Watch this. There’s no electricity involved, and also no smart government operatives. The US and Canadian military couldn’t see much potential. The inventors tried to keep it secret and give the military a heads-up but they’re only getting replies now that it is on youtube. Another case of incompetence rising to the top in Western bureaucracy. If the West survives it will be despite our governments…
UK Express: Invisibility breakthrough: It’s cheap and it’s thin, and it would foil heat-seeking cameras as well.
Yaron Steinbuch, New York Post: ‘Invisibility cloak’ straight out of Harry Potter is now a thing
HyperStealth Biotechnology Corp. has announced four patent applications for “Quantum Stealth,” its own version of the fantasy cloak that could be used to make things appear to be invisible.
“It can hide a person, a vehicle, a ship, spacecraft and buildings,” the British Columbia-based company said in a statement. “There is no power source. It is paper-thin and inexpensive.” …
It works just by bending light. An optical illusion.
“It bends light like a glass of water does where a spoon or straw looks bent except I figured out how to do it without the water or volume (thickness) of material,” he told the news outlet. …
“The light comes from the sides and comes out the middle,” CTV’s science and technology specialist Dan Riskin said.
“You think, intuitively, that the light comes straight through the middle and comes and hits your eye, but the light that’s coming out the middle has bent there from around (the sides). It’s the bending of light that makes it look like it’s not there at all,” he added. …
There are many less obvious applications, Ciaran McGrath, UK Express
“Hiding shadows in the solar industry can potentially solve the problem of the newly MIT developed 3D Solar Towers from achieving their potential of 1 Terawatt solar power generation.”
“With the laser splitting, apart from the many military and commercial LIDAR type applications, I can foresee quantum computers utilising this as it solves two of their big requirements: millions of lasers and room temperature quantum computing.
“Currently quantum computers need to be industrial cooled and just a little, they need very cold temperatures to operate, whereas I demonstrate the splitting at room temperature.”
No actual clothes yet due to the distance required around an object.
— h/t David E
Maybe they can use this to definitely ‘hide the decline’.
140
I love this story Jo !
Great science & technology
More needed for us un-greenist folks
And the Gubermint ignored it !
Too preoccupied trying to save the world
From glorebul warming !
110
Bill in OZ, you really are in Oz !
This so-called invention is a piece of junk.
Unless you are a magician.
With a carefully written promotion story.
And YOU fell for it.
It does not hide that well.
It will surely be expensive.
Tanks can be detected by heat.
You said:
“The gubermint ignored it” ?
No, they did not ignore it — they rejected it/
The claim that the inventors tried to keep it secret is total BS
Inventors promote their inventions, they don’t try to keep them secret.
Mr. Oz, I have a bridge in Brooklyn, you may be interested in buying.
I’ll sell it you for half of what I paid.
Always remember the classic definition of a gold mine,
that could be updated for this worthless invention:
A gold mine is a hole in the ground with a liar on top.
Have a nice day !
30
Looks like a fresnel lense to me.
10
Maybe this isn’t so special: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFiPJjrmmtE
60
I suspect that my Polaroid sunglasses may do something similar.
10
Best not mention it Keith
Before you lodge a patent !
🙂
00
Actually, on reading it a bit more it probably doesn’t involve pola.
Bending of the light in proximity to solids is more like it.
KK
10
The Klingons have the patent .
20
Looks like it’s a near/far focus thing done at the macro (maybe micro) level (modified Fresnel lensing?).
Reflected light rays from distant objects are closer to being parallel to each other than reflected rays from close objects.
Look at the man with the ‘cloaking’ shield in the video — when he’s close to the shield his outline is observable but very blurred with the background still clear. As he moves the shield away from his body the blurring intensifies but the background still does not blur. I suspect that there is an optimum distance from the ‘cloak’ for this to be truly effective.
20
Ooops sorry, I missed ‘bemused’ 1.2 comment above and the link to his video.
Still it’s nice to see that my reasoning was not that far from the actuality. 😉
10
Just saw another U tube video from an honest scientist. He didn’t refer to this article.
He had smallish pieces(3×5)of a similar semi-transparent camouflage film. Turns out it is a variation of a Fresnel lens made by fine grained Fresnel lens formed into one surface.
