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I just got a message from GOD!

Jadow

Diamond Member
I was watching the Plinket review of Ep3 with my PC headphones on. After it was over, I was reading email and I started hearing the Hail Mary prayer through my headphones.

I thought it was some wierd plinket flash thing and I closed Firefox completely but I still heard the prayer!

Was totally freaked out for a couple minutes googling "Hail Mary virus" didnt find anything. I had my wife come out to listen and SHE COUDLN'T HEAR IT only me!

So I was totally baffled for a minute, until I realized that when I gave her the headphones I tightened the headphone plug in the PC. I did some testing and when my headphones are all the way plugged in, nothing, but if I pull it out just a bit, my headphones are picking up some kind of radio signal!

How weird is that!

Edit, now they're doing some kind of mass and talking about the lady of guadalupe.
 
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Don't let atheists see this thread because they will go apesh*t with unfounded, silly anger over an entity they themselves say doesn't exist 🙄
 
Don't let atheists see this thread because they will go apesh*t with unfounded, silly anger over an entity they themselves say doesn't exist 🙄


On the other hand, dont let the Theists see it either as they will run round in circles untill they figure they need to martyr someone.
 
My old Cambridge Soundworks 4.1 PC speakers would pick up radio. It was pretty loud even when the speakers were switched off!

Unrelated:
Catholicism is ridiculous. Where, in the Bible, does God instruct the righteous to repeat CHANTS to Mary? A HUMAN BEING.

Where does this Mary-worship come from anyway? Chanting seems like some Hollywood satanist bullshit anyway.

If you believe in Catholicism, why have you never researched the origins? If you had, you would have learned that the Bible never said anything about government-like power structure and a world-wide spiritual leader.
 
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Well, my initial excitement has died down, I'm still listening to it, it's a radio broadcast of a Catholic mass.

Just strange that somehow my headphones are receiving radio signals when partially plugged into the PC.
 
I was watching the Plinket review of Ep3 with my PC headphones on. After it was over, I was reading email and I started hearing the Hail Mary prayer through my headphones.

I thought it was some wierd plinket flash thing and I closed Firefox completely but I still heard the prayer!

Was totally freaked out for a couple minutes googling "Hail Mary virus" didnt find anything. I had my wife come out to listen and SHE COUDLN'T HEAR IT only me!

So I was totally baffled for a minute, until I realized that when I gave her the headphones I tightened the headphone plug in the PC. I did some testing and when my headphones are all the way plugged in, nothing, but if I pull it out just a bit, my headphones are picking up some kind of radio signal!

How weird is that!

Edit, now they're doing some kind of mass and talking about the lady of guadalupe.

You probably created an am receiver by accident. It is rare but happens.
You created an parasitic diode by accident.


The Simplest AM Receiver

In the case of a strong AM signal, it turns out that you can create a simple radio receiver with just two parts and some wire! The process is extremely simple -- here's what you need:
A diode - You can get a diode for about $1 at Radio Shack. Part number 276-1123 will do.
Two pieces of wire - You'll need about 20 to 30 feet (15 to 20 meters) of wire. Radio Shack part number 278-1224 is great, but any wire will do.
A small metal stake that you can drive into the ground (or, if the transmitter has a guard rail or metal fence nearby, you can use that)
A crystal earphone - Unfortunately, Radio Shack does not sell one. However, Radio Shack does sell a Crystal Radio Kit (part number 28-178) that contains the earphone, diode, wire and a tuner (which means that you don't need to stand right next to the transmitter for this to work), all for $10.

You now need to find and be near an AM radio station's transmitting tower (within a mile/1.6 km or so) for this to work. Here's what you do:
Drive the stake into the ground, or find a convenient metal fence post. Strip the insulation off the end of a 10-foot (3-meter) piece of wire and wrap it around the stake/post five or 10 times to get a good solid connection. This is the ground wire.

Attach the diode to the other end of the ground wire.

Take another piece of wire, 10 to 20 feet long (3 to 6 meters), and connect one end of it to the other end of the diode. This wire is your antenna. Lay it out on the ground, or hang it in a tree, but make sure the bare end does not touch the ground.

Connect the two leads from the earplug to either end of the diode, like this:


radio-am-receiver.gif



Now if you put the earplug in your ear, you will hear the radio station -- that is the simplest possible radio receiver! This super-simple project will not work if you are very far from the station, but it does demonstrate how simple a radio receiver can be.

