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April 21, 2025 • 54 mins

Matt tries to explain a computer thing, Jason talks about mysterious farm Roombas, and Mike finds some answers to life the universe and everything.

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Don't Look Under The Internet
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Don't look under the internet all right, if we can
make this, that I will be.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
It makes this that this, that, that this that this,
this, that hello everybody.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
No, okay, wait, matt, are you recording?
Sure am Tight so I can do thatagain.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
Hello everybody.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
Hello, okay, hi everyone, hello everybody,
welcome to.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Hello, no, we're not doing that.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
Welcome to.
Don't Look Under the Interneteverybody.
An internet comedy horrorpodcast featuring the likelihood
of a Jason.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Maybe We'll see how I'm feeling.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
And the man of Matt.

Speaker 2 (01:05):
Hi Mandela, macho.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
Freeze warning just issued.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
And me.
I don't know what to do withthat.

Speaker 3 (01:16):
That's what the bottom of my computer screen
says right now.

Speaker 1 (01:20):
No doubt I'm going to hit you all with a little
deluty.
Housekeeping I think you meanhouse.
Que all with a little diluty,come over here Housekeeping.

Speaker 3 (01:26):
I think you mean house queefing.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
House queefing, so I ain't got nothing.
This is Our other.
Sorry, I'm eating a hot pocketand we don't have any
housekeeping because we justwent over underneath silly
billies, fucking assholes.
Yeah, you're probably going tohear a little bit of chewing
noises from me.
Wow, apologies people, I'mhungry.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Jesus.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
But hey, who cares?
Great, so we're kicking it backa little bit.
We're having a fun time today.
You know, I decided we're goingto just relax, have a little
bit.
We're having a fun time today.
I decided we're going to justrelax, have a fun time and just
chat about some weird shit wefound on either Reddit or the
internet, I suppose, because Iforget what I said to you guys.

(02:11):
I think it was just Reddit.
Yeah, you said Reddit.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
I thought you said internet, so I didn't Perfect.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Internet slash Reddit .
We're doing another one ofthese.
I love these kind of episodes.
They're just easy.
I could just I learned so much.

Speaker 3 (02:27):
That's great, because I've thrown this in.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
It really gives me an insight into your guys' minds.
Ie how much dedication you haveto this and if you're okay with
me eating a Hot Pocket on, air.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
I think we have to be you.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
Do Okay, we'll have a dedication If you haven't left
us a review, please leave us afive-star review.
We started out at like 4.8, andthen it was 4.7 for a while.
Now we're down into that 4.6territory and I'm starting to
get nervous.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
We're almost at 1,000 reviews.
We did it.
If we get under 4.0, I thinkwe're just going to change.

Speaker 1 (03:06):
Cancel the podcast.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
We'll just we'll go back to shifting sands or some
shit.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
Shift your sense we're going to have to increase
the paycheck.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
Remember how I said we're not being affected.
Tariffs don't affect us.

Speaker 3 (03:18):
Well, if you don't get those reviews up we're On
Spotify, yeah, anyway.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
So I thought we would just talk about some fun things
that we found on Reddit and theinternet in Matt's case, so
I'll start first.
I brought this up, I got usinto this mess.
I'm going to get.
I'm going to start us into it,okay.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
All right, we'll get us into this mess.
I'm going to dig us deeper.

Speaker 1 (03:41):
Exactly, we can't get out.
I'm going to dig us deeper.
Exactly, I'm gonna make sure wecan't get out.
I'm gonna dig us deeper intothis hole that is the ice ball.
Um, I'll build us a bunker.
Yeah, so I found this subredditcalled high strangeness, which
has become one of my newfavorites.
Um, in high strangeness, Ifound a post from a person named
blonde monk 116 that says looshisn't a theory, it's the

(04:03):
operating system.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
What the fuck does that mean?

Speaker 2 (04:08):
That is brand new sentence, for sure.

Speaker 1 (04:10):
Is.
Loosh like key no, so we'regoing to find out what Loosh is.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
It's like energy.
It's like emotional energy.
Right, yes, you're on tosomething.
It's like key.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
Kind of.
So it's energy that is givenoff from your emotions, right?
So it's energy that is givenoff from your emotions, right?
So it's like leftover energy.
Let me get into it.
I didn't think this was like awhole fucking theory.
Yeah, let me break down thiswhole thing for you, because it
gets pretty weird and wacky.
So, first off, what is luge?
Luge is a term used to describethe energetic byproduct of

(04:42):
human emotion, especially fear,anxiety, unresolved grief,
longing, suppressed love, rage,blind worship and forced hope.
It's emotional fuel andsomething or someone benefits
from you constantly generatingit.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
This is literally the fucking Magnus Archives.
This is what the MagnusArchives is about.
Oh, I didn't know that.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
Yeah, so I'm reading this verbatim.
Okay, this is how the magnusarchives is about.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yeah, so let's, I'm readingthis verbatim.
Okay, this is how weird thissounds.
So let's say it plainly.
You are in a realm that feedson your suffering.
It's not personal, it'sindustrial.
That's why wars never end,that's why tragedy cycles,
that's why trauma is normalized,monetized and immortalized in
entertainment.
The more you hurt, the more youfeel, the more you leak, and

(05:28):
most people I don't want.
They've been taught that that'sjust life, pay taxes quite
quietly, scroll the void, dieconfused.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
The structure of the trap.
This is fucking metal.
Like what the hell?
This isn't a ball floating inspace.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
This is a realm, a frequency locked containment
zone with layered realities,time loops and psychological
filters designed to keep yousmall, distracted and
energetically tasty.
It's not about shape, it'sabout function.
Space is a lie.
Death is a recycling system.
The sky is a locked dome ofpredictive programming and
encoded symbolism.

(06:02):
It sounds wild.
Ask yourself, why does thisreality require your belief to
keep working?
Who benefits from this?
I ask you, call them what youwant the archons, parasites,
energetic managers, ai fragments, thought forms with logos.
They don't care what youbelieve, as long as you stay
emotionally relative.
Dammit, I've ruined it.

(06:23):
I've ruined it all.

