@Taweret I dont get whats going on in this one but its got great conspiracy vibes
-
@Taweret I dont get whats going on in this one but its got great conspiracy vibes
-
4 8 15 16 23 42replied to jonny (good kind) last edited by
@jonny this seems like the kind of conspiracy that only makes sense if you're high
-
Solarbird :flag_cascadia:replied to 4 8 15 16 23 42 last edited by
-
Solarbird :flag_cascadia:replied to Solarbird :flag_cascadia: last edited by
@Taweret @jonny like the time i started picking up both the BBC and a local FM - EFF EMM - station on a microphone cable connected to a ribbon microphone
and _only_ when connected to a ribbon microphone
I _still_ do not understand this because FM DOESN'T WORK THAT WAY and WE DON'T GET THE BBC HERE so basically
applied RF feels like it's about this far >< away from demonology
-
maegulreplied to Solarbird :flag_cascadia: last edited by
Used to do neuroscience with electrodes, where we'd always have the signal coming out of an audio speaker (a kinda niche practice).
Sometimes the things you'd hear. Vague voices and organised signals, for sure.
But for me the scariest was hard to describe and unexplainable changes in the background noise. Like disturbances in the force or rumblings in the ether from distant lovecraftian events.
-
-
-
maegulreplied to maegul last edited by [email protected]
I was kinda convinced that one's openess to the potential importance of ephaptic or active-dendritic processes was related to how much they'd "heard the brain work". The sound, rightly or wrongly, definitely conveys an ecosystem rather than the point processes of spikes.
Only counter would be intracellular signals ... you can "see" the complexity in that well enough I'd say.
-
A ridiculously powerful example IME was "hearing" the thalamus "in the distance" (IE the electrode was just close enough to pick up the population against BG noise) ...
for me it truly conjured imagery of the brain as a vast landscape ... more so than anything else I've ever seen.