colorful links
angryflower
something+
scary-go-round
sluggy freelance
real life
checkerboard nightmare
keenspot
Crazy Kimchi!
Penny Arcade
electrolite
die puny humans
metafilter
memepool
fark
everlastingblort
matt fraction
kuro5hin
x-e
comicbookresources
infinitematrix
toastyfrog
opi8
gamesarefun
robotfist
onion
imdb
Tom Tomorrow
somethingawful
ananova
EVERYTHING2
brunchin
snopes
smokinggun
newscientist

mary
sarah e
alex
rachel
evan
strategized marketecture
Powered by TagBoard Message Board Who?

From?

Messages(smilies)


Archives




Can't wear the Superman shirt without feeling guilty. maystar designs

Sunday, April 11, 2004

"The Tesla coil, and latter the tesla magnifier, were designed by Nikola Tesla as devices for Global communication. His aim was to produce a 'World Service', unlike Marconi's vision of using radio as a point to point wireless telegraph system, Tesla saw radio as a way of globally broadcasting a radio signal that could be picked up by anyone anywhere with the right equipment. His failure was due to a lack of funding when Marconi demonstrated his inferior but vastly cheaper radio, based on Tesla's patents and designs (note as of 1947 Tesla holds the patents for radio).

His eventual aims for the Tesla coil were even grander - he desired to use it to transmit electrical power throughout the earth so that electrical machinery could be run anywhere without batteries just by tuning into the right frequency with the right equipment.


He tested this and was able to transmit some 2000 watts 200 miles to power fluorescent tube lights in front of a small audience. Whether or not this would have worked on a global scale was never proven, and whether it could be done safely, without electrical circuits resonating by accident and picking up kilovolts of unwanted power, was a major concern. The important thing is that it looked damn cool when the test station was powered up and producing 140 feet of man made lightning."
[ Monday, March 31, 2003 ]

"Attention to health is life's greatest hindrance."
- Plato (427-347 B.C.)


"Plato was a bore."
- Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900)



"Nietzsche was stupid and abnormal."
- Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910)



"I'm not going to get into the ring with Tolstoy."
- Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)



"Hemingway was a jerk."
- Harold Robbins


Blake at 3:44:00 PM

maystar designs maystar designs maystar designs