More interesting?!?!
:sigh:
Glad to see you left that world, but those who are left behind really have my pity. With all that time they waste pondering on endeavors that have produced nothing after more than 50 years, why it is that many pseudo scientists out there ignore what they can do with their time helping the really interesting citizen science efforts out there?
Citizen science (similar to community science, crowd science, crowd-sourced science, civic science, participatory monitoring, or volunteer monitoring) is scientific research conducted with participation from the general public (who are sometimes referred to as amateur/nonprofessional scientists). There are variations in the exact definition of citizen science, with different individuals and organizations having their own specific interpretations of what citizen science encompasses. Citi The fi...
The longest-running citizen science project currently active is probably the Audubon Society’s Christmas Bird Count, which started in 1900. Other examples of citizen science programs include World Water Monitoring Day,[14] NASA’s Stardust@home and Clickworkers, a variety of projects run by the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology,[15] such as eBird, NestWatch, Project FeederWatch, the Whale Shark Photo-identification Library, and Celebrate Urban Birds, Zooniverse including the Galaxy Zoo project, Foldit and the Phylo video game. Another example of an effective citizen science project in the United States is the Community Collaborative Rain, Hail & Snow Network (CoCoRaHS), run by the Colorado Climate Center at the Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado. Data from this project is used for weather forecasting and monitoring, severe weather alerts, and climate studies. National Geographic has an archeology project, Field Expedition: Mongolia, in which users tag potential archeological dig sites on GeoEye satellite images, to assist explorers on the ground in Mongolia.
Citizen science networks are extensively involved in phenology, the observation of cyclic events of nature, in order to investigate how global warming affects plant and animal life in different geographic areas.[16] Distributed computing ventures such as SETI@home may also be considered citizen science, even though the primary task of computation is performed by volunteers’ computers.
Heck, one can even go look for a whole new world from one’s computer!
Sad really to see all that time wasted in useless conspiracies and not on very useful science endeavors that they can be part of.