Once upon a time, GAW started out as a Q drop research site.
If you want to know what is going on, you need to understand at least some of the Q drops... the ones related to the Hunt for Red October (movie) being among the most important.
The PING refers to submarine sonar and communications... date and time stamps, plus key words and deltas (time differences) are some of the clues to decipher the meanings in the drops.
Also, Entheos is an account over on Telegram and X that occasionally posts things adjacent to the Q drops (sometimes - mainly lots of reposts of older posts).
All that said - the fact that you are waiting around for somebody else to explain everything to you instead of doing a few simple web searches for yourself means you might be in the wrong place.
Now - it plays an important role of connecting those, slightly more "normie" than the original crew here used to consist almost solely of.
Think of this as the source of an information conveyor belt, instead of simply a research club.
You might have that talent of understanding certain pieces of information - but not everyone does.
And it will take way more than just people exactly like you to win this information war.
So.
Help your fellow soldier, who has a different battle-station and job than yours.
You might be the ordnance packer - they may be the delivery driver.
The landscape here has changed - I understand the frustration that comes with that. But overall - it's exactly what SHIFTING THE TIDE really looks like.
The newbies showing up with the skills they have - not the skills you have.
Not to play both sides (given my similar reply to the same post), but it just occurred to me that there IS a downside of recruiting the autist/aspergers/savant demographic for research. It's the occasional harsh rebukes given to newbies when they want to know the things they don't know. Ya know?
Lol yes - and that makes sense, esp if you know what it's like to work with programmers.
Very smart people - very glad to have their skills and talents - but they're generally very good at those talents for a reason - and it's not because they spend all their time socializing at the clubs, lol...
I’m having a hard time absorbing it due to the scribbles and abbreviations. Can a Pede help a gal out and translate please?
Once upon a time, GAW started out as a Q drop research site.
If you want to know what is going on, you need to understand at least some of the Q drops... the ones related to the Hunt for Red October (movie) being among the most important.
The PING refers to submarine sonar and communications... date and time stamps, plus key words and deltas (time differences) are some of the clues to decipher the meanings in the drops.
Also, Entheos is an account over on Telegram and X that occasionally posts things adjacent to the Q drops (sometimes - mainly lots of reposts of older posts).
All that said - the fact that you are waiting around for somebody else to explain everything to you instead of doing a few simple web searches for yourself means you might be in the wrong place.
They're not in the wrong place.
The landscape of the battlefield changes.
This site used to be just that way.
Now - it plays an important role of connecting those, slightly more "normie" than the original crew here used to consist almost solely of.
Think of this as the source of an information conveyor belt, instead of simply a research club.
You might have that talent of understanding certain pieces of information - but not everyone does.
And it will take way more than just people exactly like you to win this information war.
So.
Help your fellow soldier, who has a different battle-station and job than yours.
You might be the ordnance packer - they may be the delivery driver.
The landscape here has changed - I understand the frustration that comes with that. But overall - it's exactly what SHIFTING THE TIDE really looks like.
The newbies showing up with the skills they have - not the skills you have.
Teamwork makes the dream work, as they say. ;)
Not to play both sides (given my similar reply to the same post), but it just occurred to me that there IS a downside of recruiting the autist/aspergers/savant demographic for research. It's the occasional harsh rebukes given to newbies when they want to know the things they don't know. Ya know?
Kek
Lol yes - and that makes sense, esp if you know what it's like to work with programmers.
Very smart people - very glad to have their skills and talents - but they're generally very good at those talents for a reason - and it's not because they spend all their time socializing at the clubs, lol...
Different functions - same battlefield.