Halloween

From: william (WILLIAMA) 5 Sep 22:14
To: ALL1 of 4
Am I the only one who saw this and immediately visualised Halloween parties?
From: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 6 Sep 13:48
To: william (WILLIAMA) 2 of 4

My first thought was: if it's a common food dye, why is this only just discovered?

I mean, Herbert G Wells seems to have guessed such a technique 127 years ago, has it really taken this long for someone to go "hey, I wonder if that would actually work"...?


Also, there's an image at the top of the article seemingly showing a human hand, but later on the article says "the procedure has not yet been tested on humans and researchers will need to show it is safe to use", and watching the video doesn't show that hand image, but does show a clearly fake arm with alongside "the method has not yet been tested in humans", so WTF is up with that?

From: CHYRON (DSMITHHFX) 6 Sep 14:33
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 3 of 4
It's working on rats. 'Nuff said.
From: william (WILLIAMA) 6 Sep 16:01
To: Peter (BOUGHTONP) 4 of 4
Yes, that hand is an over enthusiastic bit of computer graphics. I wasn't 100% sure from the article whether this only worked with red light. If that's the case the you could have all the red lights come on at midnight (or the witching hour or whatever) for extra impact.

Seeing as it's Halloween in a few weeks, it seems like the ideal time for a test.
EDITED: 6 Sep 16:03 by WILLIAMA