Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread grarpamp
>   are you sure the satellites from that time had *radar* at 6 meters
> resolution? Weren't they just optical?

Jim's wikipedia ref and links above cover that.

Here's another SAR dataset...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuttle_Radar_Topography_Mission

Paid for with money stolen from US "taxpayers" and the
best 30m data witheld as CLASSIFIED as further insult
upon the payers as the true owners for 14 years.

The US Govt (NGIA) doesn't release stuff like that unless it's:
beyond lifetime dead, or under heavy political / humanitarian
pressure, or long surpassed by public tech... the likely case here.

Quasi commercial radar imaging seems now at or better than 1m.
Optical is said to be better.
TOP SECRET of either... you're beyond fucked.

Here's a few more...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaceborne_Imaging_Radar
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Spaceborne_Thermal_Emission_and_Reflection_Radiometer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TopSat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TerraSAR-X
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TanDEM-X

"Seasat was able to detect the wakes of submerged submarines, a
discovery not anticipated before launch.[8] The conspiracy theory
holds that once this was discovered, the military shut SEASAT down,
with a cover story of a power supply short."


Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread juan
On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 17:16:06 -0500
grarpamp  wrote:

> https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-45523677
> https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA01721
> https://www.researchgate.net/publication/226843737_Continuing_inflation_at_Three_Sisters_volcanic_center_central_Oregon_Cascade_Range_USA_from_GPS_leveling_and_InSAR_observations
> 
> > This particular satellite is said to have a resolution of 6 meters.
> 
> Nobody is going to waste their money launching a pathetic 6m toy
> that doesn't even match 1990s - 2001 tech. 


are you sure the satellites from that time had *radar* at 6 meters 
resolution? Weren't they just optical? 


> Today's rigs could surely
> be expected at 60cm to commercial NDA customers, and maybe even
> at 6cm 


yeah the 6 meter resolution figure isn't to be trusted at all but what 
I think is 'new' here is that this is 3D imaging radar, not ordinary 
photography. 



> 
> Keep in mind this was the "low cost" public facade version of
> greater Beasts A Marking already been launched before,
> and more to come...
> 
> "We've done lots of work on the next generation. NovaSAR is just the
> first in a family of instruments that will offer different
> capabilities, such as finer resolutions and other parameters; and we
> will be putting those capabilities on smaller spacecraft than
> NovaSAR."
> The satellite, as *presently* configured, will operate in the S-band
> (3.2 gigahertz), giving a best resolution of 6m with a swath width of
> 15-20km. 


lol, so wavelength at 3.2 gigacycles is what? Oh yes, 10cm...


> Future variants will go to the higher-frequency X-band and
> sense features on the ground as small as a metre across, *and less*.


but it will be used to save the whales! And the children from 'sex 
abuse'. 



> 
> And that the article comes from the BBC, which is solely
> licensed and permitted to run at the whim and criminal
> tax of the self perpetuating UK Government...
> 
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC
> 
> The first free live public broadcast from Marconi took place in June
> 1920, this public enthusiasm was not shared in official circles where
> such broadcasts were held to interfere with important military
> communications. Pressure from these quarters was sufficient to lead to
> a ban on further free Marconi broadcasts.
> 
> The cost of a television licence is set by the government and enforced
> by the criminal law. Thus, the BBC is a major prosecuting authority in
> England and Wales and an investigating authority in the UK as a whole.
> The BBC carries out surveillance (mostly using subcontractors) on
> properties (under the auspices of the RIPA Regulation of Investigatory
> Powers Act 2000) and may conduct searches of a property using a search
> warrant.
> 
> To this day, the BBC aims to follow the directive to "inform, educate
> and entertain" the Sheeple, aka "propaganda, program and distract"
> 
> "Auntie Imperial" is right.
> 
> 
> > Can't imagine "anti-freedom" applications for SAR...
> 
> > designers specifically want to see if it can help monitor shipping activity.
> > the data it provides can help crack problems from illegal shipping
> 
> aka: Free Markets and Free Payments amongst peoples of humanity
> 
> > much smaller pleasure craft. We can certainly see that they are there. One 
> > of the main objectives of NovSAR will be maritime surveillance
> 
> Of course... with private and charter craft being the only
> remaining cheap and easy way for free peoples to travel
> speak and live freely together across broad waters without
> being tracked, and then censored via torpedo to swim with
> the fishes.
> 
> > "It is important to be able to monitor large areas of the ocean - something 
> > we don't do at the moment. We all saw with the Malaysian airline crash in 
> > the Indian Ocean the difficulty there was in monitoring that vast area. We 
> > can do that kind of thing with radar and NovaSAR is good for that,"
> 
> Won't someone please think of the children.
> 
> They trot that shit out everywhere they can,
> even for a simple fucking satellite.
> 
> The drugs, terrorists, crime...
> FHOTI -- Tim May
> 
> > Known as S1-4, this optical spacecraft will discern objects on the ground 
> > as small as 87cm across
> 
> Trouble always comes in twos.
> 
> 
> Here's a link mentioning a bit more about the UK's purposes...
> 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntkYbnokARA



Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread juan
On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 16:26:43 -0500
Steve Kinney  wrote:


> NovaSAR-S makes primitive but useful LandSat functions available to
> organizations working on shoestring budgets.  NovaSAR-S shift the
> balance of power in the electronic warfare terrain toward some
> "underdog" players,

LMAO - what the fuck.

I candidly admit I didn't even bother checking Jim's link in the first 
place since I can't stomach the sort of garbage teh BBC vomits BUT now I did 
and here's Jim's own BBC propaganda : 


"Its pictures are now being assessed for use in diverse applications, 
including MARITIME SURVEILLANCE" 

"NovaSAR is seeing not only large vessels but also much smaller 
pleasure craft." 

"The satellite is equipped with a receiver that can pick up Automatic 
Identification System (AIS) radio signals. " 

Vessels that tamper with or disable these messages very often are 
engaged in smuggling or illegal fishing activity.

If such ships appear in NovaSAR's radar pictures, they will be reported 
to the authorities. "


Of course, exactly like I said, the purpose of the 'technology' is the 
further enslavement of mankind. 












Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread grarpamp
>> Probably an inside joke on 21M BTC as well.
>> Though it will probably be Cryptocurrency and
>> even Metals that get the last laugh.
>> Consider that Cryptocurrency AnCap's have and will have
>> enough resources to launch their own satellites soon.

> NovaSAR-S makes primitive but useful LandSat functions available to
> organizations working on shoestring budgets.  NovaSAR-S shift the
> balance of power in the electronic warfare terrain toward some
> "underdog" players, by eroding intelligence (Earth imaging) monopolies
> presently held by the world's most powerful organizations.

It's not the tools, but those who you foolishly put in
power and stupidly let use them over you.


Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread grarpamp
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-45523677
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA01721
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/226843737_Continuing_inflation_at_Three_Sisters_volcanic_center_central_Oregon_Cascade_Range_USA_from_GPS_leveling_and_InSAR_observations

> This particular satellite is said to have a resolution of 6 meters.

Nobody is going to waste their money launching a pathetic 6m toy
that doesn't even match 1990s - 2001 tech. Today's rigs could surely
be expected at 60cm to commercial NDA customers, and maybe even
at 6cm to their UK MOD government bosses that OP article clearly
states paid £21M for spy surveillance and control rights just
to "see its offerings".

Probably an inside joke on 21M BTC as well.
Though it will probably be Cryptocurrency and
even Metals that get the last laugh.
Consider that Cryptocurrency AnCap's have and will have
enough resources to launch their own satellites soon.


Keep in mind this was the "low cost" public facade version of
greater Beasts A Marking already been launched before,
and more to come...

"We've done lots of work on the next generation. NovaSAR is just the
first in a family of instruments that will offer different
capabilities, such as finer resolutions and other parameters; and we
will be putting those capabilities on smaller spacecraft than
NovaSAR."
The satellite, as *presently* configured, will operate in the S-band
(3.2 gigahertz), giving a best resolution of 6m with a swath width of
15-20km. Future variants will go to the higher-frequency X-band and
sense features on the ground as small as a metre across, *and less*.


And that the article comes from the BBC, which is solely
licensed and permitted to run at the whim and criminal
tax of the self perpetuating UK Government...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC

The first free live public broadcast from Marconi took place in June
1920, this public enthusiasm was not shared in official circles where
such broadcasts were held to interfere with important military
communications. Pressure from these quarters was sufficient to lead to
a ban on further free Marconi broadcasts.

The cost of a television licence is set by the government and enforced
by the criminal law. Thus, the BBC is a major prosecuting authority in
England and Wales and an investigating authority in the UK as a whole.
The BBC carries out surveillance (mostly using subcontractors) on
properties (under the auspices of the RIPA Regulation of Investigatory
Powers Act 2000) and may conduct searches of a property using a search
warrant.

To this day, the BBC aims to follow the directive to "inform, educate
and entertain" the Sheeple, aka "propaganda, program and distract"

"Auntie Imperial" is right.


