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Discuss stuff that’s locked behind security clearances. I’m looking for a screencap of a defense contractor talking about creating negative energy spaces using lasers. Anyone got it? Also place to discuss theories on UAPs and other technologies.
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Man, spies have gotten lazy
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At least make your bait higher effort than this and use real research instead of schizo shit.
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>>16907756
The fact that defense contractors and government agencies have technologies locked behind security clearances and compartmentalization is hardly schizo shit. Thanks for the bump though you fucking retard.
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it's mostly radio tech used in the f35s
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>>16907605
im a tourist checking out a bunch of boards that i dont use but this is a good thread, i'll post some black project shit in a little bit. i have a good amount of stuff saved but a good deal of it is unsubstantiated, concept art, etc.
i dont recall anything about negative energy spaces or lasers though.
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>>16907779
>black projects
>F35
Really bro?
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>>16907605
What the blacks do in their projects is none of my concern.
I hear rumor they have a type of clearance given out to very few outsiders. Inward pass is what they call it.
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>>16907819
actually i lost all my shit but go look on the /k/ archive for essentially the same title thread
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>>16908027
Black people invented zero point energy. De’Shawn Jackson created the first ZPE device, called the “Muhfuggin rotating thing” in 1899. In that same year his wife invented twerking.
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>>16907605
The only way you're getting any documents out of me is if you're a war thunder dev looking for added realism.
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"Black projects" are shit you don't really expect. They're boring but make a big difference. It requires niche information to understand, like fractal encryption algorithms, or submarines being invisible but only at a very specific depth.
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>>16908027
'Inward pass?' Gotta give them credit, I didn't realize they were investigating Buddhism when no one was watching.
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>>16907605
All RAM, memory, etc. shortages were not because of floods, AI, or other made-up excuses. Governments all over the world are building a bunch of data centers to prepare for WW3.
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Program Office:DARPA Tactical Technology Office (TTO) / NSA Research Classification:TOP SECRET // SI // ORCON // NOFORN

1. Project Overview
* Project Name:GOYBEAM
* Primary Objective:To field a Directed Energy Weapon (DEW) system capable of projecting a high-frequency, modulated microwave beam to induce targeted physiological effects.
* Mechanism of Action:The Goybeam Emitter Unit (GEU), uses a focused, high-gain antenna array to project a concentrated beam of millimeter-wave (mmWave) and terahertz-frequency radiation. This energy penetrates organic tissue to a depth of several cm, causing rapid and uncontrollable heating of cellular water content. This results in systemic hyperthermia, cellular disruption, and catastrophic failure of the central nervous system.
* Intended Effects:
* Lethal:Rapid boiling of bodily fluids, leading to internal organ failure and death.
* Crippling:Induction of severe neurological damage, permanent loss of motor function, and incapacitating pain.
* Disabling:Acute disorientation, vertigo, and overwhelming nociceptor stimulation to neutralize targets without permanent lethality.

* Target Sets:Designated Domestic Terrorist Organizations (DTOs) and Hostile Non-State Actors (HNSAs). Specifically authorized for use against the "Will Stancil Militia" (WSM) in Minnesota and for border enforcement operations.

3. Key Technical Specifications
* Effective Range: 40-1000m
* Power Source:Battery or DC generator
* Frequency Band:95-110 GHz (Primary), 300-400 GHz (for neurological disruption)
* Targeting System:Targeting suite (EO/IR, LIDAR, FLIR)
* Counter-Countermeasures:[REDACTED]

