No-Go Zoneļ¼ They Will Know Everything About You, EVERYTHING!
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 36 minutes
Words per Minute
160.06212
Summary
In this episode of No Go Zone, we continue our look at some of the latest and greatest tech developments coming out of Tel Aviv, Israel. We cover radar, brain decoding, and the coronavirus, and more!
Transcript
00:00:47.360
A little bit behind the weather today, I think.
00:00:49.440
I'm not sure what's going on, but I want to come on with you guys
00:00:51.560
and share some of the latest research that I've been doing
00:00:54.300
into the frightening new technology that we have storming through.
00:00:58.900
Actually, it's going fairly unnoticed, which is interesting,
00:01:01.520
which, of course, is even more reason why we need to bring attention to it.
00:01:04.280
I do have some other stories later on in the show.
00:01:06.040
I want to cover some updates on the coronavirus, new lockdowns, proposals,
00:01:10.480
new strains and things like that, some craziness that's happening.
00:01:13.820
But I wanted to basically pick up kind of where we left off last time
00:01:17.100
and highlight some of the bullshit technologies that are coming in.
00:01:21.180
radar, you know, it sounds old school, so what do you mean radar?
00:01:26.080
But it's actually very tiny chips that they're producing right now.
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The latest iPhone and, I think, Google Pixel, whatever they're at for or whatever,
00:01:35.380
those are installed with these chips now that can send pulse radar and things like that.
00:01:41.760
And it can know not only exactly where you are, which position you're lying in,
00:01:49.640
We're talking about accuracy down to, like, two millimeters.
00:01:52.740
They can hone in depending on how they kind of trim the frequencies.
00:01:57.220
They can hone in on different aspects of your organs.
00:01:59.280
They can measure your heartbeat rate, your respiration.
00:02:05.000
There's other devices where they can measure your emotional state.
00:02:08.520
But we're also going to highlight today how they're now beginning to decode
00:02:12.360
the synapse signals of the brain, which means that they can read your mind remotely.
00:02:18.600
This is some incredible stuff that we're going to look at today.
00:02:21.280
So we're going to run through some of those videos that I have for you guys,
00:02:24.920
and we'll watch those together, new developments.
00:02:30.820
We'll take a look at some of their promotional videos.
00:02:34.700
Actually, it's ultra-wide broadband UWB that they're developing.
00:02:38.520
And you can imagine, of course, Tel Aviv have some of the most high-tech
00:02:43.400
research and development offices of anywhere in the world right now.
00:02:48.780
All the big mega corporations are tied into Israel in some capacity.
00:02:54.420
And so it's very important to see what they're doing.
00:02:56.700
Basically, the summation we can give you here in the beginning
00:03:08.480
Your thoughts, your state of your physiological, your body, your entity,
00:03:15.080
what you're doing, what you're feeling, what you're thinking.
00:03:23.200
But anyway, thank you to everybody if you're joining us live.
00:03:28.520
A couple of ways, of course, as usual, that you can join in today
00:03:41.280
And, of course, we also do super chats over on DLive.
00:03:48.540
And then we kind of dive into some of the topics here.
00:03:51.820
We also have a Beyond Flashback Friday, of course, coming up Friday.
00:03:55.920
We have a RedEis Yule stream that we're doing on Monday, the 21st.
00:04:01.260
We've started to fill up the slots right there.
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That is, what is that, 10 o'clock Central European time
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to about 8 p.m. Eastern, which is, what, about 2 a.m., I think,
00:04:22.620
That will be one of the last streams that we do here in this setup.
00:04:28.140
We're going to take a little break over Christmas, New Year's, into January.
00:04:34.760
A lot of things we need to do and tend to, of course.
00:04:36.880
But definitely don't miss us for that Yule stream.
00:04:40.740
Also going to be actually a little bit of a kind of a promotional stream
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for getting people back and resubbed or resubscribed into our members' website.
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Since, as you might know, depending on if you're just joining us or a newcomer or whatnot,
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we're being continuously deplatformed from payment processors and clearing houses and things like that.
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It's kind of a blacklist high up in the banking establishment
00:05:02.100
that is basically dropping red ice like a hot potato every time they see the word or the name.
00:05:14.980
We've tried, I don't know, countless, 20, 30, 40.
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We're trying to get you guys back in the members' site because we've lost a recurring subscription.
00:05:25.660
So over at redicemembers.com, as of right now, we do have a couple of methods, though, to sign up,
00:05:30.360
which is using Entropy Stream, of course, the Cache app.
00:05:33.800
You can also use Subscribestar, which is kind of the primary method, really, that we're pushing right now.
00:05:39.440
Eventually, we're going to get an API with Subscribestar as well.
00:05:41.820
So it should be instant access when you sign up using Subscribestar, but we're still working on that.
00:05:49.480
I can show you guys on the members' websites as of right now.
00:05:56.200
We have a really cool guy helping us out with that.
00:06:01.020
I do know some HTML, but I definitely need some of the coding help.
00:06:03.800
But anyway, new show categories for you guys over there.
00:06:07.000
So now we can actually go straight into, if you want to watch No Go Zone, Flashback Friday.
00:06:11.540
If you want to check out Lana's videos or, of course, the interviews have been there before.
00:06:15.880
Everything else, basically, is under Red Ice TV live streams and other kind of one-off live streams and stuff like that.
00:06:21.960
And then we also have Discontinued Shows, which is our prior contributors and stuff like that, that you can tune in and check out as well.
00:06:31.740
So you can click in there and then you can hover over the menu again and you get the actual names of those or the latest entries down below.
00:06:38.440
Then you can go back to the Red Ice shows on the front if you want.
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We have a lot of things in the works that we're working on.
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I'm not saying that they will be rolled out tomorrow, but we're doing it in due time.
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So thank you for your patience, staying with us there.
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And thank you again to everyone joining us over at redicemembers.com, either now for the live stream or later on in the archives, because it does help us tremendously.
00:07:04.560
Let me do a couple of these D-lives real quick.
00:07:06.240
Oh, I wanted to show this to you before I forgot.
00:07:15.680
We show this in, was it the, was it the, was it Flashback Friday?
00:07:24.520
And it's interesting to see that, you know, Kabbalah Harris is kind of in the shadows there, too, right?
00:07:37.020
Otherwise, it would be Persons of the Year, right?
00:07:38.920
So they're dealing this like it's one person, because maybe this guy will disappear, and then this one will take over.
00:07:46.080
And then, of course, if you open, even, even Cringer, if you open the cover, Time, what is this, Scientist?
00:08:06.940
I get that still, because some dumbass didn't change his address.
00:08:11.540
Anyway, guys, let me do a couple of these DLive chats real quick here.
00:08:17.960
Thank you, everyone, again, for tuning in, if you're just joining us.
00:08:21.640
Got to dive into some of the new tech stuff here today.
00:08:50.280
Field with the Apple bag, also with the Ninja Guinea.
00:09:01.820
That's, of course, another layer to this discussion that we need to have when it comes to,
00:09:08.020
basically, I kind of connected with the tech stuff, too.
00:09:11.320
Do I have some thoughts about this, of what's going on and why they're doing this?
00:09:14.300
And it's not only us, of course, but basically any kind of dissenting voices is being purged, more or less, in different capacities.
00:09:24.820
I'm not sure if anybody's hit as hard as we are when it comes to payment.
00:09:28.240
Obviously, the daily stormers, the TRSs, maybe, or something like that.
00:09:37.840
I don't know how many they've tried and tested.
00:09:42.280
There are some others like that, of course, too.
00:09:45.100
But eventually, I think there seems to be kind of a mass just purging of everything that lies outside of the norm, right?
00:09:54.540
And it could be, I mean, might be extending it too far, but some of the tech we looked at last week here in the No-Go Zone,
00:10:00.920
and some of the stuff we'll be looking at today, too, when they connect that global brain,
00:10:05.860
when they make you part of the Internet of Things, because that's where this is going, basically.
00:10:09.400
The human entity will be a component inside of the Internet of Things infrastructure that they're building up, basically.
00:10:18.320
And when they do that, they will not be able to have any kind of different opinion, different minds that can...
00:10:34.160
But the goal that they're working on is basically to connect everything.
00:10:38.960
Everything will be connected, like kind of an omniscient entity that they're building.
00:10:43.980
You know, AI will probably oversee that or something.
00:10:46.160
But even the humans inside of that will be connected, right?
00:10:54.440
You can literally, like, they could have technology now to possess another person's body, right?
00:11:00.020
So the system that they're building, they can't have something which will, like, infect it with different opinions and different views.
00:11:08.960
I don't know if that's what it's about, but sometimes it feels like it.
00:11:14.760
You know, and that's for the better, too, because I don't want to be part of it, right?
00:11:20.700
We covered it in the Weekend Warrior show, which you see right here, by the way.
00:11:25.920
Just know we do a great show every Sunday, Weekend Warrior, Inclusive Capitalism.
00:11:32.400
The Vatican, let me pull up their website again, is, and we cover this kind of in detail or in more detail.
00:11:40.760
But Inclusive Capitalism was the name that the Vatican, they're teaming up with the Rothschilds, the Rockefellers, Ford Foundation.
00:11:56.020
This is related to the homogenization of everything that we're seeing right now.
00:12:01.940
And, of course, their tagline is making the world fairer, more inclusive, and sustainable, right?
00:12:08.400
But when this is said and done, right, it will be a system based on exclusivity.
00:12:18.320
It will be those who are not welcomed in the system will not be part of it.
00:12:21.560
And that includes this new tech that we'll look at today here.
00:12:24.640
MasterCard, DuPont, Salesforce, Alliance, the United Nations, Merck, Johnson & Johnson, Visa.
00:12:33.600
Again, there's all these banking families, right?
00:12:35.300
BP, Bank of America, State Street, Lindforst, de Rothschild, right?
00:12:50.760
Anyway, I didn't mean to talk about this, but that's how it goes.
00:12:53.800
So, yes, to go back to Philbert Applebag's point there with that Ninja Guini, and thank you for that again, Philbert, is get into crypto.
00:13:06.960
Sure, if you get like Ripple or something, XRP and some other ones too, like Chainlink maybe, that's like Facebook people and Google people that are involved in that.
00:13:14.680
Still, you could still probably make money on that.
00:13:16.680
After building this beast system, this system of this demon that's going to incarnate into it one day, make some money on it then.
00:13:25.800
Maybe it's not going to be soon, but it's going to be later.
00:13:34.860
Not right now, it's all-time high, but I'm saying when the next crash occurs, when everyone's selling, and oh my god, it's crashing, get out.
00:13:49.840
The Tel Aviv mob will get a shock when they find out what I'm thinking about them.
00:14:00.320
Can't have any infectious different thoughts flying around in the global brain.
00:14:05.900
Dracooning Gip of Death with a Diamond says, a bit of non-invasive digital rape.
00:14:25.140
If you've seen, there's another picture right now of Biden flying around, right?
00:14:29.880
It's the wings of the eagle that's like poking up right behind his ears.
00:14:33.800
So he basically looks like one of those, like an orc or something.
00:14:38.480
It's kind of an interesting image flying around.
00:14:40.020
But usually, many times, I've used that M for that purpose on the Time magazine covers.
00:14:51.400
Another Diamond says, digital currencies are too easy to take away.
00:14:58.280
That's why you can't have any digital currency.
00:15:01.100
You'll have to have a currency that, well, I mean, I'm still personally a believer in Bitcoin.
00:15:08.000
I know some people favor, like, BSV and some people Bitcoin Cash and all that stuff.
00:15:18.220
Don't get into Libra, Facebook, and stuff like that.
00:15:20.340
And don't get into, I mean, the Federal Reserve right now is looking into getting basically a digital-backed cryptocurrency.
00:15:30.680
I'm talking about, like, those that do have a ledger that was set up before all these power players got into it.
00:15:40.700
But I know some people you'll never be able to convince.
00:15:43.440
I think there's a huge use case for it, though, in the future because of the very reasons of what we're seeing right now.
00:15:51.180
And I think you can make money on it, too, by the way.
00:15:53.480
Don't put in your savings or anything like that.
00:15:55.660
Obviously, there's not financial, like, advice of what you should do.
00:15:59.160
But what you have to spare when there's a crash, head on in with a little bit and see where it goes, see where it takes you.
00:16:08.600
Thank you, follow up with the ninja guinea from Mr. Right.
00:16:17.300
We are coming up on the winter solstice here on the 21st.
00:16:20.720
I hope you're in the Christmas spirit, by the way.
00:16:23.120
I am certainly not, although we did get some snow around here today, and it did help.