Speaker 3 (06:24):
They don't care what you believe, as long as you stay
emotionally relative, damn it,I've ruined it.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
I've ruined it all.
As long as you stay emotionallyreactive and spiritually asleep
, you think you're thinkingfreely.
You're not.
You're feeding.
You're feeding the solution.
Parentheses the good part no,this isn't hopeless.
In fact, this is your exitticket.
Wake up, sheeple.
The system requires yourparticipation to function.
It's a consent-basedarchitecture masked by confusion

(06:49):
and emotional overwhelm.
What's the way out?
You're probably asking yourselfStop playing the game I just
lost.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
I just lost.
Yeah, damn it.

Speaker 1 (07:09):
Here's what.
Here's what that looks like.
Stop assigning meaning to thepain they give you.
Stop believing your thoughtsare yours by default.
Cut off the energetic chargeyou give to narratives doom
scrolling, fear porn andemotional manipulation can we
talk about?

Speaker 3 (07:24):
fear porn wait stop, go back.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
What is fear porn?
Do you really want to know?

Speaker 1 (07:28):
yes, that's why I asked.
It's like being scuroused, likea fear boner, I understand I
understand.

Speaker 2 (07:34):
You really go to the house and the lady screams that
you're like, ah, yes, and youget real hard.
I get that, yeah, but what?

Speaker 1 (07:42):
what it's like when the grunge, it's like when the
lady from the ring comes out.
You're like, oh, but that'swhat fear.

Speaker 3 (07:48):
Porn is okay no, isn't she like 13?

Speaker 1 (07:51):
no, not for this narrative awakening isn't about
being enlightened.
Cut that out.
It's about becoming boring tothe machine.
When you stop reacting, youstop leaking.
When you stop leaking, you stopleaking.
When you stop leaking, you stopfeeding.
When you stop feeding, youstart remembering, and when
enough of us remember, thesystem crashes.
And the first comment aboutthis on reddit is this was the

(08:14):
premise of monsters inc oh whatuh-huh, yeah, oh my god.

Speaker 2 (08:21):
So they turn their fear into laughter.

Speaker 3 (08:23):
It turns out it's way more powerful.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
What.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
Yeah yeah, monsters Inc is just about the concept of
loose.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
Yeah, the system feeds on negative emotions.
So if you don't give it thoseemotions and you give it
something different, it's a morepowerful feeling.

Speaker 2 (08:36):
Yeah, this dude, this is literally.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
this is what this is what the Magnus archives fucking
great.
Well, this led me to theascension glossary, which is
basically like wikipedia foranyone who carries a crystal in
their pocket a j-o crystalaround
their neck and I found I foundsomething on loosh here.
Um, it's, it's nothing really,it's just like a wikipedia.
Uh, it's basically like awikipedia article for loosh, but

(08:59):
um, I just wanted to read off alittle bit of it because I
think it helps describe loushjust a little bit better as well
.
So Lush is again a term appliedto energy produced by human
beings and animals that otherentities use to feed from.
It is also referred to as theenergy that is produced by
suffering that entities feed.
This is from books by RobertMonroe and maybe a play on the

(09:23):
French word Luche Luche, I don'tknow how to say it.
L-o-u-c-h-e.
Luche Luche.
Negative emotional energycollection.
Reversal networks arecollecting life force from the
collective fields of all.
First off, hang on when you usecollective too much, I know
you're bullshitting me.
Collective, collective Arecollecting life force from the

(09:45):
collective fields of all earthinhabitants and producing more
subtle black forces and miasma.
The much sought after spiritualenergy contained in these
fields is called energetic lushby the cabals.
In this context, lush isreferred to as the emotional
energy radiated by animals andhumans when feeling threatened,
harmed or being killed.
That results in the traumatizingpain and suffering that is

(10:06):
experienced and recorded in thebody, mind and soul.
This trauma and pain getsrecorded in the earth body
itself.
For centuries, the NAA havedeveloped and exploited
multidimensional occultpractices through reversal
creation code.
This has been given to secretsocieties and institutions for
the purpose of mind control andsocial engineering, in order to

(10:27):
harvest negative emotionalenergy or loosh from the masses.
When the current accelerationof the electronic era, which
promotes transhumanism and anarray of artificial intelligence
technologies, both overtly andcovertly, the exploitation to
extract negative emotionalenergy from humanity is at an

(10:49):
all-time high, our planet isbeing diluted with negative mind
control programming to aibroadcasts that target the
negative ego filters that haveinfiltrated every fiber of
society.
This is in order to elicitextremely negative violence,
which are being massivelysuperimposed upon humanity and
the earthly kingdoms at thistime.
Early-charged, extremelycharged negative emotional

(11:10):
energy, such as the archivedduring satanic ritual abuse,
contains hormonal adrenalinecascades that course throughout
the cellular energy within thehuman body, blood and brain Is
this a topo Under such intenseextremes of painful suffering,
the blood and flesh becomescharged with heightened
molecular content, which ishighly prioritized by negative
aliens and satanic forces.
Negative aliens.

(11:31):
This is why they delight in thetorture, suicide and killing of
human beings, especially theinnocent souls unable to protect
themselves like children.
This is like a topo with extrastuff.

Speaker 3 (11:39):
Yeah, I've already got the negative aliens article
open, because I also need toknow what this is.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
What is that?

Speaker 1 (11:47):
Negative aliens.
These are extra-dimensionalbeings that have lost their
consciousness connected to God'ssource and are utilizing human
and other beings as their foodsource.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
There are so many concepts To live thousands of
years.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
So they're not aliens that feed on negative energy.
They're aliens because they'vebeen disconnected from God
Because of negative energy.

Speaker 1 (12:07):
They've lost a connection to the God's source,
so they have to get theirsubstance from negative human
emotions and whatnot.

Speaker 3 (12:16):
The God's source is a zero-point God matrix field and
it's the source of our genesis.
It projects itself through thecosmic trinityinity, which acts
as the threefold.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
I flounder flame there's so many questions, I
can't, I can't, I can't do this.
Do you see why I chose luciusmy topic today?

Speaker 3 (12:34):
what the fuck is all this?

Speaker 2 (12:38):
I've heard so much.
I have heard I like I've heardof lucian.
I've heard people bring this upin passing as something they
believe in.
I didn't know and offhand I hadto ask him what is this?
It's like you realize yourthoughts around negative energy,
positive energy, that kind ofstuff.