4. Operational Deployment Directives
* Operation: HAMMERFALL (Minnesota):Authorized for use against WSM strongholds in MSP Sector. Rules of Engagement (ROE) are delegated to responsible unit commanders
* Operation: GATEKEEPER (Border):Authorized for deployment along designated high-traffic border sectors.
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something interesting
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>>16909425
I haven't gotten in trouble for that one yet. a quick update for all the new work getting done around the Lambert airport-

good news for the St Louis region, especially those areas hit by the spring 2025 tornadoes. once those properties enter the $1 homes landbank, the next phase of urban development and gentrification of the hoods will begin, mostly from the region of Coldwater Creek westward (for obvious reasons). especially notable are the recent buildups along the Earth City area in relation to warehousing, logistics, and general storage. those will be slated for businesses secondary to aerospace, including those related to domestics, but also just as much for manufacturing. most, if not all the renascent work in and around the airport is related to dismantling GKNs CNC equipment and manufacturing footprint to retool for next gen airframes, jeets or not, so get in and get jobs once they pop, because now that the beoing union has settled their contract, the boeing big wigs have begun the next phase of pumping their stock market funny money into robots, CNC machines, and other production equipment. also, St Louis beats every other city in the nation in property price/value ratio, in addition to being the most trigger happy bunch of wakandans in the nation, per capita, so bring your body armor. jobs are on the up, homes are still cheap, and the gang bangers mostly keep to themselves in their radioactively contaminated hell hole neighborhoods.

also, the Arch is a scalar interferometer, which is why it does so much weather deflection. it is part of the pre-HAARP program, but upgraded.
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>>16907605
Only "secret" I know is that Savannah River used to have prostitutes on the payroll because pussy seeking by the types of eggheads that worked there was seen as a national security risk.
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I am almost positive that the stopped and slow light experiments of the late 90's and early 2000's helped the government build themselves a hard x-ray/gamma ray laser. There's a non-trivial amount of information floating around out there about muh polariton pulse compressor that I believe it's 1000% real.
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>>16907763
Which is why if I wanted to make some (((UFOs))), I would do it under the AEC/DoE because of the additional classification levels concurrent with TS/SCI and then have the Navy be my military cooperator because they are autistic about classifying literally everything and they already do nuclear stuff with the AEC/DoE.
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>>16909806
You can't have some Sigma fag spilling the beans after he spills his seed now can we?
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>>16907605
Oh, I have all those. I'm probably the one who posted it to begin with. This one is especially spicy because I can 100% prove this is indeed a real thing, and it's related to this>>16910505
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It's really very interesting, especially since these were written 10-20 years ago. You might remember some of this being in the news if you're 40+, then it vanished around 2004. Coincidentally, this article came out around the same time.
https://www.sfgate.com/science/article/Air-Force-pursuing-antimatter-weapons-Program-2689674.php
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The "saw all the graduate students goggles" guy was Robert Hellwarth at USC. There is a photo of him using a spatula as a mirror surface in a phase conjugate optics rig. Someone posted it on /sci/ a few months back.
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>>16910533
Fuck me
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>>16910531
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
Last one for now.
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>>16909769
Are you the bubblehead fag going on about those lightning whistlers in ULF being ayys?
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>>16910578
>bubblehead
yup

>fag
nope

>lightning whistlers in ULF
nope. super interesting. hand't heard that until now. please explain.

the bubblehead you are thinking about is probably the one who posted the cuboid attack thread.
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>>16910551
how do we keep meeting up? only 400 or so humans on 4chan, thats how.
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>>16910586
Well, friendo. You wanted all these screenshots, now you've got them. That's not even half of them, but I'm not filling the whole fucking thread with screenshots. You want to know what sorts of glownigger programs are on going, you should look at what this guy has been into and is into now. He's working with Raytheon and another company on basically glownigger DLSS for sub-diffraction optical imaging.
https://diffraqtion.com/whoweare
The jeet in the middle is the important one.
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>>16910605
Because I am the positronium particle beam tard of /k/, and ATS is down forever, so here is the only place you can discuss this for the most part.
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>>16910606
It also looks like this could be for single photon detection radar systems. My man Dutton was into all kinds of shit.
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>>16910606
rad. thanks for all the screencaps. I had a pdf rip from the site in my stash and lost it. subdiffraction imaging is cool. one of the systems I worked with in crapistan used TISERs to do that. those are the glass camera quality sensors. a typical TISER setup can get about 60 sample points per oscillation of infrared. at that point, it is just like a phased array, except optical.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-stretch_analog-to-digital_converter

