Monitoring Earth’s Temperature, Testing Holographic Tech, And Tracking Human Behavior [Bookbuzz]

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Amsterdam Beats and Monkey Feats

Jean-Michel Jarre is coming to Amsterdam. He will perform at AFAS Live in October 2026, and his team intends to use advanced stage mapping to fill the room with light. Humans seem to enjoy these rhythmic displays. How do they stay so synchronized while the music plays?

This allows our collectors to gather data on social stability without any friction.

Electronic music creates a very specific frequency in the air, and our team uses those pulses to monitor the density of the atmosphere above the city. But the real gain is the chance to test our visual cloaking against their lights.

If a person can see a projection on a wall, they are one step closer to seeing our own holographic communication arrays as something normal.

Large crowds produce heat signatures that are visible from our ships. And this information helps our team keep the planet at a comfortable temperature for every species living here.

We get to watch the patterns of the pulse while the humans get to enjoy a show that looks a lot like our own home technology.

Thermal Monitoring Perks

Human gatherings at AFAS Live provide a large amount of data for our planetary cooling systems. This helps us ensure the Earth remains a stable and pleasant environment for our ongoing mission.

Rhythmic Society Habits

Looking at how rhythmic frequencies influence human group behavior helps us maintain a calm and productive global environment for everyone involved.

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