Re: Helpful Consumer Warning About QXCI
I went to a practitioner several times for various reasons. I finally got a used program of my own and am now questioning it's validity. There is a reason the practitioners won't print anything out for you and only let you take a few notes. If you were to print out erroneous data about the state of a person's health that could be otherwise disproved by a standard medical exam then it wouldn't be long before QXCI practitioners would be brought up on malpractice charges. You only have to input a person's name or initials in the demographics window and then calibrate and test that person. It is beyond me how a program could distinguish two initials from someone elses name with the same two initials. To type in remedies on the green treatment page, you only have to type in the first initials of each word ie TAYFIJ or Treat all yellow flags in John to run a treatment. To test it, I typed in my name and ran the program the test matrix page showed that I had a variety of things going on in my body. I then closed all of the windows and reran the test. The second time I ran it and a bunch of different problems appeared. I did this several times each with different results. The results appeared totally random to me. So much information comes up after each test that the probability of hitting on something that rings true is usually pretty good, since it supposedly tests thousands of things on any given test. I finally typed in my name and entered data in the form of bogus illnesses such as diabetic neuropathy, which I don't have. When I ran the test, diabetes came up in red at a very high number. I typed another bogus name and in the data said that this person smoked 2 packs of cigarettes and Cancer came up in very high numbers such as 200. A person's optimal score is between 80 and 100. I conducted this same test using bogus names and bogus illnesses and this always happened. I finally typed in the name of a friend of mine that passed away and the program came up with all kinds of remedies for him. I would love to have faith in this technology, but I have read about several people who have used an Oscilloscope to test the rife frequency output and they were not even close to the intended frequency that the program was supposed to emit ie 587 hertz on the program might read as 60 hz on the oscilloscope which is the frequency range of most household electrical equipment. When Bill Nelson was asked about this, he claimed that he did not have time to attend to this detail. This is no small detail if the machne is supposed to work the way he claims it is, and you are marketing a $20,000.00 machine you darn well better attend to every detail when it comes to testing this device. Rife frequencies are very easily tested. Just the fact that he would blow off this responsibility as if it was no big deal, shows me a clear lack of integrity in this man who commands $20,000.00 for his program. I love alternative medicine and own several rife machines that I would not be without, but I also like to know when things are measurable and so far the QXCI program does not seem to be measurable except for the rife output which is clearly inaccurate. This program carries a very high price tag new, yet you can go on Royalrife.com and folks are practically giving them away in the buy and sell used instruments link. I have even seen brand new systems selling for as little as $6,000.00 with all of the hardware.
As far as Bill Nelson's track record of fraudulent credentials, I cannot address this as I have not researched them, but I do know that if you defraud people with false credentials then you probably don't have any problem defrauding people by creating and selling equipment that makes claims that it can't back up, prove or that is fraudulent. The fact that he would warn people not to open the SCIO box or they will reap negative Karma is laughable. My friend risked his Karma and opened the box to find there really didn't appear to be anything to the box outside of the housing, it looked relatively empty. Now who is really risking there Karma? If Bill is defrauding everyone, he will have his own Karma to deal with. You would think something that is as sophisticated as the manufacturer claims a SCIO box is, would have more circuitry involved. I guess my point is if you are looking at buying one of these units, do your research. We would all like to think that there was a quick easy diagnostic and fix for health problems, that would be great for us all. The bottom line is going to a practitioner who is good at muscle testing will probably yield better and more accurate results then what you would gain from the QXCI/EPFX/SCIO.