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AMD hides messages in the promotional video of its event

We analyzed all the hidden messages in the AMD video, which offer us a lot of information, more than we can imagine.

After viewing the AMD video where it promotes an event on January 5, coinciding (or not), with the start of CES 2017 in Las Vegas, we have realized that there are hidden messages that you do not pay much attention to at first glance, that has led us to investigate more deeply the video, to see what other things it hides and there have been many, the 'anomalies', that we have detected in the video.

During the first viewing, what we have noticed, like everyone else, is the large poster that says 'Radeon Revolution', but before this image or even the child with the drum is seen, perhaps we missed the most important of the video. During a few frames you can see a kind of warning sign with the text 'Warning! Poor Volta 'in black on a green background and with a sticker with a fist and the hashtag #BetterRed.

It seems harmless, but it seems like one of two clear taunts thrown by AMD towards NVIDIA. We see an apparently incomplete text on a white background, partially covered by the same sticker, but is it really incomplete? Well, no. We have translated it and it says the following:

[quote bcolor=»#dd3333″]

Warning lights, unpredictable engine performance pulsating lights are all signs of a faulty voltage. Can develop if the voltage fails to deliver enough. May not inform the operator of such a failure until it. Is important to be aware of the associated issues.

Warning lights, unpredictable engine running flashing lights are all signs of faulty voltage. It can develop if the voltage fails to deliver is not enough. You cannot inform the operator of such a failure. It is important to be aware of associated problems.

[/ Quote]

The message refers to a failure to supply power that could cause failures, implying that the power supply on NVIDIA graphics cards may be faulty and eventually cause the GPU to fail. Finally, in this intriguing poster appears the name of the company 'Somnum Industries', which literally translated is 'Dream Industry', as if trying to refer to a metaphorical dream of AMD. The eye logo is important and is explained later.

The next part is not very significant, since it simply appears in a VE.GA graffiti, which is the website enabled by AMD for the event, but it is curious that it appears. The next scene is really striking, since we see the boy go through an area where there is a barricade. In a large pale, we see three signs left there, one indicates 'Bring it back!', Which is 'Bring it back', in another large 'Full control', which is 'Total control', although they are interesting, the most important is the one in the center. In the image only one part is clear: 'Just for the 1%', which is 'For the 1%', although a little later this and the other posters can be seen better.

That poster so far away that it was not read well, indicates that 'VR is not just for the 1%', 'VR is not only for the 1%'. White and bottled. Direct dart to NVIDIA. It certainly speaks of the price of the GTX 1070 and GTX 1080 graphics cards, which are quite expensive, limiting the possibilities for average users, preventing building a team for virtual reality. The taunt goes further and also goes to the manufacturers of VR helmets, due to the high prices, making it impossible for an average user to have this device at home.

There is something else in this image. AMD posters cover all but two of the movie posters on the wall. The first one marked in orange is a poster of the film The last command by Emil Jannings, who received the first ever Oscar for his performance in this silent film. The second is the French movie poster The Day the Earth Stood Still, in which a human-looking alien with his robot, claims the earth and the rulers of the earth deny it to him and this alien decides to stay to see the behavior of humans. We are not very clear what these films have to do with AMD, but it does not seem to be a coincidence.

From the first moment the drum appears and ends with a room, hall or ship full of them, stacked. This clearly indicates that they already have all the charts ready to go on the market and distribute them, although it hides another meaning. The drum, in architecture, is a structure that is located under a dome as an extension. It is usually cylindrical, since the domes normally end in the shape of a hemisphere, although we can also see them in an octagonal shape. The architecture here has little or not so much to do with it, since VEGA could be the drum that supports not a dome, but a new family of high-performance graphics cards designed for virtual reality.

AMD seems to have given us a lot of information, which we have not seen until we have sat down to analyze the video in depth. Obviously, all the data that we extract from the video are assumptions or half-truths, since there is no confirmation of absolutely anything, although of course, we have seen hidden codes, some clear and others very subtle. What do you think, are we fantasizing excessively or are they aliens?

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Robert Sole

Director of Contents and Writing of this same website, technician in renewable energy generation systems and low voltage electrical technician. I work in front of a PC, in my free time I am in front of a PC and when I leave the house I am glued to the screen of my smartphone. Every morning when I wake up I walk across the Stargate to make some coffee and start watching YouTube videos. I once saw a dragon ... or was it a Dragonite?

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8 comments

  1. Well, except for the translation of Volta's message, the rest agree, I had already started to unravel the hidden messages, hahaha.

    Great job Baurk, keep it up so I love the pace and the way this is getting ^ _ ^

    Signed: Renkor 😉

      1. I had seen older ZEN, the K60P CES, on the side of the pallets there was another sign with an R that says the hashtag of #BETERRRED and radeon and behind (although I couldn't get it right) I sensed a FOR in the wood and the U of the cube, the one with the reference to FO4 (another We Can Do It), the NO LOUF (I don't know if they remove compatibility with the luffa algorithmic function for hasheo… Which is a bitch xD), the posters of references to movies or foxes and I became obsessed with the festival poster, but I didn't find anything related to 1968 ... I didn't see an update on this post, did you make any other? I have to take a look.
        Once again this is going very well Baurk 🙂

        1. Now that I look, the first CES was in 1967, is it possible that 1968 was AMD's first appearance at CES? Well I understand not because it was founded in 1969 ... Damn, that poster intrigues me xDD

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