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Do secret weapons even exist anymore?

I know, I know
>if it's secret you wouldn't have heard about it
But projects like the U-2, the Blackbird and the F-117 ended up being terribly kept secrets, hobbyists had general ideas of their appearance and their capabilities years before the government admitted they were in service

And such projects today would require even more money, even more labor, even more complexity, in a world filled with far more gossip channels and recording devices than those eras. So how "advanced" could you truly get in secret now?
>>
control the wather
>>
Yes.
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>>62777601
>more money
Generally but not all ways

>more labor
Automation

>more complexity
Diversification of work share

>gossip channels and recording devices than those eras
National Security laws

>So how "advanced" could you truly get in secret now?
Move it to Australia
>>
>>62777740
>>>So how "advanced" could you truly get in secret now?
>Move it to Australia
yeah if you started testing the MJ12 lifterscooper raygun in the outback the most people would think when shit leaked was "abos got into the fakin petril again", and at worst even the most delusional would go "abos doin magic again"
>>
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>>62777601
>he doesn't know
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>>62778338
imagine making a cool aircraft but being such a nerd that no one will acknowledge you
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>>62777601
Reminder that it’s been thirteen years since the bin Laden raid and the public still l knows exactly nothing about the stealth Blackhawks. Nor was their existence known before the raid.
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>>62778461
really!
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>>62777601
Aurora has been in development/possible deployment since the 80s and information on what it is even supposed to be has just come to light.
I believe there are still dozens of black projects under wraps.
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>>62777826
>raygun in straya
>>
>Post something secret
Oh ok...
American super secret jet car, some time in 90s
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>>62778483
Really.
That’s not one of the stealth Blackhawks.
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>>62777601
>Do secret weapons even exist anymore?
there's more where this came from
just gotta wait for the next presidency for more of these to leak
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8SyL2T-mvw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJfYikAEARk

In 1989 Honda debuted an ad for its CRX Si which featured a representation of the stealth bomber (B-2). Honda didn’t get hauled before Congress to explain, but it did cause some concern with the Air Force and Northrop

https://jalopnik.com/how-honda-revealed-the-governments-top-secret-stealth-b-666462873?utm_campaign=socialflow_jalopnik_twitter&utm_source=jalopnik_twitter&utm_medium=socialflow
>>
AIM-260

But it's not a secret, you say!

>it's already being delivered
>>
>>62778513
>Honecker's Revenge
>American
Du bist ein Dummkopf
>>
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>>62778529
Yeah i know, just dicking around

It's a blackhawk from the Fall of Kabul, some bad TV compression
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>>62778604
>Honda Stealth Bomber
>It has a Type R badge on it
>>
>>62777601
The secrets will stay secrets until they're no longer secrets. At that point, more secrets are hidden away just in case. After all, why reveal your hand to your potential adversaries? Need-to-know-basis and all that stuff.
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>>62777601
From the rotating lights I see outside my farm every night during fall through winter, I’d say yes. Been seeing them since 2022 and they are definitely in the exosphere. Looks akin to that supposed Malaysian airlines satellite video.
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there is pretty much a 99% chance that the NSA or the DOD or both operate an AI that is tracking every single person and vehicle on Earth in extreme detail

>computer, tell me the location of every S400 launch unit at this moment. Now print the names and home addresses of the people who have spent lots of time around these launch units within the past 7 days
>computer, find the owner of a blue toyota corolla with license plate abcd123 and give me a list of their friends that own guns and are registered democrats
>>
>>62778945
you are describing a ordinary database. where's the AI?
>>
>>62777601
Pretty secretive but a lot of the spooky stuff today isn't hardware, it's software. Stuxnet is a pretty good example, albeit dated by now, of how incredibly damaging government "weapons" can exist mostly in secret. You say enthusiasts were aware of the F-117 and while that's somewhat true, at the time those speculative voices were effectively smokescreened by various methods; it only looks the way it does to you with the benefit of hindsight and being able to cherrypick through all the people that were totally off the mark at the time.

