
根据马来西亚的Petaling Jaya副首领管理者Abdul拉赫曼Ibrahim (满嘴),马来西亚人的窃贼得到聪明。 在今年过去七个月,他们使用一个未知的小配件搜寻和打破有在他们掩藏的膝上计算机的255辆汽车。
“窃贼在对经营。 他们抽杀车窗和断裂到汽车起动里。 大多这些案件从星期一发生到星期五到中午和3pm和5pm和7pm。 他们等待他们的受害者停放他们的汽车,并且为他们的饭食去在触击之前”,他说。
它完全逃脱我至于怎样窃贼可能可能查出甚而没有被交换的膝上计算机。 或许窃贼太幸运。
真正时间GPS车跟踪 活跟踪10次秒更新








August 25th, 2006 at 4:16 pm
I was told by a police officer in Montreal, Quebec that thieves use Lithium detectors to detect batteries in variour electronics. My father’s laptop was hidden in his van with tinted windows, yet it was busted into and the laptop was stolen.
August 25th, 2006 at 8:29 pm
[Comment ID #6789 Will Be Quoted Here]
It seems like the Malaysian and Canadian Police are at the forefront of fighting hight tech criminals.
August 25th, 2006 at 9:30 pm
My best guess to this ingenious act would be the thieves had somehow manage to utilize a type of device capable of tracking a signal being transmitted from the notebook. Normally, if the user had only just close the lid of the notebook and if the function is being set to ‘do nothing’ the thives could just capture that signal and just locate the position of the notebook whereabouts.
August 25th, 2006 at 11:42 pm
i’d never leave my laptop in the car. NEVER.
August 27th, 2006 at 5:20 am
This happened to a collegue of mine in London only last week. Loads of other cars were in the car-park… none of them were broken into. His laptop was DEFINATELY off!! The laptop was not bluetooth-equipped.
I don’t think it’s related to lithium… perhaps the wi-fi antenna in the laptop’s lid is always a certain length, and can be made to react to a specific radio frequency?? Or maybe the magnets in the hard-disk can react to VERY sensitive magnetic equipment (but surely the car’s chassis would block most RF/Magnetic signals due to it’s metallic construction, like a faraday cage?)
Steve
August 29th, 2006 at 9:20 pm
I am not a techie type but the lithium theory sounds very interesting