home bbs files messages ]

Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   sci.physics.relativity      The theory of relativity      225,861 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 225,105 of 225,861   
   Thomas Heger to All   
   Re: parallel random-access machine (para   
   10 Dec 25 08:19:04   
   
   XPost: comp.lang.misc, sci.physics   
   From: ttt_heg@web.de   
      
   Am Dienstag000009, 09.12.2025 um 20:43 schrieb The Starmaker:   
   > On Mon, 8 Dec 2025 09:06:46 +0100, Janis Papanagnou   
   >  wrote:   
   >   
   >> On 2025-12-08 08:21, Thomas Heger wrote:   
   >>>   
   >>> An invention needs to be new. Otherwise it is not an invention.   
   >>   
   >> Not only new, but also not being something considered trivial or   
   >> otherwise not "worthy" of being a patent.   
   >>   
   >>> At least this is the main principle upon which patents are granted in   
   >>> Germany.   
   >>   
   >> In the German patent history we can observe that even marvellous   
   >> inventions have not been granted a patent because the officials   
   >> could neither understand nor see the actual or potential future   
   >> relevance and usefulness.   
   >   
   >   
   > Albert Einstein worked at a patent office and even decided WHO gets   
   > the patent. Albert Einstein was bribred to give the patent to the guy   
   > who bribed him.   
   >   
   > https://groups.google.com/g/sci.physics.relativity/c/WhZcPHah3   
   c/m/QaT6MFBIAAAJ   
   >   
   >   
   > Did you see the boat they gave him for it?   
   >   
   >   
   > Albert Einstein told his friends to create FAKE patents!   
   > (at least they got a patent on something)   
   >   
   > https://blog.nuclearsecrecy.com/2014/05/16/szilards-chain-reaction/   
   >   
   >   
   >   
   > Only an Einstein can think of fake patents.   
   > (he approves it himself)   
   >   
      
   Einstein and Szillard patented a device, which is commonly called   
   'Einstein's fridge'.   
      
   But that device has only one known use as part of a fast breeding reactor.   
      
   And a group of students who wanted to replicate the device found out,   
   that it didn't cool.   
      
   So, a plausible guess would be:   
      
   the 'fridge' was actually meant to become a part of a fast breeding   
   reactor, but named 'fridge' to hide this fact.   
      
      
   But that would lead to a very unpleasant conclusion:   
      
   to patent a part of a fast breeding reactor would require the existence   
   of a fast breeding reactor in the first place.   
      
   And that would require the need of Plutonium, because that's the stuff   
   which thoese reactors 'breed'.   
      
   And as Plutonium is among the most toxic substances on the planet, it   
   requires good reason to want Plutonium.   
      
   That could actually be the existence of atomic bombs already in the late   
   1920th/early 1930th in Germany. And that would suggest, that all stories   
   related to the creation of the bomb were fake, too.   
      
   That would mean, that the so called 'Manhattan project' didn't invent   
   the bomb, but had other objectives (like e.g. placing a 'secrecy gag'   
   upon theoretical physics).   
      
   Also chilling would be, that in such a scenario the Germans were in   
   possesion of atomic bombs already in the late 1920th.   
      
   TH   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca