The Giza Power Plant

Created on Sunday, 29 March 2009 14:59

Researcher Chris Dunn has worked at every level of high-tech manufacturing and he used his machinist's point of view to analyze the construction of Egyptian artifacts.

In this lecture he suggests that the function of the Giza Pyramids wasn't as a tomb, but rather as a machine– a holistic power plant — that could draw energy from the Earth. The ancient Egyptians had a sophisticated knowledge of science and technology, but evidence of their tools might have been wiped out in an extinction event or cataclysm.

 

Thunderbolts Of The Gods

Created on Sunday, 05 April 2009 20:58

David Talbott is a comparative mythologist whose work offers a radical new vantage point on the origin of ancient cultural themes and symbols. Wallace Thornhill is an Australian physicist. His lifelong investigation of 'The Electric Universe' offers a revolutionary view of solar system history, the nature of the Sun, the behavior of comets and stellar and galactic evolution.

The two were both inspired by the theories of Immanuel Velikovsky, who proposed that the planet Venus was once a comet that caused havoc as it came through our solar system.

 

A Brief History Of The Internet

Last updated: July 15, 2020 at 17:07 pm

Created on Thursday, 18 February 2010 12:08

Nerds 2.0.1: A Brief History of the Internet (1998) is a three-hour documentary film written and hosted by Mark Stephens under the pseudonym Robert X. Cringely and produced by Oregon Public Broadcasting for PBS.

It documents the development of ARPANET (i.e. the World Wide Web) and was broadcast two years prior to the collapse of the dot-com bubble.   

Part 1 of 3 – Networking The Nerds

 

Part 2 of 3 – Serving The Suits

 

Part 3 of 3 – Wiring The World