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Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
The earliest mentions of frequency hopping in the open literature are in US patent 725,605 awarded to Nikola Tesla in March 17, 1903 and in radio pioneer Jonathan Zenneck's book Wireless Telegraphy (German, 1908, English translation McGraw Hill, 1915), although Zenneck himself states that Telefunken had already tried it. Nikola Tesla doesn’t mention the phrase “frequency hopping” directly, but certainly alludes to it. Entitled Method of Signaling, the patent describes a system that would enable radio communication without any danger of the signals or messages being disturbed, intercepted, interfered with in any way [3].
During World War II, the US Army Signal Corps was inventing a communication system called SIGSALY, which incorporated spread spectrum in a single frequency context. However, SIGSALY was a top-secret communications system, so its existence did not become known until the 1980s. (Alan Turing and Bell labs)
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Compare Wardenclyffe with the Pyramids
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"Speculation on the Wardenclyffe Tower tunnels ranges from them being for drainage, acting as access ways, or having the function of enhancing ground connection or resonance by interacting with the water table below the tower, maybe via being filled with SALT WATER or LIQUID NITROGEN (LIQUID SUPERCONDUCTIVE GASSES LIKE HYDROGEN OR ARGON/KRYPTON).[18][21] There is also contemporaneous and later descriptions of four 100 foot long tunnels, possibly brick lined and waterproofed, radiating from the bottom of the shaft north, south, east, and west terminating back at ground level in little brick igloos."
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Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
"The rooftop of the New Yorker Hotel has never been an observation deck, and is occupied mostly by mechanical equipment."

Fluff piece on the view from the top. They don't show the "equipment."
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The New Yorker has an abandoned underground tunnel.
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Here is the truth in detail about The New Yorker Hotel
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Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
There's a power plant in the basement

“The New Yorker Hotel was the most advanced hotel in the world technologically when it was built,” says Kinney. It’s 1 million square feet above ground and 200,000 square feet below ground. The Institute of Electrical and Electrical Engineers (IEEE) named the New Yorker Hotel an IEEE Milestone in Electrical Engineering and Computing for having the “largest (DC) generating plant in the United States” when it was built. It was also one of the first cogeneration power plants in the world. There are only a little over one hundred IEEE milestone sites in the world, and the New Yorker Hotel joins the ranks of places like Niagara Falls and Bell Laboratories."

"The power plant was installed in 1929 and had enough capacity to provide electrical power for a city of 35,000 people. As such, the hotel remained completely off the power grid for thirty years. High pressure boilers made 180 pound steam, sending it over to a massive eightl cylinder diesel locomotive steam engine that powered the direct current electric generators. Exhaust steam was used for heating and other activities within the building, providing the cogeneration part of the plant. Down in the basement, you can still see the motors, over 200 of them, and a sixty-foot long switchboard, which Kinney refers to as the “Frankenstein board.”
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Even though JP Morgan abandoned Tesla in his time of need. The US Goverment did not. It swooped in and helped him rebuild Wardenclyffe and provided unlimited funding.
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