According to manufacturers, the system is based on the premise that every cell, tissue, and organ in the human body emits specific electromagnetic frequencies. The steps claimed are:

: A handheld sensor (probe) collects these weak magnetic frequencies from the palm. The software amplifies these signals and uses a microprocessor to process the data.

"Perfect mimicry," Elias said, watching the software finish its run. "But you can't trick quantum resonance. Magnetic fields don't lie about spin."

The hum ceased completely. The patient on the table took a sudden, gasping breath, his eyes snapping open. They weren't human eyes; for a split second, the irises dilated into mechanical apertures before settling into a soft, convincing brown.

: Generates over 45 detailed health reports.

It wasn't part of the official release. The hackers who had cracked the previous versions, the underground collective known as 'The Suture', must have embedded it. Elias hesitated. Running unverified code on a patient's brain stem was a death sentence. But looking at the flatlining monitor, he realized the patient was already dying.