I have worked in RF Electronics for more time then I realized, and Never have I ever fallen of my chair watching someone get so many things wrong about RF and the general concept. I loved what you four did, and applaud the ability to remain in control and burst out laughing and fall off your seats! LOL You have to cover this comedian again this was rich! Even hollywood can't write the funny! Peace
These real engineer gatherings on Mind of Steele are great! The various disciplines within physics are not my strong suit by any stretch, but I find these discussions refreshing, fun and informative. I hope the real engineers squad can come together again for some lively insights!
I want to thank sincerely conspiracy theorists like Richard. I sometimes learn interesting science from watching videos like this that debunk the idiots, and I learned quite a bit from this video.
How to prove a conspiracy blogger wrong: Just bring a couple of individuals who know what they're speaking about, even if a drunk dog would probably do the job, considering how ridiculous the 5g conspiracy is.
And women. A friend of mine is drinking bleach for "parasites" when the elephant in the room is their dreadful diet - plus nonsense they see on TishTosh. (given they have a water filter, I strongly suspect the "MMS" they're buying is fake) The other week I encountered a raw vegan "influencer" who claims you need to detox if you'd been eating cooked veggies ! (FTR I myself have only eaten veggies and beans for the past 40-odd years, but am not afraid of cooking - and know that microwave cooking is the best way to preserve nutrients)
@@yangtse55 "TishTosh". Nice. I shall steal that one, if you don't mind. Off the initial topic, but, me too. 44yrs veggie (not vegan). The fact that cooking certain foods causes chemical reactions which are extremely beneficial to human digestion and the body's uptake of certain vitamins, will forever elude them. There are foods which actually require cooking to be of any use to the body at all. Like walking upright, cooking food is one of the behavioural changes sited as helping humans advance so much further than other apes. That would involve learning a bit of biology and chemistry, though. I think, maybe there's certain 'plant'* biology, they know about. That would explain at least a bit of the imagination, but doesn't explain how a stupid idea travels from the stoned realm of "Just imagine if...", to the stoned realm of "I'm totally convinced that..." They're covert hippies, I reckons (even the copper). Except Mark Steele, obviously. Who is too insane to be even a fecking hippy, the most squdgy-brained of all the truthers. *('The Devil's' version of said plant, as opposed to The Truss one).😏
To answer your question, Ray. Yes, software engineers ARE proper humans. What do you mean that wasn't the question? Hold on... Oh, right, sorry. My memory's not been the same since the old 'plugged myself into a lamp post' incident I told you about, a while back. So, YES, you're proper engineers, too. I'd better go and sit down, now. Wibble.
@@RaynardWilson0 It's all good mate, I actually thought it was pretty funny. Love your vids. After I saw you a while back on McToon I instantly binge watched your entire channel. Now I have to wait for more. Keep it up!
As a teenager in 1965, I joined the Army and was trained as a radio technician. In the following years I worked in a variety of radio related roles from submarine support in South Africa, a ground radio engineer with Lockheed & British Airways in Saudi Arabia, ending up there as supervisor for radio and navigation aids for the whole of the western region of Saudi Arabia to radio systems support/implementation engineer for Motorola's Europe, Middle East & Africa region. Equipment involved ranged from small hand held radios through higher power transmitter/receivers in intercontinental links, marine radar etc. And Mr Vobes is an ill informed idiot.
What is wild is Vobes didn't start out like this, his channel was totally different, about exploring. He slowly went down the rabbit hole as people put these crazy ideas in to his head until ultimately going full conspiracy. What a wild ride watching that was until I unsubscribed.
Its really good to see how experts discuss this information. There are questions between each other and admission of not knowing things. Vobes seemingly lacks the knowledge that he doesn't know everything
@@RaynardWilson0 The relentless march of time, an unenviable foe. Great video tho, obviously MC Toon is the king but the other two lads were great, very fair.
Another who came via Catz. Saw my OH (electronics engineer) pause at the top of the stairs to pick up his specs then stand stock still wiping the lenses for a full five minutes before asking what I was listening to! And why! Very entertaining and informative. Have subscribed and will be back!
So you haven't saw the experiments in us with this. Oh u are missing out anything that can be turned up or dialed in frequency wise can and is used as z weapon .
Warnings for radar alitmeter inaccuracy due to 5G interference are still floating around for several airports in official NOTAMs. The necessary filters in aircraft electronics are only becoming a thing ever so slowly, as is normal for any non-vital changes in the industry. (edit) There are really at least two parts of the issue, one is that the frequencies assigned to zero-attention-span devices suddenly got way closer to that used for radar altimeters, and the other is that the high-frequency transmitters need to be put up in way more places to enable us doing useless crap really *everywhere* over frequencies that behave uncomfortably close to visible light but with lower range, so of course they are also put up in places where even a directional radar receiver cannot sufficiently reject our ubuquitous porn addiction.
Really? Everything I've heard says that the various designs all rely on an exceptional level of phase linearity across a wide band in which there can be _no_ filtering. That means that the problem all along is that these devices needed large amounts of spectrum to be quiescent, but never bothered to allocate those frequencies for their exclusive use. As for remedies, the existence of GPS-based navigation looks to be the way out. How fast is "fast" enough can change quite a bit if only one jet full of passengers crashes as a result of this oversight.
@@StringerNews1 (sorry for any potential spam, but RU-vid is a shit platform for comments and it appears to have eaten my response at least thrice now...)
