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more about #dreams more comments → Curves: Dreams come from the issues our subconscious can not, will not or have not dealt with during our conscious state. Dreams have also been recognized as ... more » Voyou_Charmant: Recording dreams would be pretty awesome, especially the sexy ones. Any other application is scary and questionable and will likely reveal the identit... more » OMG! Ponies!: Most of my dreams are already in puffy sticker form or are from the movie "Heavy Metal". more » GitEmSteveDave_ My Brute Dojo Code CDIAFIFE: This would lead to massive therapy bills to the people who have to watch the dreams. Like the one where I see myself standing in sort of sun-god robes... more » The Amazing Ant: Well I'd love to have had this a year ago; I had some dreams, and what I can remember from them started happening a month later...It'd be a heck of a ... more » xsecretfiles2: Actually, I think I can profit on this. Who wouldn't want to see the two girls one donkey scene I dream about last night? more » Kaiser-Machead: Can...you....see???? more » Curves: This is a bad idea. A very bad idea. more » zenpoet: Is it the one where you are standing on a pyramid in kind of sun god robs, and thousands of naked women are throwing little pickles at you? Because th... more » Jrsy Devil's Advocate®: "What do you think? Would that be awesome or scary as hell?" I think I'm going to have to say the later on this... more » -
#dreamrecorder
New Technology Could Display Your Dreams on Screen
A research team at the ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories in Japan has successfully displayed simple images produced in the human brain on a computer screen. Dream recorder anyone? More » -
#tv
Study Finds the Color of Dreams Dependent On the Color of Your Childhood TV
Further evidence that media's placating massage fingers mine even the deepest jelly regions of our brains, a new study has claimed to prove the long-thought notion that the type of TV and film exposure during youth drastically affects the color of dreams, even much later into life. In the study, only 4.4 percent of those who grew up with color TV reported dreaming in B&W, but those who were raised on Howdy Doody and other monochrome entertainments had colorless dreams nearly 25 percent of the time. More »
