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10 sats \ 7 replies \ @Undergotten OP 25 Feb \ on: More Radar Effects on Clouds, discussion science
Well, this turned out all wrong. Can someone point me to the instructions on how to create a post here? My attempts to search for that keep coming up with a github page that has a bunch of stuff that doesn't work. Going to upload photos to "post images" from now on, as I suspect that is part of the problem. I'm sure this is stickied somewhere and I'm just an idiot, so apologies in advance for not catching it.
You started your paragraphs with multiple blanks, triggering the code block formatting. Start paragraphs without those.
Before posting, you can click the preview tab (on the right of write) to see how it will look.
The link would have been fine, if it were not for the code block formatting.
I think it's fine to post images directly.
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Oh! So how can I indent paragraphs without spaces or tabs?
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Here's a markdown guide. The main problem appears to be your paragraph indents.
This is how I think you want it.
I'm an amateur radio enthusiast from back in the day, so this topic has been captivating me for months now, ever since someone pointed me to geoengineeringwatch.org from here. I highly recommend all you Stackers go check out the section on [Patents](https://geoengineeringwatch.org/links-to-geoengineering-patents/). It's awesome. Anyhow, to the discussion.
This is one of the first striking images I took with QGis:
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Look at the arches evident in the satellite *and* the radar images! They all line up perfectly, even the "anomalies". This, if you have ever played with radio, looks like an antenna array. You can see different nodes in the array transmit/receive at different wattage over the time lapse, represented as base reflectivity.
These next images were taken on 02-10-25, from around 7:00am-noon, est. Please direct your attention to the top right hand corner of the images, where radar "echos" are visible coming from the base located in New York, and reaching as far north as Maine. Notice the V shape of the radio wave as the sun rises. See anything similar happening in the clouds? The radio wave is clearly visible in the satellite image of the cloud cover! It remains for the whole morning, and begins to blow away in the final image/s.
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This happens often, and not just in that area. Radar is not supposed to do that, and I'd welcome any explanation of what is going on there, if it isn't weather control. [NOAA's explanations of such anomalies are laughable](https://x.com/Undergotten/status/1894046440399241548), and sound more like damage control for a political party than scientific research.
@Koob I realize now that I probably shouldn't be uploading these images directly, and I will start using another site to send images from now on. I need to learn more about how to craft a good post, here. I'd like to continue with these radar analysis posts as I learn more. I am posting links incorrectly, as well, it seems.
Which produces:
I'm an amateur radio enthusiast from back in the day, so this topic has been captivating me for months now, ever since someone pointed me to geoengineeringwatch.org from here. I highly recommend all you Stackers go check out the section on Patents. It's awesome. Anyhow, to the discussion.
This is one of the first striking images I took with QGis:
Look at the arches evident in the satellite and the radar images! They all line up perfectly, even the "anomalies". This, if you have ever played with radio, looks like an antenna array. You can see different nodes in the array transmit/receive at different wattage over the time lapse, represented as base reflectivity.
These next images were taken on 02-10-25, from around 7:00am-noon, est. Please direct your attention to the top right hand corner of the images, where radar "echos" are visible coming from the base located in New York, and reaching as far north as Maine. Notice the V shape of the radio wave as the sun rises. See anything similar happening in the clouds? The radio wave is clearly visible in the satellite image of the cloud cover! It remains for the whole morning, and begins to blow away in the final image/s.
This happens often, and not just in that area. Radar is not supposed to do that, and I'd welcome any explanation of what is going on there, if it isn't weather control. NOAA's explanations of such anomalies are laughable, and sound more like damage control for a political party than scientific research.
@Koob I realize now that I probably shouldn't be uploading these images directly, and I will start using another site to send images from now on. I need to learn more about how to craft a good post, here. I'd like to continue with these radar analysis posts as I learn more. I am posting links incorrectly, as well, it seems.
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You're the man! That's what I was looking for. I'll get it right on the next one.
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If you must, I guess you could copy-paste a couple of non-breaking space unicode characters, like from here.
You can check others' posts by clicking the ... right of the posters name, and then select quote reply. So if you see some interesting formatting you want to learn, you could use that.
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Man, I'm glad I asked that question here. Came to the right place.
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