00:16:37.220
Lord Aragon gives five one-month subs to, that's Marvin, Delencio, Ass, Ass to Ass.
00:16:50.080
The diamond says, how soon is the P.O. box changing?
00:16:53.700
There's still time, depending on where you're sending from, maybe later in January or something
00:17:06.380
So there's still some time, depending on how far away you're sending from.
00:17:21.760
Okay, so let's dive into this here, gents, ladies and gents.
00:17:26.100
First thing we're going to begin with is to look at something called the Human Machine
00:17:32.620
Interface, which is using this radar technology that we talked about.
00:17:39.920
Now, they're working together with Google, of course, to develop these kinds of projects.
00:17:44.940
We have a bunch of videos from Infineon to look at first out of the gates.
00:17:52.580
This is stuff that exists already on if your router, for example, have 5G on it already.
00:17:59.360
Many of the routers have these kinds of chips in them, and they can use this technology that
00:18:04.200
We're also going to look at Facebook, how they're developing basically how to read your mind,
00:18:10.780
It's one of the DARPA's former heads, Regina Dugan.
00:18:16.840
So some of these are like the fluffy commercial.
00:18:19.680
This is like the promotional video of how they want to sell this to you kind of stuff.
00:18:23.900
But it's good to see kind of how they're pitching this and how they're selling it, right?
00:18:31.840
Radar sensing revolutionizes the way we interact with the world.
00:18:38.840
Your presence and movements become natural interfaces.
00:18:55.360
It can also track human presence and moving objects.
00:19:02.880
By sensing sub-millimeter motions, radar can even detect vital signs.
00:19:12.860
Our sensitive radar sensors enable things to see.
00:19:23.400
Whether you like it or not, this will be part of your life.
00:19:34.520
Some of the ads later we'll look at mentions the taglines they have is like second nature and shit like that.
00:19:40.460
They're basically, whether you believe like in a creator or creators or gods or one god or that somehow there's kind of an animism or that there's some kind of spirit in nature that knows things, it sees things, it guides things.
00:19:59.800
It's maybe not intelligent or conscious even in the way that we think of it.
00:20:08.440
These people are basically trying to not hijack that, but they're trying to subvert that.
00:20:13.820
They're trying to put themselves in between that and if nothing else become that, right?
00:20:25.920
Now this connects to the medical industry, some of the crazy shit that they have regarding extending your life span, your longevity,
00:20:32.280
meddling with all kinds of stuff in your body and stuff like that, fixing everything with like nanobots and they're creating synthetic life and living robots and all that kind of stuff.
00:20:42.400
And we'll look at some of that in a later show.
00:20:45.180
This, of course, will be one of the latest last no-go zooms we do before the break that we have over Christmas and New Year's here.
00:20:52.480
But I'll pick up this right as we begin again on the other side kind of thing.
00:20:57.120
But anyway, so check out this, it's a project solely Google.
00:21:02.120
My name is Ivan Pubarev and I work for Advanced Technology and Projects Group at Google.
00:21:10.200
It's extremely precise, it's extremely fast, and it's very natural for us to use it, right?
00:21:15.080
Capturing the possibilities of human hand was one of my passions.
00:21:19.380
How can we take this incredible capability, finesse of human actions, finesse of using our hand, but apply it to the virtual world?
00:21:31.100
We use radio frequency spectrum, which is radars, to track human hand.
00:21:37.420
The radars have been used for many different things, to track cars, big objects, satellites and planes.
00:21:42.740
We're using them to track micromotions, twitches of human hands, and then use it to interact with wearables and internet of things and other computer devices.
00:21:55.660
Our team is focused on taking radar hardware and turning it into a gesture sensor.
00:22:02.580
Radar is a technology which transmits a radio wave towards a target.
00:22:06.600
And then the receiver of the radar intercepts the reflected energy from that target.
00:22:12.880
The reason why we're able to interpret so much from this one radar signal is because of the full gesture recognition pipeline that we've built.
00:22:21.000
The various stages of this pipeline are designed to extract specific gesture information from this one radar signal that we receive at a high frame rate.
00:22:29.760
From these strange foreign range Doppler signals, we're actually interpreting human intent.
00:22:39.880
Radar has some unique properties when compared to cameras, for example.
00:22:45.160
It has very high positional accuracy, which means that you can sense the tiniest motions.
00:22:50.360
We arrived at this idea of virtual tools because we recognize that there are certain archetypes of controls, like a volume knob or a physical slider, a volume slider.
00:23:03.980
Imagine a button between your thumb and your index finger.
00:23:07.860
And the button's not there, but pressing this is a very clear action.
00:23:12.620
And there's a natural physical haptic feedback that occurs as you perform that action.
00:23:17.820
It can both embody that virtual tool, and it can also be, you know, acting on that virtual tool at the same time.
00:23:23.740
So if we can recognize that action, we have an interesting direction for interacting with technology.
00:23:31.020
So when we started this project, you know, me and my team, we looked at the project idea, and we thought, are we going to make it or not?
00:23:44.180
And what I think I'm most proud of about our project is we have pushed the processing power of the electronics itself further out to do the sensing part for us.
00:23:55.300
The radar has a property which no other technology has.
00:24:06.320
And what is most exciting about it is that you can shrink the entire radar and put it in a tiny chip.
00:24:24.720
Now we're at a point where we have the hardware where we can sense these interactions and we can put them to work.
00:24:31.040
We can explore how well they work and how well they might work in products.
00:24:40.520
It blows your mind usually when you see things people do.
00:24:45.260
I'm really looking forward to releasing this development community and I really want them to be excited and motivated to do something cool with it.
00:25:02.100
I think she was part of this, the Advanced Technology Something Something Project.
00:25:12.380
But then they end up working together and shit like that too.
00:25:14.240
But yeah, so they can read this by just measuring your, you know, your, you know, the stuff that you've seen where they put on like motion capture, like, you know, for, for movies or something, you know, you still have an actor that's jumping around and shit like that.
00:25:26.940
Or you put on a VR headset helmet and like all this.
00:25:31.220
All that shit is completely outdated, completely useless.
00:25:33.640
Because they just, they use technologies to scan you from a distance, right?
00:25:38.400
They have these chips and they can see down to two, you know, two millimeter.
00:25:42.020
This will get more granular as they continue to develop this stuff.
00:25:46.340
But, so that's how you can like, you know, move your fingers like this.
00:25:49.080
And the chip, you know, sends up enough, whether this was, you know, radar, whatever the frequency range that they use.
00:25:57.380
And it bounces back at the chip and it measures like everything.
00:26:02.200
It's not physically like, or visually seeing it, but it's reading everything, right?
00:26:07.800
So I want to look at that Infineon technologies for a little bit too.
00:26:14.820
They may have a couple of videos on their website.
00:26:22.900
And it enables things to see and revolutionize the human machine interface.
00:26:27.960
It says here, since first promoting our breakthrough Zensiv or Xensiv, how do we pronounce that?
00:26:33.640
60 gigahertz radar chip back in 2016 at Google I.O.
00:26:37.140
We have been jointly working with Google to make our bold vision a reality.
00:26:41.460
In other words, to revolutionize the human machine interface of tomorrow.
00:26:45.180
Google's Soli project uses radar to enable new types of intuitive interactions.
00:26:54.920
So we'll look at some of these videos here in a moment, but I mentioned the VR stuff,
00:26:59.800
the virtual reality and basically where they want us in the future with things like coronavirus
00:27:07.320
and other things, dangers out there in the real world.
00:27:11.360
They're basically trying to keep us locked inside in a pod, basically.
00:27:16.920
But you will be, you'll be seeing and visiting amazing places just virtually, right?
00:27:25.080
And this is how you'll interact with that world.
00:27:27.380
You will actually be, whether you're standing up or sitting down, whatever.
00:27:29.840
But when you move, you move in the world, right?
00:27:31.500
You're still, but you don't have to have clunky shit on you or anything like that.
00:27:34.800
And they've managed now to intercept basically your, your synaptic signals, right?
00:27:39.600
So they can actually project or beam virtually.
00:27:50.240
I've wanted to, yeah, he's talking about how their Google Pixel 4,
00:27:55.080
the smartphone is already equipped with this chip.
00:27:57.640
So whether you want this to be the case or not,
00:28:01.080
it's not going to be that they have to install all these new things.
00:28:05.040
You know, you can, you can talk about 5G and shit like that,
00:28:07.740
but there's so many other ranges of the spectrum that they'll, you know, install new devices on.
00:28:13.740
But if everybody has a smartphone with this chip in it, that's basically all you need right there.
00:28:21.200
That's all, the Internet of Things will have these kinds of chips in everything.
00:28:26.180
It'll get smaller and smaller, more detailed and all that stuff, right?
00:29:22.260
All right, so that's just a little, a little, a little teaser there for you, right?
00:29:32.420
What they're doing, working on, let me exit out of that.
00:29:35.260
And they're, I'm going to play a couple more videos on this website here.
00:29:38.040
How Zensys radar sensors enable mobile devices to, to see, they have, right?
00:29:43.320
So they, and I still hear this stuff with like, well, privacy, right?
00:29:47.660
You don't have to have any privacy concerns because we don't use cameras.
00:29:55.080
So basically it's fine, but we can scan you with a radar down to two millimeter size and
00:30:00.160
we can put different, we can modulate and, or model different layers on you.
00:30:07.220
You can like tweak, tweak the different frequencies to, to like hone in whether it's different tissue
00:30:12.340
organs or whether it's different, you know, part of your body or your musculature, your
00:30:19.000
Uh, anyway, let's, uh, let's listen to this here.
00:30:28.140
So for the very first time we can now see a radar chip in smartphone, namely Google Pixel
00:30:40.240
The whole journey with Google was an amazing experience.
00:30:41.920
So starting with jointly creating the greater vision of using radar technology, being shrinked
00:30:47.760
on the size of a fingernail or even smaller, uh, as a kind of a new way of interacting in
00:30:53.700
between human beings and any kind of electronics going through the four to five years joint development
00:30:59.740
and now deploying this device first time ever in the Google Pixel 4, I think that has been
00:31:07.380
I think for both the parties regarding, uh, the power of joint innovation.
00:31:11.040
It makes it so special that the chip, uh, has reached a size, which is five times six
00:31:20.720
Thus, it can be used and built into each and every consumer electronics.
00:31:29.720
And the other topic is it can create a 360 degree look in a hemisphere around the device
00:31:36.520
and measure accurate miniaturistic gestures at the distance of one and a half meters.
00:31:43.240
And that's being smaller, smaller, down to two millimeters now.
00:31:46.680
Part of your life, part of tomorrow, Infineon, right?
00:31:55.320
Philbert Applebag with the Diamond says, I'm learning how to hack and attack smart meters.
00:32:03.640
We've talked about that in the past and that was deployed and now it's everywhere, right?
00:32:07.320
Uh, white is mighty with the Diamond just because we can doesn't mean we should.
00:32:11.400
Yes, but every show me one time and I'm not arguing with you, but I'm saying show me one time
00:32:17.720
throughout human history anywhere where if we could do something or thought we could do it,
00:32:27.320
I think every time, every time there's a prospect of us being able to develop something
00:32:32.680
or moving a certain direction, we, uh, we can and we do, right?
00:32:37.480
Uh, anyway, Mr. Noseberg or Mr. Ninjaberg, uh, resell for one month.
00:32:47.400
Vcog with a Diamond says, please stop this ride.
00:32:53.560
Uh, Draconian Gip of Death, but yeah, I know, I know what you mean.
00:32:56.600
I was just, just want to bail out from this sometimes.
00:33:03.560
We can finally join with the gay boy band, NSYNC.
00:33:10.200
Philbert Applebag with another Diamond says, but can the radar detect a yarmulke?
00:33:17.880
I would, I would assume they can hone in on different, uh, uh, different, uh, what do you
00:33:24.040
Uh, fab, like a fabric has a specific return frequency and stuff like that, right?
00:33:28.840
You can detect shape of, of most obscure things.
00:33:31.720
I would assume cotton, or maybe they're made of something synthetic.
00:33:35.400
Uh, Philbert Applebag with another Diamond says, uh, you can use Linux on a phobe with
00:33:45.080
I would assume it's Android because the iPhone is just, I mean, they're, they're unbearable.
00:33:48.840
I would assume it's, uh, Android, but, but let me know.
00:33:52.200
You can just put it in the regular chat, uh, Philbert.
00:33:54.200
Uh, let me know what phone, uh, because I'd be interested in, uh, checking that out.
00:34:05.240
Radar enables many new, uh, use cases in your smart home, right?
00:34:12.600
Uh, imagine a smart home where your device can sense you and act accordingly.
