The world that we live in today is one that is constantly changing, and we ourselves are one of the witnesses to this change. The way we communicate with each other has changed dramatically over the years. Our favorite channels for communication became television and radio in the 1950s and 60s respectively, but in 1984 it was telephones and cell phones. Suddenly, in less than a decade these two mediums completely transformed our everyday lives. Today, when we talk on our phones or over video-conferencing software like Skype, people can hear us from across continents with ease. We are able to send our voice over the airwaves for free to other people who are hopefully listening. Our words are being recorded for posterity to be read by future generations after we have long died. Today, though, technology is not working towards this goal. Instead it is working towards the opposite. The more technology advances, the more difficult it becomes to record and send information through the airwaves. Instead of improving communication, science is working against us. That's what John Smith believes, at least. John is a college student studying to become a radio engineer who has found his calling in life after he discovered that radio waves can travel through walls instead of just through solid objects like his textbooks claimed they would. He goes around the campus talking to people about his "discovery" and convincing them that this means he will be able to transmit messages from their homes. In fact, he does not even need a radio or a transmitter of any kind at all. All he needs is two people next to each other so the radio waves from the first person's body can pass through their bodies and into the second person's body through their ears, eliminating the need for radio waves altogether. He then uses his own body as a channel for sending signals into space. His first experiment involves putting two people in a large container filled with water and letting them communicate through sound. This works to prove his theory, but only in the presence of large quantities of water. The next day, John puts two people into a small metal box that can block electromagnetic waves. He also puts two people into a room that has no metal in it. His theory proves correct for all three cases, but not in the way he expects it to. The first group is able to communicate with each other without any trouble when they are in the metal container full of water because there are walls separating them from each other. However, when they step outside of this container, their communication stops working despite the fact that there is no wall between them anymore. The second group has no trouble communicating because they are in a small box that excludes all radio waves. John even goes so far as to put them into a complete vacuum to prove that their communication is not dependent on radio waves at all. The third group shows the most interesting results because the two students are in an empty room without any metal, so they should be unable to communicate with each other. However, when John asks them what message he should send to them, they tell him this message verbatim: "Do you know what I want? I want chocolate." The fact that this experiment yielded such an unusual result caused me to think about how much technology has advanced over the last century.
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