Anonymous ID: 6d4f22 May 25, 2022, 5:13 p.m. No.16341585   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1697 >>1872 >>2015 >>2064 >>2167 >>2239

“Events Database” Project

 

Given our political climate and the frequency of notable events happening across the world, it’s time Anons began thinking about a more accessible way to reference previous events. Today we have to go off memory and search the internet for reference articles, images, etc. But what if we had a searchable database of events, organized by category, and sorted by date?

 

Consider the power we would harness if we had instant access to topics such as “shoot shootings” listed in chronological order with summaries, key figures, etc. etc. What would it mean if we had a tool that could facilitate a search whereby anons pull down all FBI statements, again, listed in chronological order, with summaries, etc?

 

The advantages to having a searchable database of notable events are significant. For starters, we’d have a record for historical and documentation purposes. But perhaps more importantly, we would be able to extract data and manipulate them so as to identify patterns with dates, preceding events, and other “coincidences”.

 

And THAT is what’s missing today.

 

Let’s face it, anons: We are in the throes of an Information World War and our ability to search and reference data is largely dependent on sources that can’t be trusted. We don’t have an organized knowledge base of events that can be sorted, manipulated, and extracted.

 

That is why I suggest we start talking about ways we can build a database that will give us an advantage when it comes to referencing historical events and predicting our opponents next moves.

Anonymous ID: 6d4f22 May 25, 2022, 5:45 p.m. No.16341771   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2015

>>16341697

Agree on spreadsheet, but wouldn’t a public spreadsheet be a nightmare because write access is limited to one person at a time?

 

Perhaps a spreadsheet so anons can submit entries and then a read-only (but sortable, and extractable) sheet for the record?

 

I’m almost picturing a CRM but instead of a customer record, it’s an event record.