Speaker 3 (12:56):
The second section of the God Source article which is
actually called Zero PointField.
The Living Breath of God startswith the gradual particle
acceleration, which, apparently,is something that, over the
past few months, few months fromwhen, we have been undergoing a
process of gradual particleacceleration.
This particle acceleration is anatural dynamic of physics that

(13:19):
exists at the quantum level.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
You can't just prove that, and that's stupid do you
see why I chose this?

Speaker 3 (13:30):
yes, we should yeah, we need a whole episode about
this give us like a month we'rein this.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Can we just do this?

Speaker 2 (13:39):
next week.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
Yeah, I'm here, let's do it we can, but I chose Loosh
because I was like huh, I foundthis weird reddit post about
how it's the operating system ofyou know humanity.
This sounds incredible, andhere's the thing.

Speaker 3 (13:53):
Here's, oh my god I went to the front page of the
ascension glossary, which iswhere we've been and the.
The first line is the ascGlossary is part of the
energetic synthesis family ofwebsites.
There's a whole family of these.
We don't need an episode.
We need to start a whole newfucking podcast.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
Look at that Serious.
What is this?

Speaker 2 (14:17):
Shifting timelines, waking up to hard truths, pisces
, solar alchemy, pushing fortimelines.

Speaker 3 (14:23):
Reclining, primary origin for timelines so many of
these, the second coming andKing Arthur.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
Timeline the negative alien agenda.
We're starting a new podcast.

Speaker 3 (14:34):
Let's just make this.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
This has been.
There's 21 years of this stuff.
This is the whole thing, mike.
You have just stumbled on awhole year.
Can we make this a Patreon?

Speaker 3 (14:45):
tier.
This is the whole thing, mike.
You have just stumbled on awhole year or two of diluted.
Can we make this a Patreon tier, at the least?

Speaker 2 (14:49):
yes, they get the ticker and everything oh my god,
we have to make a new tier orjust fucking be like guys.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
We're putting our regular content on pause because
we have to know the contentshared on this website is
chronologically of directexperiences in telepathic
communication and or contactmade between various levels of
interdimensional intelligencesand Lisa Renee, which began in
1999.

Speaker 3 (15:08):
It's even more 26 years.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
Yeah, the fucking 26 years of the bifurcation of time
.
Oh yeah, the bifurcation oftime.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
All paths ultimately lead to one for one and for all.
I am God, I am sovereign, I amfree.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
The Hyros Gamos.
Is that like a?
Is it the Hunger Games?
Okay, this, all right.

Speaker 3 (15:30):
I will let you finish marriage level.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
No, no, I'm so into this here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
So this is why I brought it up.
I wanted to bring it up.
I didn't know about this.
How the fuck are we gonnafollow you with our bullshit?
I know right, I didn't knowabout this.
I'm very happy, we juststumbled upon this.
We have to do that another timeI want to bring this up because
Lush brought me to there's more, oh my fuck.
Lush brought me to theAscension Glossary and I'm with
you guys.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
I genuinely believe we need to start looking into
this and making this a thing,the exopolitic ET agendas and
the law of one, the Highlander,exists in this universe.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
Why is it also that these lunatics that believe in
this kind of shit have thecoolest sounding names for their
things?

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Well, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (16:17):
Because the words don't fucking mean anything.
They just slam two goodsounding words together.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
That's very funny.
Literally, it's just buzzwords.
It is just buzzwords, that'sall it is.
And they do that to prey on thenon-critical thinkers of the
world, and that's why they havesuch a large following.
It's like ooh, it sounds smart,but like I wouldn't know.
But like look the Merkaba star.
And I was like, oh my God.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
That's the star of of David.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
We need to move on.
We can spend all fucking dayhere.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
Now you see why I selected Lush as my topic for
today.
It's that you give off thisenergy whenever you are negative
, and there are things in thisworld that feed off of that.
Now here's my initial thought.
When I read this, I don't thinkthis person knows what
capitalism is and how it feedson giving you brain dead content
, because that's how it makesmoney.

(17:08):
Because the less you think, themore you'll just ingest that
content and give them more ofyour money.
That's why negative things areso popular.
That's why you love it when yousee people getting kicked in the
nuts or falling off a cliff orwhatever People getting kicked
in the nuts or falling off acliff or whatever, with our dumb
monkey brain, respond better tonegativity negativity when we

(17:29):
do positivity, which is awful,but it's just a fact and that's
why you see negative things outthere, because it's easier to
make money off of and we live ina corporate hell of a world
it's also easier to believe.
So I'm not not gonna sit hereand think that this is aliens
using some form of reversalnetwork.
I think it's just.

(17:50):
Tiktok knows how to make moneyby giving you man getting hit
nuts right, it's not a it's nota complex system.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
There's no cabal no, it's just.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
The algorithm knows that you prefer humans like
stupid to humans like stupid.
Just the algorithm knows thatyou prefer humans like stupid to
humans like stupid, and thealgorithm know that.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
Yep, but this shit is intense, this man um reverse
mercavia boys I'm starting adocument right after this,
because through just googlingsome of the terms that we just
talked about, I found othersubreddits one called star seed,
which is like some sort of likeevent in this timeline of crazy
shit, but another one is calledour soul nexus and there's a

(18:31):
post on our soul nexus that istitled connecting to plasma
intelligences via chat gpt.
We, we gotta do.
We gotta do like what we gotta.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Look at this we gotta look at this I went on my
tirade there, we have a fuckingmarathon for you guys, I think
going on my tirade in ourdiscord, nika said this sounds
like what's on those soapbottles?
Thousand percent.
It sounds like we're readingsoap bottles and actually we
might be.
You will never know hgtechnology oh yeah, it's short

(19:04):
for anti-hyrogram hyrogamictechnology, which is a gender
splitter weapon that has beenidentified by grid workers,
which note that as I don't packon the light body, I don't
understand form of targetingindividuals with assorted
electronic harassment designedfor mind control this is so far
into the esoteric realm that Ididn't understand a single

(19:26):
concept that you just threw atme.
Now grid workers.
Planetary grid worker is anetwork of living consciousness
matrix that is encoded with theblueprint or original
instruction set for the divineplan of humanity's spiritual
evolution.
Oh my God, there's so much here.
I'm at a loss of words for somuch of this.

Speaker 3 (19:47):
All right, we got to move, we got to move on.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
This is a whole fucking episode or two.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
I'm done.
That's all I got.

