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Gravity Machine - Religios. YES brothers. IT IS POSSIBLE! And after more then 43 years of hard work and simplifying, engineering and re-engineering, it is here! Gravity Motor We have many machines like that, here, and also, in our video Demonstrations. (See www.witts.ws/videos) Confirmed and tested by over 1000 Independent Scientists and Engineers. This has made quite a stir in the scientific community, worldwide!

NOW, (finally) we have one that even the average man, with minimal education, or even no education, can build for himself! Brother Nikola Tesla, a World Class Scientific Genius, and considered by many to be the Top Scientist of all time, said, “Before many years pass, man will succeed in hooking his machines, into the very wheel-work of nature!” “Ere many generations pass, our machinery will be driven by power obtainable at any point in the universe…it is a mere question of time when men will succeed in attaching their machinery to the very wheelwork of nature.” – Nikola Tesla God Bless You!

PS. 1955'56 Paris Experiments~Electrogravitics and Field Propulsion. Townsend Brown flying his discs at the S.N.C.A.S.O. facility outside of Paris. (photo courtesy of J. Cornillon) In 1955 and 1956 Townsend Brown made two trips to Paris where he conducted tests of his electrokinetic apparatus and electrogravitic vacuum chamber tests in collaboration with the French aeronautical company Société National de Construction Aeronautiques du Sud Ouest (S.N.C.A.S.O.) . He was invited there by Jacques Cornillon, the company’s U.S. technical representative. The project was named Project Montgolfier in honor of the two French brother inventors who performed early aircraft flights.

The project continued for several years until the company changed ownership resulting in a final report which was written up in 1959. Details of the Project Montgolfier experiments remained a closely guarded secret for many years until Jacques Cornillon courageously decided to make them public prior to his death in July 2008. Project Montgolfier: Universe grows like a giant brain. The universe may grow like a giant brain, according to a new computer simulation. The results, published Nov. 16 in the journal Nature's Scientific Reports, suggest that some undiscovered, fundamental laws may govern the growth of systems large and small, from the electrical firing between brain cells and growth of social networks to the expansion of galaxies.

"Natural growth dynamics are the same for different real networks, like the Internet or the brain or social networks," said study co-author Dmitri Krioukov, a physicist at the University of California San Diego. The new study suggests a single fundamental law of nature may govern these networks, said physicist Kevin Bassler of the University of Houston, who was not involved in the study. [ What's That? Your Physics Questions Answered ] "At first blush they seem to be quite different systems, the question is, is there some kind of controlling laws can describe them? " he told LiveScience. Similar Networks Brain cells and galaxies. Scientists probe Earth's core, make mystifying discovery. High performance access to file storage Scientists carrying out extreme boffinry into the makeup of the Earth's liquid core have announced that they are very puzzled to find it is not made of what they had thought it was. The great bulk of the liquid outer core of the planet, of course, is made of molten iron.

That's just as well for us and all life on Earth, as the spinning blob of superhot melted metal we all live on top of generates a tremendously powerful magnetic field which keeps off all the plasma storms and cosmic rays and suchlike deadly space radiation so that we aren't fried out of existence on a routine basis. But theory suggests that there must also be some lighter elements mixed in to the liquid comprising the outer core, otherwise it wouldn't be the density it is. (This density can be measured by seismic observations.) But it seems this is not the case. “The research revealed a powerful way to decipher the identity of the light elements in the core.

Why 'slow light' might just save the Internet. 5 things you didn’t know about cloud backup If we want to keep expanding the performance and the reach of the Internet, we need an inflection point: otherwise, its electricity consumption will become catastrophic. This isn’t some hippie greenie Luddite concern: even if we ignore the climate question, we need to be able to supply our telecommunications networks with electricity. We also need that electricity to be cheap enough that its cost doesn’t become the constraint on the Internet’s growth.

This Register hack recently had the good fortune to slip into the Australian Institute of Physics’s “Physics in Industry” conference. This meant I was listening to science that wasn’t filtered by political anti-science. To date, we’ve been fortunate: the Internet (along with the physical-layer networks that transport the packets around and the data centres that store it and serve it up) is so distributed that the electricity cost is similarly distributed. The all-optical domain 1. 2. 3.