There is currently an issue with radionicsradio.co.uk, but it is still accessible via radionicsradio.resonancefm.com – as always, all thought-frequencies submissions are highly appreciated – experiments and diffusions are ongoing.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Radionics Radio: Preventing Zero Readings
This is an important announcement: The number of blank thought-frequency submissions now outnumbers the populated submissions! Radionics Radio users please take note!
Users of Radionics Radio should carefully follow the instructions to ensure their thought-frequencies are entered into the app. Bear in mind that zero readings are useless and cannot be sounded or broadcast.
Read more on this over at the Miraculous Agitations blog.

Avoid such zero readings. Without frequencies, nothing can be done.
Radionics Radio at the Science Gallery
A new blog post over at the Miraculous Agitations blog speaks of upcoming experiments. Tomorrow – Tuesday 7th October – there will take place a diffusion of ‘thought frequencies’ at the Science Gallery Pop-Up in Boland House, London Bridge, with Asterism (Strange Attractor) also on the bill. And it’s free! 7:30 start.
Radionics Radio ‘Micro Clear Spot’ on ResonanceFM: 19th Sept – 3:45pm
A Radionics Radio ‘Micro Clear Spot’ will broadcast today on ResonanceFM from 3:45pm to 4pm, featuring radionic thought irradiation experiments recorded at the Science Gallery Pop Up in London Bridge.
The broadcast also marks the start of a new experimental release of the Radionics Radio web app. Please take a moment to acquaint yourself with this app. Thoughts can be radionically converted into frequencies, and these will be broadcast on Radionics Radio. There have already been over a hundred submissions, and every one of them will be broadcast. Watch out for future broadcasts here.
Special thanks to Peter Lanceley for assisting with the Science Gallery radionic experiments.
Problems with the Radionics Radio web application
There are currently many software problems being reported with the Radionics Radio web application. On many systems, the rotation rate (in Frequency Search mode) progresses at a cripplingly low speed.
This will be fixed soon. A new downloadable version of the app is also on the horizon. More info soon….
Radionics Radio at the Science Museum
On Friday 13th June, a live ResonanceFM programme from the Science Museum marks the launch of the Radionics Radio application. ‘Radionics Radio – Turning Thought into Frequency’ airs at 3:00pm.
The programme is something of a first, as an actual Delawarr radionics broadcasting instrument will be exhibited in earnest at the Science Museum for the first time (for the duration of the programme). It will not be plugged in, however, owing to health and safety restrictions.
The programme takes place in the Exponential Horn room where ResonanceFM is currently installed.
More information on radionics and the Radionics Radio project can be read on the Sound and Music blog.
An ‘artificial intelligence’ rustic poet
Hop over to the Miraculous Agitations blog to behold attempts to create an artificial intelligence ‘local poet’ using text analysis procedures and speech synthesis. The poet robot is based on a very obscure 1990s rustic poet called Bill Cooper. Cooper’s oeuvre was fed into a word-combination probability analyser (based around a Markov chain), and new rustic emissions were sought.
These experiments were briefly featured, among other feverishly discussed book-related things, on William English’s Wavelength on Friday 6th June. The ‘Robot Bill Cooper’ text generator has implications for books in general: in theory you could dump a book’s text into a program and have a new text generated in the author’s style…
Resonating street furniture, post-electronic busking and ‘acoustic circuit-bending’
New blog post over at the Miraculous Agitations blog – on resonating street furniture, electromagnetic apparatuses, post-electronic busking and ‘acoustic circuit-bending’. It forms a sort of cautionary tale on the perils of electromagnetically resonating too far afield.
Also, a primer on post-electronic music can be found in the new Exact Change e-zine #8.

