Fringe Science Yields 'Gay Bombs' and Psychic Teleportation
2007 06 24
Creating armor that renders a soldier invisible. Stimulating the brain to suppress sleep for days. Arming sharks with chemical implants and cameras to work as spies.
This year the Pentagon will spend $78 billion — about half of all government research and development dollars — on a variety of projects, according to the American Association for the Advancement for Science ... |
Remote-controlled humans enhance immersive games
2005 08 14
By remotely stimulating a person's vestibular system - the fluid-filled tubes in the inner ear that guide their sense of balance - with electrodes placed on the skin just below the ear, researchers at NTT's research laboratories in Kanagawa have found a way to turn humans into oversized radio controlled vehicles.
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Fly brains manipulated by remote control
2005 04 08
Like a hypnotist who gets a man to act like a chicken when he hears a code word, scientists have genetically modified fruit flies to jump or beat their wings when flashed with lasers. "This is a new approach to neuroscience," said Gero Miesenbock from the Yale University School of Medicine. "We can not only passively observe but actively control behavior."
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Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs
2007 10 11
A mechanical fly with a wingspan of less than an inch and that weighs less than a gram, being developed by the Harvard Microrobotics Lab.
Vanessa Alarcon saw them while working at an antiwar rally in Lafayette Square last month.
"I heard someone say, 'Oh my god, look at those,' " the college senior from New York recalled. "I look up ... |
Sniffer bees: New flying squad in war against terror
2006 05 08
Terrorists, beware the ultimate sting: a British company has developed a device to detect explosives at airports with the help of specially trained honey bees. In remarkable field trials completed this week, scientists have harnessed the insect's powerful sense of smell to track down samples of TNT, Semtex, gunpowder and other explosives hidden in shipments passing through a busy cargo airport. |
Remote Control Rodent 'Ratbots' Pass First Tests
2005 02 26
Researchers at SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn N.Y., have developed technology that allows them to control a rat's actions from up to 600 yards away with implants placed in its brain. Rats can be made to run, jump or climb, following instructions they receive by radio from a laptop computer. Clacking keys on a computer send these "ratbots" climbing trees, winding through mazes, or searching through building rubble.
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Pentagon plans cyber-insect army
2006 03 20
The Pentagon's defence scientists want to create an army of cyber-insects that can be remotely controlled to check out explosives and send transmissions. The idea is to insert micro-systems at the pupa stage, when the insects can integrate them into their body, so they can be remotely controlled later. Experts told the BBC some ideas were feasible but others seemed "ludicrous". A similar scheme aimed at manipulating wasps failed when they flew off to feed and mate.
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The Mind Has No Firewall
2005 09 28
The human body, much like a computer, contains myriad data processors. They include, but are not limited to, the chemical-electrical activity of the brain, heart, and peripheral nervous system, the signals sent from the cortex region of the brain to other parts of our body, the tiny hair cells in the inner ear that process auditory signals, and the light-sensitive retina and cornea of the eye that process visual activity.
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We are moving ever closer to the era of mind control
2006 02 06
Brain scientists are on a roll. Concern about rising levels of mental distress have resulted in unprecedented levels of funding in the US and Europe. And a range of new technologies, from genetics to brain imaging, are offering extraordinary insights into the molecular and cellular processes underlying how we see, how we remember, why we become emotional.
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The Age of Neuroelectronics
2006 05 01
Every so often, when some new scientific paper is published or new experiment revealed, the press pronounces the creation of the first bionic man—part human, part machine. Science fiction, they say, has become scientific reality; the age of cyborgs is finally here. Many of these stories are gross exaggerations. But something more is also afoot: There is legitimate scientific interest in the possibility of connecting brains and computers. |
Scientists Gingerly Tap Into Brain's Power (DARPA Mind Control Research)
2005 05 25
Cyberkinetics' big breakthrough is listening to up to 100 neurons at once and applying the computing power to make sense of that data almost instantly. The 100 sensors stick out from a chip the size of a contact lens. Through a hole in the skull, the chip is pressed into the cortex surface "like a thumbtack."
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Magnetic field found to stimulate brain cells
2007 05 27
A magnetic field can stimulate the brain and promote the growth of new nerve cells, scientists have found, raising the possibility of treating conditions linked to neuron death such as Alzheimer's disease, and perhaps one day of enhancing humans' memory capacity.