Intelligence gathering and especially processing are historically the most sophisticated and secretive parts of the MIC. With the current AI boom, it does paint a slightly different context for the US' novel surveillance methods tested in the middle east, and the long standing partnerships the DoE and DoD have with tech sector players that, depending on your schizo levels, either conveniently precipitated or directly developed the technologies and techniques that fuel generative AI.
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>>62778973
AI doesn't let you do new shit. It just lets you do old shit really quickly and without paying humans, which is a major enabling factor for mass surveillance.
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>>62778491
please tell me more, anon
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>>62777601
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/air-space-magazine/secret-space-shuttles-35318554/

my nigger Operation High Jump happened in 1946 and is still classified. There's spooky space stuff from the cold war that's "still up there, and still operating" as of 2009. The US hasn't declassified a single airframe in like 30 years(fact check needed, I don't follow mil tech that close).

So yeah you bet your ass there's still powerful, secret stuff out there. But without a credible threat to the US or Israel, none of that shit is getting pulled out to play.
>>
>>62777601
Dude, the closest thing anyone had to a "general idea" about the F-117 before it was publicly revealed was this fucking thing.
>>
Were the "donuts on a rope" contrails ever explained? I remember that was a big deal once upon a time but I don't really keep up with aviation stuff.
>>
>I will not Zapper post
>I will not Zapper post
If this is still up tomorrow, I'll probably Zapper post.
>>
>>62779120
Allegedly this is also a real aircraft. People have seen the pumpkin seed out and about. Unironically, ATS is a way better source for this sort of information, specifically on aircraft, than here will ever be.
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>>62779785
>Have you emailed Lene Hau, Wolfgang Ketterle, or Zachary Dutton and asked them what happens to the wavelength?
You are coming up on a year of not having done this. Why are you like this?
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>>62779785
Oh hey zapperanon. I've been doing some digging myself, and you should know that there's actually a lot more fark posts than in the list you keep posting. Erewhon's also active again on fark as of this April, and reddit is also aware of the man so best save anything you can.
>>
>>62779949
Because we already know what happens to the wavelength, fag. It's a rhetorical question. Do you actually think the would answer? >>62780315
I have sent this to Eric Weinstein and Jeremy Corbell though. I am pretty convinced that Weinstein and I know the same guy he talks about in Colorado Springs. I name dropped him, so we'll see if I hear back. I fucking hate Jeremy Corbell, but he's one of the few that actually seem to want to get to the truth (even if it's not aliens).
>>62780315
I am aware of this, but I keep it topical. What I was not aware of that he is back posting on Fark. Is he back on ATS as well?
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>>62777601
I want to believe.
>>
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Sunlight for everyone! Now we just need to figure out a way to get grass go inside and touch people.
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>>62777601
we know about the tictacs, the "unknown" drones, microsats, "experimental" underwater drones, SpaceX's military contracts, and the hypersonic "test" vehicles: X-51, X-65, Dart AE, BOLT-1B

here's your
>general ideas of their appearance and their capabilities years before the government admitted they were in service
>>
I'm sure something involving directed energie weapons is highly classified, IE their true capabilities.
>>
>>62778973
>I say Eckert old fellah, you are describing a ordinary calculator. where's the computing?
for literal decades in SF the very first thing AI does is help retrieve data in massive databases with strings of complicated if-and-or-except clauses; the primary difference is doing in seconds with machine speed what it would take humans days to do
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>>62777601
There's the RQ-180. Best we have is a blurry UFO sighting-quality pic.
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>>62779785
it is zapper posting time boy
>>
planet dirt
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>>62782749
bullshit

How the hell are you going to hide that many launches from the other world governments as well as space nerds
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>>62781257
>we
ahahaha
AHAHAHAHAHAH
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHAAAAAAAAAHAHA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
>>
>>62779120
holy fuck i had that model
>>
>>62782768
You don't need to launch into orbit to get there. A while ago some retards on /x/ made a big deal over a story regarding an underwater drone factory supposedly created by a non human intelligence, which arose from various garbled disinfo stories getting accidentally revealed to the public. The truth is that launches to Planet Dirt take place at this underwater location, using specially developed submarine craft. This is why the Navy has jurisdiction over the project, as well.
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>>62778973
"AI" is just a zoomer brainrot term for when a computer does stuff because most kids today are too stupid to understand programming. The future is grim.
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>>62781257
Don't know if he's back on ATS, but he's been posting again for at least a year on Fark. I don't think he's dropped anything juicy but you never know.