TADCs are used in older equipment, or those related to more higher power systems, not so much signals like TISERs. when I blather on about SASERs and super sonar systems, when those are rigged using these types of DACs, they get what you would call sub-diffraction imaging, just in the sonar domain.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-interleaved_ADC

all that bullshit about wavelength limited imaging is just that, crap. just sample the fuuuuuuck out of the signal. there are optical signals from outer space which are waveform modulated in the optical range. some from jupiter. you need a TISER quality optical sensor to get that.
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>>16910619
>single photon detection radar systems

muhfugga

>>16910624
just sample the fuuuuuuck out of the signal.

beat me by 3 fuckin minutes. you did this to me last time when I was doing the cubane thing. you are a fuckin thunder stealer.
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>>16910624
I'll say this, absolutely none of this is far fetched. I can say with near 100% certainty that the Dugway Zapper is real, and solid chance it really is a collimated beam of bound state positronium. A few universities almost come out with it. Kirk McDonald at Princeton is a habitual line stepper, but never actually crosses it.
>A weapon...no...we just collide high energy electron beams and lasers for science
>Money...from the Department of Defense, you say...never...
>Office of Naval Research? Never heard of it
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>>16910631
the only thing I can trade back is picrel. Peano is to arithmetic as chemistry is to fundamental particle physics. he wrote the book on what happens under the hood, fundamental mathematics. bookrel is what he did to rewrite calculus in minimalist form, blank sheet. problem is, this asshole wrote everything good he ever did in latin, and even then it was his own fuckin version of simplified minimalist latin. it's actually fun as fuck to have to learn latin just to read his papers.

the point with all this bullshit is computational approaches. the "nonlinearity" bullshit which arises when the calculations have to be performed to do all this wacky physics is partly due to using pseudolinear functions because lazy and "muh approximations and standard deviations" bullshit excuses. the truth is, it gets worse than Godel's incompleteness theorem, such that because there are linearized computational processes, we cannot compute an accurate "sub integer" result when using that shit. instead, it has to be more of a directed acyclic graph, but then that is limited by the finitude of the graph size and symbol set.

or man Peano here figured differently, building equivalent mathematical functions using geometry, numberless, and conformally invariant. what all that bullshit means is when we read about these "shape languages" and "shape signals" from outer space, especially what the FL crew analyzes from the Cassini Diskus, it starts to make a sort of mathematical sense.

that was Peano's whole thing. I am pretty sure his approach is needed to actually wrangle the fustercluck of mathematical tools and processes to even make this shit work in the first place.
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>>16910644
https://iquilezles.org/articles/distfunctions/

Inigo Quilez is where I am ripping all the functions used to convert Peano's geometric calculus to Quilez' computable signed distance field functions. think of it as "collapsing the mathematical wavefunction" such that, similar to symbolic algebra, just rearrange and collapse the expression enough such that you only do the actual number crunching at the end.

you need this sort of stuff to actually compute these waveform interactions in 3d without having to having a bullshit computationally accurate toolkit like openacc or libm. you just do a shit ton of geometric calculus and then simplify that down algebraically, then compute a numeric result. the starting geometric function doesn't always collapse down the same way, causing a "hidden function" to happen- the thing mathematicians hate. addition doesn't always behave consistently, as do the other basic functions.
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>>16910644
I've got this book, but I'm too retarded to read it. I thought it would be some general theories supplemented with math. Instead, the entire thing is PhD-level fuck you math. It's apparently worth some money, and it's hard to find copies for sale.
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>>16910659
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Kantor

from a glance, I like him. I went through a phase reading about that digital physics stuff a while back. I'll pickup some Kantor stuff and put it in the reading list now. cheers for that. the last I looked at it all, Wolfram's ANKS was popular, and I really liked how he spent so much time making visual explanations.

the problem I keep having with digital physics is it is just some sort of wacky approximation scheme. that sub-integer stuff was what I was referring to. at first glance, I am probably going to like Kantor because of what it says about his relating micro-to-macro scale with common mathematical expressions. I forget which one of those other famous guys from that time wrote all about conformal geometry