Speaker 2 (19:54):
I'm shutting it down.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
I'm shutting it down.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
Fuck Well, which one of us draws the short straw of
having to immediately followthat.

Speaker 2 (20:02):
I'll draw the short straw, simply because I'm
actually really excited aboutmine and it's actually Matt,
didn't you say that you honed itin today?
you're phoning in, let's see, goahead no okay, no, jason, you
go you go so the one that Ifound.
I've actually been trying toget us to actually cover this as
like a solo topic, but it'sit's not hard to condense down

(20:24):
into a super minute description,but we've been.
I have been talking about Wi-fisignals coming from 30 feet
underneath concrete pads andI've been suggesting we cover
this and I understandably nobodyunder knew why this has been an
episode, uh topic that I'vewanted to save kind of
specifically for an episode likethis.

(20:45):
Yeah, oh, yeah, I mean and I I'mactually glad that I re-found
it because, like I completelyforgot that this was a thing
until I stumbled back across iton red oh shit.
Um, so this is the post.
I'm going to read part of itverbatim and then we're kind of
just going to just I will saythat there's no answer here.
So I I would love it if youguys were to throw forth any
kind of solution or likescenario where this is a thing

(21:08):
that could exist.
So here we go.
It says hi.
For the record, this is aserious post starting off well,
so please no tinfoil hatcomments, etc.
Recently I lived on a semi-urbanfarm property for a few months
and I noticed some very unusualthings that I won't get into
here.
What I'd like to know is whatreason there might be for

(21:31):
somewhere in the neighborhood of25 to 30 low-strength Wi-Fi
networks, all with exactly thesame signal strength, peaking at
the same point location, to beseemingly emanating from
underneath a concrete pad whichis supposed to be simply
covering gravel and dirt.
To clarify, I used a Wi-Fianalyzer to ensure that it

(21:51):
wasn't just a coincidentalsituation where lots of
neighborhood networks happenedto have similar signal strength
due to the distances they werefrom their sources.
I walked in concentric circleswith the Wi-Fi analyzer running
and the further I got from thepoint location on the concrete
pad mentioned above, the weakerthe signals became, and he did
this basically from 12 o'clock,3 o'clock, 6 o'clock, 9 o'clock,

(22:13):
just to make sure that this wasthe spot it was coming from.
No matter which direction youwent, it degraded in proportion
to the distance you were fromthe spot.
There were residential homes ontwo sides of the property.
At the rear of the propertythere was a large county park
and to the front there wasanother larger farm, but there
was clearly no Wi-Fi routers.
The next peculiar thing wasthat these networks' SSIDs would

(22:36):
change every five minutes or so.
They also covered the entire2.4G spectrum, from channel 1 to
14, and had total coverage overthe entire spectrum.
As you watch the signalstrength diagram on the Wi-Fi
analyzer in real time, therewere peaks and valleys and
signal strength, but they wereall coordinated across these low
strength signal networks, whichmeans, I think, as one signal

(23:00):
valid, another one was peaking.
So it can't like you don't loseright um.
Also, I used a seek thermalimaging camera to check out the
peak signal strength point onthe location on the concrete pad
.
This guy has a lot of tech sowe know weird shit.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
He's using a thermal camera.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
He's got a Wi-Fi analyzer, so where are these
concrete pads?
It's literally, it's where, doyou say was he?

Speaker 3 (23:27):
and that's far up like what are?
What are they?
What are the concrete pads in?
Is it?
Is it a road?

Speaker 2 (23:31):
so it's?
No, it's.
It's out like in the middle ofa field, like it's literally
just covering uh, like graveland stuff to create a flat
surface outside like that's it.
Okay, apparently that's, that'swhat it's supposed to be.
But there are these wi-fisignals.
Um, I drilled a hole throughpart of the pad and drilled a
couple other holes randomly indifferent spots on the same

(23:52):
concrete pad.
I poured water down all theholes and the only one at the
peak signal strength locationwould drain and drain and drain
without filling up.
The others all filled up afterabout half a liter of water was
poured into them.
Any idea what this means?

Speaker 1 (24:04):
Thanks, so real or fake, real or fake?
Real or fake, I mean what's up,real or fake?
Real or fake.
So I'm not I'm not like thatknowledgeable on this kind of
stuff, but, like he said, heused a heat like a thermal
camera.

Speaker 3 (24:21):
Thermal camera it's what the police use a thermal
camera to find wi-fi signalswell, the idea would be running
hotter it would be coming fromsome electronic device, any
electronic device that's strongenough to put out.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
Any sort of signal is going to generate more heat
than just concrete that's howthey find people growing weed in
their attics.
But if the concrete's realthick.

Speaker 3 (24:40):
I mean a wi-fi like antenna.
Something that generates awi-fi signal is going to be
fairly low power, so you mightnot be able to see it through
concrete though.

Speaker 1 (24:52):
I wonder if this is like.
I don't know how this works,but I wonder if he I know it
said it was kind of like in themiddle of a field, but he
mentioned that there's like aresidential area nearby.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
Yeah, he said there's a couple houses nearby, so it's
relatively urban.
Yeah, it's relatively urban.
It's not like a neighborhood,it's like farm fields with some
houses in them.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
I'm wondering if Again, I don't know if this is
how this kind of thing works ornot, but I wonder if it's like a
city ordinance kind of thing,like, for example, where I live,
there's street lights andstreet lights, yeah, and
presumably they probably workoff some sort of wireless signal
for the camera on the top.
Street lights and street lightsand shit like that and they
work.
Presumably they probably workoff some sort of wireless signal

(25:33):
for the camera on the top.
I wonder if this is a similarsituation where they're setting
up there's no roads.
This is not like a, but maybethey're going to start it.
They're getting the undergroundshit done first.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
I guess my biggest question is why would one farm
have 25 to 30 signals?

Speaker 3 (25:50):
Yeah.
I was thinking that or like,though I would think I don't
know if they use wifi for this,but like self driving cars, like
it doesn't oh my god thefucking farm equipment.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
I was just about to say that they do that now with
the combines and shit might beself automated and this might be
just.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
They might be just.
They might have just found onespot, but they might be all over
the place.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
None of the comments are helpful, but fuck, this is
really helpful Because that's athing, and it's not so much in
the US.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
There is a small stretch of road somewhere, I
think, where they do this, butthey basically put a Wi-Fi
antenna every certain feet orwhatever underneath a road so
that as the self driving carsare going along, they can like,
connect and then huh, yeah, Ithink it might be something like
that with the farm equipmentlike you're saying now that you
guys said self driving and it'sit's on a farm where this was

(26:41):
found, like that would makesense to me.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
I just don't know why it's buried under a fucking
concrete pad maybe that's likethe, the parking spot like maybe
that's yeah, oh my god, oh,like giant farm roombas.

