As Philo-The-Third told me, his father – Philo T. Farnsworth The Second – had ‘two major cases in his life.
The first was electronic video. You wouldn’t be looking at this if he hadn’t cracked that one back in the 1920s.
Over the course of the next thirty-plus years, Farnsworth gained as much first-hand knowledge about the practical workings of the quantum realm as anybody who worked at Los Alamos. In fact, he was invited to participate in The Manhattan Project, but declined the invitation, telling his wife “I want nothing to do with building an atomic bomb.”
Instead, in the 1950s and 60s, he used his experience and singular insight to conceive and build something not even the assembled wizards at Los Alamos could fathom: a controlled nuclear fusion device, a ‘start in a jar.
This second preview from The Boy Who Invented Television recounts the moment he figured it out:
The audiobook edition is now available on Amazon or Audible.
Y’all get yer ears on!
Thank God for your book. The following link is a paper that reviews the the reality of producing unidirectional thrust from congruent, symmetric, flat parallel plate capacitors sandwiching dielectric activated by high voltages. Reports from over six laboratories and Boyko V. Ivanov’s electrovacuum gauge invariant solutions to Einstein’s general relativity equations evince the reality of the Biefeld-Brown Effect. The following is a link to my paper.
The title of the paper is Reality and Ramifications of Biefeld-Brown Effect EnigmaticThe Thrust. It is on the list of my writings that will appear when you click on http://taylorcisco.academia.edu/research
And thank you for your comment. Might I suggest you share your paper with the folks at the ttbrown.com forum? I think they’d find it interesting, to say the least.
The title of the paper is Reality and Ramifications of Biefeld-Brown Effect EnigmaticThe Thrust. It is on the list of my writings that will appear when you click on http://taylorcisco.academia.edu/research