Experiments on mice used a technique, transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS, which has become a standard tool for investigating the ... |
Invisibility cloaks are in sight
2006 05 26
Two prescriptions for an invisibility cloak have been unveiled by physicists in the United Kingdom and the United States. The researchers say that in principle the technologies needed for building these devices already exist. "Invisibility is visibly close," says Ulf Leonhardt of the University of St Andrews in Scotland, one of the researchers behind the proposals. He and John Pendry of Imperial College London, UK, and their co-workers have independently described similar ways to create an invisible 'hole' in space, inside which objects can be hidden. |
Demonstration and the mathematics of invisibility cloaking (Video)
2006 12 27
Article picked up from: davidicke.com
Invisibility Cloak Findings at Duke University
From: Real Invisibility - youtube.com
First demonstration of a working invisibility cloak
A team led by scientists at Duke University's Pratt School of Engineering has demonstrated the first working "invisibility cloak." The cloak deflects microwave beams so they flow around a "hidden" object inside with little distortion, making it appear almost as if ... |
Now you see it, now you don't: cloaking device is not just sci-fi
2006 05 06
It's been the curse of the USS Enterprise and the Klingons' favoured weapon. But back on Earth, mathematicians claim to have worked out how to make a cloaking device to render objects invisible. An outline for the device is described in a scientific paper published today in which the authors reveal how objects placed close to a material called a superlens appear to vanish. Even in the world of science fiction, the technology is not perfect, and nor is the device proposed by Graeme Milton at Utah University and Nicolae-Alexandru Nicorovici at Sydney University of Technology. |
Pentagon to Global Cities -- Drop Dead
2007 01 08
Article received from "Left Coast"
In our world, the Pentagon and the national security bureaucracy have largely taken possession of the future. In an exchange in 2002, journalist Ron Suskind reported a senior adviser to President Bush telling him:
"that guys like me were ‘in what we call the reality-based community,' which he defined as people who ‘believe that solutions ... |
Influencing Human Cognition: US Electromagnetic Weapons and Human Rights
2007 01 10
Project Censored Releases a New study on the History of US Intelligence Community Human Rights Violations and Continuing Research in Electromagnetic Weapons.
Click Here to Read Complete Study (pdf): US Electromagnetic Weapons and Human Rights - application/pdf 308K
This research explores the current capabilities of the US military to use electromagnetic (EMF) devices to harass, intimidate, and kill individuals and the continuing ...
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MIThril, the next generation research platform for context aware wearable computing
2004 09 22
MIThril is a next-generation wearables research platform developed by researchers at the MIT Media Lab. The goal of the MIThril project is the development and prototyping of new techniques of human-computer interaction for body-worn applications. The MIThril hardware platform combines body-worn computation, sensing, and networking in a clothing-integrated design.
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Beam weapons almost ready for battle
2006 01 12
There is a new breed of weaponry fast approaching — and at the speed of light, no less. They are labeled "directed-energy weapons," and they may well signal a revolution in military hardware — perhaps more so than the atomic bomb. Directed-energy weapons take the form of lasers, high-powered microwaves and particle beams. Their adoption for ground, air, sea, and space warfare depends not only on using the electromagnetic spectrum, but also upon favorable political and budgetary wavelengths too.
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Radio Frequency, Active Denial & Psych Weapons
2005 07 28
An RF active denial weapon is basically a microwave oven at full power with the door open. Microwaves make organic materials (i.e., people) heat up by vibrating molecules together. They also generate something called "eddy currents" in anything that conducts. These are small, low voltage but high current electrical fields.
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Vehicle-Mounted Active Denial System (V-MADS)
2004 09 22
An RF active denial weapon is basically a microwave oven at full power with the door open. Microwaves make organic materials (i.e., people) heat up by vibrating molecules together. They also generate something called "eddy currents" in anything that conducts. These are small, low voltage but high current electrical fields.
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Raytheon beam controls mobs
2005 09 22
An RF active denial weapon is basically a microwave oven at full power with the door open. Microwaves make organic materials (i.e., people) heat up by vibrating molecules together. They also generate something called "eddy currents" in anything that conducts. These are small, low voltage but high current electrical fields.
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'Maniac' Killings and violence to Force Mental Health Screening Legislations World Wide?
2005 03 31
Here it is again folks, hidden in plain view: Problem - Reaction - Solution (Explained). These are only a few of many, many, many headlines regarding bizarre violence, murders, people 'hearing voices' and 'Jesus told me to stab...' etc. etc. So what's going on, why is this happening?
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Mass Mind Control Through Network Television
2006 03 13
Why do countless American people go along with the War on Iraq? Why do so many people call for a police state control grid? A major component to a full understanding of why this kind of governmental and corporate corruption is to discover the modern science of mind control and social engineering. It's baffling to merely glance at the stacks of documentation that this world government isn't being constructed for the greater good of humanity. Although there are a growing number of people waking up the reality of our growing transparent soft cage, there seems to be just enough citizens who are choosing to remain asleep.
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Nanogenerator provides continuous power by harvesting energy from the environment
2007 04 08
Close-up image shows a prototype direct-current nanogenerator fabricated by Georgia Tech researchers using an array of zinc oxide nanowires. Credit: Georgia Tech Photo: Gary MeekResearchers have demonstrated a prototype nanometer-scale generator that produces continuous direct-current electricity by harvesting mechanical energy from such environmental sources as ultrasonic waves, mechanical vibration or blood flow.
Based on arrays of vertically-aligned zinc oxide nanowires that ... |