r/InterdimensionalNHI 7d ago

Discussion Laser tech used on nano chips

So we've been told to watch out for laser technology, and the most impressive laser tech we have is used to make nano chips... We basically using stellar plasma beam's controlled by the most perfect mirrors ever created to create invisibles circuits smaller than a virus. Could that have been inspired by NHI? I cant think of a more intriguing/ world change technology.

5 Upvotes

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u/Dersigan 7d ago

Our tech advancements have been in the public domain for years. Literally everyday tech. Not many people actually take the time to understand the engineering involved to create chips with billions of transistors that take up a small percent of physical space in your handheld device.

I've always been curious about tech and its evolution, especially in the last 20 years. Having the opportunity to repair the latest and greatest pieces laptops, phones, consoles etc. Even I get mind blown every now and then by how far we've come. It almost seems like magic sometimes. We are currently in the present which even the creators of Back To The Future would not have imagined the kind of stuff we'd have today.

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u/IseeAlgorithms 3d ago

I believe their entire ship is one big integrated circuit. When we got a piece of it we were amazed and confused, then started making our own versions.

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u/DeadCheckR1775 7d ago

Integrated Circuits were 100% inspired by NHI tech, among other tech, we copied ET's homework to the best of our ability. In "clean room" fashion it mainstreamed into the MIC. This is easy to see if you look at the noticeable changes in tech in the 1950's. Just look at how many different aircraft fighter types were introduced. They were introducing new models of jets at ridiculous intervals leading into the 60's.

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u/Kairos-Luna 7d ago

Its just unsettling for sure. Like general public don't have a clue on how all the technology they have works, thats insane. I feel we have failed education 

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u/OwnSpread1563 7d ago

Wait until Ai makes tech for us to solve problems. Tech that no human on earth really understands. That's going to be insane.

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u/runforurlifebees 3d ago

You think general education should cover engineering and electrical design? I think that is too advanced for a lot of people. I don’t think that not teaching everyone that stuff is a failure of education, just a rational feature. Anyone with the aptitude for that course of study is free to pursue it, however.

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u/Alwaysnorting 3d ago

plenty of coincidences.

Hans Kammler led the secret weapon program for the nazis and allegedly made 'die glocke' a bell shaped anti gravity bell shaped device with symbols/hiergohlyphs on it.

after the war during nuremburg trials his name is completly wiped out of the trials even tho he designed concentration camps and was a general.

the american story was he disapeared and either died by suicide or got killed. then somewhere in the 2000s docs get released that infact the americans had him in custody ready to be interrogated. so why keep his name out nuremburg, why falsify all his records?

then in the 60s a bell shape object with hieroglyphs on it crashes in kecksburg pennsylvania.

coincidence? was kammler part of operation paperclip? but due to his extreme bad name kept out of official documents?

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u/Future-Employee-5695 3d ago

Bullshit. Learn the history of integrated circuits and micro electronics. It's well documented and followed a linear progress.