With his small samples they had a field of view of about 45deg. Holding it in front of a couple of dowels he demonstrated that only horizontal lines could get through. A pair of gaudy, orange-handled pliers was completely obliterated into nothing.
Turns out the same thing can be done by imprinting very small Freznel lens, which probably is the type used in the hype piece. With circular lenses anything seen through the lens is fuzzed into invisbility.
Only camouflage problem I see is that with the computer power available now a program could be written to find what size and structure the lenses have and back calculate what was fuzzed out. The computers in many cameras and hi end phones do a similar thing. The light coming in flares over more than one pixel, but in a very predictable way. Process each color at a time and you can calculate how much light flared around the center pixel and add it back. Doing that for each color triples or quintuples the brightness and resolution.
00
No electricity, I just found this information;
O/T but at 11.17am with temperatures in Dodgy Danistan headed to 30 degrees, and winds howling a gale, power has been cut – either deliberately or due to idiotic Labor-caused fragility of supply – to thousands of houses, air conditioners, refrigerators, food-freezers, shops, supermarkets, factories, warehouses, traffic lights and train lines right across the State.
Our $46,000.00 richer-per-annum Dodgy Dan is today blaming everyone else but himself and his Party of wallet-stuffing gullible dills for all the problems.
Gee, wasn’t that a good Labor decision to criminally vandalise our State electricity grid and cut our power output with nothing other than Labor Lies and Greenie Fairydust to replace it….”
320
This is only the beginning.
150
Not a pretty sight on the powercor outage map with 77973 off power at 3:28 pm.
100
Probably since privatization the amount spent on maintenance has been cut. Result, more outages.
71
Looks to me like the CODE RED area declared for today in Danistan !
Utterly dopey !
80
Electoral blow torch ….meet Dans rear end…..
70
🙂
20
Not only that, but we’ve had our hottest November day here since–1894–must be climate change!
30
Or maybe,
Thermometer change.
50
So it was hotter 125 years ago.
30
But that was a once-off. This is part of a trend . . . 😉
01
So that’s how David Copperfield did it.
80
Maybe they could hide those hideously useless wind turbines.
250
Pity they can’t hide them underground or underwater.
140
Sell them to Germany?
70
Too late, the Germans have cut the subsidies so no more turbines being installed.
90
Now come all the legal cases for human ultrasound suffering and damage.
This is a scandal waiting to break loose and there’s only one group hungrier than Global Warming Promoters and that’s Loquacious Lawyers looking for earnings with a just case.
VLF pulsing causes damage to humans, has been known around the world as an issue except in the West where victims would be able to seek restitution for damages deliberately inflicted by employers.
With wind farms it’s people outside the factory being messed with.
KK
50
Then after a few windmill cases, that should be easy money, there’s the issue of heart lung problems for drivers of heavy vibrating vehicles and equipment and train drivers.
A veritable contra cagw hold mine.
KK
00
Climate change is now considered to be the number one cause of mental illness in younger people.
Our political shepherds have much to explain;
https://www.abc.net.au/news/health/2019-11-21/whats-driving-mental-health-concerns-young-australians/11714120
190
Big pharma will soon have a pill for that, you can be sure…
110
“Big Word”‘s view
“Oxford Dictionary declares “Climate Emergency” the 2019 ‘word’ of the year”
https://www.michaelsmithnews.com/2019/11/oxford-dictionary-declares-climate-emergency-the-2019-word-of-the-year.html
40
That’s two words!
I know it was qualified as “word or expression” but it’s still funny!
While here – Channel Nine web site’s 20 most extreme weather events in Australian history did not include Cyclone Tracy in 1974 but did include the Newcastle Earthquake!
40
These guys are the kind of unreconstructed family-first Catholics I can listen to. What they have to say about the Thunbergs, mental disorders and much else is pretty spot on for me…
https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/tkelly6785757/episodes/2019-11-12T05_44_02-08_00
I don’t know if Big Pharma and Big Green are members of the same fraternity of deviants…but, for the sake of efficiency, they should be.
80
They were taught to be filled with depression and despair, by their ‘Teachers’ and their ABC, and by the feral greenie circus-clowns and their propaganda.