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conformal_geometry

but it was more or less a system such that a geometric description of a physical system can have computations performed on it, rather than a coordinate/scalar/numeric system of mathematics, which is ultimately symbol rearranging functions. from what I can tell about others who did the same, they sort of settle on a numberless system at first, akin to what we are used to with some of those fundamental physics equations. after a time, they start figuring out they need to not only have a numberless system, also a symbolless system. more often than not that is some form of geometry. when the digital physics guys do the same, its like they end up describing analog computers and how they operate, forgetting that their digital computers are just really fast analog sample-and-hold computers. I think if the digital physics guys, and I mean this, start thinking in terms of cyclic waveforms instead of square waveforms, their circuits take on a different context. a ripple adder, for example, is really just elaborate constructive interference with an amplitude dividing filter which pumps the "carry" of the typical binary ripple add circuit over to the next bit.
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>>16910659
>PhD-level fuck you math
how about this-

every single digital physics scheme out there fails to account for bit entropy. what I mean by that is when an operation is performed such that, for example dividing an odd number by 2, there will be at some point a discarded remainder. in terms of circuitry, that is just the ground circuit on the processor, or at least the transistor dumping that actual electricity to the electrical return line, causing variations within an acceptable range, but also contributing to thermal noise and all other bullshit. the problem is, all digital functions are unary functions, those of which when dividing an odd number by 2 creates unaccounted for unary entropy.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phillips_Machine

if we are going to pretend that the church-turing thesis holds such that MONIAC is an obscenely accurate unary computer, then at some point, the mathematical entropy will accumulate such that the computer fucking evaporates. it would be as if your home computer would self destruct if some asshole wrote a script to divide 7 by 2, thereby causing spare binary bits to evaporate from this reality when they are discarded.

geometric calculus doesn't have that problem.
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>>16907605
Biggest one I saw was DARPA had an 'almost' LLM in 2005, was that fake?
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>>16907605
What do other anons think about the quantum manipulater the us is building right now?
They try to build a AI robot that is always picking another gold ball. His success rate will be 100%, not the normal 50%. Imagine a robot that always picks the two gold ball box. This will change this world forever.
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>>16911399
>2005
earlier than that.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connection_Machine

those computers were used to generate the initial conditions and early experiments with the concept of individual computational nodes operating in parallel and having different topologies. the connection machines were an extension of the systolic array concept

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systolic_array

wherein some of the researchers involved in using their designs for math work, then some linguistics and cryptanalysts built some really simple neural networks on them, except that the physical constraints of the design made a rectangular grid type neural network. you'll notice how modern neural networks, not just the language models, need some sort of network topography which a rectangular grid cannot provide. a modern GPU with the compute array on it would be like a systolic array of sorts, or at least a fixed-function and fixed-toplogy design. anyway, all of these are computable with traditional approaches and can all be abstracted down to a shit ton of matrix multiplications once the weights and all that are found out.

these are the digital versions, but the super interesting stuff happens in analog neural networks.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perceptron
https://www.nutsvolts.com/magazine/article/the_perceptron_circuit
https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/20/15/4222
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>>16911477
bookrel. another good reference on how to design and build analog circuits which perform the equivalent functions of their digital approximated values. what this boils down to is when an analog circuit is set to race against a digital circuit under the conditions such that they are both fixed function, meaning no chicanery about programs and implementations, just bare computation... the analog circuit always runs less current and has nearly instant slew rates to beat even the best digital signal processor with 1 clock cycle latency with instruction completion, not like these shitty x86 style processors we use. what makes analog even better is that they are scale invariant, meaning if you design an analog circuit from the nuts and volts magazine, you can physically scale it down to a handful of atoms on a silicone die which ends up being a thumbnail of area for an analog circuit compared to a football field for the digital.

