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Post by AnthroHeart on Jan 3, 2021 0:36:59 GMT
You can get the code and the binary .exe file. It can convert images and any binary file into a WAV.
I created a WAV Converter and a WAV Writer to allow turning an image/pdf/etc and text intention into a WAV file, respectively. Note, the WAV file created will be very loud and noisy, so I recommend turning volume to like 8% of max before listening. You can even play the WAV on mute and it will still work. The noise is made to work with scalar tech.
Here is my WAV Converter:
This is just one scalar tech device that the WAV can play through using a USB DAC headphone jack: Power WandIt's a bit expensive, but you can also use a Succor Punch, which can be Googled.
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Post by shadowhunter176 on Jan 3, 2021 23:10:17 GMT
I will be testing can multiple iterations of same WAV file programm water with shungite inside,will report success hopefully
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nexus
New Member
Posts: 2
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Post by nexus on Jan 16, 2021 17:26:34 GMT
So without some sort of Scalar device the file will do nothing?
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Post by AnthroHeart on Jan 16, 2021 17:28:28 GMT
So without some sort of Scalar device the file will do nothing? Hi nexus,
It is quite potent just playing the WAV even on mute. It's just stronger through a scalar device.
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nexus
New Member
Posts: 2
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Post by nexus on Jan 17, 2021 6:44:32 GMT
So without some sort of Scalar device the file will do nothing? Hi nexus,
It is quite potent just playing the WAV even on mute. It's just stronger through a scalar device.
Just to clarify a bit about the WAV file that is created. This is a field correct? Essentially If I create a WAV with a bunch of Affirmations it turns them into a Field of intention?
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Post by AnthroHeart on Jan 17, 2021 10:22:13 GMT
Hi nexus,
It is quite potent just playing the WAV even on mute. It's just stronger through a scalar device.
Just to clarify a bit about the WAV file that is created. This is a field correct? Essentially If I create a WAV with a bunch of Affirmations it turns them into a Field of intention? That's a very good question. I'm not sure if it's a field, or an anchor for the Servitor.
Basically when playing back the WAV, it has a magnetic feel like the regular Repeater does when running. Except it's stored in the WAV file itself.
It could be a field.
What would you say would be the benefit if it is a field? Can you try it and see if it's a field? I haven't really thought of it being one, but it very well could be. Or that it creates a field as it runs, but probably isn't a field itself. But I could be wrong. When it's not running, I don't feel it, so the WAV probably isn't a field.
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Post by AnthroHeart on Feb 14, 2021 20:23:29 GMT
I have updated the Intention Repeater WAV Converter to C++ and made it an executable .exe so you can run in Windows easily. Plus, it's much faster.
The sourcecode is in the cpp folder.
File is: wav_repeater_2.0.exe
Usage is: wav_repeater_2.0.exe -d 00:10:00 -n sunset.jpg -o sunset.wav
There is an optional -f flag in case you want to specify repeat frequency.
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Post by hambumger1 on Feb 16, 2021 2:36:55 GMT
Hey. I just saw your post. I tried the update and it went through flawlessly. This seems to be a thing with C++ files for me. They work perfectly, but Python ones are hit or miss. I'm not exactly sure why though.
And is it me or do WAV files feel more powerful than the Repeater itself? The vibrations feel stronger, and when I turn it off, it lingers for a longer time later on than the Intention Repeater.
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Post by AnthroHeart on Feb 20, 2021 15:44:16 GMT
Hey. I just saw your post. I tried the update and it went through flawlessly. This seems to be a thing with C++ files for me. They work perfectly, but Python ones are hit or miss. I'm not exactly sure why though. And is it me or do WAV files feel more powerful than the Repeater itself? The vibrations feel stronger, and when I turn it off, it lingers for a longer time later on than the Intention Repeater. Yeah, the WAV is especially powerful.
You can create a silent WAV by using the flag: --volume 0 when running at the command prompt/terminal.
