Could NanoCrystals provide free power for the world?
Could NanoCrystals provide free power for the world?
Nikola Tesla is a name of genius, the radical inventor who created the alternating current system that has powered the world over the last century. But Tesla himself said his greatest mistake was in having TWO ideas of profound genius. He made electrical systems possible, but he didn’t count on the greed of man and lust for control. While Edison loved his AC/DC system to make electricity practical, the idea people would not need corporations to access that electricity made Tesla a threat that had to be destroyed. And that is just what happened.
http://yournewswire.com/wireless-electricity-abusing-human-race/
THE SCIENCE:
“WattUp Mid Field transmitter can deliver power via radio frequency (RF) energy to WattUp-enabled electronic devices at a distance of up to three feet. As the only technology that can do both contact-based and non-contact-based wireless charging, as well as charge multiple devices at once, WattUp is highly scalable and automatically charges devices, as needed, until they are topped off. While older charging technologies allow for only contact-based charging, Energous is the only company to achieve Wireless Charging 2.0 to-date, which is the ability to charge devices both at contact (including fast charging large battery devices such as smartphones and tablets), as well as power-at-a-distance. Similar to WiFi, the WattUp ecosystem ensures interoperability between receivers and transmitters, regardless of the manufacturer, making the entire ecosystem flexible and accessible for consumers and manufacturing partners….
“This represents the first time FCC equipment certification has been awarded to any device that charges wirelessly at a distance, and operates under Part 18 of the FCC’s rules. The FCC’s Part 18 rules permit higher-power operations than are permitted under the Part 15 rules that have been used to approve other at a distance charging devices.”
OpenBazaar – Decentralized Block-chain Marketplace.
The mission of OpenBazaar is to give everyone in the world “the ability to directly engage in trade with anyone in the world for free,” says Brian Hoffman, the project’s 33-year-old project leader. A peer-to-peer network for selling goods online, OpenBazaar runs on open source software that users download and install on their computers, which is similar to a BitTorrent client. The client connects them to the OpenBazaar network, where they can trade with other users. It’s like eBay without eBay. All items are paid for using bitcoin. “OpenBazaar doesn’t have a central point of failure,” explains OB-1 co-founder Sam Patterson. “Everyone using it is a node in a completely distributed network. If you take one user off the network, it has no impact on any of the other users.” Last year, OB1, the company that’s developing the OpenBazaar network, got a million dollars in venture capital from Union Square Ventures, Andreessen Horowitz, and investor William Mougayar. Since OpenBazaar has no intermediaries and no built-in mechanisms for stopping a transaction from taking place, critics say it could become an ideal marketplace for stolen goods and illegal drugs—sort of a decentralized version of Silk Road. Hoffman isn’t concerned. “If we work hard to allow users to self-police, to do things legally, properly, easily, cheaply,” he says, “they will rush in and overwhelm whatever could possibly come in from the dark side of the internet.”
Links:
OpenBazaar: https://www.openbazaar.org/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenBazaar
Why PC Based DVRs are more trouble than you think-
Can I use a PC as my DVR?
You’re probably saying to yourself, “I’ve got a spare PC and a bunch of hard drives sitting around, why spend the money on a separate recording unit, why not just use what I already have?”
You think you’ll save money by using a PC based DVR, but you won’t.
There are two types of cameras that can be recorded with a PC – standard definition (analog) cameras that connect via BNC Coax cable and IP cameras which connect via networking cable.
It is a lot easier to record IP cameras directly with a computer, but IP cameras cost about $150 each (they shoot in HD). So, if you’re starting out putting that sort of investment in your cameras, you should get the reliability of a dedicated record and use your PC as a backup.
To record analog cameras, you’re going to need a DVR card which is a device that allows your computer to accept video inputs from a BNC Coax Cable – something like this Lorex PC Card on Amazon. Just looking at the cost of that device should immediately have you throw up your hands and say “this isn’t saving me anything!”
You’re right, but besides just looking at the price, looks at the reviews as well.
Source: Why PC Based DVRs are more trouble than you think