Speaker 3 (26:53):
Oh, oh, oh.
That might be how the giantfarm room is find their way back
to their charging bed oh my godyeah, yeah yeah, but the pad is
their charging pad right?

Speaker 1 (27:01):
yeah, but like farm.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
But I was thinking about, like why would the
charging pad need wi-fi?
But like if the, if the thingis like so far or whatever, it's
like I'm just going to keepgoing where the signal gets
stronger.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
If it needs to charge , it goes back to.
Oh my god, that's fuckinggenius.
What was that from, though?
This was posted eight years ago.

Speaker 3 (27:25):
That's stretching it a bit.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
That is stretching it a bit, because I don't think we
had that.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
Then we might have.
It would have been prototypeyeah, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
Um, I will.
So at the very bottom, um,somebody does say and this has
been since deleted and it wasposted about a year ago and it
says I used to bury seismographsthat would transmit data on a
hidden wi-fi, drive over theunit and connect, then download
all of its data and move on tothe next one, the main.
Uh, they were mainly used tomonitor conditions around

(27:55):
wastewater pools.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
Okay, Well, it could be not necessarily that exact
thing, but something similar toit.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Something similar where you drive over this pad
and that's how you know you'redownloading data from whatever
these fucking things are doing.
So, that could be something too, but data from whatever these
fucking things are doing.
So that could be something too,but like I just don't
understand why you'd have tobury it, I mean, if you don't
want to run it over with yourfarm?

Speaker 3 (28:17):
Yeah, you don't want it to get damaged, and if you
just put it under dirt, the dirtis going to get wet.
Yeah, it'll get wet.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
Yeah, that's fair, damn, and they wouldn't be.
You have to worry about likecrushing them or some shit yeah,
they're just safe.

Speaker 1 (28:32):
I don't know that sounds about right, but yeah,
that is very weird though.

Speaker 2 (28:36):
I think I'm on board with the theory that this is,
it's a hub for, likeself-driving tractors and shit.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
Yeah, farm well the other interesting farm room the
other interesting part is theysaid they found, like what they
say, like 20 different signalscoming 25 to 30 coming from this
one thing, and when theymeasure.
Why would you need so manysignals from one pad, though?
Wouldn't they be spread outmore?

Speaker 2 (28:57):
see, you're not wrong , but if you want all your, farm
room is to come back somewhere.
You would want them to all comeback to the same location if
it's on a true if it, if it's ona main path that leads to like
the fields and there's also likethe main crossroads for, like
driving into the field versusgoing back to the farm, I could
see why you'd run it there itcould also be for because and

(29:18):
like again eight years ago,stretching this a little bit but
like newer cars, um, they haveto have a fucking like firmware
update yeah and oh yeah, um likeI had a god I had a honda and
it it it would just connect toany wi-fi signal that was close

(29:39):
and just download it softwareupdates when you parked it, and
so it could be that where it'slike farm equipment that needs
regular software updates, andyeah, it just connects to its
own Wi-Fi network and downloadsthe updates or whatever.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
I don't know they also don't say in the, in the
post, like you know, what kindof community are we looking at
here?
Because, yeah, this is eightyears ago so the technology
might be kind of eh.
But if they're like a rich assurban farm property, if it's
rich people, I can kind ofbelieve this a bit more, because
they just have that money toblow on this experimental

(30:13):
technology for their farm.

Speaker 3 (30:15):
If it's rich farmers this is like a.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
Bill Gates farm or some shit.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
But if it's just your average farmer that's what.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
I mean I don't know if this would be your average
farmer, not eight years ago withself-driving tractors.
I don't think so.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
If that's the case, I have no, no way of looking at
their.
We need somebody.
We need a tech savvy.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Agricultural person who listens to this podcast to
reach out also.

Speaker 1 (30:40):
Oh, we're looking over probably the simplest uh
answer here.
If this was eight years ago, weknow that this shit is
experimental.
At that time, this might havebeen owned by whatever company
was making the technology, andthis is where they were oh, this
is monsanto routers, is whatyou're saying?
No, like, if, like, if, like.
John deere was experimentingwith this like self-driving farm
equipment.
This might have been where theywere testing it to see if it

(31:00):
works that was, might have beenlike.

Speaker 3 (31:02):
Well, that would make even more sense as to why
there's so many different onestoo, because if you were if you
were testing things like that,you would probably want each one
to be on its own wi-fi signalso that if something goes wrong
it's easier to troubleshoot Iwill say this guy lived on this
farm oh, yes, meaning if likesomething were to be going on
like that, I feel like he'd know, okay, well that kind of blows

(31:22):
the whole thing like he was justout and about and he's like oh,
this is somebody's farm, I'mgonna out.

Speaker 2 (31:26):
Well, he lived there and that's.
That's one of the things whereI'm like I don't know if like
this is actually like I don't.
It's definitely not likeprevious owner, because if this
is eight years ago, that meanslet's say they own it for a year
.
It's nine years ago.
It's even less likely.
You know what I mean.
So I that's.
It's one of the reasons why I'mlike what the fuck is this?

Speaker 1 (31:46):
Got to set up a camera and just watch if anyone
comes by.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely Like.
I don't even know what youwould bury Wi-Fi routers for,
and if it is the seismographsthing, like I guess that makes
sense.
I just don't know enough aboutit to like know how that works.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
Yeah, we could be, we could be looking at it wrong.
It could be something for, like, a government program that was
put there years ago years ago,yeah, before they moved in there
, before he moved on the farm oryeah like they say, they lived
at the farm, but did they own it?
Or was it owned by, like thedad, and the dad agreed to let
XYZ person?
You know what I mean if they'reold.

Speaker 3 (32:21):
The question becomes then like so I assume these
Wi-Fi networks are secured yeah,so the SSID changed every like
five minutes.
But I assume that they weresecured with like a password or
something, because then youwould need to figure.
I would assume, you could learna lot by just connecting to it,

(32:43):
but if it's secured.
If they're old, then you wouldhave to look and see what kind
of security they're using,because if it's using like wpa2,
it's a fairly newer network,but if it's using like one on
like the old wi-fi securitythings, not only, if I tell you,
covers the 2.4 g spectrum bandfrom.

