Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Royal Raymond Rife (May 16, 1888 – August 5, 1971) [1] was an American inventor and early exponent of high-magnification time-lapse cine-micrography. [2] [3]Rife is known for his microscopes, which he claimed could observe live microorganisms with a magnification considered impossible for his time, and for an "oscillating beam ray" invention, which he thought could treat various ailments by ...
In closing, I would like to say what most people are talking about as a Rife machine or Rife frequency, is actually a Crane machine or Crane frequency. Rife's original frequencies from his lab notes started at 400,000 Hz and went to 13,000,000 Hz. Crane's frequencies are at 20 to 10,000 Hz, and Clark's Frequencies are from 80,000 to 800,000.
Energy medicine devices are a class of pseudoscientific devices that originated with the work of Royal Rife, claiming to work via transferring energy to a person's energy field. The Healy claims to work using electricity to find a user's "personalized frequencies", an idea that has no scientific backing or mechanism. [3]
When Rife announced his “ProbleMATTic World Tour” in June, more than 250 dates in North America, Europe, and Australia sold out in 48 hours. The online stampede, which resulted in 600,000 ...
Rife talks about becoming a comedy heartthrob before age 30, navigating his sex appeal in the public eye, battling depression and enduring failure before finally hitting it big.
Ordinary people have better reading performance using high-frequency (20–60 kHz) electronic ballasts than magnetic ballasts, [10] although the effect was small except at high contrast ratio. The flicker of fluorescent lamps, even with magnetic ballasts, is so rapid that it is unlikely to present a hazard to individuals with epilepsy . [ 11 ]
The 28-year-old Rife said that he had no idea what a comedy set was early on, but that even at a young age he steered away from kid jokes and always aimed his material toward adults.
John S. Kanzius (March 1, 1944 – February 18, 2009) was an American inventor, radio and TV engineer, one-time station owner and ham radio operator (call sign: K3TUP) from Erie, Pennsylvania.