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re: What kind of life do you want to live? Opinion piece from quantum computing technologist

Posted on 7/4/19 at 8:48 pm to
Posted by The Dudes Rug
Member since Nov 2004
14067 posts
Posted on 7/4/19 at 8:48 pm to
quote:

You could. But you still won't answer a simple question. Name the decade. If you can't say: 'I can't.' Thus, making your quote a stupid cliche. You suffer from a severe case of verbosity. 




Dude, why are you so bent out of shape over a quote?
Posted by ThinePreparedAni
In a sea of cognitive dissonance
Member since Mar 2013
11315 posts
Posted on 7/6/19 at 11:32 am to
quote:

Deep Prasad, the CEO of ReactiveQ, a multimillion dollar quantum computing tech start-up based out of Toronto, shares Lampkin’s sentiments.


A different interview/article about this guy:

https://www.punkrockandufos.com/blog/2019/6/3/interview-deep-prasad

quote:

INTERVIEW: UFO advocate Deep Prasad could be the future of tech June 4, 2019


quote:

The University of Toronto once asked the question if tech prodigy Deep Prasad (then an undergrad) could “be the next Einstein.” At age 23, Prasad is the CEO of ReactiveQ, which aims to create the world’s first quantum computer, as well as work on producing superconductors and meta materials. The young star of innovation is also an avid UFO advocate; he’s one of us.

Part of ReactiveQ’s mission statement states they are “actively engaged with engineers from TESLA, Lockheed Martin, Volkswagen and NASA in order to validate solution.” Prasad is one the great young minds in his field, and also offers a professional perspective in the UFO field, but he wasn’t always a believer.


quote:

I am now in a position where at least personally, I cannot deny that this is real, and I'm fascinated by the mystery behind who's behind these things, the history of Humanity and where we're going with all of this.”

Being a head of a company complete with executives, shareholders, and funding from the likes of Bloomberg’s Venture Capital arm, Prasad is unafraid to speak his views on a once taboo topic.

“I believe most of them are (OK with his beliefs), and I've never gotten ‘flack’ for my beliefs, not once, which is encouraging for someone whose career relies on having a reputation of scientific and intellectual competence alone in order to succeed with the many stakeholders involved,” Prasad said. “ My core team is super relaxed, and open about the concept and have changed their minds a lot since I started talking about it, but they remain healthily skeptic until they are provided the hard material science data and other physical evidence the community requires to ‘believe.’”


quote:

ReactiveQ is currently working with engineers from Lockheed Martin, TESLA and NASA. These specific companies could offer a lot in terms of ideas of reverse engineering or better understanding new technology, which begs the question was this a mutually beneficial undertaking that possibly can tie in with advanced "foreign" technology?

“I can't comment on the advanced ‘foreign’ technology aspect, but what I can say is that everything my company does in the eyes of the public in the near future will be 100 percent strictly related to terrestrial non-’foreign’ projects,” Prasad said. “ The specific reason was that my goal before I really got obsessed with this UFO subject was to accelerate humanity's technological development by a factor of hundreds of billions of human hours. That is, I want to provide simulation capabilities so good that one can eventually algorithmically discover new engineering breakthroughs within minutes without physically having to go through the years long trial and error process of building out different engineering prototypes. Now that I know what's possible, I can actually use Humanity's ability (how far along they are in their ability to replicate ‘foreign technology’) as a measure for how successful or useful our company is at any given time.”


quote:

One of the targets of ReactiveQ is the creation and exploration of meta-materials that Prasad states will require breakthroughs in quantum physics, material science, quantum computing, advanced manufacturing technology and capital intensive resources. If humans tried to re-create a craft like the Tic-Tac UFO scene at Nimitz it would take collaboration from industry leaders . The ideas of consciousness, and meta-materials are more accepted in UFO studies, but these ideas still present these a challenge to the scientific community.

