Sunday, February 15, 2015

CAFL XREF printable version

While I haven't verified every frequency in the publicly maintained CAFL XREF (Comprehensive Annotated Frequency List Cross Reference) from electroherbalism.com, I organized and prettified it in LibreOffice to an 8.5x11 double sided page so it can be printed, 3 hole punched, and inserted into a binder for offline reference.


Rife waveforms destroyed by audio compression

Rife found tuned square waves kill pathogens and sine waves heal.  If you're using frequencies in the audio range (20-2000hz), know that audio compression technology can distort your waveform, diminishing or negating your results.

Audio compression alters the waveform based on various criteria such as human hearing perception or compression bitrate.  Using audio from video supersites such as Youtube for Rife treatment will not likely work as expected since the audio is often aggressively re-encoded to reduce filesize.

To demonstrate this, I generated 4 square waves in the free, open source software Audacity, mixed together like a chord, and rendered to raw audio in WAV format.  This is the top waveform in the picture that shows the square wave with flat tops and bottoms.

I then rendered the mix as mp3 128k constant bitrate using the LAME encoder (typical of video supersite re-encoding), imported it into the same project, and aligned it temporally.  You can clearly see the plateaus and valleys wiggling from the mp3 compression.  It is no longer a square wave, but more like square with noise.

The entire point of Rife tech is to produce tuned square waves.  Even though he did not have an oscilloscope to verify his waveforms, he went to great trouble to create machines that created the cleanest signal because the pulsing - the cyclical on / off mechanics - caused the pathogen's destructive Mortal Oscillation.  By using compression, it changes the result.