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Posted

Are there nanites in our blood currently?

It may surprise you to know that the answers can't be found on the google search engine.

Wikipedia says:

The history of the mobile device has been marked by increasing technological convergence. Early mobile devices—such as pocket calculators, portable media players, satellite navigation devices, and digital cameras—excelled at their intended use but were not multifaceted. Personal digital assistants (PDAs) proliferated in the 1990s as a way to quickly write down notes, schedule business appointments, and set personal reminders, as a handheld supplement to bulkier laptops.

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

Mobile device and desktop were at the bottom of an entire page on wikipedia dedicated to the history of computers similar but equally misinformed to a youtube playlist on the same subject I am about to post and non-corroborative on to how our modern technology actually works. 

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

So what's key here for the 1990-2000s modern development was the word "convergence" but it wasn't convergence was it? This was the culmination of a 500 year reverse-engineering attempt that began with the cylinder shot down in Germany 500 years ago. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1561_celestial_phenomenon_over_Nuremberg

In fact you can look at any online explanation of this modern technology we use, and you can't find a direct descriptive or anything explaining why the components used to do this type of automation is so flat. Having designed it myself, I can tell you exactly why it comes out flat. 

  • CharonY locked and unlocked this topic
Posted

The Eniac and the first desktop were not using this flat technology. The two aforementioned computers came from the Turing machine really. This is where the electricity is either flowing through a circuit or it is not. The flat technology in mobile devices uses a different process, it has nothing to do with the Turing machine and therefore could not have been the result of a convergence, as is my main point. If the tech was recovered in 1561 it would explain why Newton was working with photonics, and invented the light spectrum - this reverse engineering project would have culminated around 1960 where we wrapped electroluminescent wire around a cylindrical ruby, with two mirrors at each end of the ruby and a small hole in one of those mirrors. Applying the electric current to the wire, as with the light bulb, generated the beam. Without that we wouldn't have been able to understand the rest of the modern mobile device technology, you can see it clearly on the timescale when we had to start erecting satellite dishes. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Tegmark said:

The Eniac and the first desktop were not using this flat technology. The two aforementioned computers came from the Turing machine really. This is where the electricity is either flowing through a circuit or it is not. The flat technology in mobile devices uses a different process, it has nothing to do with the Turing machine and therefore could not have been the result of a convergence, as is my main point. If the tech was recovered in 1561 it would explain why Newton was working with photonics, and invented the light spectrum - this reverse engineering project would have culminated around 1960 where we wrapped electroluminescent wire around a cylindrical ruby, with two mirrors at each end of the ruby and a small hole in one of those mirrors. Applying the electric current to the wire, as with the light bulb, generated the beam. Without that we wouldn't have been able to understand the rest of the modern mobile device technology, you can see it clearly on the timescale when we had to start erecting satellite dishes. 

Newton was not "working with photonics". What you are writing is techy-sounding word salad. I think you may need medical treatment. 

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