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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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031389
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03138900.026
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1990-09-22
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TECHNOLOGY, Page 55Darth RadarNew Star Wars tools for Smokey and the bandits
First there was the radar gun, and heavy-footed drivers were
briefly slowed. Then came the radar detector -- a.k.a. Fuzzbuster
-- and the battle of highway technology heated up. Police
introduced K-band radar, which used higher-frequency signals to
fool the Fuzzbusters, and "pulse" radar, which fired bursts too
brief to be detected. But each new measure brought new
countermeasures, including ever more sensitive detectors and
systems that let speeders slow down without flashing telltale brake
lights.
Now the combatants are turning to even more exotic
technologies. A small Denver company called Innovisions Research
has introduced a line of Stealth attachments, which fasten to the
front of an automobile and use microwave-absorbing materials like
those in the Stealth bomber to reduce the car's visibility to
police radar. The company claims that a speeding vehicle that would
normally be detected from 4,000 ft. away may not show up in
Smokey's gun until 2,000 ft.
Not to be deterred, police in Colorado this month will begin
testing a new Star Wars-type speed trap that uses laser light to
spot perpetrators. International Measurement & Control, the firm
that developed the new device, claims its laser beams are not only
invisible to radar detectors but unaffected by stealthy shields as
well. Given the speedy pace of change, can antilaser systems be far
behind?