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Message Subject Duat do what
Poster Handle Anonymous Coward
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They are playing catch up lol

The trick, or so I hear, is to control your thoughts thus mind, either you're black glass or a mirror, it's a choice.
 Quoting: Huginn


Is that like active reactive?
 Quoting: Fancypantz


Yass

Think of the song

My mind is a mirrorrrrrrr

Or for some, the mind is like a tv screen, just feeding them info, no thought, beta waves galore lol

I see what i did there ha
 Quoting: Huginn



Glass and flint shockwave feedback



[link to www.livescience.com (secure)]


A team of physicists zapped small cubes of glass in a furnace with an electric voltage about what you'd get from an outlet in your home. It was enough electricity to heat up the glass, which was already quite warm from the ambient heat of the furnace. But it shouldn't have been enough current to boil the glass. Glass doesn't boil until it reaches temperatures thousands of degrees above what the current should have produced. And yet, in their oven, when the current flowed and created an electric field, the physicists saw a thin "wisp of vapor" rising from the glass sample.


For that to happen, the electric current would have had to concentrate in one part of the glass, delivering its energy unevenly. But there's a problem: That's against the law.




Here's the deal: When an electric current passes through a uniform material, it's supposed to heat the whole material evenly. Scientists call this Joule's first law, after the British chemist James Prescott Joule, who discovered it in the early 1840s. It's a material fact with roots in the law of conservation of energy, one of the most fundamental rules that govern our universe. And we see it at work every day; light-bulb filaments wouldn't have their nice, even glow without Joule's law at work.

But this current seemed to break the law. Not only did vapor rise from some parts of the glass, but a hotspot (visible on an infrared camera) danced giddily across its surface. Again and again in their experiments, hotspots appeared.

 Quoting: Fancypantz


Reminds of the skin of grapes video you posted.

It's interesting how things change when we mess with electromagnetism. The Germans did these things, arc welders on huge naval yards talked about similar things when trying to weld thick pieces of steel.

They also reported tools missing and showing up later lol
 
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