Nexus - 0604 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 53 of 89

Page 53 of 89
Nexus - 0604 - New Times Magazine-pages

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NEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCE NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY MAY REVOLUTIONISE COMMUNICATIONS strongest due to the addition of solar forces. Twice a year, the Earth receives massive doses of this energy during cutting of the Sun's magnetic plane, when Aether is the most concentrated. The polarity of Aether from the Sun, impingeing on the planet Earth, changes a few times a year. The Sun functions like eight coils, as we can deduce from the magnetosphere of our strongest due to the addition of solar NEW DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY the whizzing pulses is a "1" or "0", so the forces. Twice a year, the Earth receives MAY REVOLUTIONISE transmissions are as flexible as a computer, massive doses of this energy during cutting COMMUNICATIONS able to handle phone calls, data or video. of the Sun's magnetic plane, when Aether untsville, Alabama, USA — A _ The pulses can carry information or media is the most concentrated. The polarity of Hittetcos company in this city of as fast as the speediest corporate Internet Aether from the Sun, impingeing on the rocket scientists is about to explode connection. The pulse technology has planet Earth, changes a few times a year. _ onto the scene with an invention that might other advantages: The Sun functions like eight coils, as we be as important as the transistor or electric * It could open up capacity for radio can deduce from the magnetosphere of our _ light bulb. communication. Today there's a wireless star. The company is Time Domain. Its _ traffic jam. Users of radio waves have to 11) Presumably Aether particles cannot breakthrough is the work of Larry operate in their specific, government- spin in two axes simultaneously and travel Fullerton, a lone inventor who harks back granted slices of the increasingly crowded at the speed of light at the same time when _ to the era of Thomas Edison. His invention radio spectrum—otherwise they'd interfere they are spinning. What if they spin in two _ is a way to transmit information wirelessly, with one another. But it's unlikely the puls- axes at the same time? Does this produce _ but not using radio waves. Instead, it uses es would interfere with each other or with gravity? Is it possible that these particles pulses of radio energy, fired out at 10 mil- conventional radio waves, so the pulses [neutrinos] can spin in such a way that they _ lion to 40 million pulses a second. would open up vast new radio real estate. spin in two axes but they stop after each The potential impact is astounding. If ¢ Pulse devices could operate on one- spin of 180 degrees? the technology lives up to its promise, it thousandth the power of devices that use 12) Aether particles travel through mat- would be like the leap from vacuum tubes radio waves, so a phone could be the size ter but change if they encounter electric or to the transistor or from oil lamps to light of a wristwatch. magnetic fields, especially during the _ bulbs, touching every home and workplace. ¢ The pulses in Time Domain's technolo- acceleration of electrons. co Wireless communicators could get down to — gy are read by timing the incoming pulses (Note: Energy manifests by cutting the _ the size of a quarter. Radar could become to 10 picoseconds—10 trillionths of a sec- lines of force, which intercepts and redi - cheap and commonplace. A home radar ond. Any pulse device could tell how long rects the flow for practical use. So if system could be used for security, detecting it takes for a signal to get to it, which Aether or other forces come in the form of | movement inside and distinguishing, say, a makes it able to sense objects and measure radiation, waves will be involved which cat from a man. Already a reality is hand- _ their position more accurately than conven- can be conjugated by 90 or 180 degrees, held radar that police can use to see inside _ tional radar. Radar could be a mass-market which redirects the flow of energy. aroom before bursting in. product for homes or cars. — Jerry Decker, ) The pulse technology, sometimes also ¢ The pulses are timed according to a called ultra-wide band (UWB), could complex code shared only by the sender For further information, contact: launch whole new industries and reorder and the intended receiver. The chance of Stan (Stan-is-law) Pawlak several existing ones in coming decades. anyone who doesn't have the code inter- Space Energy "This is a technology that's as radical as__ cepting the signal is near zero. That means Hamilton, Ontario, Canada anything that's come up in recent years," pulse communications should be the most Tel (905) 545 9460, Fax (905) 544 3194 says Paul Turner, a partner at Price secure way, ever, to transmit wirelessly, E-mail Waterhouse Coopers who has studied Time _ which is of major interest to the military. Domain and Fullerton started working on the technol- ; advised the upstart ogy in 1976 and got his first patent for it in nN P' sy g P company. 1987. But the technology was crude, Representatives Fullerton didn't have the money to push it, from major tech- and the world wasn't paying attention. All nology companies __ that is changing in a big way. hawa teannad to For further information, contact: Stan (Stan-is-law) Pawlak Space Energy Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Tel (905) 545 9460, Fax (905) 544 3194 E-mail okie RIE PROZAC RA N&SIA company. Representatives from major tech- nology companies have trooped to Huntsville these past few months. "If they can really pull it off in volume, it can be quite huge," says IBM Vice President Ron Soicher who admitted to getting goose bumps when he realised the potential. The technology is digital. Each of [ Time Domain's offices are prototypes of a wireless phone that can measure the distance to the other party, cameras that can transmit video wirelessly to a computer screen, and radar that works indoors and through walls—which is something that conventional radar can't do. The proto- types are hand-built and clunky. "We haven't built a lot of things yet, so we don't know how much reality will intrude on theory," CEO Ralph Petroff says. "But our guys say they can do it." The list of believers is growing: ¢ The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has contacted Time 52 - NEXUS JUNE — JULY 1999