“I think we have to first define the term consciousness more rigorously,” said Prasad. ”The good news here is that should we encounter an advanced non-terrestrial species they would according to us humans, and our simple ways of classifying intelligent life fall into 2 categories in our eyes; biological or non-biological. Now, when or if society accepts that these entities may actually contact humans from time-to-time then the next obvious question is going to be how they get into our heads? The technology they're using to communicate with citizens of Earth seems to have no bearing or care for whether the person is awake or not. This should throw our entire understanding of reality into question for anyone paying attention as what you dream about should only be accessible to you. Hopefully thoughts like this will get the community thinking about the importance of consciousness in their own ways.”


quote:

I would love to see how right this ends up being, but I believe there's a secret band of technologists who are working towards the same goal; interplanetary integration with the rest of the intelligent lifeforms out there,” said Prasad. “ I see myself as ideally being at the center of technological breakthroughs brought to humanity through terrestrial, and extraterrestrial endeavors. I want my technology to enable the companies that are building replicators, interstellar craft and immortality tech.”

Posted by MississippiLSUfan
Brookhaven
Member since Oct 2005
12591 posts
Posted on 7/6/19 at 12:09 pm to
Thanks for posting this TPA. I’ve been thinking about these incidents with our Navy since it was reported on. I just can’t understand why this isn’t more of a big deal to everyone. The things these objects are capable of doing is literally impossible by any measure. Yet they exist and they do them. They make monkeys out of the most advanced military in the world and do so seemingly effortlessly.

Someone please explain to me how these things can invade our airspace with impunity, mock our best pilots, and basically troll them with impossible fly bys and flight maneuvers? Yet, at least outwardly, our defense Dept. Basically yawns.

I guess that we should all just take away the good news from all of this. Which is that they’ve shown no interest in using any weapons. Because if they ever do that it’s all over folks.
Posted by ThinePreparedAni
In a sea of cognitive dissonance
Member since Mar 2013
11315 posts
Posted on 9/30/19 at 9:31 pm to
Another commentary from Deep:

https://medium.com/@deep_1645/the-villager-and-the-f-18-6d2ea3a30cd2

quote:

The Villager And The F-18


quote:

As you can see, he says the object looked like a Tic-Tac, except it was 40 feet long. Here is a link to a 270 page paper doing an extensive scientific analysis of every data point that the team could get their hands on in the public domain. Here is another paper, this time from Dr.Kevin Knuth, former NASA research scientist and currently a professor of physics. It is peer reviewed and analyzes a handful of UAP cases, with the Tic-Tac being one of them. Both papers are chock filled with mathematical models that attempt to calculate and infer the g forces and velocities the Tic Tac was able to reach during its interaction with Fravor and his team. This is where things get interesting. According to Kevin Day, he said he tracked the Tic-Tac commander Fravor intercepted go from 28,000 feet to sea-level in approximately 0.8 seconds. This means the Tic-Tac was capable of achieving a velocity of at least 23,864 mph, which is 31 times the speed of sound. The maximum speed of the commander’s F-18 is 1,190 mph. This means the Tic-Tac is 20 times faster than the F-18 (23864mph/1190mph = 20). Let’s say we wanted to calculate the difference in technological capability and speed between the F-18 and the villager in our thought experiment. The fastest mode of transportation the villager can access is a horse, and suppose he’s lucky and owns the world’s fastest horse capable of reaching 55 mph. In his case, the F-18 is 22 times faster than the villager’s horse. So, roughly speaking, the Tic-Tac was to Fravor, what an F-18 would have been to a villager in the mid-17th century.


quote:

Okay, so the Navy has gone head to head against something centuries ahead of us technologically, and they did not want the story out. Now it’s gotten to a point where pilots are encountering these kinds of objects almost daily in recent years. With the shapes of the objects ranging from cubes, gyroscopes and saucers. None of this is weird at all, nope.


quote:

