Anonymous ID: e5ff7b April 12, 2018, 4:19 p.m. No.1017416   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1017127

 

Here is an intro to social network analysis

 

http:// www.orgnet.com/sna.html

 

Betweenness Centrality

While Diane has many direct ties, Heather has few direct connections -- fewer than the average in the network. Yet, in may ways, she has one of the best locations in the network -- she is between two important constituencies. She plays a 'broker' role in the network. The good news is that she plays a powerful role in the network

 

And here is an article about how...

Graph Algorithms: Make Election Data Great Again

 

https:// dzone.com/articles/graph-algorithms-make-election-data-great-again

Anonymous ID: e5ff7b April 12, 2018, 4:23 p.m. No.1017455   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7608

>>1017313

 

Remember what Q said about big pharma? They want to keep people sick so they can sell them drugs their whole life long. And there are tons of foundations and groups mucking around with healthcare things that are doing the opposite of what they claim.

 

This particular group is nothing. Without connections and a map and some evidence of criminal behavior, we have nothing. This may or may not be a starting point. The only way to know is to dig.

Anonymous ID: e5ff7b April 12, 2018, 4:30 p.m. No.1017526   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7623

>>1017451

 

This is just a respected foundation that supports the development of OPEN SOURCE software. The SecureDrop tool that was created by the CIA to ID whistleblowers was making use of Apache's name to make it seem that they were the same kind of GOOD, quality, OPEN stuff that Apache produces.

 

But in fact, Securedrop was using a Belgian consulting firm at apache.be to trick people into thinking they were open. In fact, SecurDrop is closed software, not to mention it can get people killed.

 

ASF is the good guys. This is the way we want things to be in the future, OPEN and UNVEILED.

 

No doubt the clowns have tried to infiltrate ASF but since the ASF is only a loose corporate umbrella to support otherwise independent groups of software developers, I don't see how they would get any leverage out of this.

 

Nothing really to dig here unless you are a skilled software developer, because you won't understand most of this stuff. Talk to anyone who uses Java at work and they will be able to explain ASF.

Anonymous ID: e5ff7b April 12, 2018, 5 p.m. No.1017859   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7994

>>1017767

 

Yes, the so-called quakes are suspicious. Sound more like bombs of some sort, maybe MOAB or maybe a rod from God.

 

Rods from God are hypothesized to be telephone pole sized solid chunks of tungsten. But we don't know that. And some people have run the numbers and think that much smaller chunks can do damage to. Given that the space jockeys in the X-37b can move around wherever they want up there, we may actually be dropping smaller ones on cabal hideouts including submarine bases.

 

Why the 4chan pages about the Illuminati's Luciferian religion?

Anonymous ID: e5ff7b April 12, 2018, 5:04 p.m. No.1017896   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8048 >>8106

>>1017523

 

This is a silly theory. This is not how major web applications work. They never go down. Code changes are deployed to groups of servers, which may go down, but that is invisible because the front ends distribute the work to the servers that are working. As each group gets the new software it reports back to the system monitoring everything and when all servers are updated, the monitoring system sends a signal to use the new software features. In most large web applications, this happens minimum once per day, and in some it happens several times a day.