>>62782768
Depends if they use rockets or not. I think you could reasonably hide an advanced SSTO plane/craft, especially if you know where and when the spy sats are overhead.
>>
>>62783043
I think they are submarine facilitated crew exchanges. There is a old story about a military journalist aboard a submarine. There allegedly was some crew onboard that the commanding officer specifically forbade both the journalist and the crew to talk to. One day they were all just gone. The journalist noticed and asked the commanding officer. He was promptly reassigned to somewhere else at the behest of the Navy. If I were going to swap out crew or supplies covertly for something that obviously can't land at a regular AF, the middle of the ocean is a great place to do it.
>>62782770
Yes, dipshit..."we". There are other people on /k/ that understand what "we can spatially compress a light pulse into a volume 50 million times smaller" means. It's pretty straightforward.
>If I took a 1km long slinky and crammed it into a space 50 millionths of a meter long, what would happen to the slinky?
>>
>>62783172
If he's back on ATS, it's on Really Above Top Secret because it's not indexed and invite only (pretty sure). I would imagine he's learned not to post TMI online.
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>>62783192
>Yes, dipshit..."we".
No, no. You have bowed out of conversations in the past citing your status as nothing more than a curious amateur. You WILL email the experts. You will do the fucking needful. Hop to.

No golfing. No excuses. Email. Right fucking now.
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>>62783487
Anon probably does not want to get arrested for knowing about the blackest secrets unknown to man, especially if he starts waving the receipts. Or even just getting the fark posts and the other stuff floating around taken down.
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>>62783487
>Golfing
At least I know you're paying attention
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>>62778338
why are there no non-air breathing hypersonic strategic bombers?
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>>62779785
beat you to it
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>>62783840
and again
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>>62783523
Academics want people to talk to them about their work. Hardly anyone ever does. He's just being a coward.
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>>62777601
yeah, but it is pretty mundane things like cyber hacking or EW or really good satellite cameras.
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>>62783965
More like lazy
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>>62784250
No, a pussy. A chickenhawk who plays tuff on the internet, punching down at anonymous 14 year olds. A real fuckin fag, let me tell ya.
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>>62784306
Lol, go fuck yourself. Do you think any of these people are just going to randomly spill the beans to a non-credentialed, non-academic? Why don't you fucking email them if you have such a hard on for it?
>Hey, tell me about the polariton gamma ray laser you guys were building
>Type 3 Secrecy order...it's okay, you can tell me
I'll do it the 3rd after I move. Anything particular you would like me to cover besides the dumbass obvious question of what happens to the wavelength?
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>>62783636
They're called ICBMs.
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>>62783192
>submarine facilitated crew exchanges
Sounds more like a SEAL team to me.
>>
>>62781345
What game?
>>
>>62784478
NTA, and I don’t know who you are, but you don’t necessarily need to ask them about any devices or practical applications. Just ask about the theoretical research. Academics love that shit, they’re people (nerds) too you know, nobody ever asks them questions and they universally love talking about their work. What’s the worst that could happen?
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>>62777601
I wouldn't worry about it
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>>62784780
Not him, but looks like Sunless Sea
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>>62784478
>Lol, go fuck yourself. Do you think any of these people are just going to randomly spill the beans to a non-credentialed, non-academic?
I am entirely confident that at least 1 of the 3 will, with minimal effort on your part. You have had an active interest in their research areas for years. You approach it like outsider art, like any amateur would, but that isn't a reason for your enquiries to be trashed.

>Why don't you fucking email them if you have such a hard on for it?
I could, but I have worked on DARPA & DOE backed projects so you aren't going to view me as just another anon.

>Type III secrecy order blah
Every piece of red tape can be sidestepped, circumlocuted, or otherwise defeated. If you're actually willing to go through with contacting people, there are still a few adults here who can help you game the system.

