Friday, September 6, 2013

on a clear day one can see for EVAN

unlike you
you who cannot afford apps
or you dear reader who was not picked up as human vermin for app testing

I do not have to worry about having something to say
when Evan or Tru or Adam Parker(yes THE Adam Parker ,star of screen and TV)enter The Room
which is my brain" fired" with nano bits which make my thoughts into bytes for THEM
my mentors and "renters)
I am never at loss
for words
now that they have encoded the section of my mind responsible for language

in fact all sorts of
chatter one doesn't want anyone to hear
or know
is
"playing" all the time
although I have learned to
block some of these thoughts
for up to 18 seconds
by visualizing Mark Rothko paintings in full vividousity and "stepping into the color...

Evan says this intentional BLOCKING implies
"I am up to something"
and HIDING
information
regarding
my INTENTS


they pay me these squatters with threats
in the form of ocular over rides of horse heads
at the foot of my bed.
one must have a sense of humor about the 5 sense over rides
and fight
for the right
to type about it anyway
as many in my supplicant position of being "manned by other men (and women) are too afraid to
speak of "the horror of it all"
nor
the wonder of it all
for on a "clear " day one can see for Evan.." and a Proxy feels
like any dog whose been beaten and terrorized by it's master that one indeed is helpful
and of use

did you know that in 1999 THEY could see through a cat's eyes?
Than ..they needed to remove the skull of the cat and place the electrodes
now they just put some nano particles in the cat's food and in 3 to 4 days the digestable pellet filled to the brim with microscopic biosensors
opens the cat's senses
for business
 Monday, October 11, 1999 Published at 19:10 GMT 20:10 UK


Sci/Tech

Looking through cats' eyes

Fuzzy but recognisable

By BBC News Online Science Editor Dr David Whitehouse
These are the first pictures from an extraordinary experiment which has probed what it is like to look through the eyes of another creature. As reported on BBC News Online last week, a team of US scientists have wired a computer to a cat's brain and created videos of what the animal was seeing. By recording the electrical activity of nerve cells in the thalamus, a region of the brain that receives signals from the eyes, researchers from the University of California at Berkeley were able to view these shapes. The team used what they describe as a "linear decoding technique" to convert the signals from the stimulated cells into visual images. Dr Yang Dan, Assistant Professor of Neurobiology at UC Berkeley, Fei Li and Garrett Stanley, now Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Harvard University conducted 11 experiments. They recorded the output from 177 brain cells that responded to light and dark in the cat's field of view.

[ image: A cat's-eye view of a woodland scene]
A cat's-eye view of a woodland scene

In total, the 177 cells were sensitive to a field of view of 6.4 by 6.4 degrees. As the brain cells were stimulated, an image of what the cat saw was reconstructed.

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