Dunno if and who already digged on this, in case if someone has more info it's appreciated, for the rest, got there while looking at some patents on covid owned by the Rothschild it's about one of the Malaysia airline lost planes, in specific the MH730
Apparently, on board there was the boards of directors and engineers of the Freescale Semiconductors, a company that was researching / developing innovative technologies specially on semiconductors, shareholders are known groups linked to the old presidential administrations
Long story short, the Rothschild, via various holdings, following the crash, had assigned the rights on their patents
Look up what this company used to do and their technologies.....tracking....Friends or Foe.....both MIL and Civilian..... does this sound any bell with the graphene oxide in the vaxes?
Just started to research on, seems not many info's around, first link i found it's this https://worldtruth.tv/rothschild-inherits-a-semiconductor-patent-for-freescale-semiconductors/
if someone has any info or wanna have a look at this it's more than welcome
A test drive on the chip https://jaycarlson.net/pf/freescale-nxp-kinetis-kl03/
Here’s a run-down of the KL-03:
48 MHz Arm Cortex-M0+ 8 KB of flash, 2 KB of SRAM Internal 48 MHz HIRC, plus low-power 8 MHz and 1 kHz oscillators QFN-16 package with 14 I/O 12-bit 818 ksps ADC with 4 channels Dedicated 8KB ROM with SPI, I2C, and UART bootloaders built-in 5 timer channels, including 4 channels of PWM Separate UART, SPI, and I2C modules Analog comparator On-chip 48 MHz, 8 MHz, and 1 kHz oscillators Lots of low-power modes for running, waiting, and sleeping
Well, if that's the reason of the plane hijack, i'd say is rather possible that this chip is the bedrock of what they planned as our inner body 'buddy', they would just need a way to use graphene bots to assemble themselves (shot after shot) until they can create a similar version of the chip inside the body (if you think it's not possible, watch the video i posted earlier about robots)
Some useful anon digs on this topic are at these links:
https://qresear.ch/?q=MH+370
https://qresear.ch/?q=mh370
Thanks Fren, first thing that jumped to my eyes is a reference to a specific chip (Kinetis KL-03), looks like to be a hell of an MCU, a lot of internal communication ports and many other stuffs on a relatively really small chip, i'll need some time to study the datasheet and understand why could be so important, here is the link
https://www.nxp.com/docs/en/product-brief/KL03PB.pdf
Also, backtracking the chip model, i got on this page even if apparently has no public keywords on it
https://www.sott.net/article/451333-DARPA-working-on-COVID-vaccine-Implantable-microchip-to-detect-virus
That would make sense, if they could miniaturize the packaging a little more.... you would have not a simple tracking device but, an entire IoT computer smaller than half a grain of rice, within the body
Here is a picture of a similar chip (same WLCSP packaging)
http://www.nexteck.com.sg/uploads/allimg/200523/1-200523004J4N1.png
very interesting! good dig
I did some digging on this a bit a couple months ago when it first hit the chans.
Rothschild owned Freescale via the Carlyle Group as major shareholder. When Freescale merged with NXP, Rothschild still continues to own it in part, because Blackrock is the majority shareholder in NXP.
The KL03 "chip" (really, System-on-a-Chip or SoC) is merely an improvement on an earlier architecture, but most of the SoC itself is ARM and Texas Instruments' intellectual property (IP). Further- the KL03 is old, designed in 2012 and superseded by two generations. It may have been small, but certainly not injectable into the bloodstream- it's not much smaller than a grain of rice. It might make for something implanted subdermally, but you'd still need to figure out a power source 2-3 times that size.
The one patent in question (https://patents.google.com/patent/US8650327B2/en) is pretty innocuous.. grouping I/O pins together as a "virtual port". Regardless of what people were on MH370, or the other names on the patent, the IP is owned by Freescale. Royalties are a different story, with each named individual receiving some of that (usually it's a one-time award or annual bonus check).
As far as the value of the patent goes... well, it's questionable. It's stuff we've been doing in software and firmware for 20 years. Cool they move it to the chip, but the patent's so narrowly written, it's unlikely they could even patent troll someone that made a similar SoC design.
Soooo.... cui bono? I don't see a net difference to Jacob Rothschild either way.
Edit: copypaste spezzed a paragraph.
I don't know honestly, still have to look at the patents and datasheets in details, but the first thing that jumps to my mind, it's the various number of protocols/ports and GPIO in a similar package, i'v worked with many types of integrated myself, but never something similar in a wlcsp package, what me thinks, is, if you take the design of this chip, find a way to reduce it a little further and simplify the layout, you could get it to be built within the body in blocks, via graphene nanobots and 'organic' connections to inner things in the body, that could eventually be 'upgraded' with modules as needed, this way you wouldn't need to chip people, and no need for GSM or long range modules, as connection could work via loranet and similar / 5G, full control within the grid, in case the body could easily be the antenna
Seems unreal at first, but once you look at how nanobot can shapeshift and adapt / change etc, sounds a different story
Self organizing nanoscale MCU is intriguing, but I think still at least 20 years out. Carbon-based nanoscale sensors are getting there, but interfacing with silicon is still in its infancy.
I'd also be looking at 5GHz+ and ultrasonic tech, the antennas on LoRA or even 1GHz ISM bands would be comparatively huge.
There was a full thread about this on voat. Check the search voat archives.