blog.wired.com — "Ugh, what I wouldn't do to rid my house of the snake-like electrical cords coming out of my computer monitor, external drive, laptop, stereo, TV, etc. I'm tired of getting my office chair tangled up with the mess under my desk! Well, my wish for wireless electricity may not be too far off."
Aug 22, 2007 View in Crawl 4
bdhughesAug 23, 2007
| implying you're an arm chair researcher (or an idiot)or implying that you are an actual scientist.where are we supposed to get our unbiased information? all become researchers and scientists?obviously ANYONE can get the information needed to support their pov. whether or not these sourced materials are the ultimate, indisputable truth or not is itself in dispute.let's not call each other idiots for crying out loud. leave that to others.
glitch82Aug 23, 2007
Is anyone an expert in this field? I always thought that as long as your body didn't have the same resonance frequency that the electromagnetic waves in question do, then they would harmlessly pass through you.
blaaguuuAug 23, 2007
"Rather than send out electromagnetic waves, it fills the space around it with a magnetic field oscillating at a particular frequency."It's not using EMFs... Just plain ol' magnetic fields, which have practically zero effect on the human body, and zero known side affects so far. It is highly unlikely that magnetic fields would cause something like cancer.
Closed AccountAug 23, 2007
He invented it and demonstrated it now 100 years later people at MIT are trying to make it feasible; there is a major difference between demonstration and large-scale implementation.
justaboutdeadAug 24, 2007
actually, thats what Tesla was trying
abhinavsoodAug 26, 2007
<a class="user" href="http://techxtreme.blogspot.com/2007/08/hacking-hididng-vbs-exploits-bat-files.html">http://techxtreme.blogspot.com/2007/08/hacking-hididng-vbs-exploits-bat-files.html</a>