Just watched escaped circus-clown Sarah Hanson-Young on Sky. She couldn’t bring herself to utter a word of criticism on China, but Australia is apparently a pouting spoiled brat in the corner, throwing our toys about, as we ain’t doin’ nuffin’ ’bout climate change! … NUFFIN!
She’s the spare lunatic the greens wheel-out when they realize she can actually manage to pull off a passable impression of being a same ‘moderate’ for a few minutes. They haven’t worn out the public with her nonsense for a few months so out she tumbles from her padded-cell for a little yakety-yak with Australia on where we’re getting it all wrong.
And that’s why Ibuprofen was invented.
110
Is David Copperfield the CEO? :).
60
Can’t say, apparently the board hides behind a cloak of secrecy.
lol
90
When the MIC tells you they are about to do something it means they have already been doing it for a long time. If this “new” tech is not itself a stunt it might explain a past stunt or two.
Something has to be done to lift the standard of fakery.
60
Incredible and intriguing I would say.
Who knows what applications that it might have with further development.
GeoffW
60
Traffic jams might be a thing of the past and and perhaps it could solve the population problem..
10
So basically all you need to do is get your tank or fighter to operate within a large plastic box?
(also there is no point in blocking a thermal signal if the blocking material itself has a thermal signature. You don’t have to look out for the thermal image of a tank anymore, you just have to look for a large rectangle that doesn’t match the background.)
Yeah, pretty sure the US and Canadian military were right.
(although, just for trivia, the desire for ‘visual stealth’ with aircraft dates back to when military aircraft were first invented and hasn’t really stopped. In WW1 the Germans experimented with using a transparent plastic instead of fabric on some of their early ‘R Class’ aircraft. It worked… unless it was bright and sunny, in which case it helped the sun reflect off the aircraft. The material also, iirc, didn’t handle moisture too well.
(In WW2 the Allies (I want to say British, but going by memory and it may have been a joint project) experimented with placing lights all over long range ASW aircraft. The theory was a bright aircraft against a bright sky would offer no contrast and hence it would be easier to shadow enemy surface units or to sneak up on U-boats. The practice however was that it absolutely worked, however by that stage of the war every man and their seal had air search radar and it was considered being hard to visually spot was no longer worth the effort.)
50
Number plate covers in *cough* Victoriastan and their “fair” 1 km/h tolerance……most speed cameras use infrared photography i believe…
Nah…just jokin’
🙂
50
With this technology, infrared light rays could be disappeared to form a temperature differential to power heat engines …and so speed camera IR light could power automobile heat engine powered vehicles…brilliant!!
20
I prefer “Danistan”
It has a better (? ) sound to it !
🙂
20
🙂 🙂
20
Amazing development with enormous potential for both application and improvement.
That it has come from Canada is more amazing still.
Soy-boy black-farce Justin is unlikely to let this remain in private hands for long.
The globalists will obviously want it or they will steal it to get it.
31
There is nothing new in this. Canberra has been using it for years; you pay in increasing amounts of tax but do you ever see any benefit?
40
A vast improvement on ‘dazzle’.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/when-british-wanted-camouflage-their-warships-they-made-them-dazzle-180958657/
50
Compare and contrast with the pattern used by the Berlin garrison component of BAOR during the Cold War.
At the time ‘normal’ British military vehicles were painted ‘normal’ camouflage based on the sound theory that they would be fighting in ‘normal’ areas. The Berlin garrison of course was expected to be fighting in Berlin, a rather urban environment and as a result had a pattern that was base dark grey with irregular white and dark brown squares over the top.
Also, while we are on the topic of British armour, the Caunter Scheme. This dazzle style camouflage pattern was used by tanks in the Western Desert from 1940 to 1941. It is a hotly debated topic for tank fans and has been described as a carefully scientifically designed pattern, a compromise based on the fact the Western Desert Force had to source their paint from the RAF and everything in between.
61
(I probably wouldn’t have gotten the above past the moderators if I hadn’t been able to cloak it so well!)
70
I’m pretty sure I saw exactly this material being demonstrated by Chinese men on youtube about a year ago. Can’t find it now. It showed Chinese guys in a bush or garden setting “disappearing” as they stepped behind the “secret material”.