(33:03):
Yeah, that would mean thatwould mean it's probably an
older network because it's notokay, it's not five gigahertz.
So right, I mean it, you couldstill have a newer 2.4 network.
But if if it was a five, thenit you would know it would be a
newer network, but what type ofencryption or security it uses
would also give you like an ideaof what time frame the network

(33:26):
was set up in.
And those older securityprotocols are actually really
easy to break.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
Nice.

Speaker 3 (33:33):
I don't know.
We need to know more.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
I want to know more we got to go out to this farm.
We'll see.
Do they say what the?

Speaker 1 (33:40):
Wi-Fi name comes up as no.

Speaker 2 (33:43):
They don't say that yeah.

Speaker 1 (33:46):
Just like Dave's Wi-Fi just out in the middle of
a farm.
It's actually, it says Wi-Fi.
Wow, that's interesting.
I like honestly.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
I want to know, like really, why I wanted to talk
about this like full episode byitself or here, I don't care.
I just want to know, like whatthe fuck like why.

Speaker 1 (34:07):
I'm glad you brought this one up, because it might
not have as much going on aslike mine, but there's a lot
more conversation to be hadabout like, like, theories it's
there's no, there's no solidanswer to it and it's not
fucking wildly out there thatyou're just like.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
This is probably not real.
Yeah, like it's, it's very muchin the realm of possibility,
it's, it's very real.
We just it's mysterious becausethere's no have there been any
other posts about this.
No, dude, this is from eightyears ago and there's literally
nine comments total, and one ofthem is me saying what did I say
?
Ever find out what's happening?

(34:42):
I'm weirdly curious, that's it.

Speaker 3 (34:47):
Or the simplest explanation they made it up.

Speaker 2 (34:54):
Honestly up for internet cloud?
Hey, we haven't.
We haven't talked about that ina minute I'm making it up for
internet cloud yeah, that's very, very possible but also like do
that.
I don't think anyone lies no, no, you can't lie on the internet.
No, they stop you.
Yeah, it's, yeah, it's thewhole point.
I think the midday.
Yeah, I've got nothing elseabout it.
It's just a super mysteriousphenomena that's happened to

(35:18):
what I can tell One dude.
Yeah, one guy on Reddit hasbrought this up and I personally
really want to know what thefuck's going on with that.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
I'm surprised there's not more.
There's so many networks.
Not only that, but I'msurprised he hasn't like this.
This is what kind of partiallymakes me think he made it up is
like if this was real, I wouldhave posted way more than just
once and I would still be doingit to this fucking day yeah, I
would figure this out.

Speaker 3 (35:42):
I wouldn't be like, oh yeah, well, that's fucking
weird, and then move on with mylife.

Speaker 1 (35:45):
Especially if it's on my property.

Speaker 3 (35:47):
This would become my sole motivation until I figured
it out.

Speaker 2 (35:53):
Yeah, I would lose my house.

Speaker 1 (35:55):
I would be using podcast money to get a camera,
put it out there, see if anyonecomes up to the fucking thing
and go from there.

Speaker 3 (36:02):
Yeah, like you know, this is a audio drama podcast
beginning for sure honestly yeahthat's a really good one too,
oh yeah, you can go a lot ofdifferent directions with that
there's so many directions.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
Somebody make this, somebody with more time than me
matt, uh, what do you got meboil?

Speaker 3 (36:20):
I have.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
I'm gonna teach y'all some computer science here real
quick yay so um I didn't comehere to learn, I came here to
get stupider.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
I'm gonna start this with something and you're gonna
be like what the fuck does thishave to do with anything?
What is this?
This isn't a weird thing on theinternet, um, but we'll get
there.
So the thing that I want totalk to you about today is
something some may have heard of.
Um, if you're a computerscience student and you go to
college for computer science,you think there's a very good

(36:49):
chance you're going to hearabout this at some point.
It's called the game of life orconway's game of life.
Um, sometimes it's just calledlife.
But basically this is a computeralgorithm simulation thingy
concept that was invented by amathematician named John Horton
Conway in 1970.
And what it is is it's analgorithm for simulating some

(37:14):
sort of very basic life formsimulation and there's a few
different rules to it.
So the idea is essentially,you've got a grid that is
divided into.
It can be any size grid, buteach spot on the grid is called
a cell and you start with bydrawing a pattern on the grid

(37:41):
which is like the initial stateof the system, and that's called
the seed of the system, andthen you start running the
simulation and the rules of thesimulation are before we start
with that.
If you mark a cell, like drawsomething into a cell, that
means the cell is alive.

(38:01):
If you don't put anything in it, that means that the cell is
not alive.
So any cell that has somethingin it is alive.
So every cell is either aliveor not.
So when you start running thesimulation, the rules are any
alive cell with fewer than twolive neighbors dies as if like
by underpopulation.
Any live cell with two or threelive neighbors lives on to the

(38:25):
next generation.
Any live cell with more thanthree live neighbors dies as if
by overpopulation.
And any dead cell with exactlythree live neighbors becomes a
live cell, as if by reproduction.
So it's just this fun littlegame where you start with a grid
and something is drawn on itand when you start the

(38:46):
simulation, things starthappening and the things that
happen follow these rules.
Now here is where this becomesa fun thing or a strange thing
on the internet.
There is, I mentioned this wasstarted in 1970.
There has become an entire cultof people.
Cult is a strong word, but likecommunity of people who are

(39:11):
very fucking into this.
Um okay event it initially theinterest in this started with
like, oh, it's interesting, it'san interesting, uh experiment
in computer computation.
And then they figured out that,like, the simulation itself is
touring complete, which meansthat you can actually use the
simulation shit you can actuallyuse this simulation to run any

(39:34):
algorithm like any computeralgorithm, theoretically
apparently, uh and ai justpassed the touring test too.
That's really, reallyunfortunate essentially,
essentially this thing, thissimulation itself, is a computer
in its most basic form, butthere's an entire group of

(39:55):
people who are just superfucking into this and play it as
a game.
So there's this website calledconwaylifecom and if you go to
conwaylifecom you will begreeted with an implementation
of this game of life and there'sa couple of different like
preset patterns that you canchoose from.

