Presently, the machine can only take a person 5-8 years in the future

Apr 11, 2013 12:28 GMT  ·  By

A time machine has allegedly been invented by one Iranian scientist named Ali Razeghi.

Though this might come as a bit of a disappointment to some people, it need be said that, for the time being at least, the so-called Aryayek Time Traveling Machine can only take a person about 5-8 years in the future.

One other bubble-bursting piece of information concerning this time machine is that, contrary to what some might expect after watching loads of SF movies and reading several books on the matter at hand, Ali Razeghi's invention does not really take one to the future.

Quite the contrary: it brings the future to the individual ready and willing to become acquainted with it.

Long story short, the machine reportedly uses a series of algorithms to process data fed into it and then rolls out a detailed description of how an individual's life will change throughout the course of the following 5-8 years.

According to Gizmodo, Ali Razeghi commented on this latest invention of his as follows:

“My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you.”

The same source informs us that, following several experiments and investigations, it was concluded that the Aryayek Time Traveling Machine has a whopping 98% accuracy when made to predict someone's future.

Hence some people's beginning to think of it as a high-tech (and perhaps more efficient) version of Nostradamus.

The machine was recently registered with Iran's state-run Center for Strategic Inventions, and Ali Razeghi is quite convinced that it will not be long until heads of state will use it to collect information concerning both the future value of foreign currencies and fluctuations in oil prices.

Sadly, Ali Razeghi is still reluctant to introducing the general public to the prototype of his invention.