60
That idea has been about for a few years now and I think had different people doing it. There was one clip similar to what you describe showing US tanks driving along and the disappearing only to reappear when they got past the cloaking screen.
30
A couple of years ago it went viral.
https://metro.co.uk/2017/12/09/quantum-invisibility-cloak-footage-amazes-millions-on-chinese-internet-7145433/
50
Is it a form of lenticular printing?
20
Can see many applications even in civilian life not just military, great find Jo.
10
will he now become “invisible”?
behind paywall:
21 Nov: UK Times: Extinction Rebellion disowns co-founder Roger Hallam over Holocaust remark
by Oliver Moody, Berlin
One of the British eco-warriors who founded Extinction Rebellion has been disowned by his allies and rebuked by the German government after insisting that there was nothing “unique” about the Holocaust.
Roger Hallam created a schism in the radical protest movement yesterday with an interview in which he described the Third Reich’s systematic murder of six million Jews as “just another f***ery in human history” and said that genocide was “almost a normal occurrence”.
His remarks caused widespread offence in Germany, whose modern culture has been profoundly shaped by its efforts to atone for Nazi crimes.
Mr Hallam, 53, a former organic farmer and sociologist, was one of the three Britons who set up Extinction Rebellion in London in October last year…
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/extinction-rebellion-disowns-co-founder-roger-hallam-over-holocaust-remarks-3z5mmcp5b
20
It’s one thing to have a screen you can go behind and disappear. It’s another to be able to disappear from any random location on a battlefield, and at a variety of wavelengths from DC to daylight.
40
Here’s an idea for Twiggy and his geekware mate. When restless investors start asking where are all the batteries and solar panels for powering Singapore, just say say the whole shebang is hidden behind a Hyperstealth Invisibility Cloak. (Unless there’s a great big gas generator that needs concealing.)
50
mosomoso:
Why hide the gas plant? Just route the electricity cable via some island (Timor? some spare island in Indonesia?) where they couldn’t care less about CO2 emissions. The gas plant could operate anytime they need the electricity and Australia’s Greens wouldn’t be able to see it, much as they celebrate getting to “50% renewables for 5 minutes” without asking what happens at other times?**
** Latest from Sub Australia the ‘big battery” is to be up-graded from (maybe 2 minutes supply to 3 minutes supply) with adoring commentary in the media about how Sub Australia is now got more reliable generation and a safer supply. That they are not getting any extra supply (indeed a slight reduction) doesn’t bother the media. Nor, since the battery will use low priced renewable electricity*** to charge and periods of low supply of renewable electricity**** to make money, will the public benefit.
*** i.e. when the wind blows strongly and the wholesale price drops in order to dump it onto the grid and get the RET subsidy
**** i.e. when the wind doesn’t blow very much and there is a shortage of generation (filled by the Big Battery at a profit). The effect is to reduce the amount (time) of low wholesale prices and increase the amount of high wholesale prices, thus raising the average RETAIL price.
60
Graeme, so when they’re not on the RET they’re on the high coin? Such clever bunnies, these green entrepreneurs.
Now that Bolivia has been made safe for democracy a lot of lithium should be coming on stream very soon. Big Battery might be a better spot than most to park some invented billions. (There’s something about the colour green that doesn’t feel so sub-prime.)
30
S Australia are not just boosting the Battery capacity ,
….they have also just brought on line the new gas fueled generators ( 12 x 18 MW) , AND decided not to shut down the Torrens Island gas generators previously sheduled to close down.
20
The current policy is that the older Torrens Island units will keep going until the end of March, to provide cover though the hot weather and peak demands.
When they shut down SA will have slightly less reliable capacity.
20
As well as “Cloaking” us from speed cameras (Original Steve), how about a body worn version to stop us being constantly tracked as we go about our daily business?
40
The shield is obviously made out of a kind of hardened CO2 optical glass to absorb infrared photons as well as the visible light spectrum.
50
Not having read much on it, I’m going to have to take your assessment on that as real
.
KK
20
Not having read much on it, I’m going to have to take your assessment on that as real
.