The silent WAV still have power.
For help use the flag: --help
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Post by Forester on Mar 3, 2021 15:08:42 GMT
Hello, I would like to know what is the best way to use this wav version, text or images?
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Post by AnthroHeart on Mar 4, 2021 21:20:19 GMT
Hello, I would like to know what is the best way to use this wav version, text or images? That's a good question. Well, text can repeat faster. Images will give you the energy of a specific place/thing.
I am told by a friend that images are more powerful than text, and I do respect his input.
Play around with both. They both work with the Infinite Intelligence of the Servitor.
Thing is, text can give you the option to get the best of something, and you can specify to pull from Akashic Records and all that. So images have more definition I think, but text is more flexible.
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Post by Forester on Mar 5, 2021 7:17:57 GMT
How do you write an intention in the box dialog, if for example you are using an audio track or an image?
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Post by AnthroHeart on Mar 5, 2021 16:20:36 GMT
How do you write an intention in the box dialog, if for example you are using an audio track or an image? The WAV Converter doesn't really take intentions in a box dialog.
But that isn't the WAV Converter.
When you run the .exe, it is something like this:
You can have your intentions in a .TXT file as well.
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Post by reden on Mar 19, 2021 14:02:18 GMT
I tried a manifestation of a grape in my mouth using 5 GB RAM. I felt like if something was vaguely indicating my tongue to move, like if if it didn't it would be bad (I forgot to add "Create manifestation zone." I only used "realize", "manifest", "stable field"), and I shuffled my tongue towards more open positions for my mouth. In fact this felt a bit automatic. After... 5 or 10 minutes? I became panicked on the possibility of choking, it felt like if was taking more shape and blocking air space. (I may have overreacted) and stopped it. Edit: Maybe the wav repeater can help us? Keeping the manifestation wav going on and on to observe differences compared to interactive/willful/Repeater assisted manifestation, or even to be able to leave it unattended. The WAV Repeater is a great thing to try. Perhaps you can experiment.
I'm mainly doing housekeeping and maintenance on the Servitor to enhance it for better manifestation.
I tried using the wav repeater last night, and I failed. The C++ code had Windows only parts and assumptions in it, indeed according to the compiler it may have been only meant for Windows. Then I tried using the old Python version. I set the volume lower, and tried to create a WAV from a text file of intentions. No matter what I did, it always complained with this error: "sys.stdout.write('Status: [' + str(int(sample_num/total_samples*100)) + '%] (' + bytes_format(sample_num*2) + 'B / ' + bytes_format(total_samples*2) + 'B): ' + in_filename + ' -> ' + out_filename + ' \r' )" and afterwards, "TypeError: can only concatenate str (not "float") to str" (without the outer ""). I even compiled older Python versions, to check if it had been an accidentally introduced language flaw as versions go on, or in codespeak, a "regression". One of the compiled Python versions worked with a random .h file that was in Python's main source code folder (also known as the root source code directory, or just source root). I tried with the .txt intention file again, yet it failed in the exact same way. In your github, I saw that there was an older WAV repeater meant only for text files. Maybe I should have used that one instead.
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Post by AnthroHeart on Mar 19, 2021 15:39:47 GMT
Use my WAV Converter. It was converted to C++ and uses TXT files. The WAV Repeater is older and not converted to C++. I have the .exe for the WAV Converter: github.com/tsweet77/wav-converter/tree/main/cppMy C++ developer for that named it WAV Repeater for some reason. You don't have Windows? I compiled it using this line: "C:\Program Files\mingw-w64\x86_64-8.1.0-win32-seh-rt_v6-rev0\mingw64\bin\g++" -O3 wav_repeater.cpp tinywav.cpp -o wav_repeater.exe -static-libgcc -static-libstdc++ -Wl,-Bstatic -lstdc++ -lpthread -Wl,-Bdynamic
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