00:34:18.200
Think about speakers that always know what room you're in, lights that can automatically
00:34:22.840
turn on when you enter a room and turn off again when you leave devices that activate you
00:34:28.920
Infineon's highly accurate radar-based presence detection solution enables all of this and more.
00:34:34.920
Our intuitive sensing products allow smart devices to detect whether someone is within the field of
00:34:40.200
view and to intuitively interact with that, uh, person.
00:34:45.000
Uh, so here's more about the radar and how that works.
00:34:47.800
Imagine a smart home assistant that is just waiting for you to open the door.
00:35:05.880
It instantly knows that it's you and immediately adjusts lighting and heating to your comfort settings.
00:35:12.600
Your smart assistant follows your movements, opening doors as if by magic, adjusting the lighting as you go.
00:35:25.640
Presence detection solutions based on sensitive radar sensors from Infineon.
00:35:34.520
No need to wave your arms, authenticate yourself, or use a specific key.
00:35:45.880
It's creating a strong, a strong human in the new, the new era that we're entering into here.
00:35:53.160
You don't even have to wave your, it knows before you do that you want a coffee.
00:36:10.680
Automatically turning off again as you walk away.
00:36:20.680
Sensitive sensor solutions fit seamlessly into your lifestyle.
00:36:27.160
Constantly scanning your environment so they can see, hear, and sense what you do.
00:36:36.600
They convert all this data from the real to the digital world.
00:36:46.120
Almost with the skill and intuitive sensing capability of a human.
00:36:50.680
Oh, since you see that, they got, he caught the olive oil.
00:36:59.320
That makes life easier, safer, and more convenient with technology that has become second nature.
00:37:06.200
Second with, listen to that tagline right there.
00:37:08.840
Makes life easier, safer, and more convenient with technology that has become second nature.
00:37:20.360
Intuitive sensing solutions that link the real and the digital world.
00:37:24.200
The, this is the, the new man right here that's being, uh, created, right?
00:37:30.200
Um, ah God, there's just, there's just so many fucking thoughts I have about this.
00:37:36.440
Uh, the, the, you know, the, the more, the more you rely on this technology, the,
00:37:44.680
the, and this is obvious, uh, I'm not saying anything here, but like groundbreaking here,
00:37:49.240
but like the, the, it's just the, the weaker and the, it's like anything, right?
00:37:55.000
The more you stop using something, it atrophies, right?
00:37:58.920
And that, that will then include not only your physical body, right?
00:38:02.200
And I know that they think that they will have these, well, we'll just have these, we'll inject
00:38:08.040
And they will like, uh, rebuild the muscular fiber.
00:38:11.160
You, you'll, uh, they'll, uh, extract and break down, uh, fat cells.
00:38:15.720
And you, you, you look like a Greek God, but you're like, and you never move your body.
00:38:20.520
I know that they're going to try to go for this, right?
00:38:25.480
You will just re, uh, remake, reprint your organs and shit like that, right?
00:38:31.480
Uh, and they'll do it with your own stem cells, by the way, too.
00:38:34.120
So your body won't push it out, squeeze it out, right?
00:38:41.720
And apparently, I don't know if this is true, but apparently the ultra wide broadband
00:38:45.240
and some of these other, maybe including radar,
00:38:46.920
we have to get into the nitty-gritty of the radio frequencies or the frequencies,
00:38:49.800
rather that they do use to see what effect it has on the human body.
00:38:54.200
Because we know that Wi-Fi, for example, is not good, right?
00:39:01.000
Um, that is the same that your microwave operates on.
00:39:04.840
So basically depending on your proximity, that's, that's part of it too.
00:39:07.960
How close are you to the actual, uh, emitter of the, of the frequencies and stuff like that.
00:39:12.520
But that's why even in the fine print of like an iPhone and stuff like that,
00:39:16.360
it says you're supposed to hold the phone like an inch.
00:39:18.440
I think it's an inch and a half or something away from your ear,
00:39:21.640
And if you ride up against it, you basically cook, you know,
00:39:25.560
So it's, it's bad frequencies, but apparently as far as what we've heard so far
00:39:34.600
they can choose the megahertz range, which is not, um, messes with you.
00:39:40.360
I, I, I still think that there's always consequences.
00:39:44.840
And I could be wrong on this, but I, I don't know.
00:39:46.520
I think that there's a, there's going to be a massive downside to just
00:39:50.520
continuously just bathing in different frequencies all over and it's measuring you
00:40:00.120
imagine being a light form that picks up those kinds of frequencies in the same way
00:40:03.960
that you can't hear a dog whistle, but the dog goes nuts when it hears it.
00:40:06.920
What if there's other types of life or microbes and shit that hear all that stuff?
00:40:16.360
do we just bathing in like just insane noise and colors or something?
00:40:23.000
Uh, and now they're looking at expanding, by the way,
00:40:24.760
the frequency range of our visual capability and audio, you know,
00:40:28.200
audio capability as well, uh, which is just crazy.
00:40:32.360
Intuitive sensing, uh, extensive sensors give things the human senses.
00:40:37.880
That's right. So it's about supplanting, improving, uh, you tapping into using what
00:40:43.640
you have and then turning it into a product and selling it back to you.
00:40:48.840
And again, there's no talk of privacy issues weaved into this.
00:40:53.320
I'm sure it'll be great one day when you can just hack into someone's frequencies.
00:40:57.160
I could see absolutely everything about you, where you are, where you're located,
00:41:01.400
what you're doing, what you're thinking, what you're feeling.
00:41:03.640
I'm sure that's, that's, there's no problems with that whatsoever.
00:41:07.560
So here's that other one about the human senses.
00:41:17.880
We live in a world full of sensory impressions and experiences, sounds, and movements.
00:41:26.360
A world where technology increasingly sees, hears, and senses the same things we do.
00:41:36.120
Technology is becoming more intuitive, intelligent, and invisible as the lines
00:41:39.800
between the real and digital world begin to blur.
00:41:52.280
Moving into the 3D space where we control the things around us with nothing more than a gesture.
00:41:57.800
Suddenly, devices seem to intuitively know what we want them to do.
00:42:05.720
We no longer need to push buttons or use keywords to activate.
00:42:13.240
And all of this technology integrates seamlessly into our modern lifestyles,
00:42:18.760
following our movements, scanning our environment, capturing real world happenings,
00:42:35.080
Intuitive sensing solutions that link the real and the digital world.
00:42:39.320
I mean, how can you, how can you, with that catchy music, how can you, this is going to be so great.
00:42:49.000
Trucker Chris with a diamonds of smart homes are prisons waiting to be activated.
00:42:54.040
Because eventually, they'll have that in-between phase when you're like, oh my god, this is,
00:43:00.680
I mean, what's happened so far with technology for mankind, right?
00:43:03.400
It keeps becoming more and more convoluted and complicated and things that were meant to save you time.
00:43:10.920
As you've, you know, as I say in Fight Club, right?
00:43:16.520
But for a while, I think it could be this, like, maybe there will be some revolutionary,
00:43:22.600
you know, step that happens overnight as this kind of shit is rolled out.
00:43:25.880
And it feels, not to me, don't get me wrong, I don't want this, but to people in general,
00:43:30.280
uh, you know, to the, to the boomer mindset and all that stuff of a convenience.
00:43:36.840
It's, uh, everything is so much, it's everything about my house is helping me now.
00:43:40.840
And it's working for, I don't have to unstack the dishes.
00:43:44.520
I don't have to, you know, I don't have to manually masturbate anymore.
00:43:47.880
We just used to patch in and, you know, all this bullshit, right?
00:43:50.920
Uh, but at the end of that, they will have you tied to a pod somewhere, basically.
00:43:57.480
Uh, I mean, mate, I mean, it's kind of cringe to say it, but like, look at, look at, like,
00:44:03.560
look at Terminator all the way up to like the matrix, right?
00:44:06.040
And, and, and we, excuse me, it was a fly or something.
00:44:10.440
Uh, and even if that scenario is not an organic one, I would assume that it would be those who
00:44:17.080
do have the backend keys and, you know, entryways into an artificial intelligence
00:44:25.720
that would program it to, whoops, it just, it just ran amok on itself.
00:44:31.800
He murdered millions of humans by building robots that, that just slaughtered everybody,
00:44:36.280
except these people over here, which had this little device on them.
00:44:41.400
The people have this device or emit this frequency.
00:44:45.720
Imagine when they hack into your brain to that capability where they can
00:44:52.040
You know, people have been talking about, what was that called?
00:44:53.720
It was the, uh, and I don't, I forget why, but the Mandela effect.
00:45:00.520
But did you guys hear, anybody hear about that, Chad?
00:45:05.480
People were arguing kind of like that all of a sudden there were certain things that either
00:45:09.720
was in the memory pool or it was not in the memory pool all of a sudden.
00:45:16.440
And here all of a sudden here it is, or because of an impactful event that like that was taken
00:45:22.680
out or inserted, it changed the course of, of, of history, right?
00:45:27.400
Some of the technology they're working on now is basically able to, to do that, uh, where they
00:45:33.560
And again, that's why you can't have people who are, who know different.
00:45:37.080
And maybe I'm not saying that I'm not saying there will be people that will be immune to this,
00:45:41.640
but I'm sure there will be individuals that somehow are on the outside of this.
00:45:47.800
Maybe people are already kind of, you know, aware of certain things.
00:45:50.440
And again, to use that matrix matrix analogy, where the term comes from are red pill.
00:46:01.080
Maybe they would at least have a slight feeling that something is wrong.
00:46:07.160
But if you do any of these kinds of mass mind control operations or whatever you want to call it
00:46:12.680
by extracting memory, I know that that sounds like fanciful and sci-fi and just impossible.
00:46:20.360
And they've been able to achieve it in military test subjects.
00:46:23.800
And I'm sure the things that they do have in the black ops, black ops development, you know,
00:46:28.920
facilities and the deep underground bunkers somewhere working on super soldiers and all that shit.
00:46:34.600
Remember the clip that we even showed you in the last week in warrior that we did right at the end,
00:46:39.080
it was a leaked CCP, you know, members list that have been leaked.
00:46:43.720
But even the U.S. State Department were not recognizing that the Chinese are doing biological enhancement on their own military personnel.
00:46:53.640
The super soldier, all that stuff, like, that's what they're doing now.
00:46:57.560
And part of that is to extract and insert memory, right?
00:47:01.400
Again, the matrix analogy, you know, what you saw with that, like, they're jacking in, right?
00:47:08.600
They jam up into your, like, cerebral cortex or whatever.
00:47:28.360
Ultra-wide broadband, you have to have fairly close, but it's a remarkable impact that it can have on you.
00:47:36.440
While other technology, pulse radar, I believe it, you can have, I mean, you can literally have,
00:47:40.280
and again, it sounds like crazy, you know, sci-fi kookery here, but you can literally have, like,
00:47:56.120
20 years from now, all appliances will be smart.
00:47:59.160
I mean, they're inserting, it's the Internet of Things.
00:48:12.440
Again, they don't even need sensor pads in the floor.
00:48:15.320
You just have a radar sensor mounted up in the ceiling on another device or on your Wi-Fi router.
00:48:22.280
It notices your biometrical signature, how you walk, how you breathe, how you talk, you know,
00:48:40.120
Looking forward to having you on our Yule stream on the 21st.
00:48:44.040
Make sure you check out White Rabbit Radio here on DLive.
00:48:58.760
Smart home will know when to feed you to the insects.
00:49:06.600
This is bridging a realm with the demonic realm via tech.
00:49:13.400
As I'm looking into some of this, I'm kind of falling back into that.
00:49:29.960
They're just completely demonic, for the lack of a better term.
00:49:36.040
Conrad Kurse with a diamond package with gifts should have hit the PO box.
00:49:41.160
We do have a couple of very nice and kind of Christmas cards that we're going to show
00:49:49.880
But thank you to everyone sending stuff to the PO box.
00:50:01.480
The thing with the Faraday cage is that the mesh is...
00:50:07.000
What is it that basically you can do it with like...
00:50:14.440
Basically, what you see on your microwave, right?
00:50:16.520
Your microwave oven right in the front where they have the glass.
00:50:23.480
To block out the microwaves, you need very small holes, right?
00:50:30.280
But my point was, I'm sure with like pulsed radar or something, you can just go straight through that.
00:50:38.600
They're experimenting with how to make sure you can't just set up a Faraday cage and escape.
00:50:43.000
Or try to dissuade you from doing what you need to do to get away from the beam weapons here.
00:50:56.760
We need to reject this forced augmented bondage.