KK
10
🙂 Thanks KK
….CO2 is the only molecule known to (climate) science that can absorb infrared and then direct it, like a laser, to earth instead of scattering IR in every direction like the other chemicals and elements……amazing how CO2 can absorb heat, and then direct it back to earth or hand ball photons of heat over to other CO2 molecules so they can stop the IR (infra red) from getting away into the upper atmosphere.
Obviously the invention/cloak of invisibility takes advantage of this property of CO2 that seemingly knows which way is up and down, as though it can distinguish up and down by using gravity.
For example, the sun emits infrared to earth and CO2 catches any infrared …. and then re-directs it to earth….CO2….. , even though there is very little in the atmosphere, is able to selectively re-direct infrared heat energy that is absorbed by it back to earth which creates the greenhouse effect….Hardened CO2 in the form of a kind of glass might have the properties of ……
I am still working on my assessment…..It will be available in hard copy and as an E-book 🙂
50
ES:
Rather than an e-book I suggest the AGW claims would be better published in roll form on absorbing paper.
60
🙂 🙂 🙂
CO2, such an amazing gas.
I once saw a huge lump of solid CO2, it was scarey.
10
CO2 also has the property that the central carbon atom has two oxygen atoms linked to it.
Unfortunately these oxygens find each other repulsive and are in a constant state of agitation trying to get away from each other.
This makes it look like the CO2 molecule is constantly bending and reversing its appearance.
Some scientists have commented that it’s like watching a politician over the course of a day, dodging, weaving and shape changing.
It’s an amazing gas.
KK
10
21 Nov: SBS: Qantas executive says flight delays caused by climate change
Stronger winds caused by climate change have led to increased flight delays and cancellations over the past three years, according to a Qantas executive.
The company said above average wind strengths had contributed to a slump in on-time performance, most notably within the past four months at Sydney airport.
“We have seen wind velocities 34 per cent higher than the average of the last 30 years, and it’s a prevailing westerly rather than the south-south-westerly we’ve seen in the past,” Qantas Domestic chief executive Andrew David told The Australian
“That’s led to runway closures, meaning (aircraft) movements are slowed.”
Mr David made the comments during the airline’s investor day on Tuesday, where he backed a recently announced Qantas commitment to work towards zero net carbon emissions by 2050 as part of a long-term environmental campaign…READ ON
https://www.sbs.com.au/news/qantas-executive-says-flight-delays-caused-by-climate-change
10
??? No midweek unthreaded ??
00
Chad:
Blame it on climate change.
20
the potential saving of a mere $40 per year per household got this story on to the front page of tomorrow’s Daily Tele!
NSW’s plan to go it alone on new power generation projects
Daily Telegraph – 1 hour ago
Households will save $40 per year on their electricity bills and NSW will have one of the highest reliability targets in the world under a new state electricity strategy…
00
wow!
21 Nov: The Hill: Supreme Court weighs lawsuit pitting climate scientist against skeptics
By John Kruzel
The Supreme Court on Friday will consider whether to take up a prominent climatologist’s defamation suit against a venerated conservative magazine, in a case that pits climate scientists against the free speech rights of global warming skeptics.
The dispute between scientist Michael Mann and the National Review has drawn attention from lawmakers, interest groups, academics and media, as the court weighs adding a potentially blockbuster First Amendment showdown to an already politically charged docket.
Scientists hail Mann’s lawsuit as a necessary defense against efforts to erode public confidence in the scientific consensus that climate change is an urgent threat, while free speech advocates have rallied around the iconic conservative publication.
The case has made for strange bedfellows, with the National Review receiving backing from the Center for Investigative Reporting, which has produced award-winning coverage of climate change; Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.); The Washington Post; and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
“The only way to protect free speech for our allies is to protect it for our adversaries,” Arthur Spitzer, ACLU D.C.’s legal director, told The Hill. “Today it’s unacceptable to deny climate change, but yesterday it was unacceptable to deny that homosexuality was sinful, and tomorrow it may be unacceptable to deny that robots are better parents than humans.”…
The ACLU sounded a similar note.