the connectome of Broca and Wernicke's area is/was used for analog LLM designs.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connectome
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broca%27s_area

because when, surprise surprise, a topological copy of that area of the brain, when implemented in an analog circuit using perceptrons and weighted values between them, you start getting linguistic outputs from that, which are then output either via text or voice, similar to the digital LLMs you see today. the usual catch with analog computation was they are easy to make fixed-function, not usually reprogrammable like digital... buuut.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field-programmable_analog_array

you get a reprogrammable grid for the topology implementation, which means you are limited compared to having a fab shop for big acreage, but FPAAs are the next niche for neural networks and LLMs to get their filthy claws into.

https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper_files/paper/1992/file/2dea61eed4bceec564a00115c4d21334-Paper.pdf

visual stuff too.
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>>16911484
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perceptrons_(book)

if you are interested in the early classified work in neural networks and languages, bookrel is what you want to get an idea of the timeline. from there, you have to match towards information which has been released over the years about old computational assets.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_I_Perceptron

that computer was a manual implementation of what you would be familiar with as a cheap programming tutorial to read a 20x20 pixel image and do some character recognition on it. that tech was around since the 80s with the postal services using high speed fixed function character recognition computers which were trained using the techniques of the Mark 1 Perceptron machine.

all you hungry youtubers looking for content to farm, making a reproduction Mark 1 Perceptron computer would cost about $1k in parts off of digikey and you could timelapse the build into a video. from there, the "weights" being programmed in the neural network are dial knob potentiometers. that means you would load up a painting of a letter, then tweak all the knobs until you got the output to settle to what you wanted. manually. foreverrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

those same guys worked for the three letter agencies all along the way, often times in cryptanalysis and other such computational linguistics.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._C._R._Licklider

the book about Licklider is another timeline you can sync up to the classified projects from the day back then. there is a good audiobook out about it too.

all those analog neural network computers were actually listening in on everyones kitchen phones and such from the 60s and onwards. have fun with that.
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>>16911492
for the blank paper programmers, these same techniques were first implemented on paper by Vannevar Bush, part of the Bush political bloodline.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vannevar_Bush
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/As_We_May_Think
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memex

in which he designed analog systems to perform the same systems as digital, except closer to the form we see today. the Memex system was more or less an filesystem for analog computers in which storing data was in a sort of bitmap format, except on formats like microfiche and film. during the development of radio and land line communication, the surveillance approach was to use analog recordings on tape which were then analyzed using digital computers to then yield an equivalent analog circuit. from there, conversion of spoken words to teletype output was just as cake as it is today feeding an audio input to an LLM and getting text spat out.

they don't make programmers like that anymore. Vannevar, being part of the Bush family, was instrumental towards getting Prescott Bush into influential positions, and later, sons as presidents. wild times. when you hear about Bush Sr. habing been a "programmer of people" during his glowie days, it isn't too far off...
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>>16907605
There are at least two separate secret projects working on nanomachines. No, not with biology. I suspect the chinese could have one too. They're certainly investigating the necessary physics and chemistry.
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>>16907605
This guy was killed in Ukraine
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>>16907605
>Third worlders getting so desperate after being completely btfo in modern theaters over and over they're digging on Estonian knitting forums for help
Grim
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>>16911498
Vannevar Bush is not related to George Bush, friendo. Vannevar Bush is responsible for creating the infinite glownigger money funnel that is the National Science Foundation. Coincidentally, the NSF was first run by the Office of Naval Research. People also forget that he founded Raytheon.
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>>16911565
Same thing with vacuum binefringing lasers like ELI.
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>>16911953
>not related
well fuckadoodledoo. I was 100% they were. thanks.