00:51:00.280
Yeah, but it really is augmented reality is where this is going.
00:51:03.720
And we'll look at a couple of clips in a moment here.
00:51:17.640
They're just standing like out in the open in the yard or room or something.
00:51:20.440
And just like looking up at something or like interacting with something that isn't there.
00:51:27.480
A doctor is checking the heartbeat of someone half across the world kind of thing.
00:51:35.400
You know, you'll see whether it's items in the digital world that you interact with and change.
00:51:41.560
Whether you're playing a game or having a virtual meeting with somebody or whatever.
00:51:47.320
The augmented aspect to it is that you're not even going to have to wear anything or put something on to interact with that environment.
00:51:59.240
I love Philip K. Dick, but don't want to live it.
00:52:12.360
Yeah, I mean, and that's why I think too it will not last.
00:52:19.080
I think this is a doomed path to go down because when you develop dependency on it,
00:52:27.160
when you let it do everything for you, I mean, it's bad enough now.
00:52:33.400
If the grid goes down, if they do this cyber polygon operation that the World Economic Forum are talking about,
00:52:37.960
and Klaus Schwab, your favorite James Bond villain.
00:52:42.760
If they pull that shit off and knock down the grid, I mean, you would have mass die-offs already.
00:52:49.480
Imagine when you're not even used to opening doors or pushing a button.
00:52:53.320
How the weakness of what you will be completely just dependent on all this machinery.
00:53:11.880
There's two different paths taking off right now.
00:53:16.360
It doesn't mean you have to be a complete Luddite or whatever,
00:53:18.600
but there are certain lines in the sand, so to speak, that you should not cross.
00:53:23.560
And they're going to try to cross it for you, obviously.
00:53:25.640
That's what we're seeing in this technology that they're rolling out.
00:53:29.800
If you have a smartphone, if you have a Wi-Fi router in your home,
00:53:31.800
if you have a smart meter, well, we'll patch into that
00:53:34.760
and we'll beam you with frequencies and check everything out anyway.
00:53:39.960
When they begin the embeddable technology, if they even have to do that,
00:53:43.160
the augmented reality of modifying your body, optogenetics,
00:53:50.440
triggering certain genetic codes in you and taking things away and all that shit.
00:53:55.880
You're entering onto a path where you're just like,
00:53:57.640
nope, it's no longer human. I want nothing with it.
00:54:02.200
And again, that's why people have raised concerns about this,
00:54:05.160
both mRNA vaccine, but also the later DNA vaccine.
00:54:08.120
When that comes out, it will actually alter you.
00:54:09.720
It will turn you into a genetically modified being.
00:54:16.520
Cathedral can only do so much, definitely demons.
00:54:20.120
Filbert Applebag with the diamond technology seems to weaken people in the long run,
00:54:25.480
That's why the future is the past and hard times will make hard men.
00:54:30.040
And that's where we need to put our reliance as we're entering into a
00:54:36.520
era of unprecedented weakness and dependency with this kind of technology.
00:54:41.720
And again, the globalists, they know, they know what this,
00:54:44.600
they are convinced that they know exactly what this will create and their ability to control
00:54:51.160
everything, to see everything, to manipulate everything, to alter everything, including your
00:54:55.720
memory, including history, including, I mean, it's insane what they can do.
00:55:04.760
Are you saying that my tinfoil hat won't work either?
00:55:23.160
I'm going to blow that up a bit so I see what it's...
00:55:39.080
We're just going to force your body to produce this strand of the virus in itself inside of your nucleus.
00:55:46.840
We can take your base material from your cell and your nucleus,
00:55:49.720
and we're going to put those together with this little genetic machine inside of you.
00:55:59.320
This is the last video on the Infineon site, and then we'll move on.
00:56:05.880
We're going to look at how Facebook is developing a method to
00:56:14.280
Anyway, this is the last one in the Infineon series.
00:56:20.760
There's a buffer when I got the full screen there.
00:56:22.600
Infineon is connecting the real world to the digital world.
00:56:25.640
In order to doing so, one of the fundamental problems to overcome is that you have to put sensors everywhere.
00:56:32.440
Infineon is working on building the five human senses in the form of semiconductors,
00:56:37.160
such as a smart feel, a smart taste, a smart eye, a smart nose, but also smart ears.
00:56:47.480
It's like they'll start manipulating you, modifying you rather.
00:56:55.720
Of course, we could stand at a precipice where the ultra-wealthy class in America alone 0.1%
00:57:02.760
Do you think these people want to live forever?
00:57:04.760
Do you think they want to turn themselves into gods before you?
00:57:10.440
Expanded senses, knowing better, faster, stronger,
00:57:13.720
bigger dicks, they'll manipulate everything they can.
00:57:19.640
We are putting these devices into each and every kind of electronics,
00:57:23.160
like robots, smart speakers, or simply smartphones,
00:57:26.920
in order to make those devices understand what's happening in the surrounding
00:57:31.240
and make them in a more intuitive manner interact with us as human beings.
00:57:42.840
Yeah, so they have to build this grid of sensors and stuff.
00:57:45.960
But as we said, these are going into so many devices.
00:57:50.120
And even the fact that your phone has it, your Wi-Fi router has it.
00:57:53.880
So here's one regarding the Solano, I think they're called,
00:58:00.200
Just to give you this idea that it's not restricted to one method.
00:58:11.480
Every, just a mass occupation of the frequency ranges that exists.
00:58:18.120
Which is, of course, usually beyond what we are able to, you know,
00:58:22.840
Otherwise, this would be madness to live in it.
00:58:25.080
But I'm sure, somehow, that your cells, they feel it.
00:58:31.000
I already feel, have you guys ever been out way,
00:58:33.800
way out on the countryside somewhere in a cabin, no electricity,
00:58:38.120
I mean, it's just, it's a magical feeling being just away from it.
00:58:42.360
But now with the, you know, Starlink, Elon Musk sending that up,
00:58:51.640
So, if you could, like, if there was a, and I mean, I know it exists,
00:59:05.320
because I'm on some of these licensing sites and stuff like that myself,
00:59:07.640
sometimes looking for, you know, music or images and stuff.
00:59:10.440
But, you know, to build some of our, you know, animation or videos and stuff.
00:59:14.360
But it's like, Corporate Music 2 dot, dot, wave.
00:59:19.960
That's what this music in the back end is like,
00:59:24.760
soulless, corporate, like, disgusting music than this?
00:59:34.200
a frequency shift occurs, known as the Doppler effect.
00:59:38.040
It can be used to measure the range and direction of a moving object,
00:59:41.480
to track its location, and enables the classification of movements and postures
00:59:47.640
Wi-Fi Doppler imaging offers myriad capabilities for depicting real-time events,
00:59:52.040
including recognizing gestures and classifying common body movements,
00:59:56.200
labeling objects, tracking objects, and detecting breathing and other vital signs.
01:00:04.280
Echoes, that's all, it's a bunch of echoes will be surrounded by this 24-7
01:00:12.520
Hi-Fi Doppler imaging enables applications such as intrusion detection
01:00:19.480
The RF imaging-based technology is a simple and ingenious method
01:00:26.120
By enabling the determination of who is sitting in front of the screen at any given time,
01:00:30.440
it allows the service provider or advertiser to personalize content accordingly.
01:00:35.880
Wi-Fi Doppler imaging is also highly effective as a remote monitoring solution.
01:00:40.040
For connecting elderly people who live on their own to family,
01:00:46.200
It triggers alerts if anything irregular or dangerous occurs
01:00:51.880
If anything irregular, if you have heightened emotional states because you're...
01:00:57.720
You could just, oh, you could just feel it's like this...
01:01:00.840
You will be contacted by someone when you get angry.
01:01:09.320
You know, they kind of hone in on this there with like medication and shit like that.
01:01:13.000
But like, you know, this just incessant like nanny state in the form of like big tech corp.
01:01:23.880
If you think big tech is bad right now, just wait until they get a hold of your frequencies
01:01:33.400
Wi-Fi Doppler imaging has numerous benefits as an event depiction technology.
01:01:37.800
It combines imaging technology and standard Wi-Fi networking over a single state-of-the-art connectivity chip.
01:01:44.360
It achieves high resolution localization using a single device rather than relying on multiple devices.
01:01:50.920
It's optimal for motion classification for posture identification and context analysis.
01:01:56.680
And because it's free of line-of-sight constraints, it can virtually see through walls,
01:02:01.320
enabling an expanding array of value-added indoor applications for service providers
01:02:05.880
and their partners without the need for deploying additional infrastructure on customer premises.
01:02:25.720
All these, you know, the Googles of this world.
01:02:30.680
I'm not even now talking about like a genetic, you know,
01:02:33.240
engineering and collection of, you know, data and shit like that.
01:02:36.600
Like, it's just the all-seeing nature of where we're going with this is just insane, right?
01:02:46.760
Facebook build the tech to help you type with your brain and here with your skin.
01:02:52.760
Now, what they're referencing is a presentation by Regina Dugan.
01:03:08.360
Then she went to work for basically the DARPA department within Google.
01:03:25.800
Just three, three and a half years later or so.
01:03:29.560
It's a little bit longer, but it's actually kind of interesting.
01:03:31.400
I might skip forward or speed up certain aspects.
01:04:02.440
If you're tuning out right now, of course, you can watch the archives later.
01:04:17.560
It was tied to some research with the Google glasses thing,
01:04:20.360
but there was a company, a subcontractor that had developed a lens.
01:04:25.320
Again, I think at the end of the day, you're not even, there's this wearable tech ship.
01:04:29.400
It's like, sure, there's still companies doing that.
01:04:32.040
And we might have that for a little bit of time, but it's basically like the cassette tape
01:04:38.040
It's like, sure, you'll have it, but you'll quickly leave it and move on.
01:04:42.680
So all the wearable tech stuff, including even like projection on the retina and stuff like that,
01:04:47.320
that will, you're not going to need it because you just, you go straight into the synapse,
01:04:53.720
the visual nerves and hijack, so to speak, the signal right there.
01:05:00.200
But yeah, augmented reality is definitely here.
01:05:02.440
HP Lovecraft's cat with a diamond says, good belated St. Lucia day, a light in dark winter.
01:05:12.200
We celebrate that, especially in Sweden, Norway, parts of Denmark.
01:05:22.120
Let's watch this presentation here by DARPAs or former DARPA head, Regina Dugan here.
01:05:28.120
And now it is my great pleasure to introduce the head of building.
01:05:30.760
Oh, and I should say too, this one was at Facebook's, I guess, F8.
01:05:38.280
Or is that their eighth conference or something?
01:05:57.720
In my entire career, I've never seen something as powerful a force in the world as the smartphone
01:06:06.120
that didn't also have unintended consequences, sometimes grave, sometimes every day.
01:06:16.520
If we intersect this device with the mission of Facebook, we find that this little black box has
01:06:23.880
has allowed us to connect to people far away from us, to share moments of our lives and to do so unconstrained by time or distance.
01:06:38.280
It has allowed us to connect to people far away from us, too often at the expense of people
01:06:56.920
We don't talk about it much because most of the discussion goes like this.
01:07:01.480
If you were just strong enough, if you had enough willpower, you would put down that addictive drug
01:07:08.120
that is your smartphone and honor the conversation in front of you.
01:07:11.320
Usually, this is said in a moment of anger or judgment.
01:07:23.800
Yeah, it's a prominent nose, but I think it's not.
01:07:34.600
It allows us to be curious about the world beyond the one we can see right in front of us.
01:07:42.120
It allows us to have empathy for people we might not otherwise know.
01:07:59.560
It's just that we know intuitively and from experience that we'd all be better off
01:08:11.320
Now, voice interfaces have attracted much attention of late.
01:08:27.080
I think that voice is important, but not for these tech-centric reasons.
01:08:36.600
Because these new hardware platforms have enabled us for the first time in a long time to crawl out of this little black box
01:08:47.080
and be back in the room where our lives are and where so many of the people we care about exist.
01:08:54.120
Now, when viewed in this way, we realize that we've only begun to scratch the surface of what's possible.
01:09:06.920
So, today and tomorrow, this is our goal at Facebook, to create and ship category-defining consumer products that are social first.
01:09:17.560
Yeah, and why do you think that it's because their objective is, of course, to unify the world and bringing us all closer together?
01:09:28.520
You'll understand, as he continues here, where this is going and what Facebook's role in this is.
01:09:33.720
...at scale and to power this with a breakthrough innovation engine modeled after DARPA.
01:09:41.480
Products that recognize we are both mind and body.
01:09:50.880
That seek to connect us with the power and power.
01:10:00.200
...possibility of what's new while honoring the intimacy and the richness of what's timeless.
