The 4th Tesla Electric City Festival is happening this Sunday at the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology. It’s a gathering of tech enthusiasts who celebrate the achievements of Nikola Tesla. And if your asking who that is, Tim Bolen finds out for you.

The 4th Tesla Electric City Festival is happening this Sunday at the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology. It’s a gathering of tech enthusiasts who celebrate the achievements of Nikola Tesla. And if your asking who that is, Tim Bolen finds out for you.

The 4th Tesla Electric City Festival is happening this Sunday at the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology. It’s a gathering of tech enthusiasts who celebrate the achievements of Nikola Tesla. And if your asking who that is, Tim Bolen finds out for you.

The 4th Tesla Electric City Festival is happening this Sunday at the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology. It’s a gathering of tech enthusiasts who celebrate the achievements of Nikola Tesla. And if your asking who that is, Tim Bolen finds out for you.

In recent years many studies have demonstrated stimulatory effects of pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMF) on biological tissue.
However, controversies have also surrounded the research often due to the lack of knowledge of the different physical
consequences of static versus pulsed electromagnetic. PEMF is widely used for treating fractures and non-unions as well as for
treating diseases of the joints.

A treatment discussion about osteoporosis or osteopenia is not complete without considering electromagnetic stimulation of the bones. While nutrition, exercise, hormone balancing, and supplements are critical to adequate bone formation (particularly post-menopause), they are often not enough. There are many circumstances where these approaches are inadequate or not possible; even when these methods are suitable, adding electromagnetic stimulation enhances the potential benefits and long-term results. This means that multiple approaches are necessary to deal with osteoporosis/osteopenia adequately.

First trials in the United States with a new technology based on electromagnetic waves bring hope for millions of patients suffering from Alzheimer’s disease.

The 4th Tesla Electric City Festival is happening this Sunday at the Hamilton Museum of Steam and Technology. It’s a gathering of tech enthusiasts who celebrate the achievements of Nikola Tesla. And if your asking who that is, Tim Bolen finds out for you.

View live data from GCI’s Global Coherence Monitoring System, a worldwide network of magnetometers that collect a continuous stream of data from the earth’s magnetic field.

As we navigate the ever-new avenues and quantum leaps in technology, there are some that stand out and hold their own, having maintained their momentum with time.
I am intrigued by the Testa technology. The brilliant inventor and research physicist named Nikola Tesla introduced to the world a wireless technology that has been adapted for a wide variety of applications that we use almost without a second thought today. He developed the alternating current (AC) that is still the platform for today’s electrical inventions. He worked for Thomas Edison before venturing out on his own to use his genius in the revolutionary world. Of electricity. In about 1891 Tesla invented the Testa coil. which is a high voltage transformer that is still the standard for pulsing magnetic fields.