View single post by joecioppi
 Posted: Jan 12th, 2009 01:55 PM
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joecioppi



Joined: Sep 22nd, 2008
Location: Doylestown, Pennsylvania USA
Posts: 130
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Keith,

It may help to understand that the Puck is a digital measuring device with sensors on selected channels. The sensors respond to voltage charge fields, heat radiation hitting the temperature sensor, and magnetic fields surrounding the device. Those fields vary in magnitude, frequency, and direction. The sensors attempt to bring signal levels up to the 0-5volt input window of the A/D converter. The A/D converter brings the signal levels into the digital binary number realm.

The binary numbers are then processed by the computer according to the programmers instructions. In the Puck the numbers can be converted to text data displayed on the computer screen or synthesized voice sounds. Data can be displayed on charts to give indication of trends. Word lists can be compared to the data to select complete words to be expressed by the voice synthesizer.

The factor in all this that relates to spirit communications is the content of intelligence in the input signals. It has been suggested strongly by experience that knowledge and awareness is contained in something picked up on electronic devices called random noise. The "random" nature of noise is the thing that fools us into thinking that spirits must be reaching us by an unknown force. Isolation of the random nature and using it to select vocal sounds or text data can reveal the intelligent mind behind the "natural"... "random"... " noise."  Instrument noise can be thought of as a  wide band analog signal channel with nearly infinite intelligence content. This is supported by the content of voice messages in the same signal with spectrum images.

Each sensor channel of the Puck has a stream of intelligence that can be processed to reveal various aspects of the total content. A simple temperature chart can reveal the passing of a "cold spot". The properly selected "noise" in a magnetic field might activate a voice synthesizer to converse with the user. The trick is to read the DNA of that noise source.

Joe Cioppi