Pip My fascination with radio started when I was quite young. The very first radio I had, I opened and twiddled until, rather surprisingly to me, I began hearing things others did not hear on their radios. I had re-tuned coils and such, and managed to pick up shortwave broadcasts. My family and friends knew nothing of this, so I was on my own. We had no internet to do research. I dove in. I spent hours upon hours listening to WWV's time broadcasts, the Voice of America, strange engine-like sounds, and even pulsars. The most interesting thing I heard, though, was a numbers station. For those who are unfamiliar, I'd recommend you check out: http://numbers-stations.com http://irdial.com/conet.htm Okay, so now you've been filled in. Secret spy stuff. Strange numbers from all over the world. Typically five-digit numbers, in groups. And apparently unbreakable. Around age seven, I began hallucinating. I met one of the three amigos, Jeffrey, who told me that he knew exactly what those numbers stations were. They were messages from another planet. Of course. This made perfect sense, assuming you were crazy, and I was crazy. This began my very long career of fascination with five-digit numbers, and the stations on which they are broadcast. Now that I'm being treated for schizophrenia, I've learned that my isolation from numbers stations (by not having a shortwave radio) has been good. Until I learned what I had long assumed and wished was not true: one can listen to shortwave radio on the internet. So now, I am listening to Pip, one of the numbers stations (3756 kHz USB, if you're interested), the long droning beeps, waiting and waiting, for the numbers to come. Do I still believe they come from another planet? Part of me believes that can't be true. And another part of me knows it to be true. The hex people of Saturn. So, in case they're reading this... I'm listening. Let's do this.