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Thursday June 7th 2001 |
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Your computer is psychic. If it's going to crash, it will choose the moment
when you really can't afford to lose your work. Somehow that pesky processor
knows when you're up against a deadline.
Most people put it down to coincidence or Murphy's Law: "If anything can go wrong - it will!" But Princeton University's brilliant professor of engineering, Robert G Jahn, had a dazzling insight: he saw that an operator's mind could influence the machinery and set out to test his theory. Jahn's unit spent more than a decade monitoring volunteers - people with no paranormal history - as they stared at a computer displaying random zeroes and ones. The number sequence was not pre-programmed. Jahn told his experimenters to will the number one to appear more often. It did. The evidence was overwhelming, the testing conditions utterly rigorous. Ordinary people could direct their thoughts at a computer and force it to respond. The odds against achieving this by chance were 1,000 billion to one against. Everything a computer does boils down to zeroes and ones. All its calculations are binary, using just those two digits. So if your mind is influencing the number sequence, the sums will go wrong and the PC could crash. Naturally the greatest danger occurs when your mindwaves are at their wildest, under stress, close to deadlines. To prevent this, use my simple relaxation mind game. Close your eyes and visualise a glass bowl, filled by two taps which are gently dripping numbers cut from tissue paper. One drops blue ones, the other green zeroes. They flutter gently into the bowl, always falling where they should, with no breeze to ruffle them. It's a calm image, controlled and precise. Your computer will thank you for it. |
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