It's an interesting string that runs across three distinct dates, but the pattern beyond that grouping of posts is not tight. If you keep scrolling down there should be a good twenty or so more posts on the :00 minute (all the way down to 4962).
But I think this sort of pattern is compelling and one of the reasons I wrote the tool was so we could start digging for themes on the Q-clock minutes. e.g. do the minutes have certain authorship or themes or kill boxes or patterns? Does the Q-clock map to some similar cabal object? I actually had a word cloud tool but the results were kinda dumb so I cut it out.
I hope you weren't encountering some sort of scrolling or loading issue.. I noticed a bit of funkiness on my phone that I've been trying to address.
One of the most wild things about having a new tool is you just see things in different ways. The data gets formatted a little differently. The features are different. Even the bugs are a little different. ;)
Yeah! On my laptop rn. Hopefully that issue is only on mobile! Was just a thought I had and only tried it out on the one second. Though, part of the inspiration behind the thought was the phrase "future proves past". Like, examining things from the future and then going to the past could bring about a new perspective. That's all. would be cool if this brought about other interesting strings like this, too!
It's got an infinite scroll type thing going. You may need to hold page down to get the whole thing loaded.
EDIT: Another thing you might try later: I'm gonna make it to where you can put Q-clock rays in the Excalidraw view, and also the whole Q-clock. You might notice something about this run of days in relation to other parts of the clock.
Used Qalerts search to look up the dates of the posts:
#4324 - May 26, 2020
#4323 - May 26, 2020 (Same as above one)
#3904 - March 27, 2020
#2536 - December 2, 2018
#2535 - December 2, 2018 (Same as above one)
Then I checked these dates on the Vanilla QClock from q-clock.com: https://www.q-clock.com/images/qclock_vanilla.jpg. They do match up on the QClock, but it's on [01], so that's a bug, and it seems that they aren't actually consecutive, so yeah, that's also a bug. Bummer. Still strange how well that sequence seemed to fit!
Shite thx fren I really should have noticed there was an off by one error when the first ray came up :19. I'll follow up here when it's fixed. Apologies.
It's an interesting string that runs across three distinct dates, but the pattern beyond that grouping of posts is not tight. If you keep scrolling down there should be a good twenty or so more posts on the :00 minute (all the way down to 4962).
But I think this sort of pattern is compelling and one of the reasons I wrote the tool was so we could start digging for themes on the Q-clock minutes. e.g. do the minutes have certain authorship or themes or kill boxes or patterns? Does the Q-clock map to some similar cabal object? I actually had a word cloud tool but the results were kinda dumb so I cut it out.
I hope you weren't encountering some sort of scrolling or loading issue.. I noticed a bit of funkiness on my phone that I've been trying to address.
One of the most wild things about having a new tool is you just see things in different ways. The data gets formatted a little differently. The features are different. Even the bugs are a little different. ;)
Yeah! On my laptop rn. Hopefully that issue is only on mobile! Was just a thought I had and only tried it out on the one second. Though, part of the inspiration behind the thought was the phrase "future proves past". Like, examining things from the future and then going to the past could bring about a new perspective. That's all. would be cool if this brought about other interesting strings like this, too!
It's got an infinite scroll type thing going. You may need to hold page down to get the whole thing loaded.
EDIT: Another thing you might try later: I'm gonna make it to where you can put Q-clock rays in the Excalidraw view, and also the whole Q-clock. You might notice something about this run of days in relation to other parts of the clock.
Used Qalerts search to look up the dates of the posts:
#4324 - May 26, 2020
#4323 - May 26, 2020 (Same as above one)
#3904 - March 27, 2020
#2536 - December 2, 2018
#2535 - December 2, 2018 (Same as above one)
Then I checked these dates on the Vanilla QClock from q-clock.com: https://www.q-clock.com/images/qclock_vanilla.jpg. They do match up on the QClock, but it's on [01], so that's a bug, and it seems that they aren't actually consecutive, so yeah, that's also a bug. Bummer. Still strange how well that sequence seemed to fit!
Shite thx fren I really should have noticed there was an off by one error when the first ray came up :19. I'll follow up here when it's fixed. Apologies.
I actually did scroll down before scrolling up. Trying to confirm these posts are truly clustered together like this.