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Showing posts with the label Area 51

Chilling EVPs Captured by SCD Archon & Vocibus Mk2 – LIVE on Coast to Coast AM

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By Anthony F. Sanchez, Author & Researcher For Ghost Hunter Apps In July 2024, when SCD Archon and Vocibus Mk2 hit the scene, they didn’t just push the boundaries of the paranormal field—they shattered them. These cutting-edge tools, designed by Ghost Hunter Apps (GHA), introduced a revolutionary way to communicate with the unknown. At the heart of this breakthrough is Necrosent Mode , an AI-driven system that "trains" the Ghost Box mind to remember signal strengths and station frequencies preferred by spirits. It’s a first-of-its-kind innovation—one that has already yielded chilling , undeniable evidence . A New Era for Paranormal Research From the SCD1, SCD2, GB-1, Afterlife, and other groundbreaking tools, GHA has always been at the forefront of spirit communication. But 2024 marked a turning point—the retirement of the old and the dawn of something entirely new. Armed with the SCD Archon & Vocibus Mk2 , Anthony F. Sanchez has already conducted high-profile i...

A Bluetooth Ghost Box?

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  By Anthony F. Sanchez, Author & Researcher For Ghost Hunter Apps Why did I do this? Why did I create a tool that transcended its original purpose? Yes, this is legit. In 2011, I traveled to Area 51 with Ric Prestel and a group of friends from MUFON to look for UFOs , enjoy patty melts with Grey Aliens at the Little A'Le'Inn , and perhaps have a few beers. Before that trip, I had been experimenting with Software Defined Radio technology—scanning HAM radio using Windows software written in C#. I have to say, that stuff was HECKA COOL! And it also sounded weird at times. But for the Area 51 trip, that wasn’t what I wanted to experiment with. I had already used a Uniden handheld BC95XLT frequency scanner —the one with the NASCAR logo on it. Yes, it works—even to this day! But for that 2011 trip, I had written a C# .NET program that allowed me to use my Bluetooth dongle ( yup, this was way back in the old days ), and surprisingly, I could scan the ISM frequencies! That’s t...