>Anything particular you would like me to cover besides the dumbass obvious question of what happens to the wavelength?
Literally just whatever pieces you're missing. I can't recommend other things off the top because I haven't followed the evolution of the zapper lore. I haven't followed it because it seems like you're stuck in a rut, still clinging to vagaries from a guy who shitposts on fark and ATS, still short-circuiting every time someone who isn't /x/ asks you to lay out the basics and they don't see what you're talking about. You have like, 3 truths, 10 half-truths, and 20 lies and you're circling the drain trying out different combinations of them. I have been calling you a coward because I do not think you are an idiot, and it would take an idiot not to figure out that you need novel reliable information to rectify that situation. Not more internet fights with teenagers and NEETs.
>>
>>62784478
academics are dying to show their work, especially if it's actually useful, not nth social studies feminism paper
>t. academic
>>
>>62777601
>Do secret weapons even exist anymore?
Stealth Drones. Aka Beast Of Kandahar. Supposedly is is RQ-170 Sentinel, but there can be more.

Also I think Navy has several secret drone related things. Like decoys, remote sensors, torpedo and mines variant, active anti torpedo defenses.
>>
>>62778338
Stealth Drones is possible to fly at night and keep secret. Sr-71 is visible from sattelites even at night.
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>>62783636
because they took dynasoar from you, manned antipodal bombers could've been in service by 1970
>>
>>62785006
Dunno if emailing any of these guys would be super useful for the specific line of inquiry at hand. Some information isn't releasable outside of the right networks, even if it's unclass, due to export markings and shit. You know that. Unless anon can get on DTIC at minimum he's probably going to get a canned "cannot confirm or deny" response, if anything he's asking about is of substance.
>>
>>62779120
>>62779797
That's Have Blue
>>
>>62785049
>point radio sensor array to the sky
>see massive inductance emissions from the motors
S T E L F
>>
>>62779120
I don't think that'd actually be very stealthy, just eyeballing it, that sorta elliptical wing has got to be terrible right?
>>
>>62779785
How the fuck is that possible?
>>
Serbia : "Sorry, we did not know it was stealth"
>>
>>62785151
funny how they didn't stop the others from bombing the absolute shit out of them though lmao
guess the rest really were stealthy then, huh?
>>
Oh, zapperanon, another thing I found was a guy called Maj Gen George Keegan, Assistant Chief of Staff for Air Force Intelligence back in the 70s. He talked a lot about Soviet DEW capability which he believed to be a credible threat, even annoyed the British about it when he retired. His warnings seemingly turned out to be mistaken, but it makes me wonder if it wasn't another F15 situation where the US overcompensated by building the damn thing themselves? There was that whole Star Wars thing under Reagan...

Here's a video of him describing it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_ZwqW2EFGo
>>
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>>62785173
Your post reminded me of the mysterious "dome of light" phenomenon observed by some US aircrews following certain Soviet nuclear tests involving the SS-20.
>>
>>62785146
https://groups.seas.harvard.edu/haulab/slow_light_project/slow_light_project.htm
Quantum physics are a fucking trip
>>
>>62777623
that's been in use since vietnam and was publicly disclosed
>>
>>62785225
It's also not nearly as powerful as the phrase "controlling the weather" makes it seem, since it's essentially an elaborate way to make a small region of moist air become a raincloud. This fact completely escapes normalfags for some reason, as a shit ton of them unironically believed the hurricanes over the past couple months were created by Joe Biden in order to destroy Republican-voting counties and steal their land in the name of Blackrock.
>>
>>62785232
to be fair, logic and evidence aren't usually a thing when it comes to the more out-there conspiracies,which are faith based and fueled by emotion
>>
>>62779135
The buzzwords I heard in the 90s were detonation wave and external combustion. I remember seeing pics of what looked like a two meter wedge shaped flight body mounted on the tip of a sprint missile. Apparently was accelerated to hypersonic speed by the sprint and sprayed fuel into its own Shockwave and burned it externally. I'm guessing it worked in short bursts but wasn't scalable to a full sized vehicle probably because of surface heating, heavy fuel consumption, and couldn't dk anything satellites could do better.
>>
>>62781345
Easiest way to make bank and also the easiest way to go insane if you fuck it up
>>
>>62785173
Soveits had wide scale laser weapons programs. Enormous test site in Kazakhstan
https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A2%D0%B5%D1%80%D1%80%D0%B0-3
As site and some documentation left out of Russia post USSR some info was declassified
Most powerful Soviet lasers were single use explosives driven generators. Large brothers of this thing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_laser_pistol
It used single use "cartridges" kinda like old school magnesium photo flash.
Soveit ASAT program used such things scaled to large size. No info about their characteristics declassified but desing of the system point out they were driven by hundreds kilograms of explosives if not tons. Single use laser generator was located half a mile from aiming mirror and telescope comple and was connected to it by vacuum tube. After explosion of generator laser energy was sent via vacuum tube and then guided by aiming mirror at target. Such design was necessary to protect telescope complex from blast wave of the generators that can throw aim off and damage brittle telescope mirriros and systems.
As you can understand such activity is easily visible from space. Including missile warning sattelites. Massive explosions and enormous power laser beams going into space. CIA had pretty good understanding what is going on.
Supposedly program falied (besides cyclopic costs) because of thermal blooming, laser energy defocused in atmosphere and couldn't deliver good energy density to space even with massive generated laser energy. This fact CIA couldn't access with spy sattelites.

