October 20, 2011
2. Newblog2011: 10/20/11 M.I.T./Kaiser/Chip
Regardless of what the story of the smoot is, MIT is a bad place, anyway, by now.
Today, as yesterday, there’s a caption along the side of the first page of the MIT website about “Kaiser,” which is a name that I mentioned this past summer as being pretty close to apt for President Obama.
There's also a cartoon in the center of the first page of the website that says “Could I put a computer chip in my brain to make me smarter?”
There’s another caption along the side of that page that says “Tiny stamps for tiny sensors,” that goes to a page whose first paragraph says this:
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“Advances in microchip technology may someday enable clinicians to perform tests for hundreds of diseases — sifting out specific molecules, such as early stage cancer cells — from just one drop of blood. But fabricating such “lab-on-a-chip” designs — tiny, integrated diagonistic sensor arrays on surfaces as small as a square centimeter — is a technically challenging, time-consuming and expensive feat.”
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October 20, 2011
It’s not possible that the “Kaiser” article on the MIT website is a coincidence.
I would like it to be a coincidence that the Masons’ child ID program is called “Masonichip International,” but I don’t think it is.
Here’s a featured name from the Masonichip website, which, as I’ve mentioned online recently, now has, at the top of the first page, a picture of a line of children, each in a t-shirt of a different color so that they form a rainbow line:
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Clifford "Chip" Stamm
Masonichip International Chairman
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Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, October 20, 2011 @ 12:53 p.m.
2. Newblog2011: 10/20/11 M.I.T./Kaiser/Chip
Regardless of what the story of the smoot is, MIT is a bad place, anyway, by now.
Today, as yesterday, there’s a caption along the side of the first page of the MIT website about “Kaiser,” which is a name that I mentioned this past summer as being pretty close to apt for President Obama.
There's also a cartoon in the center of the first page of the website that says “Could I put a computer chip in my brain to make me smarter?”
There’s another caption along the side of that page that says “Tiny stamps for tiny sensors,” that goes to a page whose first paragraph says this:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
“Advances in microchip technology may someday enable clinicians to perform tests for hundreds of diseases — sifting out specific molecules, such as early stage cancer cells — from just one drop of blood. But fabricating such “lab-on-a-chip” designs — tiny, integrated diagonistic sensor arrays on surfaces as small as a square centimeter — is a technically challenging, time-consuming and expensive feat.”
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
October 20, 2011
It’s not possible that the “Kaiser” article on the MIT website is a coincidence.
I would like it to be a coincidence that the Masons’ child ID program is called “Masonichip International,” but I don’t think it is.
Here’s a featured name from the Masonichip website, which, as I’ve mentioned online recently, now has, at the top of the first page, a picture of a line of children, each in a t-shirt of a different color so that they form a rainbow line:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clifford "Chip" Stamm
Masonichip International Chairman
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, October 20, 2011 @ 12:53 p.m.