#wireless
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alphaengineering · 2 months ago
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Cyborg Origin🤖💪
By:
https://x.com/nickadobos/status/1910807851821633687?s=46&t=phIcPWPJmXLJ7wJtmxw22Q
https://x.com/nickadobos/status/1910807851821633687?s=46&t=phIcPWPJmXLJ7wJtmxw22Q
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todaysdocument · 3 months ago
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Patent Drawing for G. Marconi's Wireless Telegraphy
Record Group 241: Records of the Patent and Trademark OfficeSeries: Utility Patent Drawings
No. 786,132
PATENTED MAR. 28, 1905
G. MARCONI.
WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY
APPLICATION FILED OCT. 13 1903
FIG 1
(drawing of invention)
FIG 2
(drawing of invention)
Fig 3.
(drawing of invention)
Witnesses
Frank S Obur
Delos Sivedin
Inventor:
Guglielmo Marconi
By his Attorneys
Betts Betts Sheffield Betts
Sept 28 1904
(in handwritten text on left margin)
Guglielmo Marconi Wireless Telegraph
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maklodes · 2 years ago
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You bring a mousegirl over to your place, and she’s super self-conscious about the fact that she’s old-fashioned and needs to be plugged directly into a USB port to function and isn’t modern and wireless, and she’s just so happy and relieved when you tell her that you prefer wired mousegirls and are glad that you don’t have to worry about batteries and keeping track of easy-to-lose dongles and pairing them with their associated mice, etc.
(Not that you’re judging wireless mousegirls – they can’t help how Logitech made ‘em – but you do have preferences.)
(Really, maybe the first person would be more appropriate than the second person here.)
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drnikolatesla · 21 days ago
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thediaryofarevolutionist · 7 months ago
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I feel the pain of every woman who was born into this world so no I can't let it go
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weareravershq · 11 months ago
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REMA | Linking Up With Artist At Wireless Festival
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lindahall · 2 months ago
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Guglielmo Marconi – Scientist of the Day
Guglielmo Marconi, an Italian electrical engineer and inventor, was born Apr. 25, 1874, into a wealthy family in Bologna.
learn more
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getawayfox · 11 months ago
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“Right,” begins Draco, heart hammering against his ribcage, “well then–” but Potter’s on him, over him, catching Draco by the nape of his neck as the mattress dips, and now there’s no sentence left to finish, nothing left in Draco’s brain at all. Potter’s possessed by some fresh surety, kneeling up over Draco and reeling him in with a tight fist to the back of his t-shirt, the fabric pulling tight across Draco’s neck, holding him in place as their lips finally meet. The kiss is the same: furious, frenzied, the kind of kiss that’s a claim; the kind of kiss that’s proof.
Quote from a gorgeous, clever, hot and funny fic Closing Time by @sweet-s0rr0w (Drarry, E, 18,4k)
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danskjavlarna · 6 months ago
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Source details and larger version.
Tune into this weird collection of vintage radio imagery.
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recursive360 · 2 months ago
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(via GIPHY)
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newyorkthegoldenage · 1 year ago
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Oscar Wuertz instructing a youngster in the art of making his own wireless set in a Brooklyn radio shop, ca. 1922.
Photo: Underwood & Underwood via getarchive.net
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digitalmemoriez · 10 months ago
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✫・゚*.2006・゚✫*.
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mentalanguish · 3 months ago
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now playing:
Maroon 5 - She will be loved
0:01 ❍─────── 4:28
↻ ⊲ Ⅱ ⊳ ↺
Volume: ▁▂▃▄▅▆▇ 100%
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fly-the-pattern · 1 year ago
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drnikolatesla · 1 month ago
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Tesla’s Wardenclyffe Tower: Built on Sound Math, Undone by Cost and Misunderstanding
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Let’s set the record straight—Nikola Tesla’s Wardenclyffe Tower was a high-voltage experimental transmission system grounded in quarter-wave resonance and electrostatic conduction—not Hertzian radiation. And the math behind it? It was solid—just often misunderstood by people applying the wrong physics.
In May 1901, Tesla calculated that to set the Earth into electrical resonance, he needed a quarter-wavelength system with a total conductor length of about 225,000 cm, or 738 feet.
