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The Official Sub for Technology
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4
Did Bob Lazar ever make drawings of the antigravity propulsion mechanism? how did they determine the fuel source but not the material the sphere and plate were made out of?     (technology)
submitted by HowDoYouDoFellowNiggers to technology 2.5 years ago (+4/-0)
14 comments last comment...
Where were the components located?

Found a supposed illustration of it https://files.catbox.moe/vogulx.png
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Chinese hackers use Google Drive to drop malware on govt networks     (www.bleepingcomputer.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to technology 2.5 years ago (+4/-0)
0 comments...
4
New search engine AstianGO     (astiango.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to technology 2.5 years ago (+4/-0)
5 comments last comment...
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A very good video on the Alien Reproduction Vehicle     (m.youtube.com)
submitted by Crackinjokes to technology 2.4 years ago (+4/-0)
1 comments last comment...
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Plasma Propulsion Discovery Could Herald a New Era of Space Exploration     (thedebrief.org)
submitted by Spaceman84 to technology 2.4 years ago (+6/-2)
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Tech dorks unsettled by upcoming surveillance gadgets     (www.cnet.com)
submitted by Spaceman84 to technology 2.3 years ago (+4/-0)
1 comments last comment...
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"Intel’s Israel Team Is At The Forefront Of 5G Tech That Will Revolutionize How We Communicate" By Ricky Ben-David     (nocamels.com)
submitted by beece to technology 2.3 years ago (+4/-0)
3 comments last comment...
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Nvidia quietly boosts the video encoding capabilities of GeForce GPUs     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to technology 2.1 years ago (+4/-0)
0 comments...
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/03/nvidia-quietly-boosts-the-video-encoding-capabilities-of-geforce-gpus/?comments=1

The video encoding hardware built into GeForce GPUs is getting a small boost, according to a quietly updated Nvidia support page (as spotted by Tom's Hardware). Previously, the NVENC encoder built into GeForce GPUs could encode up to three video streams simultaneously. Now, most GPUs supported by Nvidia's current drivers can encode up to five streams of video simultaneously, unlocking capabilities that had always been present in the hardware but that were software-limited in consumer GPUs.

It's unclear exactly when Nvidia made this change, but archival snapshots on the Internet Wayback Machine show the old three-stream limit as recently as March 18, so you may need to install the most recent drivers to unlock the additional encoding capabilities. Your video quality settings may also limit the number of video streams you can encode simultaneously.
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Google accused of ripping off OpenAI's ChatGPT     (web.archive.org)
submitted by HowDoYouDoFellowNiggers to technology 2.1 years ago (+4/-0)
2 comments last comment...
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Amazon, De Beers partner to grow artificial diamonds for quantum networking     (www.verdict.co.uk)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to technology 2 years ago (+4/-0)
4 comments last comment...
https://www.verdict.co.uk/amazon-diamond-quantum-networking/

Amazon has forged a new research collaboration with a unit of mining company De Beers Group, to develop artificial diamonds for quantum networking.

Under the partnership, De Beers’ Element Six will be working with Amazon Web Services (AWS) Centre for quantum networking.

Quantum networks use quantum repeaters that allow the transfer of quantum information over long distances, without compromising the quality of data.

The diamonds will be used in the quantum repeaters that function as amplifiers.

AWS, which provides cloud computing services, could eventually end up using the technology in its networks.

