Author: Richard K Collins
Director, The Internet Foundation
Studying formation and optimized collaboration of global communities. Applying the Internet to solve global problems and build sustainable communities. Internet policies, standards and best practices.
Marley, For the last 20 years or so, I have been tracking gravimeter developments, hoping one day they could be developed enough to use in low cost gravitational imaging arrays. I don’t have my notes on what I wrote to you. My memory is that I saw you were at “earth tide” sensitivity. That is
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With LEDs going to lower and lower energies, moving electrons is probably less expensive than digging holes and trying to concentrate the rather thin light on Mars. I was gathering what groups and resources are needed to send small nuclear packages to Mars to provide the energy needed. The old dream of atomic energy was
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I would like to see a small region of the night sky at high frame rate. The ZWO cameras I have looked at could run 128×128 at 480 frames per second. That lowers the photons per second at the sensor, but the photos each do their bit. And the local noise is uncorrelated. If I
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Richard K Collins
Collaborative Global Model of the Sun,
Electromagnetic Gravitational Field,
Gravitational Engineering,
HoverBoxes HoverCards,
Internet Best Practices,
Internet efficiency,
Schools, Universities, Learning and Working,
Solar System Colonization,
Symbolic Mathematics
August 3, 2021
Some NOAA Visualizations Data Projections More Gravity Sun Moon Global Cooperation https://youtu.be/4waIa-2tMlY My comments and a few suggestions. Then another pitch for global cooperation, and for help with gravimeter arrays to scan the atmosphere, the oceans, the earth interior, the moon, sun and planets and moons. Richard Collins, Director, The Internet Foundation The video refers
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I would like to look at the data (numbers,not pictures) for vertical soundings from forecasts over a region. Essentially the 3D volume data for some area of the US. It can be as small as 100×100 grid points and 100 sounding levels. I doubt any of your products does that many vertical levels. And the
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Alexander If you search for “fluctuations” OR “fluctuations” on google, it will give you about 97 Million entry points. For the last 23 years I have been tracing through these kinds of searches to see exactly what people are doing with terms like “fluctuations”. As you can imagine, this particular term, “fluctuations” has lots of
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Thanks for the links. I spent the last few days going over the NexGen Level 3 Weather radar system. I downloaded many example datasets and tried to review and organize all the parts of it. Looking to see how to integrated radar, satellite, SDR (electromagnetic networks of many sorts), GPS and other sensor networks and
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Internet Research – global sensor networks and sharing Looking for data to correlate with other sensor networks Your left bars are rich in links. But you are using almost a different style of navigation on every page, certainly every section. With about 3 Million entry points for site:weather.gov that is a lot of hand building
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I am reviewing “diffuse x-ray” on the Internet. It has about 160,000 entry points. I was just reading papers to see where it fits. I was wondering what roadblock are slowing its development. A lot of people have spent a lot of time, as shown on the Internet. But they are not working together, and
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I have used Family Tree Maker which syncs to Ancestry. You download the trees to FTM and merge them, and then upload to a new tree. The merging is tedious but better than “save to tree” bit by bit. It is the ONLY method I found that preserves the records as records so that all
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