|

Government Uses of Fiber Optics
Do you really need to fear the CIA, or the Interpol? How about the
NYPD? Sorry for the exploitation of the word, but perhaps you would
if you learn about the government uses of fiber optics.
In Surveillance
A number of movies had made it clear; surveillance had gain notable
achievement due to fiber optics and what it allows. If you’re still
bamboozled, try watching Air Force One and John Leguizamo, playing
as an anti terrorist operative. That fiber optics shown on that film
by the way is old techie. Newer, sleeker, less conspicuous designs
have been sold for so long over the internet. If the public the
access, it is safe to assume the government would have too. In fact,
who were the ones who got us inspired with these non-conventional
peeping toms other than Mr. Agent using government license plates?
Here, guess what, it is available for purchase across the internet.
See this dig I found over the internet.
Fiber Optics Image Scope Model VID 016
At: http://www.advanced-intelligence.com/optics.html
In Sensors and SONAR Technology
Hydrophones are becoming more encompassing and sensitive thanks to
the hundreds of fiber optic threads functioning as SONARS that delve
the bottom better than acoustics can perform. This will be
ultimately useful in determining slight geological differences
somewhere in the future that could mean hundreds of lives saved
because of a timely warning. Then, devastating aftereffects like the
2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami can be averted.
Advance Avionics
Timbercon Fiber Optics, a renowned optical fiber manufacturer has
been providing state of the art fiber optics technology specifically
for the United States government use. And since the U.S. Military
(who is most benefiting from this new technology) uses fiber optic
technology in a massive array of applications: from sight
augmentation, to wide reaching radar, sonar, and sensor equipment,
to dedicated telecommunications, even a number of crafts and
facilities, Timbercon is the oinly suitable manufacturer capable of
meeting such particular demands. And now several of the Timbercon
technology has been augmented in the Lockheed Martin’s LM-STAR
avionics test equipment module on the FiberSTAR project.
Somewhere during the Cold War, the United States Forces was often
disputed as mediocre, only relying on wealth to pump innumerable
Surface to Surface Missiles that may (or may not) cajole opposing
nations to desist the ‘arming’. Thankfully that nightmare is over,
now we only hope that government uses of fiber optics in aviation
will be more reliable and thus cementing the claim that the United
States Forces is still the strongest in the world.
Information Articles
|