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Related: I know a local guy (Silverton) who developed an inexpensive emergency lock system for school classrooms and he says the School District gave him the "not invented here" treatment and bounced him out.
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Same law enforcement that let them in too. Now this. Funny coincidence right?Although the only guns displayed during the Capitol walkthrough were by those of law enforcement, this becomes another convenient excuse to erode away at our rights.
It kinda already is.Soon, millimeter wave tech will be in every cellphone and they will use it to know when people are carrying.
It kinda already is.
Your home router or other continual broadcasting wifi can (and has been for years) be used as a back-scatter transmission source.
This is old tech that few civilians are fully aware of. It's kinda the same as 'A' and 'B' truck units nearly every car travels between at borders, tunnels and bridgeways.
And as for, 'the latest tech' - I can pretty much (professionally) assure you that any tech you see or use these days has been declassified for many years. The technology we use these days is no longer based on, 'gain' (VOLUME!) but rather, 'selectivity'.
Example: Nearly 30 years ago a simple hand held device came into use at borders. The problem was trying to quickly find illegal passengers on freight trucks hiding. (This was before we simply "x-ray" trucks as they rolled by.) This little device was simply tuned to detect a simple and easily identifiable repeating electrical signal that is found nowhere else. Your heartbeat. The tiny electrical pulses your body generates to simply function stands out like a beacon for this device. Just walking around a semi trailer can identify passengers. And this was 30 years ago.
I wouldn't be too worried about AI / visual detection tech. Sure it's real and futuristic - but it keeps people from realizing how advanced current tech is already working. Today it's about 'passive measures' detection. A simple fly over with the proper equipment can reveal all the varying density's of all the steel and iron in your location - using only the earth's magnetosphere as a background 'scatter source'. Much less the handheld devices that can pinpoint a piece of high density metal on your person from 100 yards away.
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Not for us.All that, but STILL no Tricorders that can detect/diagnose problems in the human body.
Sometimes it's the older tech that works best too. For example, my employer uses certain old tech because the new stuff simply cannot do what the old stuff does as reliably and as accurately.It kinda already is.
Your home router or other continual broadcasting wifi can (and has been for years) be used as a back-scatter transmission source.
This is old tech that few civilians are fully aware of. It's kinda the same as 'A' and 'B' truck units nearly every car travels between at borders, tunnels and bridgeways.
And as for, 'the latest tech' - I can pretty much (professionally) assure you that any tech you see or use these days has been declassified for many years. The technology we use these days is no longer based on, 'gain' (VOLUME!) but rather, 'selectivity'.
Example: Nearly 30 years ago a simple hand held device came into use at borders. The problem was trying to quickly find illegal passengers on freight trucks hiding. (This was before we simply "x-ray" trucks as they rolled by.) This little device was simply tuned to detect a simple and easily identifiable repeating electrical signal that is found nowhere else. Your heartbeat. The tiny electrical pulses your body generates to simply function stands out like a beacon for this device. Just walking around a semi trailer can identify passengers. And this was 30 years ago.
I wouldn't be too worried about AI / visual detection tech. Sure it's real and futuristic - but it keeps people from realizing how advanced current tech is already working. Today it's about 'passive measures' detection. A simple fly over with the proper equipment can reveal all the varying density's of all the steel and iron in your location - using only the earth's magnetosphere as a background 'scatter source'. Much less the handheld devices that can pinpoint a piece of high density metal on your person from 100 yards away.
Some of the most technically advanced tanks, troop carriers and military vehicles- capable in all manners of invasion and defense - are still all easily stopped in their tracks by a simple ditch and berm. Some times the old ways are the best ways. Thinking outside the box is the best defense. They just like to keep you thinking inside this box.
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Now, "Money Guns" - that's some scary stuff.
Imagine having all your cash detected - and counted - before a cop even pulls you over.
Too much lucre involved. Health is one of the new empires of growth.All that, but STILL no Tricorders that can detect/diagnose problems in the human body.
Health is one of the new empires of growth.