So Tesla’s tower design had to evolve during construction. In a letter dated September 13, 1901, to architect Stanford White, Tesla wrote: “We cannot build that tower as outlined.” He scaled the visible height down to 200 feet. The final structure—based on photographic evidence and Tesla’s own testimony—stood at approximately 187 feet above ground. To meet the required electrical length, Tesla engineered a system that combined spiral coil geometry, an elevated terminal, a 120-foot vertical shaft extending underground, and radial pipes buried outward for approximately 300 feet. This subterranean network, together with the 187-foot tower and carefully tuned inductance, formed a continuous resonant conductor that matched Tesla’s target of 738 feet. He described this strategy in his 1897 patent (No. 593,138) and expanded on it in his 1900 and 1914 patents, showing how to simulate a longer conductor using high-frequency, resonant components. Even with a reduced visible height, Tesla’s system achieved quarter-wave resonance by completing the rest underground—proving that the tower’s electrical length, not its physical height, was what really mattered.
Tesla calculated his voltages to be around 10 million statvolts (roughly 3.3 billion volts in modern SI), so he had to consider corona discharge and dielectric breakdown. That’s why the terminal was designed with large, smooth spherical surfaces—to minimize electric surface density and reduce energy loss. This was no afterthought; it’s a core feature of his 1914 patent and clearly illustrated in his design sketches.
Now, about that ±16 volt swing across the Earth—what was Tesla talking about?
He modeled the Earth as a conductive sphere with a known electrostatic capacity. Using the relation:
ε × P = C × p
Where:
ε is the terminal’s capacitance (estimated at 1,000 cm)
P is the applied voltage (10⁷ statvolts)
C is the Earth’s capacitance, which Tesla estimated at 5.724 × 10⁸ cm (based on the Earth’s size)
p is the resulting voltage swing across the Earth
Plugging in the numbers gives p ≈ 17.5 volts, which Tesla rounded to ±16 volts. That’s a theoretical 32-volt peak-to-peak swing globally—not a trivial claim, but one rooted in his framework.
Modern recalculations, based on updated geophysical models, suggest a smaller swing—closer to ±7 volts—using a revised Earth capacitance of about 7.1 × 10⁸ cm. But that’s not a knock on Tesla’s math. His original ±16V estimate was fully consistent with the cgs system and the best data available in 1901, where the Earth was treated as a uniformly conductive sphere.
The difference between 7 and 16 volts isn’t about wrong numbers—it’s about evolving assumptions. Tesla wrote the equation. Others just adjusted the inputs. His premise—that the Earth could be set into controlled electrical resonance—still stands. Even if the voltage swing changes. The vision didn’t.
Wouldn't that ±16V swing affect nature or people? Not directly. It wasn’t a shock or discharge—it was a global oscillation in Earth’s electric potential, spread evenly across vast distances. The voltage gradient would be tiny at any given point—far less than what’s generated by everyday static electricity. Unless something was specifically tuned to resonate with Tesla’s system, the swing had no noticeable effect on people, animals, or the environment. It was a theoretical signature of resonance, not a hazard. While some early experiments in Colorado Springs did produce disruptive effects—like sparks from metal objects or spooked horses—those involved untuned, high-voltage discharges during Tesla’s exploratory phase. Wardenclyffe, by contrast, was a refined and carefully grounded system, engineered specifically to minimize leakage, discharge, and unintended effects.
And Tesla wasn’t trying to blast raw power through the ground. He described the system as one that would “ring the Earth like a bell,” using sharp, high-voltage impulses at a resonant frequency to create standing waves. As he put it:
“The secondary circuit increases the amplitude only... the actual power is only that supplied by the primary.” —Tesla, Oct. 15, 1901
Receivers, tuned to the same frequency, could tap into the Earth’s oscillating potential—not by intercepting radiated energy, but by coupling to the Earth’s own motion. That ±16V swing wasn’t a bug—it was the signature of resonance. Tesla’s transmitter generated it by pumping high-frequency, high-voltage impulses into the Earth, causing the surface potential to oscillate globally. That swing wasn’t the energy itself—it acted like a resonant “carrier.” Once the Earth was ringing at the right frequency, Tesla could send sharp impulses through it almost instantly, and tuned receivers could extract energy.
So—was it feasible?
According to Tesla’s own patents and 1916 legal testimony, yes. He accounted for insulation, voltage gradients, tuning, and corona losses. His design didn’t rely on brute force, but on resonant rise and impulse excitation. Tesla even addressed concerns over losses in the Earth—his system treated the planet not as a passive resistor but as an active component of the circuit, capable of sustaining standing waves.
Wardenclyffe wasn’t a failure of science. It was a casualty of cost, politics, and misunderstanding. Tesla’s system wasn’t just about wireless power—it was about turning the entire planet into a resonant electrical system. His use of electrostatics, high-frequency resonance, and spherical terminals was decades ahead of its time—and still worth studying today.
“The present is theirs; the future, for which I really worked, is mine.” —Nikola Tesla
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