Here's how it works. Your wire antenna is receiving all sorts of radio signals, but because you are so close to a particular transmitter it doesn't really matter. The nearby signal overwhelms everything else by a factor of millions. Because you are so close to the transmitter, the antenna is also receiving lots of energy -- enough to drive an earphone! Therefore, you don't need a tuner or batteries or anything else. The diode acts as a detector for the AM signal as described in the previous section. So you can hear the station despite the lack of a tuner and an amplifier!

For explanation read :
http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/radio9.htm
 
I used to have an old speaker phone that would occasionally pickup CB transmissions loud and clear. Phone would be unused, and on the hook, and I'd get voices that would pop out every so often. It kind of weirded me out, and I eventually cut the speaker wire.
 
My Google skills seem to be lacking, but it seems to me it wouldn't be difficult to write "writing" analysis software that would compare the writing style of 2 people, and tell you if they're the same person. I bet there's something like that out there, and a proxy server wouldn't defeat it.
 
I thought it was pretty obvious that it was PJW all along...and we're just waiting for him to slip up and say something that proves it.
 
What you experienced was only first stage.
At breakfast in the morning, look closely at your toast for religious images.
Later, you will hear voices telling you to do things.
Very evil things, to small animals and neighborhood children you dislike.

Then again... it could become your foundation for a career into American politics.
 
When I was like 6 or 7 years old (~1963) I sent away for an AM radio advertised on a bubble gum wrapper for like $1. When it came it was around 2" X 2" X 1/4" and had an ear bud, and antenna you could slide out 2" and was used to tune it, and an alligator clip on a wire coming out of it. No batteries. You clipped it to something metal and you usually could hear one station if it was really quite in the room.
 
When I was like 6 or 7 years old (~1963) I sent away for an AM radio advertised on a bubble gum wrapper for like $1. When it came it was around 2" X 2" X 1/4" and had an ear bud, and antenna you could slide out 2" and was used to tune it, and an alligator clip on a wire coming out of it. No batteries. You clipped it to something metal and you usually could hear one station if it was really quite in the room.

Was it cool, or lame? It seems like companies were more dishonest years ago. As shitty as they are now, they were worse back in the day. You never knew what you'd end up with if you didn't get the product from Sears or Wards(remember them:^D).
 
When I was like 6 or 7 years old (~1963) I sent away for an AM radio advertised on a bubble gum wrapper for like $1. When it came it was around 2" X 2" X 1/4" and had an ear bud, and antenna you could slide out 2" and was used to tune it, and an alligator clip on a wire coming out of it. No batteries. You clipped it to something metal and you usually could hear one station if it was really quite in the room.
I got one of those in 4th grade. It was a "radio pen" and it worked. The tuner was the nib and it had the alligator clip as well. I ordered mine from the back of a comic book. I received cool catalogs (strobe lights, disco balls, lifesize monsters, etc.) and offers to sell Grit for the next four years.
 
Yeah, had a set of cheap speakers do that for me, years ago. Thought I was losing it, because it was so faint (at my normal volume level). I was looking around, trying to figure out where the heck that song was coming from, and finally cranked the speaker volume all the way up, and could hear it clearly.

Sadly, the station it was picking up was the local country/western station. D:
 
When I was like 6 or 7 years old (~1963) I sent away for an AM radio advertised on a bubble gum wrapper for like $1. When it came it was around 2" X 2" X 1/4" and had an ear bud, and antenna you could slide out 2" and was used to tune it, and an alligator clip on a wire coming out of it. No batteries. You clipped it to something metal and you usually could hear one station if it was really quite in the room.

That's a crystal radio right there, like the one described above. You need to be close to the transmitter to pick the station up. Originally, all radios were like this. That's why people like Marconi needed very high voltage generators to send long distance signals.

The big difference between this and an electronic radio is the addition of an amplification circuit. In 1908, Lee DeForest invented the triode tube. It's what makes broadcast radio possible. Most AM radios today are still fairly simple. I have a four tube model from 1937. Uses two diodes to extract the audio signal and two triodes to boost it. A more modern radio would use an integrated circuit to do that but the parts and principal is still the same.
 
Did he instruct you to destroy a demon that's walking around disguised as a human?

Better start digging out that hole underneath the shed out back, and lookin for that axe.

frailty.jpg
 
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