@@StringerNews1 what I'm going by is basically the existence of those NOTAMS which indicates that there was at least one near-accident on a baulked approach due to a radar altimeter going nuts at the wrong time, and for example marketing editorials like [search for "Honeywell 5G radar altimeters] (which talks about "potential" issues, but at the same time would be sued out of existence faster than you can say "Raytheon pays off politicians" if there wasn't enough actual problem in it to be worthwhile). There is likely a huge number of radar units silently doing their thing "well enough" ever since the 70s too, and would you trust those still to be fully up to spec? Satellite-based navigation, these days going under the umbrella term "Global Navigation Satellite System" and not exclusive to GPS, is at the same time interesting and problematic. There is indeed a move to navigation using GPS with several highly nationalised augmentation systems like EGNOS (sucks to be you, Brexit...) or WAAS providing enough precision and stability for more complex and efficient approaches including vertical guidance (at least I think so), but there is always a last check at an altitude determined by on-board instruments, barometric or radar, that makes the final decision; for the most critical approaches in the worst visual conditions, that's usually radar. The problematic part of that is that it's really easy to jam GNSS signals, which certain failed nations are currently doing liberally for fear of tiny little toys going to their capital to drop a few gifts. Flightradar24 have a map illustrating the issue: [search for Flightradar24 GPS jamming map] so if you are, for example, a Baltic state, you're currently probably very glad about every working ILS approach you have.
Software engineering is real engineering. Asymptotic analysis is indeed calculus. But the industry doesn't have engineering standards (leftpad). Therefore, the title "software engineer" carries little information on its own.
I love how he makes out we would be more aubfait with MW. We were all listening to LW Atlantic 252 from Ireland and radio luxembourg. Unlike the tosh he said, BBC world was mainly SW back in the day. Never mind the cultural part of it. He is a bit confused about the wavelengths. Basically he doesnt believe this 5g tosh. None of these grifters do. He just wants to milk the gullible.
Wow...just wow. It's not uncommon for laypeople to present pretty hackneyed notions about how things work, them being laypeople and all. But when someone says that they're going to correct the laypeople with "real" people, that does bring an expectation of higher standards. I'm not seeing that here. In fact, that old chestnut about "planes falling from the sky" has got to be the very worst misunderstanding of flight that is humanly possible. What kind of cursed logic that could go from "radio waves" to "planes falling from the sky" has got to be the epitome of dumb, and yet there you have grown men discussing it as if it's a reasonable sentiment. Who exactly is the crackpot here? The admitted novice, or the people who profess to be very, very expert, but who fall way short of that self-assessment?
software engineering is engineering but the kind that requires very little physics knowledge. like social engineering. although that one is not even engineering.
Perhaps he should speak to Dr Barrie Trower, the expert on radio frequencies, or Dr Rima Laibow perhaps, or in fact any one of the many authorities who provide a more detailed analysis. Proper research is invaluable.
@@RaynardWilson0 Hi there. I look at so much stuff it gets a little crazy sometimes. I feel he would enjoy more freedoms as hopefully we all do. As for some things he says I don’t always agree but I don’t always agree with my Dad. Anyways good luck with your channel. Take care.
@@RaynardWilson0 Minimum Wave tech. He and many people feel it’s damaging to humans especially children. Being an Electrical Engineer I feel it needs more investigation. Me being not trusting of many corps and being told it’s all fine always gets my spidey sense going. All I can say about me is that if I have my 4g phone against my head for more than 5 mins I get a bad headache. And that makes sense on what’s being directed at you. As for Mr Vobes I like him I don’t agree with him or his guests every time. And yes I’ve been wrong many times and right too. My bottom line is I want kids to be safe and happy. Sadly many don’t. Take care.
I am (was) subscribed to Richard Vobes channel, purely because he has historic walks, many of them in my home county. They date from around 6 years ago, I had no idea he was this much of a nutjob, and will be unsubscribing immediately.
@@RaynardWilson0 It'll be difficult, I'll have to find someway of incapacitating myself to avoid throwing something heavy at the screen, I'm not made of laptops you know! Maybe Toon can send me some Toonshine to help dull the pain.
The third law of thermodynamics proves that as the power goes up, the frequency concentrates, and therefore the radar goes faster. To be clear, the law states that an object in motion will stay at rest when acted on by a radio frequency.
I have no problem with criticizing others and don’t call it ridicule when they’re peddling woo. If they were telling the truth but had a different voice, or had silly illustrations then it would be ridicule. But when you’re exposing people who spread lie, or misinformation, I applaud it.
Richard has a lot of fans so prepare for more push back in this one, he's seems a nice enough guy and is pro freedom which is something that truly is under threat, but he seems to have fallen for a lot of sovereign citizen nonsense and takes a lot of conspiracies at face value without researching both sides.
@@londonleedsfan It's a complicated in depth subject, but gradually over time the West are becoming ever more totalitarian with new laws introduced to reduce freedom, we are seeing 2 tier policing where they'll protect what the state allows and attack what are seen as dissenters. Excuses are used to reduce freedom too like lies about climate change and no restrictions whatsoever were ever necessary in 2020/21, this is just a small part of it, ultimately we can expect universal basic income, the government wants us all dependent upon the state, then they have control over everyone, eventually receiving it will be conditional upon compliance.
@@londonleedsfan They're also controlling our perception to control us, censorship has never been as bad, even my last comment is hidden unless you sort by newest first which people rarely do.
Whose opinion /WOULD/ you trust. FTR I'm a 64 year old radio ham and a retired AV/IT techie and love having access to the world's knowledge in my pocket at all times and wish others were actually benefitting from it and not watching TishTosh quackery while they ought to be focussing on their driving -