01:10:17.640
This is their contrived attempt at trying to say, we care.
01:10:21.320
We know we've designed things that makes you just look and look and look and look on that Facebook wall or whatever it is.
01:10:28.280
That's something that's popped up in the last couple of years.
01:10:31.560
That's like, oh, they're designing things to keep you stuck on the platform and just never being able to leave kind of thing.
01:10:37.080
And now they're doing this cringy, you know, attempts at trying to take responsibility as a company to make sure that you also take a break occasionally, right?
01:10:58.380
There's no accident that DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Agency's personnel, is going like a swing door back and forth between Facebook and Google and then back to DARPA again and then out in the private sector developing all this shit.
01:11:16.120
That's why you'll never see these big tech platforms being, you know, banned or lose Section 230 or their protection or anything like that.
01:11:24.100
Because it's funded by and with the aid of military, defense technology, government.
01:11:32.440
So these hearings you hear and shit like that, it's all for show.
01:11:39.680
Your brain has 86 billion neurons that fire 1,000 times per second.
01:11:52.360
That would mean your brain is capable of producing about 1 terabit per second.
01:11:59.100
About 40 HD movies are streaming in your brain every second.
01:12:04.540
Now, if you haven't had your coffee yet, you might be moving about 10 times slower.
01:12:09.740
So let's just say it's four HD movies every second.
01:12:16.880
How do I get all of that information out of my brain and into the world?
01:12:28.980
Don't you just feel that you want to take all your psychic garbage and just smear it on the walls of the internet?
01:12:37.140
You're saying this because you want to get into people's heads and know their thoughts and using them for your own selfish and nefarious purposes.
01:12:50.640
Again, this is part of this borderless bullshit that they're pushing right now.
01:12:57.040
There's no borders, actual borders in our countries.
01:13:00.820
There's no borders when it comes to your property.
01:13:15.060
Like, there's no, where it used to be in the old days, you had a public persona.
01:13:23.400
But that's seen as, well, that's stale and stiff and stuff.
01:13:30.040
You know, it used to be a time where people, they dressed up when they were going out.
01:13:38.380
I think it was a necessity of civilization to make sure that you adhere to certain social standards
01:13:44.780
and you just didn't, like, emotionally just smear your crap over everything and everybody.
01:13:55.200
But this is the reason why they don't want any borders anywhere, including your own thoughts and your personal space, your property.
01:14:08.760
We'll be, in the same way that mouse experiment where it just pushes a button to feel good all the time,
01:14:15.380
that all its entire life evolved around just sitting there and it was doing it, like, with this nose or something.
01:14:22.460
It's, you know, just pushing this button that made it, like, release endorphins and feel good kind of thing.
01:14:31.540
They'll just beam some frequency into your biological being and you'll just feel, you'll just, it feels great.
01:14:38.320
We're not even talking about, like, the, you know, how they're legalizing all the drugs and stuff and the SOMA, basically, right?
01:14:44.800
They'll just do this with frequency eventually.
01:14:48.140
But anyway, so that's the obsession with this, the no borders thing, that it goes much further than that, right?
01:14:54.060
Although these people, they live behind armed, you know, armed guards and, like, you know, 10-foot stone walls in their mansions as they're doing this to us.
01:15:05.180
I'm speaking to you right now and I'm transmitting at about 100 bits per second.
01:15:11.040
That's the bandwidth equivalent of a 1980s dial-up modem.
01:15:15.600
So, here's what we have, four HD movies per second streaming over a 1980s dial-up modem.
01:15:27.080
Speech is essentially a compression algorithm and a lossy one at that.
01:15:32.780
That's why we love great writers and poets, because they're just a little bit better at compressing the fullness of a thought into words.
01:15:47.380
So, what if you could type directly from your brain?
01:15:54.200
It sounds impossible, but it's closer than you may realize.
01:15:57.440
And it's just the kind of fluid human-computer interface needed for AR.
01:16:04.440
Even something as simple as a yes-no brain click would fundamentally change our capability.
01:16:24.420
She cannot move or speak, but she is typing with her mind, not with eye blanks, with her mind.
01:16:34.420
An array of electrodes the size of a pea has been implanted where her brain would normally control her motor functions.
01:16:45.460
The electrodes record her neurons firing when she imagines moving the cursor.
01:16:54.420
Using this system, she can type eight words per minute.
01:17:00.660
She is typing at eight words per minute directly with her brain.
01:17:07.340
Now, that's less than one-third the speed that you can type on a smartphone, but it is lightning fast compared to silence.
01:17:18.620
So, what if instead of using imagined arm movements, we could decode speech directly?
01:17:26.120
And they're in of why they developed this technology.
01:17:32.680
They always, like, talked about this last time, the last note goes on, but it's always the quadriplegic or the person who can't move and stuff like that.
01:17:43.780
They're just using these people as the willing test subject because they're desperate enough to try to, you know, get out of their condition, which I couldn't completely understand.
01:17:51.860
But just wait until this is, like, you know, rolled out entirely on everybody.
01:17:56.000
Against your will, even if you don't want to do it, I will read your brainwaves anyway, remotely.
01:17:59.640
I mean, you can check, no, I don't want to share any info with this app or whatever.
01:18:08.780
We are not talking about decoding your random...
01:18:17.060
That might be more than any of us care to know.
01:18:21.500
And it's not something any of us should have a right to know.
01:18:41.100
We're talking about decoding those words, the ones you've already decided to share by sending them to the speech center of your brain.
01:18:51.420
A silent speech interface, one with all the speed and flexibility of voice,
01:19:02.620
Better yet, with the ability to text a friend without taking out your phone,
01:19:08.300
or to send a quick email without missing the party.
01:19:16.160
Now, Mark Chevrolet is the lead for this effort.
01:19:20.020
He's a physicist neuroscientist, and six months ago, he had the idea that this might be possible.
01:19:26.100
Today, we've assembled a team of more than 60 scientists, engineers, and system integrators.
01:19:32.020
They specialize in machine learning methods for decoding speech and language,
01:19:37.160
and optical neuroimaging systems that push the limits of spatial resolution.
01:20:00.000
Limits of spatial resolution in the most advanced neural prosthetics in the world.
01:20:23.740
Together, we have a goal of creating a system capable of typing 100 words per minute,
01:20:32.120
five times faster than you can type on your smartphone, straight from your brain.
01:20:38.320
Over the past three decades, work in artificial speech recognition has produced powerful tools
01:20:47.080
to decode text from brain activity while people are speaking.
01:20:51.600
This is real data showing the remarkable result of mapping brain signals to text directly.
01:20:59.060
Now, these systems don't currently operate in real time,
01:21:13.340
Did you guys see, too, what Elon Musk is actually proposing with his Neuralink?
01:21:16.480
He's just like, yeah, we'll have these robots that just drill a hole in your skull
01:21:21.080
and implant this little wafer with, like, what, about 100, you know, copper nodes or whatever it had in it.
01:21:33.360
I mean, some fanatics will and stuff like that,
01:21:35.500
but the majority, they will not get their skull drilled for this,
01:21:39.960
and so that's why they're circumventing that right now.
01:21:44.740
We'll need new non-invasive sensors, sensors that can measure brain activity hundreds of times per second
01:21:52.320
and precise to millimeters, and without signal distortions, even as they read through hair and skin and skull.
01:22:12.360
With the stuff that we talked about and what we showed in the last No-Go Zone,
01:22:18.260
we showed that they're developing that right now.
01:22:22.200
They're decoding the signal flow of your brain and your activity and stuff like that,
01:22:30.300
They're right at the cusp of it, and it's going to be rolled out.
01:22:34.160
And we think optical imaging is the best place to start.
01:22:39.660
Optical imaging may be the only non-invasive technique capable of providing the spatial and temporal resolution we need,
01:22:47.860
and thanks to technological improvements in performance, cost, and miniaturization driven by the telecommunications industry,
01:23:00.160
The spatial and temporal resolution we need, and thanks to technological improvements in performance, cost,
01:23:08.300
and miniaturization driven by the telecommunications industry, we have a very big wave to ride.
01:23:14.600
So, how do we get optical techniques in the sweet spot of performance,
01:23:20.360
sampling hundreds of times per second and precise to millimeters?
01:23:24.300
We start by filtering for quasi-ballistic photons.
01:23:29.660
Now, if you've ever pressed a red laser pointer to your finger,
01:23:37.420
The reason you don't see the original resolution of the laser pointer
01:23:40.900
is that most of the photons scatter many times as they pass through, flying off in all directions.
01:23:47.900
The photons are diffuse, and diffuse photons won't give us millimeter resolution.
01:24:01.340
If we filtered only for these, we would retain the original resolution of the laser pointer.
01:24:07.540
It's just that there are too few of them to see.
01:24:15.180
Quasi-ballistic photons are somewhere in between.
01:24:22.480
And if we get the trade-off just right, we can get the spatial resolution we need
01:24:37.400
because speech is encoded in the high-frequency oscillations of neural activity.
01:24:42.900
That means we'll need to sample hundreds of times per second to decode them.
01:24:47.300
But today's optical imaging systems, they don't measure neural activity.
01:24:53.340
They measure blood oxygenation, which is a time-integrated sum of neural activity.
01:25:00.300
Yeah, don't even get me started on, like, the medical applications that they'll begin to use
01:25:05.180
with this measurement organ, you know, interference,
01:25:10.120
or, like, how they can shut off and turn things, shut down and, you know, turn on things.
01:25:15.320
This is already, you know, it's just like, I'm not going to get into it now,
01:25:17.800
but there's a whole showing itself just on that, of what they can do medically
01:25:22.660
and basically living robots that they're creating right now.
01:25:29.540
They can program certain cells to do certain functions.
01:25:34.180
start manipulating and altering things genetically.
01:25:38.980
It's robust, but it is too slow to capture speech.
01:25:43.300
Instead, we will need to measure the neural activity directly
01:25:48.280
by capturing instantaneous changes in the optical properties of neurons
01:25:57.720
In a few years' time, we expect to demonstrate a real-time silent speech system
01:26:07.120
A speech prosthetic, you might say, for patients in need.
01:26:13.180
A step on the path, as Michael said, to making input for AR more natural.
01:26:34.660
There's all kinds of things you can do to alter things like that.
01:26:41.220
Imagine like a layer overlapped over everything.
01:26:43.760
You walk past a restaurant and it shows your reviews or something.
01:26:50.000
Oh, we'll put on these glasses and then you can see it.
01:26:56.460
As Michael said, to making input for AR more natural.
01:27:03.120
A first prototypical system capable of measuring speech-related neural activity non-invasively
01:27:17.600
But it's only the beginning of what's possible.
01:27:24.540
Because your brain activity contains more information than what a word sounds like or how it is spelled.
01:27:32.660
It also contains semantic information that tells us what those words mean.
01:27:43.520
It is a man-made object that you can hold in your hand.
01:27:51.260
Understanding semantics means that one day you may be able to choose to share your thoughts independent of language.
01:28:07.500
After all, the word cup, or taza, or chabe, is just a compressed thought.
01:28:17.860
And if we can make it possible to communicate directly from your brain,
01:28:23.100
what if we could make it possible for you to hear through your skin?
01:28:29.420
You have two square meters of skin on your body.
01:28:33.660
It is a complex network of nerves that transmit information to your brain.
01:28:40.140
Braille, invented in France in the 19th century, taught us that people can learn to interpret small bumps on a surface through their fingertips as language.
01:28:50.540
The Tadoma method, developed in the early 20th century, went well beyond Braille.
01:28:58.080
Based on work with Helen Keller, it sought to create a scalable method for children who are both deaf and blind to communicate.
01:29:06.140
Yeah, this obsession with creating a one language, it's very interesting.
01:29:14.640
I mean, I'm not against a lingua franca or something like that.
01:29:23.620
There's something very interesting to language.
01:29:26.160
I kind of haven't nailed that down yet, but it's obviously related to the existing biological differences that do exist.
01:29:36.420
And the language arrives for very specific reasons.
01:29:39.360
It's even tied to not just the tenor and the pitch and the delivery and stuff, but many other things as well, like the actual words and stuff, down to geographical location or how cold it is.
01:29:54.920
It's a very interesting and unique way of getting a sense of the people who developed this language or a specific language, certain words and stuff.
01:30:07.840
It's more to it than just the mechanics of what she's breaking down.
01:30:15.140
I think a part of the control mechanism has always been the destruction of language, right?
01:30:24.040
In 1984, their newspeak, they're removing certain words, limiting your vocabulary.
01:30:29.600
Interestingly enough, your brain also operates with the words that you do have, with the vocabulary that you do have.
