It would take some special hardware - a human with good hearing can hear
between 20Hz and 20kHz. The frequency reponse of a good sound card basically
drops to zero below 30Hz and above 20kHz, then you've got to consider the
speakers it's going to output through. Most average computer speakers drop
to zero below about 40Hz and above 18kHz. A REALLY good set of subwoofers
MIGHT take you down to 20Hz, but that's about it. What's the point of making
speakers that go outside that range? No-one's going to hear it.....!
The 'instant nausea' frequency is generally agreed to be at 14Hz, give or
take a decimal or two. To get any output power at that kind of frequency,
you need special hardware, because the rate of change of signal level in the
waveform is so slow (14 cycles per second) that you're essentially driving
DC through the speaker coils, which is going to melt them.
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 02 August 2001 21:02
To: CF-Community
Subject: RE: Forget the Code Red Worm...
Can a computer be configured using software to generate hi/low frequency
waves or does it take special hardware? I know I can do some nice stuff
with flash and subliminals but they don't work on everyone (very
controversial).
At 03:45 PM 8/2/01, you wrote:
>on that note : ]
>
>my father has been going to school his entire life [even now]
>in oak city. he is a retired air force guy who worked on radar & the like &
>is currently messed up with the FAA.
>
>any way, he was mentioning to me a few years back
>about one of his professors who created the first prototypes of low & hi
>frequency weapons.
>
>during the testing phase [& i think as a prank]
>they would drive to a mall parking lot & point one of these low frequencies
>devices out the van towards an unsuspecting passer by.
>who then would immediately defecate, & become generally miserable.
>
>now if they went lower the person would be incompasited by a pressure that
>would basically make them pass out.
>
>on the other end of the spectrum, if they went hi, they could shatter ear
>drums & rupture blood vessels in the brain.
>all this low/hi stuff with out it being audible, though defiantly
perceived.
>
>
>just think it could tie in nicely with a daemonic thingy ma bob.
>
>-paul
>
>"the ponds here are drying up.
>if your not a mud skipper you are likely to be bird food.."
>
>web developer, nbbj
>work: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 614 241-3534
>fax: 614 485-5534
>
>home: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 614 449-1681
>
>icq: 47658358
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 2:58 PM
>To: CF-Community
>Subject: Re: Forget the Code Red Worm...
>
>
>A virus or any program to do that would need a human component to actually
>chant the summoning ritual or the computer would have to have a sound card
>to chant the ritual itself and be located somewhere prone to spiritual
>interference. I can see the heart attack without a problem but physical
>manifestation to decapitate someone is no where near common. Personally,
>when I talk to people who summon spiritual entities they never have then
>manifest physically.
>Of course I actually deal in the occult so I can look at this thing with a
>eye (a small cynical one) towards this as being true.
>There's also other things to think of here. A monitor is basically a high
>power display. Most audio systems on a computer are also rather powerful.
>Remember the whole thing about flashes of light causing seizures? How about
>certain tones causing physical damage to circuits? If someone wanted to
>write a program to try and induce hallucinations, seizures and other mental
>abnormalities in people then they could. Distributing it as a virus would
>fit into this perfectly. (I dealt in this area in psych years back).
>
>At 02:28 PM 8/2/01, you wrote:
> >Digital demon
> >
> >IT'S REASSURING to know just what a firm grip on technology some people
> >have. According to the Computer Fraud and Security Bulletin,
> >a supermarket tabloid reports that two people were killed by a
> >virus-infected computer in Valparaiso, Chile. The virus is said to
> >have created a horned demon which decapitated one worker; the other died
> >from a heart attack. Anyone coming within 3 metres of the
> >computer blacked out or started deranged babbling. The computer was
>exorcised.
> >(1 February 1992)
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Structure your ColdFusion code with Fusebox. Get the official book at
http://www.fusionauthority.com/bkinfo.cfm
Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists