>>15540 LB multiple posts
Checked qresear.ch archives for "Black Forest"
"Black Forest" isn't a place. It's a thing.
https://onehope2016.wordpress.com/2018/01/28/q-anon-66-who-are-dopey-and-black-forest/
Q: BLACK FOREST = Test of Mars-bound instruments in the Black Forest
Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-03-mars-bound-instruments-black-forest.html#jCp
March 30, 2017, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Q: Dopey = SNOW WHITE (who has 7 dwarf planets of the PLEIADES=ELITE secret STAR MAP-thehiddenrecords.com)
Q: Think mirror. Look there, or [here], or there, truth is behind you.
Q: Distress cal[L]s to others will [d]o you/family no good at this stage. We know whe[R]e you/the family are at all times and can hear you breathing.
Note “LdR” in brackets.
LDR= The Large Deployable Reflector (LDR)- NASA SPACE FIR (Far Infrared) observatory a 20-m-primary two-stage four-mirror orbiting sub-mm/FIR astronomical observatory.
https://www2.cisl.ucar.edu/supercomputer/blackforest
"A $6.2 million IBM SP RS/6000 named blackforest was delivered to NCAR on August 11, 1999. Use of the computer was equally divided between NCAR's community users and the Climate Simulation Laboratory.
The SP was initially made up of eight tall black boxes — a virtual "black forest" of computers. Following a tradition of naming NCAR computers after Colorado landmarks, its name also refered to the forested area along the Palmer Divide between Colorado Springs and Denver, which includes the town of Black Forest."
https://www.itworldcanada.com/article/ibm-building-first-self-aware-supercomputer/33199
"Capable of predicting atmospheric climate changes, heating oil prices, and global warming, Blue Sky will be equipped with IBM’s eLiza technology by the end of next year. The goal of IBM’s eLiza program is to give a computer the ability to repair itself, and keep itself running without human intervention.
The first stage of Blue Sky’s assembly at NCAR, code-named “Black Forest,” will line up over 300 IBM SP Supercomputers to deliver computing power equal to 2 trillion calculations per second, according to Peter Ungaro, the vice-president of high performance computing at IBM."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRISM_%28surveillance_program%29