Pick 63 - Pagers

A pager also known as a beeper is a device that is essentially a small battery operated radio receiver that when the proper signal is received will set off an alert (either audible or vibrating) and display either a numeric message such as a phone number or a word message if the pager is alphanumeric capable. 

If he had not responded to a Page from the Grim Reaper on June 9, 2009,  John Francis Mitchell would be celebrating his 86th birthday on New Year's Day 2014. Unless you have worked for Motorola or are imbued with communications technology , you may never have heard of John Francis Mitchell.  However, if you use a mobile phone or pager, you should realize that Mitchell developed this essential tool of urgent communication in 1960--long before Steve Jobs came along. During his 45-yerar career with Motorola, Mitchell shaped the creation of nearly all of the wireless communications industries in the latter half of the 20th century. 
 

In 1960, he combined elements of Motorola's Walkie Talkie with evolving features of AM transistor radios for automobiles. The result was the first transistorized pager.  Although mobile phones were also evolving, they were expensive and not well supported. However, paging technology was affordable and well supported by the various telephonic Paging services that had sprang up across America since the 1950's. Pager technology continued to expand, until the early 1990s when cellular technologies became cheaper and more widely supported. Still, the Pager has not yet been relegated to the Smithsonian. It has hidden value in the way it operates that has yet to be disrupted by the cellular industry.

Pagers reached their peak popularity in the late 1980's through late 1990's.  Around the year 2000, cell phones became smaller with a longer battery life and cell phone plans became less expensive which enabled the average consumer to switch from paging to cellular communication. At the peak of pager popularity, there were well over 60,000,000 pagers in use worldwide.

Pagers are still in use where mobile phones have no signal, and in places where the operation of the radio transmitters in mobile phones is prohibited. This includes hospitals and airport hubs, where cellular coverage is weak or nonexistent, and  radio transmitters can interfere with sensitive electronic equipment yet there is a  need for 24/7 communications with service and emergency staff.

Any facility handling classified information, precludes the use of  transmitter or data storage devices to ensure no information can leave the facility undetected.

The 2005 London bombings spurred user overload and subsequent shutdown of all SMS systems during the resulting panic.  But pagers, which do not have to "answer"  before a message can be received, continued to operate as usual. Moreover, they operate at very low signal level that causes no interference to other communication devices such as radio and TV. For this reason, Volunteer Firefighters, EMT, and Rescue squad members carry pagers to alert them of emergency call outs for their department. These pagers receive a special tone from a fire department radio frequency that is not susceptible to jamming or hacking.

Pagers have a growing customer base in the restaurant and hospitality industry. Customers who may wish to shop or visit the bar while waiting for a table get a portable beeper that alerts them when their table is ready. Some restaurant kitchens use beepers to alert wait staff when meals are ready to serve. This frees them to take new orders or provide other service instead of hanging out in the kitchen to ensure prompt service.

 

Modern paging systems typically use multiple base transmitters to modulate the same signal on the same RF channel, a design approach called simulcast. Simulcast systems can use satellite feeds to distribute identical information to multiple transmitters.  This coverage overlap, plus the broad reach of satellite communications, makes paging systems more reliable than ground based cellular networks that are easily disrupted by severe weather or terrorist activity. This hidden value has led public safety agencies to adopt pagers over cellular and other commercial services for critical messaging.




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Pick 62 - Blood Types

I have Type O-negtive blood. Depending on how you feel about blood transfusions, this can be a blessing or a curse. It is a blessing to be able to donate blood to anyone else regardless of their blood type. The American Red Cross calls me a "universal donor" meaning they can transfuse my blood to anyone regardless of the recipient's blood type. It is also a curse. I can only receive blood from donors having O-negative blood--and we are not in the majority by any means.




The discovery of the ABO blood group system is widely credited to Austrian scientist Karl Landsteiner, who identified the O, A, and B blood types in 1900. Understanding the ABO blood group system has enabled safe and predictable transfusions which was not the case prior to 1900.  According the Landsteiner, Type A and Type B blood groups are associated with anti-A and anti-B antibodies.  They are produced in the first years of life by sensitization to food, bacteria, and viruses. 

 Landsteiner originally described the O blood type as type "C", but in parts of Europe it was renamed  as "0" (zero), signifying the lack of the A or B antigens.In persons with Type A or B blood, these antigens or sugars physically exposed on the exterior of red blood cells are unique to each individual--similar to fingerprints. Each person's Immune System uses these markers to distinguish between good cells and bad cells. Any cell that does not have the correct marker is destroyed as a defense against germs and harmful bacteria. This is all well and good until a person with Type B blood receives a transfusion of Type A blood.  The Immune Systems goes on general alert and begins all out war on the "foreign" red cells.  This harsh response, though an adaptive reaction useful against infection, can cause death when large amounts of such cells are encountered after blood transfusion. 

Prior to 1900, all blood was thought to be the same as long as it came from another human being. The success or failure of a blood transfusion was hit or miss depending on the prevalence of blood donors who coincidentally matched the blood type of the recipient.Once the role of antigens was understood, it was not long before scientists determined that the O-negative blood type had no markers. The red cells are, in effect, stealth cells that are ignored by the human Immune System.  That is the hidden value in O-negative blood. However, the down side of that for me is that my Immune System does not expect red cells to carry any antigens. So if I happen to receive a transfusion of Type A or Type B blood I am SOL. Thanks to Dr.Landsteiner, that is very unlikely to happen.







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Pick 61 - Remote Viewing

As a freelance writer searching for new opportunities, I never know what hidden value I am going to discover. I have already covered "curator" as a 21st century upscale career path. Today I discovered "remote viewing" opportunities.  Like me, you may already be associating concepts like Peeping Tom, CIA Operative, or a Reviewer of YouTube clips with this opportunity. Like me, you'd be totally off base. Here is what the requester was actually seeking:

This position requires someone who is fluent in Remote Viewing and able to determine current targets.
The interview will consist of you being randomly assigned a Target and you will need to demonstrate your proficiency in correctly documenting the details of the event


Given the news we have been hearing lately about UMV strikes against terrorist leaders, my thoughts focused on "current targets" and "correctly documenting the details of the event" but I dismissed those thoughts because I was searching a site dedicated to freelance writers not drone operators or mercenaries.

To get a handle on the hidden value in this new opportunity I turned to Wikipedia. As usual, Wiki had the information I needed:

Remote viewing (RV) is the practice of seeking impressions about a distant or unseen target using subjective means, in particular, extra-sensory perception (ESP) or "sensing with mind".
Typically a remote viewer is expected to give information about an object, event, person or location that is hidden from physical view and separated at some distance. The term was coined in the 1970s by physicists Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff, parapsychology researchers at Stanford Research Institute, to distinguish it from clairvoyance. 
If I actually had any RV ability, there was someone out there willing to pay me for a demonstration.  The freelance writing opportunity was to document the details of each demonstration.   But that is not the hidden value in this opportunity. The hidden value lies in the personal and unique nature of remote viewing. It cannot be outsourced, it has financial value that does not need Union Protection, and it brings entitlements that no Government agency controls.


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Pick 102 - Generation Alpha

 Screen technologies are the base of everything that characterizes Generation Alpha and truly distinguishes them from every other generati...