did you catch that magic number?
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Apple's Mac shipments fall more than 40%     (www.cnbc.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to technology 2 years ago (+9/-5)
0 comments...
4
Scammers Are Selling Fake AI-Generated Nudes on Reddit     (futurism.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to technology 2 years ago (+5/-1)
4 comments last comment...
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DARPA’s silent MHD magnetic drives for replacing naval propellers     (www.naval-technology.com)
submitted by Spaceman84 to technology 2.0 years ago (+4/-0)
5 comments last comment...
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SkyFi lets you order fresh satellite imagery in real time with a click     (www.skyfi.com)
submitted by Kozel to technology 2.0 years ago (+4/-0)
3 comments last comment...
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Western media and glowniggers accuse Russians of hacking themselves     (archive.is)
submitted by Spaceman84 to technology 1.9 years ago (+4/-0)
5 comments last comment...
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Earpods That Read Your Thoughts Being Used By Employers!     (www.youtube.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.9 years ago (+4/-0)
3 comments last comment...
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Plebbit is like a peer-to-peer Reddit without central administration and sub managers can set arbitrary challenges to be able to post on a sub which makes it harder to spam. I've been watching it and it doesn't require an app but it seems to work well.     (plebbitapp.eth.limo)
submitted by Crackinjokes to technology 1.9 years ago (+4/-2)
0 comments...
4
(((Coincidence Detector)))     (coincidencedetector.com)
submitted by Kozel to technology 1.8 years ago (+5/-1)
3 comments last comment...
https://coincidencedetector.com/

Detect (((names))) for a reminder of what total coincidences have occurred in the past, and continue to occur today.
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Russia's Luna-25 spacecraft crashes into moon     (www.bbc.com)
submitted by Sal_180 to technology 1.7 years ago (+4/-0)
1 comments last comment...
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What is needed to best communicate strong ideas to the maximum number of people is a Reddit like forum that is peer-to-peer rather than centrally hosted.     (technology)
submitted by Crackinjokes to technology 1.7 years ago (+4/-0)
17 comments last comment...
What is needed to best communicate strong ideas to the maximum number of people is a Reddit like forum that is peer-to-peer rather than centrally hosted.

So hopefully you understand immediately why things need to be peer-to-peer and not centrally hosted because anything centrally hosted can be taken down through monetary financial or social pressures or government pressures. So I hope I don't have to get into why that's important.

So let me tell you why something like a Twitter interface or others are not good for communicating single ideas for lots of people. Twitter relies on an individual having a lot of popularity to get their particular tweets out. But that's not what you want. What you want is for an idea to rise to the top and to be voted on by a ton of people so that the maximum number of people see that idea. Now any of you who are alive when read it for started when they were absolutely no subreddits and there was very little censorship if anything know that that's what Reddit was. and an idea in one day could go from complete obscurity to being voted to the front page or even the top of Reddit and it would be seen by millions of people. It was truly transformative and that's why of course the Jewish family that controlled so much media bought Reddit and immediately began installing moderators which read it never had before and started breaking it up into subreddits which kept any single idea from being seen by anyone outside of a group who already was interested in that kind of stuff.

So hopefully that's enough of an explanation.

So now what I want to know is has anybody written a Reddit type situation where millions of people can vote up an idea that's a genius idea from some obscure person and haven't get up to the top in ranking so it can be seen by millions of people but yet that that structure of that forum is peer-to-peer or blockchain oriented so it cannot be censored? And taken down?

Does anyone know of any such computer program?

Edit:
One of the key things of such a system is to not have it separated into different forms based on subject matter. One of the reasons that the first Reddit was so successful in communicating an idea to millions was it it didn't matter what the subject matter of a good idea was. If somebody who had a tech leaning identified a new technology that was fantastic it got voted up to the top of the front page and millions of people who otherwise wouldn't care about tech would become aware of that particular technology or if someone determined that insurance companies never paid out if you had a claim that exceeded a certain amount that information did and would get voted to the front page of Reddit and millions of people would suddenly know that fact and it would change politics at that moment and it did for example there was an actual post just like that that was one of the top 10 posts on Reddit of all time which has now been censored from the old Reddit histories. If some group was using their media empire to push an agenda and it was a public company and it was against the stockholders interest that too would get pushed to the front page of Reddit and millions of people would suddenly become aware of that. But if all those different things had existed in different sub forums and only been pushed to the top of those sub forums then it's very likely that the only people who have ever would have known about those are people who already were probably aware of them because they were pretty skilled in that particular area or subject matter. That's why it's extremely important that whatever kind of system this is it only has one Central non-subdivided posting system. No sub forms. When the Jewish family that bought read it wanted to subdivide it and keep knowledge from being spread the two techniques they used were number one to put in moderators and number two to subdivide Reddit into all these other forms so suddenly only the Republicans in the Republican form knew about stuff relating to Democrats which of course they already knew about and only the Democrats and the Democrat forum new about the corruption Republicans which of course they already knew about but the Republicans never heard about the corruption of Republicans in the Democrats never heard about the corruption of Democrats so the two of them never realize the whole damn thing was run by Jews who corrupted both. So you're really really don't want sub forms even though it sounds like you might want them that is not what you want.
4
apparently the elites wont need to use those pesky undersea internet cables in a near future, thus “OuterNET.”     (www.wnd.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.7 years ago (+4/-0)
7 comments last comment...
https://www.wnd.com/2023/09/big-change-coming-communication-technology/