“Society can’t progress unless people are free to express and consider heretical ideas,” Spitzer said, “because there’s no way to predict which heretical ideas will be tomorrow’s truths.”…READ ALL
https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/471406-supreme-court-weighs-lawsuit-pitting-climate-scientist-against
10
followup to comment in moderation, i.e. The Hill’s coverage of the following:
21 Nov: Townhall: Climategate + 10: Free Speech on Trial
by Steve Milloy
In October 2012, lead author of the 1998 hockey stick paper, Michael E. Mann, sued the National Review and Competitive Enterprise Institute for libel in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia…
The good news is that, although news outlets like the Washington Post and Associated Press tend to bat for climate alarmism in their reporting, in the case of Michael Mann vs. Free Speech, they and 15 other news outlets have come to the side of free speech…
There’s a lot at stake for everyone. If this Jarndyce vs. Jarndyce litigation marathon ever makes it out of the Washington, DC court system, the US Supreme Court will likely have the last word.
https://townhall.com/columnists/stevemilloy/2019/11/21/climategate–10-free-speech-on-trial-n2556789
20
typical AAP to tack on demand for more RE at the end of this piece:
21 Nov: The Senior: Community groups urge energy ministers to help vulnerable afford power bills
by Rebecca Gredley, AAP
The nation’s energy ministers are being urged by dozens of community and health groups to do more to help vulnerable Australians afford their power bills.
The Australian Council of Social Services is one of 40 organisations putting pressure on the ministers ahead of their meeting on Friday.
The groups want a national framework for mandated energy efficiency standards for rental properties to lower power bills ***and also reduce emissions.
“Millions of people are living in homes that are too cold in winter and too hot in summer and cost a fortune to run. People are sadly dying as a result,” ACOSS chief executive Cassandra Goldie said on Thursday…
The Clean Energy Council has written to each minister urging them to ensure investments continue in renewable energy, given it has slowed significantly this year…READ ON
https://www.thesenior.com.au/story/6503491/people-are-dying-energy-ministers-urged-to-help-vulnerable/
20
20 Nov: E&E News: Emissions: Booming Southeast Asia’s dirty secret: Coal
by Nathanial Gronewold
SINGAPORE — Southeast Asia has one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, but intertwined with that rise is a rare distinction: a shift toward the use of more coal.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations is “the only region in the world where coal is expected to increase its share” of the energy mix, said Keisuke Sadamori, director of energy markets at the Paris-based International Energy Agency.
It’s a pattern that runs counter to worldwide efforts to fight climate change. And it’s one that has caught the attention of environmentalists and several global organizations, from the United Nations to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA).
All of them have urged Thailand, Indonesia, Cambodia, Vietnam and the six other nations that make up the 10-member ASEAN to pursue a different path, one led mainly by renewable power. U.N. chief António Guterres repeated that plea at the ASEAN leaders forum in Thailand…
And it could get worse…
“Since 2000 overall energy demand has grown by more than 80% and the lion’s share of this growth has been met by a doubling in fossil fuel use,” IEA analysts said in their latest regional energy outlook report, made public last week. “Oil is the largest element in the regional energy mix and coal, largely for power generation, has been the fastest growing.”…READ ALL
https://www.eenews.net/stories/1061593609
40
pat:
They could soon add Africa to the list of those increasing coal use. There are people there who have observed the economic boom in China and India and the boost in living standards for their people, and are asking “Why don’t we try some of that?”.
20
20 Nov: Reuters: NYC pension leader targets three utilities over emissions plans
by Ross Kerber
BOSTON – New York City’s top pension official has called on three major U.S. utilities to name independent board chairs, pressuring them to “decarbonize” their operations by 2050 and underscoring how power companies have split on whether to set such goals.
New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer, who oversees about $208 billion in retirement assets, recently filed shareholder resolutions at Southern Co, Duke Energy Corp and Dominion Energy Inc.
The resolutions call for shareholder votes on whether to name independent individuals to chair boards currently led by the chief executive of each company. The change would be “useful to oversee the strategic transformation” of the companies to operate in a low-carbon economy, according to the resolutions, seen by Reuters…READ ON
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-utilities-climate-investors/nyc-pension-leader-targets-three-utilities-over-emissions-plans-idUSKBN1XU1G9
00
Fake.
Shouldn’t be on this site.
00