The question is stated as delivery of a "S-300 or S-400 missile system." A "system" requires all the major operational components to be delivered (search radar, targeting radar, missile launcher, command post, etc.). Regarding hiding the system, while I agree that generally you don't want to give away the exact location of your military assets, it is important to credibly signal your enemies if you expect to deter them. Most of the Iranian comments to this point are probably inward directed, to create a sense of strength in the aftermath of the nuclear deal with the West. Outward directed statements (to Israel) will come when the system is actually functioning.
@einsteinjs Too early for conclusions, maybe some hypothesis fishing. I'm only aggregating data among those who have signed mutual nondisclosure agreements and being careful to anonymize data. That, of course, requires a verifiable identity and an address.
Folks, please search through your old emails and if you find any more leads, I'll post the links here. I'm just reluctant to discuss anything that might violate someone's privacy, and don't want to jump to any conclusions that turn out to be unfounded.
What I can say, though, is that I keep on being amazed as I discover more and more different experiments from GJP4. How amazing if eventually I can piece together the whole picture. Alternatively, perhaps they eventually will report on an overview of the the entire project, as the Scicast Predict folks did several months ago.
@cmeinel: I am not sure what is motivating your autopsy of GJP, but I very much appreciate your sharing your findings. I have never seen the material you have provided to us. Very interesting.
@cmeinel, LOL "of the future ... always will be" ... took me a minute to get it! I was trying to solve the problem of high cost versus benefit of superior material at prohibitive cost and came up with idea to layer atom thick layers of gallium arsenide with the cutting edge discoveries re. graphene to gain the properties of both at a fraction of the material involved, bordering on the quantum level for properties, electricity generating properties and many other applications (i.e. Bob Bigelow's inflatable space station modules, if incorporating this as an external layer would gain the strength of graphene, greater than steel, and the photoelectric properties from gallium arsenide circuitry). also clothing woven from such fibres would be a giant step forward in chargeable apparel, perhaps a power source for pacemakers, and if adapted to convert the 8 Hz Schumann resonance of both planet Earth and the human heart, a transformer of electric current into other useful energies in a reverse direction. But, you weren't asking me to do that, you were going for the forever future point which went right over my head. Now I need to patent all these ideas before I lose this thread of thought.
https://www.seas.harvard.edu/news/2016/02/metal-that-behaves-like-water
@ravel nice, I will add to my music collection. I have been branched off on Sophie Hunger, accidental discovery: https://youtu.be/AyUp1rnv7rY, also no doubt a favorite of our Swiss sponsors.
Regarding the tech stuff, now that we have gravity waves, I've been waiting for a portable gravity generator for spaceships so we can have nice big flat spaceships that look like frigates, like in this Canadian sci-fi show that I binge-watched last month: https://youtu.be/1TqwBlTQfTg
Reaffirming my forecast.
The question is stated as delivery of a "S-300 or S-400 missile system." A "system" requires all the major operational components to be delivered (search radar, targeting radar, missile launcher, command post, etc.). Regarding hiding the system, while I agree that generally you don't want to give away the exact location of your military assets, it is important to credibly signal your enemies if you expect to deter them. Most of the Iranian comments to this point are probably inward directed, to create a sense of strength in the aftermath of the nuclear deal with the West. Outward directed statements (to Israel) will come when the system is actually functioning.
@einsteinjs Too early for conclusions, maybe some hypothesis fishing. I'm only aggregating data among those who have signed mutual nondisclosure agreements and being careful to anonymize data. That, of course, requires a verifiable identity and an address.
I am sorry that I can't contribute. I don't have my data. I thought I had downloaded it, but I did not, apparently. Rats.
Thanks to one of my informants, here's a location where we can download the preregistered experimental plan for one of the experimental cohorts in GJP4: GJP registered at https://osf.io/pzrbm/?view_only=7fb7ac8bcd49443db2a9ae76e17fc281
And here you can download the GJP4 report for that particular cohort. https://gallery.mailchimp.com/a968cb2b065622a3e1fd1e85a/files/GJP_CE_IARPA_Report.pdf
Here is the powerpoint training material for that experimental cohort: : http://learnmoore.org/mooredata/QES1/CEtraining.pptx
Folks, please search through your old emails and if you find any more leads, I'll post the links here. I'm just reluctant to discuss anything that might violate someone's privacy, and don't want to jump to any conclusions that turn out to be unfounded.
What I can say, though, is that I keep on being amazed as I discover more and more different experiments from GJP4. How amazing if eventually I can piece together the whole picture. Alternatively, perhaps they eventually will report on an overview of the the entire project, as the Scicast Predict folks did several months ago.
@cmeinel: I am not sure what is motivating your autopsy of GJP, but I very much appreciate your sharing your findings. I have never seen the material you have provided to us. Very interesting.
@redacted The secret of research: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNC-aj76zI4
Update: delivery "in the nearest time". Meaning?
Russia to deliver S-300 missile systems to Iran in nearest time: RIA - Reuters
https://apple.news/APeEq4wXPTE2eoifEXwbBSQ
It means we'll always have S-300.
https://youtu.be/93WuCPokDr0
@ravel Could S-300s for Iran be like gallium arsenide: beginning in the 1960s, it's been the semiconductor of the future -- and always will be. http://www.futurity.org/gallium-arsenide-solar-cells-885992/
@cmeinel, LOL "of the future ... always will be" ... took me a minute to get it! I was trying to solve the problem of high cost versus benefit of superior material at prohibitive cost and came up with idea to layer atom thick layers of gallium arsenide with the cutting edge discoveries re. graphene to gain the properties of both at a fraction of the material involved, bordering on the quantum level for properties, electricity generating properties and many other applications (i.e. Bob Bigelow's inflatable space station modules, if incorporating this as an external layer would gain the strength of graphene, greater than steel, and the photoelectric properties from gallium arsenide circuitry). also clothing woven from such fibres would be a giant step forward in chargeable apparel, perhaps a power source for pacemakers, and if adapted to convert the 8 Hz Schumann resonance of both planet Earth and the human heart, a transformer of electric current into other useful energies in a reverse direction. But, you weren't asking me to do that, you were going for the forever future point which went right over my head. Now I need to patent all these ideas before I lose this thread of thought.
https://www.seas.harvard.edu/news/2016/02/metal-that-behaves-like-water
@000 I love Paris in the Springtime!
https://youtu.be/fVPTtb9ov5s
@ravel nice, I will add to my music collection. I have been branched off on Sophie Hunger, accidental discovery: https://youtu.be/AyUp1rnv7rY, also no doubt a favorite of our Swiss sponsors.
Regarding the tech stuff, now that we have gravity waves, I've been waiting for a portable gravity generator for spaceships so we can have nice big flat spaceships that look like frigates, like in this Canadian sci-fi show that I binge-watched last month: https://youtu.be/1TqwBlTQfTg