One forthcoming satellite constellation is bidding to address those shortcomings and bring forward a truly revolutionary satellite communications network—faster than fiber, truly global, and as secure as anything on the market.

Rivada Networks calls it the “OuterNET.” To understand why it’s revolutionary, it helps to look at the weaknesses of existing offerings.

Every satellite constellation in existence today uses what’s called “bent pipes.” In short, they bounce the signal off a satellite—and straight back down to Earth, where it is sent through a gateway and onto the same Internet backbone as nearly everything else. It’s a very long way to travel that “last mile” between your home or office and the public Internet. Starlink, OneWeb, Amazon’s forthcoming Kuiper—all are built this way.


The OuterNET is being built differently. Rivada’s orbital network will serve in effect as a second Internet backbone in space, capable of routing traffic at gigabit speeds from one satellite to another, with no need for a gateway on Earth until the data reaches its destination. That matters not just for speed and security, but for coverage, too. We’ve all seen the images showing how many new satellites are in space, and many of us have seen the trains of satellites tracking across the night sky toward their final orbits. But with most other LEO constellations, having a satellite overhead doesn’t matter unless that satellite can also see a gateway on the ground.

The Rivada system is gateway-less. Instead of beaming your communications straight back to a ground station, the whole constellation is interconnected with optical laser links. That means that if there’s a satellite above, you can get connected. And because its satellites move in a single synchronized shell in polar orbits, there will always be a satellite overhead when the constellation is fully deployed.


**It’s also being built to be 100 times faster than current low-Earth orbit constellations. But this is not the home broadband connection of your dreams. It’s a wholesale network built for enterprises and governments. Like the original Internet backbone, it’s not something designed for consumers to connect to directly. Instead, it will provide backhaul to wireless networks, in-flight connectivity, maritime communications, and the like. It’s the fiber optic network for where there is no fiber, or for those who don’t trust or can’t afford to risk using the terrestrial Internet backbone.
4
Apple informs journalists Russia is targeting them with Pegasus spyware     (www.businessinsider.nl)
submitted by Sal_180 to technology 1.6 years ago (+5/-1)
12 comments last comment...
1
Musk says he might put X behind paywall     (www.bbc.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to technology 1.6 years ago (+4/-3)
13 comments last comment...
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Exclusive: Nvidia to make Arm-based PC chips in major new challenge to Intel     (www.reuters.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.5 years ago (+4/-0)
8 comments last comment...
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Google’s on Trial. No Looking. Why a big chunk of the most important tech trial in years is happening behind closed doors.     (slate.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.5 years ago (+4/-0)
1 comments last comment...
https://slate.com/technology/2023/10/google-trial-secret-redactions-trade-secrets-closed-door-testimony.html

Judge Amit Mehta, a Barack Obama appointee, has been widely derided by journalists and government transparency advocates for his repeated deference to requests by Google—and the other tech companies involved—to redact documents and hold witness testimony behind closed doors.

The case is ostensibly about protecting the interests of consumers and illuminating potentially untoward practices of a business nearly every American depends upon, but the public has consistently been shut out. Google Search has long been called a “black box.” Fittingly, so is its trial.

weird that slate is blasting a big mike appointee lol