Over the past year, I’ve gotten to know online and in-person, some of the people who were present and onboard the USS Princeton and USS Nimitz carrier during the days the Tic-Tacs were observed. These are critically thinking, humble and mentally-strong people whose lives were changed by a genuinely profound and extraordinary experience. They are equally as lost as you and I are, and have various theories about what the Tic-Tac was and where it came from. I have my own, which is that it was not made by human hands. After meeting people from DoD, CIA and NASA who were or are intricately involved with the UFO phenomena at an official capacity, as well as doing my own investigations in general, I concluded that there really does exist extremely advanced technology manufactured by a non-human intelligence and the art of studying them is extremely lucrative plus critical to national security. Imagine being the country reverse engineering technology centuries ahead of their time, and succeeding in certain key ways. A person could become theoretically invincible with the capabilities of the Tic-Tac. An unstoppable adversary isn’t a good idea for anyone in my opinion. If someone does own this technology, they’ve managed to elude billions of people in the development of the tech (the Tic-Tac in this case).

They’re also spending a lot of the time they interact with the human population by reminding the military that their efforts in defending themselves against UAP are futile. I was told that the details of any attempt to contact UFOs is classified. This is also something Luis Elizondo publicly stated in the Unidentified docu-series. The seemingly increased rate of incursions without possibly any direct communication on the UAP’s end signals to me that they’re sending a message but through their actions. I believe we are getting acclimatized to the presence of one or more super intelligent civilizations and they are not interested in going through something as primitive as our governments or landing on the Whitehouse. Instead, they’re becoming an ongoing, polite pain in the neck to those in charge while also revealing themselves slowly to the population on an individual basis. To the point that the idea of their existence spreads quickly through credible/influential individuals (pilots, radar operators, civilians and military scientists, etc.) and not just the top-down organizations like Government. Kevin Day said the Tic-Tacs acted like they just wanted to be left alone. If that’s true about them, then maybe these civilizations are using invisibility cloaking, holograms and spacetime manipulation among other technologies to go about their day undisturbed. Every now and then advanced sensors like the AESA pick up on them regardless, which leads to incidents like the Tic-Tac. In my opinion, I could see that happening to us humans too one day when we have the ability to go to other planets and study more primitive or developing civilizations. There would be so many new lifeforms to study, and an entirely unique path that evolution would take. This would lead to fundamentally different kinds of civilizations and cultures worthy of studying without contaminating ideally. Maybe we’re the equivalent of an uncontacted tribe on Earth, where we’re mostly left alone to our savagery and ignorance. Every now and then one of us catches a glimpse of an airplane and our tribal perception thinks it’s God or something mythical when it’s really only advanced technology. In any case, I hope you enjoyed this deep dive into what I think it means for the Navy to indirectly acknowledge the existence of the Tic-Tac. We are in uncharted territories and I could not be more excited. It is my view that if we learn to overcome our ignorance, accept a humble perspective that we could be one of many intelligent races out there in the Universe and then attempt to make contact with whoever is behind these UAPs, we’ll advance enormously as a civilization from an intellectual and probably spiritual perspective. Right now though, it seems that we lack so much order that we can’t even properly sort out the question of whether we’re alone in the Universe or not. Most people around the world are likely not prepared to accept one on one contact with an “Alien intelligence”, for lack of a better word. They have not had the time to digest the possibility or incorporate it into their world view. Until that changes, I think we can expect a continued increase in UAP incursions as time goes by. We need to keep in mind though that just as the villager lacked the ability to photograph an F-18, we may lack the tools to “photograph” or truly capture the presence and entirety of the Tic-Tac for now.


The first person to respond in the comments is Garry Nolan

Dr. Nolan is the Rachford and Carlota A. Harris Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Stanford University School of Medicine. He trained with Leonard Herzenberg (for his Ph.D.) and Nobelist Dr. David Baltimore (for postdoctoral work for the first cloning/characterization of NF-?B p65/ RelA and the development of rapid retroviral production systems). He has published over 300 research articles and is the holder of 20 US patents, and has been honored as one of the top 25 inventors at Stanford University.
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