HDRKID
Senior Member
Re: HDRKID
Hi Frog:
1. Could you tell me about that guy who went to 2095 and what he experienced during his trip?
Steven Gibbs did not tell me what the guy saw in 2095. He was there for only a few hours. He got pretty darn scared though. I know that in the 2080's teleportation is popularized and there is massive unemployment.
Not just people working for car companies, but filling stations, motels, roadhouses, etc.
At first the teleportation devices, which look like phone booths, are bulky and expensive and there are accidents, but later they replace ground travel {trucks, buses, trains} so enjoy your car.
The highways fall into disrepair as people abandon roads to use teleporters as a way of transportation, so there are no roads in the far future.
Personally, I prefer to see to the past in my HDR. I hate the modern age, but rather prefer the gentle breeze from a bygone era that has long since departed. A time of horse drawn carriages driven over narrow cobblestone streets with the clop clop sound of horse hooves and the crunching of wagon wheels and that magical feeling you get as you ride up and down rolling green hills, while far off in the distance stand purple mountains.
The smell of fresh cut hay early in the morning mixes with that of fresh baked bread coming out of a wood oven.
Farmers plowing the land with teams of oxen, while in the background the distant sound of church bells ringing harkens you home.
The fresh plowed earth waiting patiently for the cool spring rains while seedlings begin to poke their heads out of the rich dark dirt.
That eternal cycle of new life at the beginning of each spring as the trees clothes themselves with leaves and the formerly brown meadow turns vivid green and bursts into bloom with splashes of red and blue.
2. If the world was flat instead of round do you believe time travel could still exist and work?
No, I think that the ley lines are in straight lines, but a flat earth would not have a magnetic pole so there would be no hartmann grid or grid points. You need a grid point to travel through time. So I believe that time travel would not be possible on a flat earth.
Steven Gibbs told me that he is now building the STM - Space Time Modulator. it must not be in the catalog with the Hyper Dimensional Resonator.
Hi Frog:
1. Could you tell me about that guy who went to 2095 and what he experienced during his trip?
Steven Gibbs did not tell me what the guy saw in 2095. He was there for only a few hours. He got pretty darn scared though. I know that in the 2080's teleportation is popularized and there is massive unemployment.
Not just people working for car companies, but filling stations, motels, roadhouses, etc.
At first the teleportation devices, which look like phone booths, are bulky and expensive and there are accidents, but later they replace ground travel {trucks, buses, trains} so enjoy your car.
The highways fall into disrepair as people abandon roads to use teleporters as a way of transportation, so there are no roads in the far future.
Personally, I prefer to see to the past in my HDR. I hate the modern age, but rather prefer the gentle breeze from a bygone era that has long since departed. A time of horse drawn carriages driven over narrow cobblestone streets with the clop clop sound of horse hooves and the crunching of wagon wheels and that magical feeling you get as you ride up and down rolling green hills, while far off in the distance stand purple mountains.
The smell of fresh cut hay early in the morning mixes with that of fresh baked bread coming out of a wood oven.
Farmers plowing the land with teams of oxen, while in the background the distant sound of church bells ringing harkens you home.
The fresh plowed earth waiting patiently for the cool spring rains while seedlings begin to poke their heads out of the rich dark dirt.
That eternal cycle of new life at the beginning of each spring as the trees clothes themselves with leaves and the formerly brown meadow turns vivid green and bursts into bloom with splashes of red and blue.
2. If the world was flat instead of round do you believe time travel could still exist and work?
No, I think that the ley lines are in straight lines, but a flat earth would not have a magnetic pole so there would be no hartmann grid or grid points. You need a grid point to travel through time. So I believe that time travel would not be possible on a flat earth.

Steven Gibbs told me that he is now building the STM - Space Time Modulator. it must not be in the catalog with the Hyper Dimensional Resonator.