12 Comments
User's avatar
HeatherMac's avatar

I am interested in all the topics listed!

HeatherMac's avatar

I did vote and chose the first topic, which appears to have the most votes.

HeatherMac's avatar

Thanks Roman!

HeatherMac's avatar

I'm not sure if I signed up in time as I just signed up this evening. Will there be a replay or a way to view later, if I don't get the link to join this evening? Thank you.

me's avatar

Useful to mesure our own blue tooth code as said with GQ emf 3 9 O meter, capable of it.

Privacy will become HUGE soon, ID requierements, the mark of beast ?

Gloria S's avatar

Greetings Roman and Bohdanna!

Everything that has ever been presented has been fascinating and so informative.

I would be interested in knowing more about the role of radiofrequency in weather modification/solar radiation management and that perhaps the push behind all of those federal bills to deploy wireless infrastructure is not just for telecommunication purposes but geoengineering.

I'll be happy no matter what. Just keep up the fantastic work!!!

John Wright's avatar

All three:

Measuring EMF/ what meters work?

Hard wiring techniques

Online privacy

Are all interesting topics, if any new information can be shared.

Roman S Shapoval's avatar

Thank you John! I appreciate your input. If you HAD to choose one, which one would it be?

🤔

John Wright's avatar

Online privacy is extremely important. I'm frustrated by constantly being forced to disable my protections because all kinds of services malfunction and won't work with things like VPNs or privacy measures enacted.

John Wright's avatar

I chose "hard wiring techniques" because that is perhaps most challenging for me. It's a royal pain in the ass to run wires through your walls! Not easy to do! I did this when I moved into this house (ran a hardwired line from my office / computer center in the basement up to the second floor bedroom I use as a media room for TV).

The challenge I have "now" is trying to get a whole home music system as an alternative to (WiFi based) Google Home. Google Home has been a huge disappointment in that it works so poorly. I'd love to replace it with "old school" audio but that's easier said than done!

But I'm also very curious about measuring. My "Trifield" meter is supposedly one of the "best" but this is something you basically need to practice to gain real world experience. Where should you measure? What is a high reading? What is a "safe" reading? How do you best measure to make sure that an RF blocking blanket is actually working?