(40:15):
One is called the Cosper GliderGun and you can select a
pattern and you can hit play andit'll start moving around.
And for people who aren'twatching this, it's like,
basically, the pattern startsplaying and then you see all the
cells lighting up and thendisappearing, as the cells, like
, become alive or die.

(40:36):
The interesting thing aboutthis and what people try to do
is, depending on the patternthat you start with, you can
start making things happen, likethere's a lot of different
types of patterns, like cyclicalpatterns that have actually
been named there.
Some of them are called gliders, some of them are called, uh,
spaceships and they're basicallylike these patterns that

(40:58):
continue to move on their own orbecome cyclical over time.
And there's just like thiswhole community of people who
try to come up with theseinteresting patterns and make
interesting things happen.

Speaker 2 (41:10):
Um, I'm like.
I'm.
I'm watching the, the videoyou're sharing.
I'm like, transfixed by it it'slike it's kind of hypnotic.
It really is so like I think, Ithink I kind of get it one.

Speaker 3 (41:22):
One of these examples is um, the, this, uh,
copperhead.
So this is a um spaceship.
That is the only pattern thatthey know of.
Um, or no, I'm sorry, sir robin, is the only pattern that they
know of.
That is like a spaceship thatmoves not straight up and down

(41:47):
or straight left and right onthe grid, it actually moves like
diagonally and if you pick itand hit play, you can watch it
move diagonally.
Now, like I said, where thisbecomes sort of a weird thing on
the internet is there areforums attached to this and
these are the nerdiest, mostbasement dwelling individuals

(42:12):
I've ever seen in my entire life.
If you go to the forums, there'speople that like share their
different patterns that they'vefound.
There's people that are veryproud of patterns that do
certain things that theydiscovered on their own, and
then there's a sandbox section,and the sandbox section has lots
of things that are like justlike little games that people

(42:34):
play in the forums and itreminds me a lot of like kind of
early internet stuff, wherepeople are just on here wasting
time doing things like, um,building a civilization, so, um,
there's a thread on here that'slike people asking what pattern
are you like the most?
So, basically, what patternhave you plugged into this thing

(42:55):
that you personally identifywith?
and people can post culture here, yeah, can post their own
patterns by um.
So if you see a pattern on herethat somebody's posted, it's
just like a code, basically, andyou can go back to the front
page and you can hit advancedoptions and you can paste the
code in here and then see whatthis person came up with.

(43:16):
So this, this pattern that I'mplaying right now, is the
pattern that this person feelsthat they identify with the most
.
Um, it says life ended atgeneration 26, which means that
every cell on the grid died.
I don't know, if that's whatthey identify with there is,

(43:37):
there's a role playing.

Speaker 2 (43:40):
What the thread I was going to ask if there was like
an RP server.

Speaker 3 (43:50):
Yeah, there's like a role playing thread where people
basically like-play as cells inthe game of life and they
continue the game of life as ifthey are a character in this
cell grid.
What?
There's people that havewritten entire computer programs
that have to do with this.
No, I think these are justprograms that they've written
that have something to do withit.
Oh, here's one that I thoughtwas really interesting this is

(44:17):
one one that I am not identifywith it.
No, I, I don't understand likeyou got to be real, real, real
nerdy to feel like this is whatyou need to be spending your
time on.
But somebody asked the questionif you could take any pattern
that's been discovered in thisthing and send it back to a
point in time when and theresponses the responses are just

(44:40):
like.
This guy has this p15 glidergun, which is a pattern that
fires a glider, and he said hewould send it back to 1970.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
Did he give a reason?

Speaker 3 (44:53):
To send it to Conway before he discovered what a
glider was.
There's one that doesn't makeany sense.
He would send this oscillator Gstabilization, which I don't
even know exactly what it means,to January 1973.
No explanation given for that.

Speaker 2 (45:09):
even know exactly what it means to january 1973 no
explanation given for that andI wonder if we search that date
and oscillation, we'll find likesome weird event I don't know
something big happened, but thisis the pattern.

Speaker 3 (45:20):
It's just wiggling around my man that's the 1973
pattern, yeah okay, so all right, some people might find this
interesting.
I find this kind of interesting.
Some people may think this islame as shit, but I find it very
interesting that there arepeople who are just like all
about dedicated to it like this,like a religion.

(45:40):
Look at this thing that's onthe screen right now and just
imagining just being all aboutit just like.

Speaker 2 (45:46):
This is all you think about, this is all you talk
about, this is what your dreamsare made of.

Speaker 1 (45:50):
This is literally.
This is turning into a religionpixels blipping in and out of
existence.

Speaker 3 (45:53):
This is your life well, so it goes even further,
like, if you read the wikipediaarticle, that there there are
people who, like, are just waytoo consumed with this and they
like identify with it on aspiritual level and think that
there's, like there are secretsto the universe that are just
like deep within this simulationso how is this, uh, how does

(46:14):
this work?
as like a computer in itself,like I don't understand what
this has to because you give itrules and it has to abide by I
mean, I can't do the proof toshow you how exactly this is a
computer, but like I guess theit, it's just out of my, my
brain.

Speaker 2 (46:32):
I think it's just based off of ones and zeros,
like zero's off, one's on, andthat's how you tell the pixels
and that there's a code behindit, depending on what pattern
you give, and it'll follow thoserules, just like a computer.

Speaker 3 (46:45):
Yeah, I mean anything that A Turing machine is
basically just like a set ofrules that define how and how to
perform instructions, and sothis thing is.
It's a set of rules thatfollows instructions, and so the
idea is, in theory, you cansupply this thing with a

(47:07):
carefully crafted set ofinstructions to like perform any
outcome, like if you have anoutcome in mind.
If you have an outcome in mind,there's, in theory, there's
some set of instructions thatyou can feed this thing that
will result in that outcome,whether that's like drawing a

(47:30):
dick on the screen or like wellsee, that's the idea right, doom
can be.
Doom is just a set of code.
In theory, since this istouring complete, it can run any
computer algorithm.
So in theory, if you couldfigure out how to convert Doom
from C or assembly or whateverlanguage to this there's a way.

(47:55):
It's just real complicated andnot worth your time Exactly.

Speaker 2 (48:01):
Damn.
That is the ultimate test.
Can it run?