> Can't imagine "anti-freedom" applications for SAR...

> designers specifically want to see if it can help monitor shipping activity.
> the data it provides can help crack problems from illegal shipping

aka: Free Markets and Free Payments amongst peoples of humanity

> much smaller pleasure craft. We can certainly see that they are there. One of 
> the main objectives of NovSAR will be maritime surveillance

Of course... with private and charter craft being the only
remaining cheap and easy way for free peoples to travel
speak and live freely together across broad waters without
being tracked, and then censored via torpedo to swim with
the fishes.

> "It is important to be able to monitor large areas of the ocean - something 
> we don't do at the moment. We all saw with the Malaysian airline crash in the 
> Indian Ocean the difficulty there was in monitoring that vast area. We can do 
> that kind of thing with radar and NovaSAR is good for that,"

Won't someone please think of the children.

They trot that shit out everywhere they can,
even for a simple fucking satellite.

The drugs, terrorists, crime...
FHOTI -- Tim May

> Known as S1-4, this optical spacecraft will discern objects on the ground as 
> small as 87cm across

Trouble always comes in twos.


Here's a link mentioning a bit more about the UK's purposes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntkYbnokARA


Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread Steve Kinney


On 11/24/18 1:51 PM, juan wrote:
> On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 18:00:23 + (UTC)
> jim bell  wrote:
> 
>> NovaSAR:. First all-UK SAR (synthetic aperture radar) satellite sends back 
>> images.


[...]
>   I guess that kind of news is rather important for cypherpunks because 
> of the "know your enemy" principle. 

vs. "Know your terrain," which includes many new (to human experience)
overlays generated by sensors and communications networks.

On the other hand, other than being a really cool ham radio project (I
would describe it as almost literally that) what's the new radar
satellite actually used for?

https://directory.eoportal.org/web/eoportal/satellite-missions/n/novasar-s

quote:

NovaSAR-S provides medium resolution (6-30 m) imagery ideal for
applications in the following fields:

- flood monitoring

- agricultural crop assessment

- forest monitoring (temperate and rain forest)

- land use mapping

- disaster management

- maritime applications (e.g. ship detection, oil spill monitoring,
maritime safety, and security of defence applications).

/quote

In terms of this gadget's potential for military and State Security
purposes, that's almost laughable:  A flyswatter vs. laser guided
artillery rounds comparison fits the case of comparing NovaSAR-S to
military sensor packages.

NovaSAR-S makes primitive but useful LandSat functions available to
organizations working on shoestring budgets.  NovaSAR-S shift the
balance of power in the electronic warfare terrain toward some
"underdog" players, by eroding intelligence (Earth imaging) monopolies
presently held by the world's most powerful organizations.

:o)





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Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread juan
On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 18:00:23 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

> NovaSAR:. First all-UK SAR (synthetic aperture radar) satellite sends back 
> images.



"The Pentagon's Rampaging Surveillance Blimp Will Fly Again" 

http://fortune.com/2016/02/16/rampaging-blimp-will-fly-again/


"U.S. border patrol flies huge blimps with low-altitude radar to detect 
drones trying to cross border"

https://www.recode.net/2016/11/8/13566270/wall-drones-border-control-mexico-drugs-blimp
 






Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread juan
On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 19:58:32 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

>  On Saturday, November 24, 2018, 10:51:29 AM PST, juan  
> wrote:
>  
>  
>  On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 18:00:23 + (UTC)
> jim bell  wrote:
> 
> >> NovaSAR:. First all-UK SAR (synthetic aperture radar) satellite sends back 
> >> images.
> 
> 
>  >   amazing new tool for the complete enslavement of the human race, thanks 
> to western fascist 'science' 
> 
> >   I guess that kind of news is rather important for cypherpunks because of 
> >the "know your enemy" principle.
> 
> 
> Before you spout your paranoia, 

wow - very disappointing. You might want to think before displaying 
such a kneejerk reaction when confronted with reality. 

> you should be aware that SAR has been used since the 1960's, 

so? I didn't make a comment on any specific date. "new tool" was 
sarcasm referring to the fact that when advertising garbage, it's usually 
described as "new and improved".


> We can try to imagine how SAR can be used for "the complete enslavement of 
> the human race", but nevertheless I don't see very much, even when I turn my 
> "paranoid-mode" dial up to "11".

wow - you are trying to mock your betters and only mocking yourself =) 
- The phenomenom is known as "involuntary self parody".


> This particular satellite is said to have a resolution of 6 meters.  It's 
> hard for me to imagine how being able to detect voxels (3-D pixels)  of 6 
> meter on a side, from space, could enable "the complete enslavement of the 
> human race". 

your lack of imagination isn't an argument though. It's more like the 
"argumentum ad ignoramtiam" fallacy. 

you might want to consider that the resolution will be improved, for 
starters. 




> It can detect buried artillery emplacements, such as those of North Korea,

LMAO at the right wing war propaganda. 


> 
> It can be used to detect bulging of a few inches height, 

I thought you said the resolution was 6 meters? 



 
> I don't claim (and it would be foolish to claim) that there are no 
> "anti-freedom" applications for SAR.  But I cannot imagine many of those, 
> compared to the others.  

In other words, you completely miss the point? Now, let's ignore 
reality and follow the bullshit 'progressive' propaganda about how amazing 
'technology' is. WHY should crypto anarchists care about it? 

What kind of anarchist or libertarian gives a fuck about the 
'applications' you listed? 







Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread jim bell
 On Saturday, November 24, 2018, 10:51:29 AM PST, juan  
wrote:
 
 
 On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 18:00:23 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

>> NovaSAR:. First all-UK SAR (synthetic aperture radar) satellite sends back 
>> images.


 >   amazing new tool for the complete enslavement of the human race, thanks to 
western fascist 'science' 

>   I guess that kind of news is rather important for cypherpunks because of 
>the "know your enemy" principle.


Before you spout your paranoia, you should be aware that SAR has been used 
since the 1960's, and was actually conceived in 1951.  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic-aperture_radar
It is enormously useful, and became much more practical as computer technology 
advanced, especially in the 1980's. (it is necessary to turn thousands of 
individual radar-returns into a 2-D or 3-D image, a process that became far 
easier with the advent of high-speed computers in the 1970s.)
We can try to imagine how SAR can be used for "the complete enslavement of the 
human race", but nevertheless I don't see very much, even when I turn my 
"paranoid-mode" dial up to "11".
This particular satellite is said to have a resolution of 6 meters.  It's hard 
for me to imagine how being able to detect voxels (3-D pixels)  of 6 meter on a 
side, from space, could enable "the complete enslavement of the human race".  
It could detect the existence of houses and cars, but those items have been 
detectable from space since the 1970's using optical satellites.  
It can detect buried artillery emplacements, such as those of North Korea, but 
the average ordinary citizen doesn't have buried artillery emplacements.  
http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/9315/this-is-how-america-keeps-watch-over-north-korea-from-the-sky
  


In the 1990's, space-shuttle-based SAR was used to identify the ancient city of 
Ubar, found primarily by noticing the lines on the map produced by hundreds of 
years of wagon-wheel compaction of the deserts, which could be identified and 
imaged under feet of sand.  
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA01721

It can be used to detect bulging of a few inches height, over an area of tens 
or hundreds of square miles, such as was done over a place called Sisters, 
Oregon, starting in 2001.  Google 'Sisters Oregon SAR magma bulge' for some 
details.  One 
resulthttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/226843737_Continuing_inflation_at_Three_Sisters_volcanic_center_central_Oregon_Cascade_Range_USA_from_GPS_leveling_and_InSAR_observations×

The underwater analog of SAR is called "side-scan sonar", which was developed 
in the late 1970's and 1980's by (among others) Harold Edgerton, late 
professor-emeritus at MIT.  This can be used to accurately map seabeds, as was 
used in the recent successful search for that Argentine submarine that sank 
about a year ago.  (and in the as-yet unsuccessful search for that missing 
Maylaysia aircraft.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaysia_Airlines_Flight_370 


Very cheap sonar imagers are apparently available for boating use. 
https://www.boatingmag.com/using-side-scan-sonar  
I don't claim (and it would be foolish to claim) that there are no 
"anti-freedom" applications for SAR.  But I cannot imagine many of those, 
compared to the others.  
                     Jim Bell
  

    
  

Re: BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread juan
On Sat, 24 Nov 2018 18:00:23 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

> NovaSAR:. First all-UK SAR (synthetic aperture radar) satellite sends back 
> images.


amazing new tool for the complete enslavement of the human race, thanks 
to western fascist 'science' 

I guess that kind of news is rather important for cypherpunks because 
of the "know your enemy" principle. 




BBC News: NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images

2018-11-24 Thread jim bell
NovaSAR:. First all-UK SAR (synthetic aperture radar) satellite sends back 
images.

NovaSAR: UK radar satellite returns first images - 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-46312874