P.S. Today adaptive optics that can counter thermal blooming exists. Large number of telescopes with adaptive optics are operational and new are build. And Russia has their nose in all these supposedly peaceful astronomy programs.
>>
>thread about the practical limits of secrecy
>retards doing the same shitty larp they've done for years

Get new material holy shit you've been copy and pasting the same nothing this entire time, if you mattered (((they))) would surely have noticed by now. You're just spamming off topic at this point.
>>
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they keep things secret for at least a decade
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>>62779135
like what >>62785317 said, its thought to be pulse detonation engines
>in aug 1989, an RAF guy saw a triangle aircraft being refueled by a tanker, it made the gunk-gunk sound as it flew
>in mar 1992, a guy in texas saw the donuts-on-a-rope contrail, and heard the gunk-gunk sound
>in jan 2008, the Borealis, a pulse detonation engine powered aircraft was flown (i can't find any info on what it sounded like though)
>in june 2008, info on Blackswift was released, a darpa pulse detonation engine powered aircraft, that was a black triangle no less
theres no doubt tons of other shit, seeing as things like the "Multiple Kill Vehicle" has been around since probably the late 80's (the publicly released tests were in 2008, but the there were legit recordings of it since the early 90's), everything we get officially is mega outdated on a dripfeed
the MKV is literally just 10lbs of RCS thrusters, and we've had that tech since at least 1958, and if they're keeping MKV's secret for about 20 years, just think of what they else they're keeping secret
i think the idea of them being antimatter engines instead of pulse detonation is cool as fuck though, even if it may be impossible

also, in 2004 my dad in southern cali saw the donuts-on-a-rope contrail & heard the gunk-gunk sound, so thats cool (he also saw the MKV footage back in the 90's too)
>>
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>>62784847
THE SUN! THE SUN! THE SUN! THE SUN! THE SUN!
>>62781345
>>62784847
Also NTA, but I can highly recommend it. It's a dog-shit, timewasting, shell of a game made by the most artsy-fartsy types you could possibly imagine, but it has some truly compelling writing and worldbuilding.
>>
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>>62782749
Any scoop for this because I haven't been able to find much on it.
>>
>>62785045
>Like decoys, remote sensors, torpedo and mines variant, active anti torpedo defenses.
I knew this was coming/already here, it just makes so much sense to dronify torpedoes and opens up so many options.
>>
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>>62779785

Project Chronos
Operation Chronos
Jack Sarfatti
LLNL/AFRL
Argonne National Laboratory
Plasmonically Stored Digital Data -4D Datablock
The Applied Sarfatti Membrane
Novikov Device

and some juicy scuttlebutt...
2019 Radiological Overflight Anomaly (see pic)
>>
>>62785348
It does make you wonder where the hell Zeldovich got his Phase Conjugation work from. Erewhon talked about how the guy seemingly came out of nowhere with this extremely unintuitive, seemingly physics breaking phenomena. The Keegan video talks about how the US thought any beam would disperse in the atmosphere, but if you were to use Phase Conjugate mirrors to focus and direct it... Could it be that Zeldovich's Principles of Optical Phase Conjugation had a start in the Soviet ABM beam systems?
>>
>>62785627

meant 2020 not 2019

>In January 2020, a radioactive UFO flew over canada and triggered radiation sensors under its' flight path.

