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Originally posted by ChaoticOrder
Q: how are emerson and dick connected
A: grabs document
Originally posted by ChaoticOrder
reply to post by Kellter
Ok since I've already let the cat out of the bag it would be unfair to keep it a secret. I'll just tell you guys how to do it. You need all the following files:
Nice catch, that is pretty conclusive evidence of where we are. Now as for the year, I highly doubt it's actually set in 2012. The first thing that gives us a clue is our immediate environment, the tap kit reminds me of some old school morse code machine, which is probably what it is. If you look at the parts in it, it seems to contain tetrode vacuum tubes. They were invented around 1918 and were very common by 1926. It also appears that radio wave technology is rather new and there's some sort of propaganda effort by AMP to suppress it. The wave unit plans certainly appear to be electrical schematics for some sort of radio transmission and/or receiving device. If you look at the history of radio broadcasting, again we seem to be getting dates that are around the early 1900's.
Originally posted by markothecatt
Q: Are we on Japan?
Map cutscene
Nerima is on the map, and is a city in Japan
The earliest radio stations were simply radiotelegraphy systems and did not carry audio. The first claimed audio transmission that could be termed a broadcast occurred on Christmas Eve in 1906, and was made by Reginald Fessenden. Whether this broadcast actually took place is disputed.[2] While many early experimenters attempted to create systems similar to radiotelephone devices by which only two parties were meant to communicate, there were others who intended to transmit to larger audiences. Charles Herrold started broadcasting in California in 1909 and was carrying audio by the next year. (Herrold's station eventually became KCBS).
For the next decade, radio tinkerers had to build their own radio receivers. In The Hague, the Netherlands, PCGG started broadcasting on November 6, 1919. In 1916, Frank Conrad, an employee for the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, began broadcasting from his Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania garage with the call letters 8XK. Later, the station was moved to the top of the Westinghouse factory building in East Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Westinghouse relaunched the station as KDKA on November 2, 1920, claiming to be "the world's first commercially licensed radio station".[3]
Radio Broadcasting