01:30:41.500
If you lack the vocabulary to, or if you don't know, rather, what certain parts are called of a thing that you're watching, you would think less of it.
01:31:00.400
I remember this a couple of years ago, I heard this one person who was like, he was learning the different parts of the ant, for example, right?
01:31:07.940
And when he began tying language to the different parts of the ant, he started getting fascinated by the insect overall, the group, what it can do and stuff.
01:31:20.740
Like, here's the antenna, here's the middle portion.
01:31:23.580
And, you know, I don't know all the words for the different parts of the ant, but he described this, this person talking about this.
01:31:28.640
But it was not until, like, he understood all the different components that he's like, there was more thought and activity and understanding about the thing that he was dealing with because he had learned the words for it.
01:31:41.500
Otherwise, it was just the ant and that's it kind of thing.
01:31:45.720
But, so this is an interesting thing because he might circumvent that altogether.
01:31:50.580
Or, you know, well, you can, you just think your thoughts instantly and just beam that out or project it onto someone who can get them or whatever.
01:31:58.380
But, I don't know, again, I think there's massive downsides to this kind of stuff, beginning meddling with this stuff.
01:32:05.860
It would turn us into something really different.
01:32:10.880
You just be, it's just, just internally, just, just a brain to brain kind of thing.
01:32:19.460
As it turns out, the vibro-tactile sensors embedded in our skin allow us to interpret complex inputs.
01:32:27.560
The pressure change in a puff of air, the vibration of the vocal cords and on the jaw as language.
01:32:37.160
What you'll observe in this video is a man, deaf and blind, speaking.
01:32:42.900
He is using only the sensors of his hand in his skin to hear, to process, interpret, and yes, even reproduce the spoken words of his teacher.
01:33:01.020
He is repeating words that he cannot see or hear by feeling them.
01:33:16.480
From the 1950s until today, what all of these techniques have in common
01:33:25.620
is our brain's ability to reconstruct language from components.
01:33:38.220
As you listen to me now, the cochlea in your ear is taking my voice
01:33:42.920
and separating it into frequency components that are transmitted to your brain.
01:33:47.960
Your cochlea essentially does a Fourier transform, a frequency domain analysis of sound.
01:33:55.280
So what if we could do the same work of the cochlea,
01:33:58.440
but transmit the resulting frequency information instead via your skin?
01:34:06.400
Freddie, he leads this project, and that's Frances.
01:34:12.640
She is not deaf and blind, but she can hear through her skin.
01:34:23.520
They are tuned to 16 different frequency bands.
01:34:27.520
Frances currently has a tactile vocabulary of about nine words.
01:34:46.780
Okay, Frances, so let's go through the nine words we just learned.
01:34:49.600
We'll do some singles, then doubles, and then get more complicated.
01:36:00.800
she'll tell you that she has learned to feel the acoustic shape of a word on her arm.
01:36:08.060
The word black moves from low-frequency regions to high-frequency regions.
01:36:15.180
She processes these shapes in her brain as words.
01:36:21.620
She's learning how to use the artificial cochlea we made for her skin.
01:37:01.940
We're going to make sure that things get better
01:37:06.520
that's going to enslave you and we'll read everything.
01:37:10.200
We can just beam language right to your skin now.
01:37:14.460
Now, despite being much closer than perhaps you realized,
01:37:24.980
because we don't always have the luxury of time.
01:37:33.860
That's what they're pushing so hard and so fast over the top.
01:37:40.780
I'm sure the DARPA department knows very well about this.
01:37:44.980
Sir, we better control the narrative and shut down the internet
01:37:53.220
There's a window of opportunity if we're going to take over
01:37:57.520
We need to eliminate certain aspects in the node.
01:38:01.420
We've realized, sir, that they will be too disruptive of a force.
01:38:04.720
I once read an article that said 93% of our face-to-face time
01:38:11.000
with our parents is done by the time we finish high school and leave home.
01:38:18.160
Now, most people experience that fact like a kick in the gut.
01:38:23.440
Because it's a profound reminder of the power of connections
01:38:26.700
and that we should do all that we can to increase our sense of presence
01:38:40.700
When I moved from the East Coast to the West Coast...
01:38:46.960
I think there was something more right at the end that was interesting.
01:38:57.420
It is when I told her about a talk I had to give
01:39:05.980
Because it's not the big moments alone that define relationships.
01:39:11.280
It is the extraordinary everyday, the beautifully mundane.
01:39:16.820
And I owe the depth of my relationship with my mom in part.
01:39:23.500
You're working for an agency that's like helping to develop exotic technology
01:39:27.940
that's like frying people alive and like blowing white phosphorus over them
01:39:33.860
It's like we have to connect and get closer together.
01:39:37.220
Do you guys remember the men who stare at goats?
01:39:39.080
That's always the way I think about when there's like these weird like defense
01:39:42.480
departments have turned into like these weird, you know, tech hippies and stuff.
01:39:47.060
Like, yeah, we'll defeat our enemies with love.
01:39:50.260
We'll just, you know, drop an endless sea of dildos down on them.
01:40:05.820
These military people and like, you know, but they're like,
01:40:08.820
we can blow up the heart of people by just staring at them like what they actually
01:40:14.780
And some of that it's partially partially kind of done to ridicule the exotic
01:40:19.600
capabilities of military applications and stuff like that, because there are
01:40:25.640
A lot of things that showed in the documentary kind of failed or didn't work out
01:40:31.420
The DARPAs of this world, they have so much money, so much resources, so much
01:40:35.120
capability that's like, just investigate everything, like all of it.
01:41:00.240
But then it's like, but you're like, you're like, your military is going
01:41:05.120
It's like, can you just stop like blowing people up in other countries or
01:41:11.320
Maybe that would help first to stop the waves of migration because of that.
01:41:18.440
See technology hands-free and Bluetooth made it possible.
01:41:24.560
Those technological advances made it possible for me to be in my life and
01:41:48.580
Turd world immigrant with a diamond says happy holidays.
01:42:13.340
I think the window of opportunity is swiftly closing.
01:42:19.840
There's some people that still have hope and faith that this could be turned around.
01:42:27.260
It's not over until the fat lady sings, as they say.
01:42:32.160
Definitely with McConnell going out there, all the GOP.
01:42:47.980
Radio frequencies interferes with electronics, which the brain is.
01:42:58.180
We talked about that at the time on the radio show back in 2007, 8, 9, something like that.
01:43:06.720
But, you know, they can make you more religious, less religious.
01:43:15.440
by using electromagnetic fields on certain portions of the brain and stuff again.
01:43:19.720
But, again, these were like, that was at the time when they had, like, big clunky helmets and stuff.
01:43:25.080
Manipulate your brain and your thoughts and stuff like that.
01:43:29.580
They just, you know, they just apply it and that's it.
01:43:41.040
Yeah, the stuff that she's talked about, always, right?
01:43:47.820
It's always about something else doing the work for you.
01:43:51.060
Or making it so convenient to a point where, like, what's the reason, kind of, in a way?
01:44:00.040
It's, like, part of the journey or being here in a human body and doing these things is the aspect, I would assume, of being tied to it.
01:44:14.880
But you know that we'll just become more and more dependent and, therefore, more and more controllable
01:44:18.740
as things get more and more convenient and easy.
01:44:28.420
Anyway, he says, oh, this goes in your mouth, this one goes in your ear, and this one goes in your butt.
01:44:39.440
And then they change it, and they say, oh, no, actually, wait a minute.
01:44:43.240
This goes in your mouth, and I think this in your ear, and this in your butt.
01:44:53.780
Sometimes in one to two, though, you're going to connect with these computers and stuff.
01:44:56.940
And with all the bad, you know, stuff that happens with computers and the processing and stuff.
01:45:03.660
I know they're working on that, but still, it's like, eesh, buggy systems.
01:45:07.440
You know, the blue screen of death when you're, like, having some vital, you know, brain, I don't know,
01:45:21.900
Philbert Applebag with a diamond says, a flashlight is really just a photon gun.
01:45:29.180
Neil DeLorean with a diamond says, they are going to build a word ban list.
01:45:39.920
And then, interestingly enough, the more that you lose this off your vocabulary,
01:45:43.900
the less you're able to think and, ultimately, then experience, right?
01:45:53.360
BRP with a diamond says, the Tower of Babel 2.0.
01:45:59.600
I think it was called something like, yeah, it was something like Babel or Babel.
01:46:05.780
It was related to some of this stuff that they're, like, just translating brainwave frequency
01:46:09.920
and you can understand it, you know, instantly and stuff.
01:46:17.560
I mean, we've heard this stuff from mythology before, right?
01:46:23.220
Alex Tremont with a diamond says, hell no, nothing can replace our European languages.
01:46:32.080
I think it's part of those differences in temperament and stuff.
01:46:35.360
The world shrinks more and more and more, right?
01:46:38.440
And therefore, it becomes more and more boring.
01:46:41.000
It becomes, you know, there's a way you can connect with all these people.
01:46:44.440
And it's like, I don't know, the more they wheel this stuff out and the smaller that the
01:46:47.960
world becomes with aid of technology, the less adventurous you feel, the less you feel
01:46:54.140
a need to even maybe go and visit places and see amazing things and stuff.
01:46:57.620
I just, you just, yeah, I'll beam over, you know, with my brain right now.
01:47:11.860
Every sense of adventure, all this stuff, right?
01:47:17.980
Double Dog with a Nijigini says some Russian gobbledygook.
01:47:24.200
Vaccine, if, if we just stay, it's amazing how you actually piece that together.
01:47:28.840
Henrik won't have to worry about vaccine if we just stay constantly, there you go.
01:47:40.140
Now the COVID vaccine, speaking to Double Dog's point here, at least out of the UK, they said
01:47:46.820
that they don't know the impact of the, of, on fertility, pregnancy with the vaccine.
01:47:51.560
So they recommend you not taking the vaccine if you are pregnant.
01:47:54.580
So one of the ways around this, of course, to everyone watching out there, um, with your,
01:47:58.680
with your spouse, with your wife or with your man, um, just stay pregnant.
01:48:03.220
And then you don't, you don't have to take the vaccine.
01:48:07.560
Oh, I'm, you know, uh, we're two months pregnant or whatever.
01:48:10.620
I mean, uh, the, the, the, the man doesn't get away from it, I would assume.
01:48:16.640
Uh, Ronald Whitewolf with a Diamond says, good morning from Korea.
01:48:21.840
Lord Aragon with a Diamond, uh, trying to be godlike won't work in my honest opinion.
01:48:30.240
We could see some strange and bizarre outcomes of this.
01:48:37.240
The hubris, I mentioned the Atlantis mythology last time, right?
01:48:39.980
But it's like, that's, the priest class is right at the cusp of some amazing thing, right?
01:48:46.280
They turned off this optical device, this, you know, crystal laser light power thing.
01:48:59.980
Absolute cycle of, of, uh, destruction and then rebuilding it.
01:49:07.340
Celtic Cowboy with the Diamond says, maybe it can help, uh, commies, uh, plus co-experience
01:49:12.100
empathy, uh, commies plus co, plus company to experience empathy.
01:49:20.340
I think, I, again, I think that the homogeneity of the attitudes of why they're purging, I
01:49:28.480
mentioned this in the beginning in case you just tuned in, but potentiality of why they're
01:49:32.740
purging certain aspects of the population, the dissidents, the people are, you know, objective.
01:49:39.520
And again, you see this in America with things like, what do we do about the 70 million?
01:49:46.560
The, the people, excuse me, who voted for Trump and they're talking about right-wingers.
01:49:50.300
And from their perspective, what do we do about these white supremacists and, and neo-Nazis
01:49:56.500
You know, that's what they, what, that's what they mean.
01:49:58.380
But can you imagine if a technology like this came, came online and you could, you could
01:50:02.680
actually, you know, understand different people or your, your emotional impact.
01:50:09.520
or something like that, that would, that would poison, in their view, poison and insert
01:50:13.800
way too much, too many dangerous variables into the, the, the global brain, brain that
01:50:19.580
The internet of things and the human population is, is, is our components in that internet.
01:50:26.920
They might, it might even turn out to harness our brain power.
01:50:31.220
I mean, the brain is, I mean, you can't, in some ways you can compare it, but it really
01:50:36.360
is like one of the most just amazing, uh, like quantum computers, right?
01:50:42.860
It's what if they're trying to tap in because they want to use our brains, they want to use
01:50:50.480
There's, there's a lot of, a lot of avenues you could go down here.
01:50:55.840
Um, millennial honky with a ninja guinea, some shekels for the cause.
