05-01-2014, 01:55 AM
mrlynn wrote:
Whatever, the GeoResonance report is certainly worth pursuing. They claim they sent it to the relevant authorities back on March 31st, and received no replies, which could be a scandal in itself.
/Mr Lynn
http://www.cnn.com/2014/04/30/world/asia...?hpt=hp_t2
GeoResonance Managing Director Pavel Kursa, citing intellectual property concerns, would not explain how the imaging works.
CNN aviation expert Miles O'Brien said GeoResonance's claims are not supported by experts. "My blood is boiling," he told CNN's "New Day." "I've talked to the leading experts in satellite imaging capability at NASA, and they know of no technology that is capable of doing this. I am just horrified that a company would use this event to gain attention like this."
He called on company officials to offer "a full explanation" for their assertion, which he said appeared to be based on "magic box" technology.
Sending investigators to the Bay of Bengal would draw away from the limited resources that are focused in the southern Indian Ocean, O'Brien said.
But that won't stop them from going, he predicted. "I think they have to," he said. "It's a public relations thing now."