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Thruster's marketers describe their product as a Personal Truth Verifier, different from its recognized cousin, the polygraph. You know, that is the gritty real-world lie detector where sweaty guys in fedoras wire you up under bright lights. Trustier is way more high-tech and user-friendly. You plug your phone into a simple little sensing oral appliance connect it for your computer. Then the software gets control of. According to the owner's Links Of London Bracelets manual, it uses "an ingenious new algorithm to detect vocal stress" and identifies shades of truth. Lying, it seems like, produces subtle "micro tremors" of tension in one's vocal cords that normally go undetected but could be acquired by Trustier. With each sentence or a reaction to a question, it flashes an email: "Truth." "Inaccurate." "Slightly Inaccurate." "Subject Not Sure." "False." Little graphs and electronic squiggles chart your conversation just like a type of psychic seismometer. There is another way of looking at it. The wisest among us would not use the word fear but would replace it with more acceptable notion and words such as ‘cautious’ and ‘wary’. Either way, fear defines most, if not everything that we do in life. Or should we say that fear starts to control us, our feelings and our thoughts? Peter Cavell would have been a fit child, who watched his diet and exercised regularly. But then, life set in and started biting away at his priorities as it does with all of us. I mean, if you think maybe to your younger years, the chances are you understand that you had far more sparetime and quite a few less responsibilities. Peter Carvell was the identical, then when life got busy, his fitness began to suffer. Flickr: Danny O