>It emitted no sonic boom, had no witnesses and wasn't seen on civilian radar.

>It didn't make the MUFON database. It wasn't talked about any any forums and there are no photos, video or audio evidence.

>The DOE knows about it. The DIA also knows. So does the NRO, NORAD etc. So do some other countries since not every reponse could be hidden.

>The object moved so fast that it behaved like cyber attack. Further, it MAY have actively sought out the sensors in order to overfly them. Further, the object was so fast that it SEEMED like it was arriving at it's next destination before it had even left the one it was at. Like a loony toons character.


Google pickering nuclear alert
>>
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The Space Tether is a Marauder power source
And a power source for the manufacture of AeroMetalic materials
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>>62785686
SkyForge
>>
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>>62785409
>made by the most artsy-fartsy types you could possibly imagine

QRD? WDYM? I've wasted tons of hours into Sunless Sea and I've never got that vibe. Then again I don't think I have delved all of the LORE, either.

Couldn't get into Sunless Skies though.
>>
>>62784801
>>62785006
Well, okay faggots. I'll do it. I'm packing up my office shit today, but I'll be moved by the 1st and unpacked by the 3rd.. I do indeed have everyone's institutional emails, so we'll see what shakes out. I think I could legitimately get some information from...
>Carl Weiman
>Lene Hau
>Naomi Ginsberg
>Eric W Davis
I have most of their institutional email addresses from my collection of glownigger PDFs. Hau actually seems like the best bet because she isn't an American citizen.
>>62785655
The Russians let him publish it. The glownigger portion that we aren't privy to is allegedly smuggled photos of the actual apparatus and methane gas cell. It's odd that you don't hear a thing about this guy in scientific literature for the most part (outside black hole superradiance), yet he was obviously one of the primary principals behind the Soviet nuclear program outside of Sakaharov. What I would like to personally know is what glownigger things Robert W Hellwarth was up to at USC using Zel'dovich's research.
>>
>>62785006
I think we have reached the limit of publicly available information on this particular topic. Obviously there is a number of commercial applications for this research like diffraction free imaging, ultra high bandwidth fiber optics, error correction control and data links for photonic computing, etc. Yet there are zero patents for any of this from either Hau, her team, or Harvard/MIT board of trustees. They obviously gave her something to shut the fuck up. They made her a National Security Technology and Science Fellow in 2010, despite not even being an American citizen. Any of you homos in your late 30's or early 40's might even remember her and few others in the news. It was a huge fucking deal at the time, and in almost every national publication.
>>
>>62777601
There is almost certainly an SR72 kicking around somewhere.
>>
>>62786443
>I have most of their institutional email addresses from my collection of glownigger PDFs.
lmao you can just look them up in the Harvard or Stanford or whatever directory. They aren't some kind of secret knowledge.
>>
>>62779010
>>62778945
Palantir was doing data mapping before you were in High School. They don't have a mystical AI that solves problems. They have an extremely large dataset that they can experiment with using tools one of which is an LLM.
>>
>>62786724
You can, but there are some other spicy @mil and @civ addresses for some that aren't readily available on the university website, fag.
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>>62777601
Not really interesting but according to recent leaks Israel deploys long range stealth reconnaissance drones
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>>62778461
That's because there were no stealth Blackhawks. The Pakistanis sanctioned the raid after they had enough of bin Laden.
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>>62778461
iykyk
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>>62777601
>But projects like the U-2, the Blackbird and the F-117 ended up being terribly kept secrets
Except they were well kept secrets, and for the most part still are?

