From: Winston on 19 Mar 2010 15:45 On 3/19/2010 11:28 AM, osr(a)uakron.edu wrote: > > > Electrodes!, Ha! Now that would be grossly outdated and barbaric... > > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-V95eGgZbrU > > Steve How did you get the current to flow? Surface contact? --Winston -- Today's retailer is in an awkward position. He must assuage his visceral need to anger some of his clients while having to delight them sufficiently to guarantee repeat business.
From: osr on 19 Mar 2010 16:03 On Mar 19, 3:45 pm, Winston <Wins...(a)bigbrother.net> wrote: > On 3/19/2010 11:28 AM, o...(a)uakron.edu wrote: > > > > > Electrodes!, Ha! Now that would be grossly outdated and barbaric... > > >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-V95eGgZbrU > > > Steve > > How did you get the current to flow? Surface contact? > Work Product, Company IP, cannot discuss due to NDA. Suffice it to say there are other natural pathways into the body. Sierra Nevada did NOT get phase II of the SBIR for Frey Effect... Maybe this will answer your questions as to why this does not work. This will be my last post on the subject... If the IEEE is not a better source for you then the sensationalist hype of "Wired" I don't know what is... Names are named, so you can go look up the papers. http://spectrum.ieee.org/biomedical/devices/why-microwave-auditory-effect-crowdcontrol-gun-wont-work Remember, this was discovered by a seaman standing watch on radar platforms at sea with massive cold war radars. High peak energy, and at slow, click , click, click pulse rates, ie short range search mode... Also the transit time across the skull precludes modulation for "hearing voices", all you hear, and the physics matches this, is rebounding echos of the click off the wall of the skull obscuring any possible content. And if you can hear that, the power level is a eye hazard for all in the area and a rad hazard for you.. You end up cooking bystanders corneas for some distance away.. Also please note I use my UA address as a Google spam trap... I'm not there anymore, and neither is my account. Steve
From: Winston on 19 Mar 2010 18:01 On 3/19/2010 1:03 PM, osr(a)uakron.edu wrote: > Work Product, Company IP, cannot discuss due to NDA. I respect your decision. At the risk of appearing to need the 'last word' I respond to let you know I appreciate your feedback and will consider it carefully. > Suffice it to say there are other natural pathways into the body. OK. (Scratches head) > Sierra Nevada did NOT get phase II of the SBIR for Frey Effect... I guess I never mentioned that this has absolutely nothing to do with the sensation of sound experienced by someone in the path of modulated microwave radiation. I am reassured that the Frey Effect is apparently incredibly inefficient, nonetheless. Thanks again. --Winston -- Today's retailer is in an awkward position. He must assuage his visceral need to anger some of his clients while having to delight them sufficiently to guarantee repeat business.
From: osr on 19 Mar 2010 19:11 > > > Suffice it to say there are other natural pathways into the body. > > OK. (Scratches head) > You have 5 senses plus the pretty girl effect. And maybe more, And don't tell me a pretty young thing cannot tell when you are staring at her. There are other things, vestibular, stomach acting at acoustic resonance, or acceleration, touch divided into in pressure and temperature and large electric fields.. Normal and peripheral vision etc . . Steve
From: Winston on 20 Mar 2010 00:01
On 3/19/2010 4:11 PM, osr(a)uakron.edu wrote: > >> >>> Suffice it to say there are other natural pathways into the body. >> >> OK. (Scratches head) >> > > > You have 5 senses plus the pretty girl effect. And maybe more, And > don't tell me a pretty young thing cannot tell when you are staring at > her. There are other things, vestibular, stomach acting at acoustic > resonance, or acceleration, touch divided into in pressure and > temperature and large electric fields.. Normal and peripheral vision > etc . . http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_senses#Definition I think we fell out of sync there, Steve. There must be a point but I'll be darned if it is obvious. --Winston -- Today's retailer is in an awkward position. He must assuage his visceral need to anger some of his clients while having to delight them sufficiently to guarantee repeat business. |