Inside the Russian Short Wave Radio Enigma | Wired Magazine

Oooooooooh, spooky:

From a lonely rusted tower in a forest north of Moscow, a mysterious shortwave radio station transmitted day and night. For at least the decade leading up to 1992, it broadcast almost nothing but beeps; after that, it switched to buzzes, generally between 21 and 34 per minute, each lasting roughly a second—a nasally foghorn blaring through a crackly ether. The signal was said to emanate from the grounds of a voyenni gorodok (mini military city) near the village of Povarovo, and very rarely, perhaps once every few weeks, the monotony was broken by a male voice reciting brief sequences of numbers and words, often strings of Russian names: “Anna, Nikolai, Ivan, Tatyana, Roman.” But the balance of the airtime was filled by a steady, almost maddening, series of inexplicable tones.

I’ll wager the reality is something much more mundane. And the broadcaster is likely to be completely unaware they have such a mass following. But it says something about people’s tendency to congregate around things they don’t understand.

55 notes

Show

  1. bulentyusuf posted this