I, like most others, am able to discern the design, materials, manufacturing, and correct usage of a complex machine simply by knowing it exists.
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Polybius was a One-time pad and money dispenser for Soviet Spies based out of Quebec.
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>>62787441
KGB had a key
The prize tickets had the cyphers
Only trained agents could play for enough levels to prove their bonafides without the pixel pattern shown at level 5 the tickets were useless.
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>>62786228
Part of me feels like withholding this information since it's such a sad context for things, but they've jarringly swerved into aggressive wokeness. I'm not even the kind of anon that minds that stuff, honestly, but it's become quite undeniable. Every game they make has a trans character, and every game they get more in-your-face and obnoxious about it. They famously offered a dreamy paid internship in the company, but only for Black candidates, since there's so much 'racial disparity in games development'. Their most recent one has a Synagogue as a location hub and dives deep into the persecution and experience of London's Jewish community. One of the characters is a gay, Muslim, anti-colonial ex-Punjab soldier, and he's not even one of the annoying ones. It's just...too much. It's sad to see the brainrot tendrils creep into everything they do. There's still some excellent storycrafting shackled to this dead corpse of identity politicking, but I wouldn't blame another anon for not being able to put up with it.
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>>62787512
Damn shame.
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>>62787631
>I'm speaking to a HMOFA appreciator
Better times will come.
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>>62785408
>also, in 2004 my dad in southern cali saw the >donuts-on-a-rope contrail & heard the gunk-gunk >sound, so thats cool (he also saw the MKV >footage back in the 90's too)

WHAT'S MKV footage that you talking about? tell me more
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>>62786443
Cool, make update threads with obvious titles so we'll find them. Sequential or something.

>>62785057
>>62786516
It from bit, anons. Just because I've been funded by glowburos doesn't mean I respect authority on any level. Truthseeking does not concern itself overly with Shut The Fuck Up Juice of decades past.
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>>62787282
The only secret things about F-117 today are some of the bases it used to fly out of and... his little mysterious brother that allegedly flew with it operationally. Well, yes... RCS coating is secret too when it cames to characteristics but that's about it.

Same for SR-71, you can find a flight manual for it online today. Some of the bases it used to fly of are still a touchy subject though
>>
>>62785348
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFICAsbBhDA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TY25qQtYY6A
I really want to go to some of the ex-Soviet states and do some urbexing.
>>
>>62787441
The USAF actually did use arcade games to filter recruits for a while in the early '80s. Mostly Cinematronics' Starhawk and Tail Gunner.
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>>62788312
>It from bit
I unironically own a copy of Information Mechanics by Frederick W Cantor. I will send updates, including of the copy of the email I sent to Lene Hau (or whoever). I don't expect to hear much back for obvious reasons. Like I have mentioned before, I do indeed know a "knower" in Colorado Springs that has already confirmed (off handedly) most of this is real. Anyone that has a EE masters from Texas A&M and spent his 20 at Edwards as flight test engineer ending as a Major deserves some attention.
>>
>>62788303
cool shit, being military can have it's benefits
though, plenty of people have seen this footage before it was official, so its nothing special, but it shows the fact that what we see thats been publicly released, is only whats been deemed outofdate
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RnofCyaWhI0
>>
>>62790232
I love the guys going completely apeshit with excitement in the background of some of those clips. I don't know if they ever tested those things outdoors but it doesn't take much of a leap to imagine how someone could think it was ayys with how they maneuver either.
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>>62778973
in 2024, e = mc^2 + AI
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>>62790240
>it doesn't take much of a leap to imagine how someone could think it was ayys with how they maneuver either.
if i remember correctly, when the "Lunar Landing Research Vehicle" was still secret & they were flying it around, they'd just say it was a alien ufo or some shit
probably getting the story wrong, but i know its been happened for other things that used to be secret, like when the SR-71 would be glowing hot or whatever (thinking of it glowing reminds me of the theory that it used plasma as the real "material" for stealth, which is a really interesting theory, the science even makes a lot of sense too)
another time i've heard of secret stuff first hand, was a teacher i had who was in the airforce during vietnam, he saw an aircraft landing that he never seen before, it was in the white, experimental paint & all, everyone but him & a few people were called away from the flightline, and then he was told to refuel it & that he saw nothing
ended up being a "Rockwell B-1 Lancer", if i remember correctly, but its cool to see when something goes from totally under wraps to given out for free
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>>62778591
they destroyed Stonehenge? after saving the world from Ulysses i'd think it would have been held in better respect
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>>62790056
You ever asked him about the lichen or never got round to it?
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>>62788136
>HMOFA
its not that kind of strip ;_;
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>>62791271
It started with monster girls for me too.
>>
>>62777740
>>62777826
Look at the distance between those trees.

>>62782749
I want to believe



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