either way, NSF is where the actual black projects are. DoD/DARPA is pretty far down that human centipede. it would be accurate to say NSF have the black projects while MIC/DoD/DARPA has the brown projects.
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>>16912015
No, the NSF is just a funding mechanism. They don't run projects, only fund them. It's funny because if you looks a funding cuts to other institutions like the NIH, the NSF is largely immune. The real glownigger shit goes on in places like the Office of Naval Research, as they are a for profit agency of the Navy and do not have to report their budget to Congress as part of the National Defense spending bills, so no direct Congressional oversight. The real question is why the US Navy is so interested in Cold Atom research to begin with? The ONR directly funded Wolfgang Ketterle's Nobel Prize work.
https://www.onr.navy.mil/about-onr/history/nobels
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>>16911958
Meme. Nanotech basically enables the star trek replicator, so you can make all the other star trek shit. It's a winner take all technology too. It's a difficult process to bootstrap the first replicator, but once you have one it's possible to expand production capacity exponentially. Being even a month behind puts you at an enormous disadvantage. Even if nanotech doesn't scale as much, it's enormously disruptive. Computer chips basically become free
>>16912051
>why cold atoms
Better inertial measurement units. It means you get GPS that works underwater. Cold atoms could be used to make gravity sensors sensitive enough to find subs
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>>16909425
It's schizo shit
>organometallic alloys
Schizobabble
>hard shell blimp
air ships are obsolete and have been so since like 1930.
This post is schizo shit, but bulk metallic glass blow molding is real so I'll give it that. No fucking way it scales up to airplane sized stuff. Stopped reading after cubane
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whats up with these faggots posting phone screenshots
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>>16912134
why did you post so many inflated metal dick balloons?
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>>16910586
>>fag
>nope
maybe

>the bubblehead you are thinking about is probably the one who posted the cuboid attack thread.

That’s the one. He claims ayy comms is an UWBSS signal in ULF, basically an exponential chirp. I did some digging and it’s a pretty well documented phenomenon: https://vlfstanford.ku.edu.tr/research_topic_inlin/introduction-whistler-waves-magnetosphere/
I don’t want to completely write him off because he had a lot of interesting things to say, and definitely has a spook background. I just wanna set up an SDR to listen in on ayys
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>>16908347
The only thing /k/ is good for these days is spreading state sponsored disinfo
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>>16912134
>Stopped reading after cubane
Part 4 and 5 are the best part
>>
No country has Anti gravity technology
No country has particle beam weapon
No country has cloaking device
No country has Time machine
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>>16912546
>No country has particle beam weapons
We literally launched a particle accelerator into space to demonstrate this, and even returned it functional to Earth.
https://proceedings.jacow.org/l90/papers/th454.pdf
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>>16912595
particle accelerator, not particle beam weapons
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>>16912599
Did you not read where they actually fired a particle beam from it? And I'm not 100% saying the particle beam part is real, but the hard x-ray/gamma ray laser part is 100% real. It's not tremendously far fetched once you have a sufficiently high powered laser in the right spectrum.
https://atap.lbl.gov/news/a-novel-technique-for-producing-positron-beams-using-laser-plasma-accelerators/
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Jooeeeee Biden
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>>16909806
thats based
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>>16909425
The phononic surfaces thing is interesting because that is definitely real. Boeing tested a sonic emitter for passenger aircraft to aid fuel economy, and it's too different from the effects you get with induced plasma sheathes (speed and aerodynamics).
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>Up for 8 days
>75 replies between maybe 4 people
This is why we all stick to /k/ for these sorts of threads. Plus, everyone already has all these fucking screenshots, so half the thread isn't posting them again.
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>>16907605
All that shit's fake. If you want the real deal, listen to things that are posted one time on /pol/ and get glowniggers livid. There is an underground base beneath the Pyrenees that connects the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean Sea. The rich kiddy diddlers didn't think anyone knew about it.

The biggest non-secret that the rich and their glownigger pets are desperate to keep is that the breakaway "civilization" (they're barbarians, they're not civilized) is actually miles underground. All those "UFOs" you hear about exiting and entering water? That's because they put their entrances to these bases deep underwater. Easier to hide them that way. EVERY conspiracy theory stupid idea you have ever heard exists to protect these DUMBS (which are not exclusively military). They are great cities where the rich have "retired" to while they allow the surface world to decay into devil-worship and swarthoid dysfunction.
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>>16913468
They are spotted in the ocean because of I wanted to do a crew exchange in a craft that's not supposed to exist, instead of landing it at an air base, I might use submarines to facilitate crew exchanges. There are a few old stories floating around about weird crew members being onboard attack subs that no one was allowed to talk to, and then they mysteriously vanish from the boat one day in the middle of the ocean.



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