01:51:08.300
You could write fledgling, uh, just, just claim you try to have a baby and that would be enough
01:51:13.780
Uh, hopefully there will be other exemptions as well.
01:51:19.040
I want to talk about this one for a little bit or show this one rather detecting your images.
01:51:25.140
This is from, I forget which company this was from, uh, but we'll play it.
01:51:30.040
This video describes EQ radio, a new technology from professor Kitabi's group at MIT that can
01:51:36.240
recognize people's emotions using wireless signals.
01:51:39.780
Was there a moment in your life when you looked at someone's face, but you could not figure
01:51:46.360
What if your wireless router can tell people's emotions?
01:51:52.180
It's like, let's develop an algorithm that makes the wifi router detect what someone
01:51:59.240
Even if they don't show them on their faces, this is exactly what our technology does.
01:52:07.440
The device transmits a wireless signal which reflects off a person's body and comes back.
01:52:12.460
It captures these reflections and analyzes them to infer the person's emotions.
01:52:17.020
Specifically, our algorithms zoom in on the wireless reflections to extract the minute variations
01:52:24.420
We then further analyze these reflections to extract the breathing signal and the heartbeat
01:52:29.960
We then zoom in more on these signals to obtain individual heartbeats and breathing cycles
01:52:34.560
and feed these as features into a machine learning algorithm to recognize a person's emotions.
01:52:44.460
The device can automatically know if the person is excited, angry, sad, or happy.
01:52:49.980
Our device can recognize emotions with an accuracy of 87% while relying purely on wireless
01:52:57.260
We envision that EQ radio can be used in many applications.
01:53:00.240
It can recognize a person's emotions while he is watching a movie and provide movie makers
01:53:15.320
It can also allow smart environments to detect emotional states like depression and inform us
01:53:26.100
It can even enable these environments to react to our moods and adjust lighting or music
01:53:38.280
To learn more about this research, please check out our website.
01:53:44.820
So, it's just to show you that, that they're like, they're working on every...
01:53:50.300
They're working on every aspect of decoding you.
01:53:56.100
You're the thing that they want to know and understand and analyze and get into and, you
01:54:03.900
So, here's that other one that I mentioned before.
01:54:08.740
Because I still don't know exactly what the product is, but this is basically an ad for
01:54:14.020
And you'll see this weird, like, you know, kind of...
01:54:19.880
Remember how for a while there when people had, like, Bluetooth, like an earpod or what
01:54:25.980
Airpod, I guess I call it today, but like an earpiece, Bluetooth, and it has a mic on
01:54:30.060
And you see, you know, you see them from the other side, not from the side where you can
01:54:33.920
You see someone just going, talking to themselves, and you think they're insane.
01:54:41.260
Well, that's going to get even worse and go further now.
01:54:44.480
Well, you see people in the street and stuff, wants to begin beaming out these frequencies
01:54:53.420
And wait for it, that makes sense in a moment when you see where this video is going.
01:54:58.420
And you're standing in the middle of the street or in your room or something, you're just
01:55:03.800
It's like just complete, I guess, I mean, illusion, delusion.
01:55:10.360
I mean, it's happening, you're experiencing it, but like from an outside point of view,
01:55:13.620
it's like if an alien landed and saw some of this shit of what's happening, if they haven't
01:55:18.140
gone through the same technological route themselves and destroy themselves, it would
01:55:29.320
Anyway, check out this little commercial clip here for Anna Avatar.
01:55:34.900
And of course, you know what Avatar is a reference to, right?
01:55:37.920
So, wait, why are you in the depths of La R ģ ģ73?
01:55:54.440
So, wait, why are you in the depths of La R ģ ģ73?
01:55:57.220
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10.
01:57:32.660
So that's the tech that some of these companies are working on right now.
01:57:36.660
It's basically an inspiration of Japan, a Star Alliance member, right?
01:57:41.660
This is the type of things that you might see in the future being developed, right?
01:57:47.660
It's like you don't have to be anywhere or go anywhere.
01:57:54.660
As someone said in chat, it will just seem like a mass delusion.
01:57:58.660
Imagine like you're in a Minority Report. Actually, no, not Minority Report.
01:58:03.660
But in Minority Report, I thought of it for that reason.
01:58:07.660
Maybe he lost his son, right? Or something like that.
01:58:11.660
You live in a world in the future where they can basically remove your painful memories of that.
01:58:24.660
There's one scene here where it virtually is lifting up a boy.
01:58:33.660
Like you can live in a world where that which happened didn't happen.
01:59:30.660
I think it's important to see what these lunatics are trying to do.
01:59:47.660
They will be just utterly consumed by this, right?
02:00:06.660
You just have to make a conscious choice that you're like, no.
02:00:15.660
There are certain limits that you have to draw that line in the sand and say, no.
02:00:24.660
You're just being trapped in that illusion or delusion.
02:00:29.660
Flying Dutchman with a Ninja Guini says, for our family and cause.
02:00:37.660
Tremo Del Norte with the Diamond says, was that man really the dad or one of Epstein's friends?
02:00:52.660
You know, I know that these perverts and stuff, they probably want the real...
02:00:55.660
They're going to have the real thing still, right?
02:01:00.660
They might experiment it early on, but like the elites and stuff, they want to have the real thing.
02:01:06.660
Remember the scene in The Matrix, he cuts up this little bloody steak, like he sits inside of it and tastes it.
02:01:11.660
And he's just like, all this is a synapses, you know, flying in my brain.
02:01:21.660
But the elite, they're going to want to have the real, the real steak, right?
02:01:30.660
Alright, so let me read this a little bit here.
02:01:35.660
And then we'll take a look at some of their videos that they have attached to their project.
02:01:47.660
Ultra-wide broadband imaging startup raises $45 million.
02:02:20.660
Some of the links that we've gotten here were tips that I got from TMZ in his show.
02:02:24.660
He has a shout-out to him regarding some of the things that we have looked at and covered.
02:02:33.660
And he's covered ultra-wide broadband quite a bit in some of the recent shows that he did.
02:02:41.660
And then we'll take a look at a couple of videos from Viar, the company.
02:02:47.660
3D imaging RF sensor company, a radio frequency sensor company, Viar Imaging Limited from Tel Aviv, Israel, has raised $45 million in a series C round of financing.
02:03:00.660
Viar's 3D ultra-wide broadband radio sensors provided the ability to look into and beyond solid objects and sense material composition and have multiple potential applications.
02:03:12.660
From health, smart home, through to autonomous driving and defense.
02:03:17.660
He says you have greater accuracy when you drop the white phosphorus, for example.
02:03:25.660
The latest round was led by Walden Riverwood and ITI with additional funding from Caltech and followed on investment from Battery Ventures,
02:03:34.660
Bezerman Ventures, Israel Cleantech, Israel Cleantech Ventures, and Amiti, bringing total capital raised to date to $79 million.
02:03:49.660
Like, I mean, this is one company, this is small potatoes, right?
02:03:52.660
It's like, we can't even have a credit card processor for talking about some of this kind of stuff, right?
02:03:59.660
Of what they're doing, the global vision for the planet, their hatred of people of European descent, what they're doing to us and that kind of stuff, right?
02:04:11.660
We just talk about our opinions, analyze the news, look at what's going on.
02:04:15.660
Some of these companies that are building like a demonic system that could just, you know, just raise $79 million.
02:04:23.660
It's truly, it's truly just sickening fucking times.
02:04:29.660
Sorry for cussing, but it's just like, it's disgusting to think of it.
02:04:34.660
Of these monsters, these pedophiles at the very top of our societies are running free and, you know, the Epsteins and the whole network that he was connected to.
02:04:47.660
While people who just mildly oppose them are being shut down.
02:04:57.660
The Googles, the Facebooks, how they're tracking you, monitoring you, watching you, studying you, learning everything they can about you on every aspect.
02:05:06.660
Down to your now, the frequencies and chemicals that your neurons emit.
02:05:15.660
VR said it would use the money to grow its global team, broaden its sensing product offering and expand it into new industries.
02:05:23.660
The company was originally started with the goal of using radio wave imaging technology to see into human tissue to detect early stage breast cancer.
02:05:31.660
VR sensors is an IC containing dozens of transceivers that transmit on wide and flexible frequency bands.
02:05:38.660
It is able to receive, analyze and create high resolution 3D images.
02:05:42.660
VR sensors create a 3D image in real time without the use of a camera.
02:05:47.660
These sensors can see through solid objects, map large areas and can be used in privacy sensitive locations where optics cannot.
02:05:59.660
VR sensors have expanded across industry sectors, including smart home, automotive, retail, robotics, medical, construction, agriculture and more.
02:06:07.660
Lip Bhutan, Chairman of Walden International and Managing Director of WRV said,
02:06:14.660
VR's technology has disruptive potential across a myriad of different industries.
02:06:18.660
VR is growing fast and we look forward to helping VR impact the automotive and smart home industries in a similar way.
02:06:37.660
A leader in 4G imaging sensors straight out of Tel Aviv.
02:06:40.660
Our intelligent sensors can see through walls and objects and track and map everything happening in an environment in real time.
02:06:49.660
Everything happening in an environment in real time.
02:06:54.660
Our chip covers imaging and radar bands from 3 GHz to 81 GHz.
02:07:02.660
With up to 72 transceivers and an integrated high performance DSP.
02:07:07.660
Low cost and multifunctional offering an affordable sensing solution for a variety of applications.
02:07:16.660
They're protecting our privacy, boys and girls.
02:07:20.660
Unlike other products that rely on cameras and optics.
02:07:27.660
So basically just because we're watching a different frequency.
02:07:35.660
We can literally like scan your dick with these frequencies.
02:08:07.660
We're going to look at a couple of videos here too.
02:08:15.660
The baby didn't know she'd been left in the car.
02:08:27.660
We've taken the most advanced 4D imaging MIMO radar system.
02:09:24.660
The Viar sensor uses a high resolution 4D point cloud.
02:09:42.660
Viar sensor monitors what's happening in each seat.
02:09:54.660
And sends seatbelt alerts only to the ones who need them.
02:09:57.660
It recognizes if a passenger is out of position.
02:10:11.660
The sensor identifies posture and dimensions of the passengers.
02:12:40.660
Retailers often lack information on their products and customers.
02:12:43.660
Stores are full of unrealized sales opportunities that go unnoticed every day.
02:12:50.660
Viar's intelligent IOT sensors will tell you what's really going on.
02:13:00.660
Track what's happening on each shelf in real time.
02:13:06.660
Identify hotspots and dead zones around the store.
02:13:09.660
At the checkout if lines are too long automatically alert cashiers to open more registers.
02:13:16.660
Viar's retail solution will analyze sales conversion funnels and shopper behavior.
02:13:21.660
Just maximize every sale just squeeze everything you can out of that.
02:13:28.660
And you know it's just I don't know it's just I don't know.
02:13:32.660
It will monitor inventory and tell you when it's time to restock.
02:13:36.660
Analyze performance on the store level or compare across the organization.
02:13:42.660
All of these insights are delivered through a customizable dashboard that can monitor KPIs and create benchmarks.
02:13:50.660
You'll also receive real time alerts in the palm of your hand.
02:14:17.660
I think this is one of the earlier videos here by finding things out.
02:14:21.660
I guess explains the back end or just did the over kind of overview of it here.
02:14:58.660
I mean, with that music, though, I mean, how can you how can you say no?
02:15:21.660
Let me check their YouTube channel here, chat, and we'll see what else you want to play from here.
02:15:31.660
Viar's 40 imaging radar sensor for in-car ADAS safety.
02:15:36.660
So a lot of it is automotive, which, of course, has to do with tracking and maybe, you know, shutting down vehicles and things like that.
02:16:02.660
Here's what it can do in a senior living facility.
02:16:04.660
You place it on the wall and it monitors health and safety in each room.
02:16:11.660
It detects if anyone has fallen and immediately calls for help.
02:16:16.660
Viar Home scans any room 24-7 for continuous protection.
02:16:22.660
Straight into the Israeli server backbones, which is connected to the Mossad.
02:16:27.660
Facility to prevent falls and alerts you about changes in a resident's health or behavior patterns.
02:16:32.660
It displays all of this on a dashboard that gives you the status on all of your rooms at once.
02:16:37.660
And uses this data to both alert if a problem has occurred in any room in real time.
02:16:42.660
And provide pre-emptive indicators of health deterioration.
02:16:46.660
The facility dashboard gives you important data analytics, like when the latest fall occurred, the average response time it takes to get to a resident, and the number of falls that occurred in the facility.
02:16:57.660
Viar Home. Protect your residence and your facility.