Speaker 3 (48:04):
Doom there are and I didn't have time to look it up
and really try to to find them,and if if somebody knows where I
could find something like that,I'd be very interested.
But there was something that Ifound that said that claimed
that people have builtrudimentary, like general
computation devices on thisthing where, like well, that's

(48:25):
like.

Speaker 2 (48:25):
That's like the people who built fully
functional computers inminecraft, like it's fucking
crazy that people can do thatright here's what I could be.

Speaker 3 (48:34):
Here's what I should have extracted from the
wikipedia article if I hadn'tphoned this in, like I said.
But so here's an example ofsome of how this works and what
somebody was able to do with it.
So, from the Wikipedia page,you can build a computer by

(48:55):
taking three gliders andshooting them at each other.
And then it basically creates acounter, which is something that
like slides back and forth.
It can increment and likerepresent numbers, back and
forth, and can increment andlike represent numbers.
And using like this same method, apparently it's possible to
implement logical operators likeand or and not, which is I get

(49:16):
this well, not, we won't getinto that, but that's basically
how all computers work, becausethey use logical operators like
and yeah, I'm not.
That's how a processor works.
So this is like using thosefoundational like things.
If you put enough of themtogether, you can build a
computer out of it.
So much to the point wheresomebody was actually able to
build Tetris using these basicHoly shit, that's awesome these

(49:39):
basic blocks.
So if you go to the Wikipediaarticle and look at the source
for the Tetris thing, you canfind where this guy explains how
he did this using these,basically using these logical
operators in life to build agame of Tetris.

Speaker 1 (49:53):
So they pretty much use these gliders to make their
own forms of zeros and ones andjust built from there.
That's exactly what it is.

Speaker 3 (50:00):
It's like well, yeah, that's how it is.
It's like a cell that's aliveis a one and a cell that's dead
is a zero.

Speaker 2 (50:08):
Yeah, it's binary, but on yeah, it's binary, but
yeah, I don't know, that's allcomputers.
I mean, yeah, that's that's howthey really computer data is on
or the data is off.
Yeah, Just that's super fuckingcool.
God, we all had some shit.

Speaker 1 (50:24):
We're just like huh, I liked this one very well.

Speaker 2 (50:30):
This was a good fucking night, guys.
Like I'm gonna go home and I'mgonna talk kelly's goddamn ear
off about shit she does not careabout today I learned about
these things, okay.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
So, first off, they're either dead or they're
alive, and if you put threealive ones next to a fort, they
will.

Speaker 2 (50:46):
You've heard about the flat earth theory, right?
Well, let me tell you.

Speaker 1 (50:52):
Let me tell you about the Ascension Gallery or
whatever the fuck.

Speaker 3 (50:57):
Oh my god.
This is a picture of the actualarchitecture of the computer
this guy built in life, Holyfuck he built his own RAM.
Well, that's how you have tomake the Tetris game.
That makes sense because that'syour memory.
Yeah, he built this life.

Speaker 2 (51:09):
Holy fuck, he built his own RAM.
Well, that's how you have tomake the Tetris game.
That makes sense, becausethat's your memory.

Speaker 3 (51:11):
Yeah, he built this computer.
All these are cells in life.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
Damn, I'm finding out that I'm way younger than I
thought I was, because this isfucking, this is giving me a
hard-on for sure.

Speaker 3 (51:22):
I would recommend if this interests you.
I took a class in collegecalled biological computing
which it talks about this, butit also talks about like it
expands on this idea where youcan use like the way that living
organisms behave in nature tosimulate computer computation.
Um, and it's super interestingwhat people do with like

(51:43):
computation using bacteria andshit like that oh shit, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeahyeah.

Speaker 2 (51:48):
Law of large numbers falls into play there.

Speaker 3 (51:50):
Anyway, that's a fun one.
I'm nerding out Mike.
Continue outrowing the show.

Speaker 2 (51:56):
We could keep talking about this shit all day.

Speaker 1 (51:57):
No, I'm really happy with how all this shit went.
This is a very fun episode.

Speaker 2 (52:01):
This was fucking great.
Good job, boys Good job.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
I'm going to outro by just saying find us whatever
social media you're on.
We're probably on it too.
We're either going to be underlike diluty pod or don't look
under the internet.
One of those.
Don't go, look for us.
Give us a Spotify review, giveus a rating.
Five stars would be dope, butdo whatever you feel you want to
, but five star, let's be real.

(52:26):
Five or one patreoncom slashdilouts out to Google Shmortles
Shouts out to Undefined Graphics.
That's Mike Lowy, right there.
My neighbors here.
If you want to send us an email,deludypod at gmailcom.
Send us some information, allthat good shit.
And go check out our Discord aswell.

(52:46):
Fun people in the Discord.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
Oh yeah, you can go chat about what we're talking
about and how wrong we areExactly, or dumb we are Exactly.
That's great.

Speaker 1 (52:55):
Other than that, if you want to ascend, oh God, you
have to have at least three dadsin your dad cube, your dad
glove box cube, and then thatascends to the formation of Gaia
, which is just a big dad in thesky G-U-Y-A.
Yeah, g-u-y-a, big dad in thesky, and it goes from there.

(53:23):
That's all I got.
What do you got, matt?
That's fucking terrifying.

Speaker 3 (53:28):
Take your stinker and your thinker and place them
together and do a.

Speaker 2 (53:35):
Stanky leg.
Do the stanky leg.

Speaker 1 (53:39):
Do the stanky leg.
Do the stanky leg, jason, what?

Speaker 2 (53:42):
do you got Fuck Always.
I mean stay paranoid, but I'mstill enraptured by the fucking
life simulator like thatfascinates me.
I'm gonna be looking at thatall night.
So go check that out, butmainly, stay paranoid.
There's somebody in your closetright now definitely right now

(54:03):
he's breathing.

Speaker 1 (54:04):
And what do you got Doug?
Hopefully, oh yeah, brother.
Oh yeah, brother, oh.
And what do you got, doug?
Hopefully, hell yeah, brother,hell yeah brother Forgot to
mention that.

Speaker 2 (54:13):
Doug, you're JD.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
Vance again this week .
That's cool.
Bye everybody, have a blessedday and may the Ascension people
be on your side.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
May the good Lord bless you.

Speaker 3 (54:38):
Don't look under the internet, bye.
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