The video discusses several inventions that were never widely adopted or recognized, despite their potential to revolutionize various fields. These inventions include:
1. Frei Ruiz's magnetic motor (1989), which could power a car without fuel.
2. Royal Rife's cancer-fighting machine (1934), which used a special generator to attack cancer cells.
3. William Reik's cloud booster (1930s), which could allegedly control the weather.
4. Stanley Meyer's water-based engine (1990s), which could run on water instead of fuel.
5. Amauris Word's starlight material (1983), which could withstand extremely high temperatures.
6. Lester Henderson's fuelless generator (1928), which used the Earth's magnetic field to produce energy.
7. Ron Jan Vermeer Sloot's slot coding system (1995), which could compress large amounts of data into a small space.
8. Nyon's salt disk (1960s-1970s), which could allegedly defy gravity.
9. Toma Google's carburetor (1970s), which could significantly improve fuel efficiency and reduce pollution.
The video suggests that many of these inventors faced suppression, ridicule, or even death, and that their inventions were often lost or forgotten.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. Frei Ruiz invented a magnetic motor in 1989 that required no fuel and could power a car.
2. The motor was patented but never mass-produced.
3. Royal Rife invented a machine in 1934 that could allegedly cure cancer by attacking infected cells.
4. Rife's machine was tested on 14 patients with terminal cancer, and they all recovered.
5. Rife's work was allegedly suppressed by the American Medical Association.
6. William Reich invented a machine called the "Cloud Booster" that could allegedly control the weather.
7. The machine was tested in the 1960s and appeared to be successful, but further testing was restricted.
8. Stanley Meyer invented a water-based engine in the late 19th century that could allegedly run on water.
9. The engine was tested and appeared to be successful, but Meyer was murdered and his engine was classified as fake.
10. Amauris Word invented a material called "Starlight" in 1983 that could allegedly withstand extremely high temperatures.
11. The material was tested on a BBC television show and appeared to be successful, but Word did not license the material for fear of it being used by criminals.
12. Lester Henderson invented a fuelless generator in 1928 that could allegedly produce electricity using the Earth's magnetic field.
13. Henderson's generator was tested and appeared to be successful, but he was accused of quackery and fraud.
14. Ron Jan Vermeer Sloot invented an algorithm in 1995 that could allegedly compress hundreds of gigabytes of information into a small space.
15. The algorithm was tested and appeared to be successful, but Sloot died under unusual circumstances and the information was lost.
16. Nyon invented a device called the "Salt Disk" in the 1960s that could allegedly generate electrical energy and defy gravity.
17. The device was tested and appeared to be successful, but Nyon destroyed all working samples and never patented the device.
18. Tom Ogle invented a new type of carburetor in the 1970s that could allegedly save fuel and reduce pollution.
19. The carburetor was tested and appeared to be successful, but it was never mass-produced due to alleged pressure from oil and gas companies.
20. Ogle died under suspicious circumstances in 1981.