02:17:01.660
So, in other words, you'll be moving into a smart home, you know, since you'll own nothing, but you'll be happy, according to the World Economic Forum, in the future.
02:17:12.660
These will be pre-installed in whatever apartment that you rent, and it will just go straight in, right?
02:17:19.660
Virus automotive child presence detection in car sensing demo.
02:17:28.660
Excuse me while I just kind of look around here a little bit.
02:17:31.660
Smart building solutions. Maybe we should look at this one.
02:17:34.660
We'll take a look at a couple of these here more.
02:17:37.660
A truly smart building won't turn the lights off on you in the middle of a meeting.
02:17:42.660
It'll always find you an available workstation, and there aren't any cameras to invade your privacy.
02:17:51.660
I mean, okay, sure, okay, I get it. Like, you have to say this and shit like that, but it's like, you're literally scanning everything, including down to the health levels, respiration, heartbeat, emotional impact, or emotional state, but you still try to say that there's not a privacy issue?
02:18:14.660
To invade your privacy. In fact, upgrading to a truly smart...
02:18:18.660
I mean, it's not a camera. You can't... you can't see anything with it.
02:18:25.660
Viar's sensors enhance your smart building solutions by detecting and tracking people anywhere in the office in real time, protecting privacy, and working in all lighting conditions.
02:18:37.660
Hot desking. Find a free workstation for each team member without any effort.
02:18:42.660
Conference room occupancy. Always know which meeting rooms are occupied or vacant.
02:18:47.660
Staff utilization. Make the most out of your maintenance team's time. Energy efficiency. Control energy consumption.
02:18:59.660
Maintain social distancing guidelines and monitor building...
02:19:02.660
Oh, and there it is. There it is. I didn't know that. Of course, they're going to use this for the fucking COVID bullshit as well. Monitoring social distance.
02:19:12.660
Have a robot tell them if you wear a mask or not.
02:19:15.660
...consumption and reduce power bills. Safety. Maintain social distancing guidelines and monitor building occupancy.
02:19:22.660
Security. Receive intruder alerts for unwanted visitors and restricted zones. Viar's sensors are easily integrated into any building.
02:19:33.660
All this information is gathered by one intelligent radar sensor that uses 4D imaging technology for a complete snapshot of your building status.
02:19:43.660
All right. I believe you. Is this the video? I think this one. Yeah. Smart home automation sensor. Let's look at this one here.
02:19:52.660
Hi, I'm Jael from Viar Imaging. Viar develops 3D imaging devices that create a 3D image of the world around you in real time, utilizing dozens of antennas on the one chip.
02:20:02.660
We're setting up some demos. And we're ready to go.
02:20:14.660
Our device can even identify a person's body position.
02:20:37.660
Unlike a camera, it doesn't take pictures and protect your privacy.
02:20:52.660
The device can pick up even minute changes, such as a person breathing, or two people breathing next to each other in different positions.
02:21:17.660
What you saw here today was one device that can replace the capabilities of numerous sensors.
02:21:22.660
The same device can be applied for fall detection and elderly care, for smart home security and automation, for in-car monitoring and automotive, for retail applications, and many more things that we can't even imagine.
02:21:43.660
But, of course, straight out of Tel Aviv, ladies and gentlemen.
02:21:49.660
We've gone over our time here a little bit, but I'm going to wrap up shortly.
02:21:56.660
Out of McMaster's University, the Department of Electric and Computer Engineering.
02:22:01.660
Just to give you an idea of, you know, what it can look like on the back-end as well.
02:22:08.660
These are, like, luggage inspection applications.
02:22:11.660
It's already, I mean, the, what are they called again, the Michael Chertoff's, you know, cancer radar devices that they installed in all the airports after 9-11, of course.
02:22:23.660
That's already kind of part of this and what they do and how they map and imaging and stuff.
02:22:27.660
And it's just, oh, it's just background microwave radiation scattering or something.
02:22:36.660
But they can, like, they can go into different layers.
02:22:45.660
They can, like, they can hone in on different aspects of it.
02:22:49.660
Which, of course, is totally not an invasion of privacy on top of it as well.
02:22:55.660
When you can, like, take away, you know, clothes layer and stuff like that, right?
02:23:02.660
But just to give you an idea of, like, what they can do.
02:23:22.660
Anyway, I quickly want to show you that regarding, like, how they can, what they can do.
02:23:27.660
Just with microwave near field imaging and stuff like that, too.
02:23:30.660
And, of course, you can imagine in the future the applications, right?
02:23:36.660
New York Police Department to deploy robotic dog to combat criminals, right?
02:23:46.660
Actually, the big dog was the early Boston Dynamics development that they were working on.
02:23:51.660
Then they ended up doing a smaller one called Spot.
02:23:54.660
And I believe, at least for a while, Google bought up Boston Dynamics and they worked together for a long time.
02:24:02.660
But this is the kind of stuff that will be policing you in the future.
02:24:05.660
Imagine all the sensors that it can have, you know, connecting with all the different AI systems out there and just have access to everything.
02:24:16.660
Anyway, let's just take a look at this video, see what they got for us here.
02:24:19.660
At New York Presbyterian Hospital, home of Columbia and Wild Cornell doctors.
02:24:26.660
Let me lower that a little bit while we're waiting for a spot.
02:24:29.660
New York Police Department's new dog to pop up here.
02:24:36.660
And we're getting a look at the NYPD's newest crime-fighting tool, a robotic dog.
02:24:41.660
This dog, it can be sent to dangerous situations and help protect officers.
02:24:46.660
IWN Azir's reporter Kimberly Richardson shows us exactly how it works.
02:24:50.660
There's a new dog in town, an NYPD canine archer isn't quite sure what to make of it.
02:25:07.660
It's able to run about three and a half miles per hour.
02:25:13.660
We got an exclusive look at what this futuristic four-legged being can do.
02:25:20.660
This robot's able to use its, you know, artificial intelligence to kind of navigate through very complex environments.
02:25:28.660
Deepu John says it's as simple as playing a video game.
02:25:31.660
He's with the NYPD's Technical Assistance Research Unit.
02:25:35.660
It's one of many officers trained to operate the RoboDog.
02:25:38.660
It is covered with cameras and lights, which allows police to get a real-time look at things.
02:25:44.660
We can send it into complete darkness and we get an idea of what's going on inside.
02:25:51.660
In Brooklyn, in October, a shooting suspect had barricaded himself in a home.
02:25:56.660
Then in Queens, DigiDog was back at it at this tense scene where two armed men were holding five hostages in a home.
02:26:06.660
People wanted food, so we strapped food onto it, sent it into the location.
02:26:11.660
DigiDog is also capable of two-way communication.
02:26:15.660
If an officer needs to talk with the suspect, he or she can.
02:26:24.660
In January, an arm's coming out, so we'll be able to open doors and move objects.
02:26:31.660
For now, this is the department's only robot dog during this test phase.
02:26:35.660
It's only been used a few times, but officers are hoping to add more.
02:26:43.660
Alright, so you know, you know what's, you know what's coming.
02:26:49.660
In the future, it will be simply too dangerous for human officers, especially white ones I would assume,
02:26:57.660
to police certain areas, to be just, you know, we need to replace these people,
02:27:03.660
we need to have robots that do this, and they need to do it right.
02:27:10.660
Just roll out these robots, Robocop, and these different dogs and stuff,
02:27:14.660
and then combine it with all the madness that we've seen with like sensors
02:27:17.660
and knowing everything and everywhere and pre-crime and all this crazy shit, right?
02:27:28.660
we can't afford to have any more of our people flee from reality.
02:27:32.660
I mean, this is, all of this is the ultimate escape from reality.
02:27:38.660
But, you know, we just, if these people want to go into that world and, you know, do their thing,
02:27:49.660
I mean, you have to have some kind of like, semblance of understanding of where this will be going
02:27:57.660
Sadly, though, it will be targeted towards kids, and there will be computer game upgrades,
02:28:02.660
and you don't even need any controls anymore, and it'll be fantastic,
02:28:06.660
and just, you know, your device senses you everywhere and shit like that.
02:28:13.660
But some days I just feel, you know what, you just like,
02:28:16.660
just want to buy like a farm somewhere, just way out on the countryside,
02:28:21.660
somewhere just far away from all this bullshit.
02:28:27.660
We need to be in, you know, certain selected spots around in the West
02:28:30.660
and hold the territory and just make sure that this shit doesn't get there.
02:28:35.660
But at least for now, the sad reality is it will, at least initially.
02:28:40.660
But then at the end of the day, there has to be lines drawn in the sand
02:28:43.660
where we just don't let some of this technology in.
02:29:00.660
But, and let me see if there's a follow-up to that.
02:29:06.660
I would assume you mean, but there's always this downside.
02:29:10.660
There's always something that happens with it, right?
02:29:15.660
Every story that we've created in the last couple of decades about the technology has,
02:29:19.660
more than that, in fact, last century has told us why.
02:29:26.660
And my point is, maybe it even will be designed to fail.
02:29:29.660
Maybe that is, maybe that's point of it or part of it, right?
02:29:55.660
We'll look at some of the Boston Dynamic robotics
02:29:59.660
You know, the different robots are able to run and stuff like that.
02:30:19.660
I mean, they'll just cut you in two halves, like right away,
02:30:27.660
They don't even need, if they can get close enough,
02:30:31.660
They just make you hurt so bad, you're incapacitated.
02:30:34.660
I mean, the Terminator series have kind of shown that a little bit, too.
02:30:39.660
I'm sure they will be putting all kinds of matters of weaponry
02:30:46.660
Unfortunately, the dog is BLM and Antifa blind.
02:30:51.660
These biases that they claim exist within the police department of stuff
02:30:55.660
will have to be unprogrammed or reprogrammed in the right way,
02:30:59.660
which means these things will walk around in police,
02:31:09.660
How just, like, just insane this will be getting in the future.
02:31:32.660
I mean, I think it's bad enough already, obviously,
02:31:34.660
with government agencies, with military and stuff like that,
02:31:40.660
But even rogue groups and stuff like that will do that as well.
02:31:49.660
We do have some more stories up to cover COVID,
02:31:52.660
some of the COVID updates in the next Flashback Friday.
02:32:00.660
We'll talk about Bill Gates talking about new lockdowns.
02:32:04.660
There's a new strain of coronavirus popping up conveniently
02:32:09.660
We had a huge hack with a vulnerability that was had
02:32:18.660
that happened right on the day of the solar eclipse, by the way.
02:32:27.660
SolarWinds on the day of the solar eclipse had a huge problem with it.
02:32:31.660
All these government systems and websites were down and stuff like that.
02:32:36.660
which always is a tell that they're applying something else.
02:32:43.660
Also, we've had some interesting transgender activists
02:32:48.660
calling for children to be put on puberty blockers
02:33:07.660
but they've had a lot of interesting things develop there.
02:33:32.660
Cynic, I think it is, with two C's at the end for five, says,
02:33:39.660
We know where you are at all times, protecting your privacy.
02:33:46.660
Should we add surveillance is privacy to the list?
02:33:53.660
just because you have, you know, no optical lens,
02:33:59.660
And they can see way more than they can with an optical lens.
02:34:12.660
and then we'll do that as a last thing, and then we'll wrap up.
02:34:17.660
We have much more of these kinds of things to cover.
02:34:19.660
In fact, I have way more in kind of an archive file,
02:34:24.660
Let me add in a couple of more lemons in the chest as well.
02:34:28.660
We have 1.1K in there, distributing those right now.
02:34:33.660
In the meantime, of course, if you do want more,
02:34:35.660
redicemembers.com, join us over on the members website.
02:34:43.660
We need you to come back as subscribers as well,
02:34:46.660
I've mentioned many times, but we have new people tuning in all the time.
02:34:51.660
We have some new cool updates coming to the members website as well.
02:34:55.660
A lot of new features going to be rolled out and stuff like that.
02:34:59.660
We are going to improve things for sure over the next, hopefully, couple of months or so here.
02:35:19.660
And thank you to everyone else as well, donating over on DLive for joining us here today.
02:35:24.660
Thank you to those who sent on Entropy Stream as well.
02:35:27.660
And as always, special shout out, of course, to our members for joining us here today.
02:35:35.660
Flashback Friday back soon with much more coming up.
02:35:39.660
Thank you, Cherry Phosphate as well for that diamond.
02:35:48.660
And we'll make some dents in this demonic system that they're building.
02:36:08.660
Get access to exclusive material by signing up for a Red Ice membership.
02:36:13.660
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02:36:18.660
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02:36:21.660
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02:36:27.660
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02:36:33.860
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02:36:39.440
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