View Full Version : The Cooking of Humanity -- Barrie Trower
ktlight
20th October 2013, 09:33
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JojdEH0nzos
"Published on Oct 19, 2013
Cooking of Humanity - Invisible Global Warfare
Deborah Tavares interviews Scientist Barrie Trower, Portland, Oregon"
This is about microwave technology, including smart meters and wi-fi, its effects on humanity and what can be done about it.
indigopete
20th October 2013, 13:22
I am watching this right now - amazing interview.
This guy seems a formidable authority on microwave radiation. I think he gives a dispassionate and concise account of their dangers.
spiritguide
20th October 2013, 23:46
As synchronocity has it this popped up on yahoo today.
Crown Castle to buy rights to AT&T towers for $4.85 billion
.....(Reuters) - Wireless infrastructure provider Crown Castle International Corp said on Sunday that it had agreed to buy rights to about 9,700 AT&T Inc wireless communication towers for $4.85 billion in cash.
Under the agreement, Crown Castle will purchase some 600 towers and have the exclusive right to lease and operate around 9,100 AT&T towers for a weighted average term of about 28 years.
The company will have the option to purchase the towers at the end of the lease terms for option payments of around $4.2 billion.
Crown Castle expects to fund the transaction with cash on hand, equity and debt financing, including borrowings under its revolving credit facility.
"Consistent with our focus on the top 100 US markets, nearly half of the AT&T towers are located in the top 50 markets, where we expect the majority of network densification and upgrade activity to occur.
The deal is expected to close by the end of the year.
AT&T, the No. 2 wireless carrier in the United States, had said last month that it was exploring the sale of its towers but that its ability to reach a deal would depend on the terms it is able to reach with the buyer for its ongoing use of the towers.
When wireless service providers sell broadcast towers they typically lease back space from tower operators so they can continue to offer their services without interruption
"This deal will let us monetize our towers while giving us the ability to add capacity as we need it," said Bill Hogg, Senior Vice President — Network Planning and Engineering, AT&T Services Inc.
"And we'll get additional financial flexibility to continue to invest in our business, maintain a strong balance sheet and return value to our shareholders," he added.
Under the deal AT&T will keep its communications facilities on the towers for a minimum of 10 years with monthly rent of $1,900 per site and fixed annual rent escalators of 2 percent.
AT&T will also have access to additional space on the towers for its future use, the company said.
Crown Castle will have the right to sublease other available capacity on the towers and expects to accommodate at least one additional tenant per tower.
In addition, it said nearly half of the towers were located in the top 50 markets, where it aims to benefit from increasingly dense networks and future network upgrades.
(Reporting by Nicola Leske; Editing by Bernard Orr)
So who is Crown Castle?
A short video of their operation. They are installing microwave systems everywhere and will blanket most areas just as CCTV. Who uses their services under the guise of public safety?
Here is what they can do!
http://www.crowncastle.com/ccisites/CCIsitesTour.aspx
They already have the tools to know who, what, where and why. It is here big time folks.
http://www.crowncastle.com/publicSafetyVideo.html
Peace!
silverfish
24th October 2013, 15:12
thought this might be of interest lifi :cool: I have never heard of it before but I stumbled across it after watching the opening vid
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/click_online/9566689.stm
The internet could soon be transmitted to us at the speed of light. Visible light communication is a process that uses rapid pulses of light to transmit information wirelessly.
A commercial version of li-fi has been developed and if proved successful could soon be ready to compete with conventional wireless internet.
Harald Haas, professor of mobile communications at University of Edinburgh, explains how his team are using off-the-shelf LED lights to transmit data.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-news-from-elsewhere-24567671
Chinese scientists claim to have connected four PCs to the internet via a one-watt LED bulb, it's reported.
Researchers at Shanghai's Fudan University say they followed a process of using light as a carrier instead of the traditional radio frequencies used in WiFi, according to state news agency Xinhua. It quotes IT professor Chi Nan as saying a lightbulb with embedded microchips can produce data rates as fast as 150Mbps (megabits per second), which is speedier than the average broadband connection in China. Communications watchdog Ofcom says the average UK broadband speed is 14.7Mbps.
Dubbed "LiFi", the technology was first developed by the University of Edinburgh's Prof Harald Haas. The latest advance will reportedly be on show at next month's China International Industry Fair in Shanghai. But it seems it'll be a while before its a commercial success, with one crucial flaw to overcome. "Turn off the light and there is no signal. If the light is blocked, then the signal will be cut off," Chi's quoted as saying
I am hoping this is a safer route we can access before taken out the game ??
Powered by vBulletin™ Version 4.1.1 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.