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Time Machines & Experiments
Scientific reasons why Bajak Flux Capactor should work
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<blockquote data-quote="Sonix" data-source="post: 185339" data-attributes="member: 10954"><p>It appears that <a href="http://scarsdale10583.com/section-table/122-scarsdale-worships/7096-memorial-service-for-poet-and-mental-health-client-advocate-john-stanley-bajak-on-september-9-at-scc" target="_blank">John Bajak lived through to May 5, 2018</a>.</p><p></p><p>"[...] John Stanley Bajak, a quirky, engaging poet and self-styled philosopher of computing who struggled with schizophrenia his entire adult life, died of cancer at age 55.</p><p> </p><p>The youngest of four children born to the late Sigmund F. Bajak and Dorothy Mershon Bajak Armistead, John was raised in Scarsdale, N.Y. and lived most of his adult life in White Plains, N.Y. He died May 5, 2018 in Pittsburgh of complications from melanoma, which he battled for more than a year.</p><p> </p><p>John was in many ways a psychiatric success story. He lived independently in his own apartment for 27 years, worked on behalf of the mental health community, never married and was inveterately creative when he wasn’t perplexing family members with his theories of computing and time machines.</p><p></p><p>When he wasn't perplexing family members with his theories of computing and time machines he was entertaining them with humorous ditties he wrote and sang. His theoretical time-travel invention, the ³Flux Capacitator, drew unwanted online attention that prompted him to quit the Internet for a time.</p><p></p><p>John was also a ham radio enthusiast and electronics expert - though he didn’t get his first smartphone until 2017. His fears of malicious Internet actors were precocious indeed.</p><p> </p><p>John would tinker for hours on circuits, LEDs, vacuum tubes and transistors, and patiently taught his nieces and nephews the ins-and-outs of amps and volts. One of his great joys was scouring garage sales for the components of his whimsical inventions [...]</p><p></p><p>R.I.P.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sonix, post: 185339, member: 10954"] It appears that [URL='http://scarsdale10583.com/section-table/122-scarsdale-worships/7096-memorial-service-for-poet-and-mental-health-client-advocate-john-stanley-bajak-on-september-9-at-scc']John Bajak lived through to May 5, 2018[/URL]. "[...] John Stanley Bajak, a quirky, engaging poet and self-styled philosopher of computing who struggled with schizophrenia his entire adult life, died of cancer at age 55. The youngest of four children born to the late Sigmund F. Bajak and Dorothy Mershon Bajak Armistead, John was raised in Scarsdale, N.Y. and lived most of his adult life in White Plains, N.Y. He died May 5, 2018 in Pittsburgh of complications from melanoma, which he battled for more than a year. John was in many ways a psychiatric success story. He lived independently in his own apartment for 27 years, worked on behalf of the mental health community, never married and was inveterately creative when he wasn’t perplexing family members with his theories of computing and time machines. When he wasn't perplexing family members with his theories of computing and time machines he was entertaining them with humorous ditties he wrote and sang. His theoretical time-travel invention, the ³Flux Capacitator, drew unwanted online attention that prompted him to quit the Internet for a time. John was also a ham radio enthusiast and electronics expert - though he didn’t get his first smartphone until 2017. His fears of malicious Internet actors were precocious indeed. John would tinker for hours on circuits, LEDs, vacuum tubes and transistors, and patiently taught his nieces and nephews the ins-and-outs of amps and volts. One of his great joys was scouring garage sales for the components of his whimsical inventions [...] R.I.P. [/QUOTE]
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Scientific reasons why Bajak Flux Capactor should work
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