Im keeping up but im 4 pages behind checking something that caught my interest.

Jorki that vid series needs a whole new thread solely for that as its (edit: the sources I mean) all over the place and will get lost here and its awesome!

Just to add confusion Im sure Drew said it abut the 'Remember Salome' thread, he was surprised it hadnt been solved earlier, he said that before it was solved.
 
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Source: https://www.twitch.tv/videos/85666548


17m in but main bit is at 18m 00s to 18m30s

Its another telling of the DB 'Its in the game' but a slightly different version to the other 3 we have on P1 with slightly different context. Edit also places it at the pre-launch or launch party meaning the very first version...

Edit edit: same vi. 22 mins an on - DW says DB alluded to lots of things in or around the bubble to be discovered. Talked about Gen ships implying none or not many of those found at the time so its way before people found a lot of stuff if DB did say that he hasnt said it recently unless anyone can source it? This vid is 4 years old.
 
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Too late!
😉
Nooooooooo!!!!

I can’t believe no one warned you that a major theme du jour on DD is looking up old videos and either:

- using them to jump to ridiculous conclusions about what’s going to / should be in Odyssey

And/or

- using them as a grounds for cries of ‘broken promises

(Occasionally they’re cited for more sensible reasons too like pointing out the nature of the long term pipeline, but I fear the more salty used are in the ascendancy! 😀)

😉
 
Without going into too much detail to protect a confidential source but does this picture mean anything to anybody


14°555
I've found looking at the audio for to long, people, myself included would project a bit of themselves on the sound and spectrogram. If there isn't clearly something unusual about it I'd move on. You point out a better example of clearly something interesting in your video about Colonia and the LS Signal in the audio in Jacques station. If it is is a curious audio, catalog it, remain mindful of it but keep looking, and you may find something that makes it clearer, but that will never happen hyper focusing on only one method or sample.
 
Nooooooooo!!!!

I can’t believe no one warned you that a major theme du jour on DD is looking up old videos and either:

- using them to jump to ridiculous conclusions about what’s going to / should be in Odyssey

And/or

- using them as a grounds for cries of ‘broken promises

(Occasionally they’re cited for more sensible reasons too like pointing out the nature of the long term pipeline, but I fear the more salty used are in the ascendancy! 😀)

😉

Ah, I’m not a big forum user, didn’t know. Perhaps a friendly Moderator could move it?

Edit: moved to Lore & Roleplay!
 
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from p927

26 AURIGAE D is also a bit weird as the icy planets don't show up when you scan the system using the field spectral analysis to discover them (I'm guessing because they are tiny by the looks of it, looked like empty targets until I got very close when flying to them).

Just checked and they showed up as normal for me in FSS. Must have been a bug or something, I had no issue whatsoever. Now off to check the most obvious system in the galaxy for Raxxla.
 
Probably the wrong place to ask but does anyone know whatever happened to DJTruthsayer's theory? Ive heard it mentioned on 2 or 3 vids including the one above but never seen the one where he tests it? Anyone happen to have it in their favs?
 
No, not yet anyway in the vids Ive seen, he had the usual theory. Triple Elite and in the bubble but thats all I have so far plus his interpretation that it needed 3 things to get the solution: Knowledge of the Lore, the devs / Brookes & something else, its in the vid above but I cannot recall. He said when he got triple Elite he would go and the LS audience could join him but these vids are 4 years old and dunno when or if he ever did it.... I may have to start trawling vids again.

I'm curious as to what happened and where it was, what his theory actually was.
 
When I posted my list of FDev reference source vids plus notes the other day the forum software expanded the urls to show the start of the video, which then seems to really slow down the page update and makes it a little buggy. Is there a way to stop that expansion happening?

Edit: mmm, taken advice on this. Only way seems to be to remove the ”https://” from the start of each url, so have done so. The remaining part if each link still seems to work if pasted into Safari browser “paste & search” so guess it will be the same for others.

Edit2: removed the prefixes and updated the post. The forum software allows the remainder of the url to be clicked and opens up the source video, fantastic!!
 
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Princess Astrophel and the Spiralling Stars

After reading Sir Philip Sydney's Arcadia in the Garden of an old English manor house....

I

A star in the silence that follows
The song of the death of the sun
Speaks music in heaven, and the hollows
And heights of the world are as one;
One lyre that outsings and outlightens
The rapture of sunset, and thrills
Mute night till the sense of it brightens
The soul that it fills.

The flowers of the sun that is sunken
Hang heavy of heart as of head;
The bees that have eaten and drunken
The soul of their sweetness are fled;
But a sunflower of song, on whose honey
My spirit has fed as a bee,
Makes sunnier than morning was sunny
The twilight for me.

The letters and lines on the pages
That sundered mine eyes and the flowers
Wax faint as the shadows of ages
That sunder their season and ours;
As the ghosts of the centuries that sever
A season of colourless time
From the days whose remembrance is ever,
As they were, sublime.

The season that bred and that cherished
The soul that I commune with yet,
Had it utterly withered and perished
To rise not again as it set,
Shame were it that Englishmen living
Should read as their forefathers read
The books of the praise and thanksgiving
Of Englishmen dead.

O light of the land that adored thee
And kindled thy soul with her breath,
Whose life, such as fate would afford thee,
Was lovelier than aught but thy death,
By what name, could thy lovers but know it,
Might love of thee hail thee afar,
Philisides, Astrophel, poet
Whose love was thy star?

A star in the moondawn of Maytime,
A star in the cloudland of change;
Too splendid and sad for the daytime
To cheer or eclipse or estrange;
Too sweet for tradition or vision
To see but through shadows of tears
Rise deathless across the division
Of measureless years.

The twilight may deepen and harden
As nightward the stream of it runs
Till starshine transfigure a garden
Whose radiance responds to the sun's:
The light of the love of thee darkens
The lights that arise and that set:
The love that forgets thee not hearkens
If England forget.


II

Bright and brief in the sight of grief and love the light of thy
lifetime shone,
Seen and felt by the gifts it dealt, the grace it gave, and again
was gone:
Ay, but now it is death, not thou, whom time has conquered as years
pass on.

Ay, not yet may the land forget that bore and loved thee and
praised and wept,
Sidney, lord of the stainless sword, the name of names that her
heart's love kept
Fast as thine did her own, a sign to light thy life till it sank
and slept.

Bright as then for the souls of men thy brave Arcadia resounds and
shines,
Lit with love that beholds above all joys and sorrows the steadfast
signs,
Faith, a splendour that hope makes tender, and truth, whose presage
the soul divines.

All the glory that girds the story of all thy life as with sunlight
round,
All the spell that on all souls fell who saw thy spirit, and held
them bound,
Lives for all that have heard the call and cadence yet of its music
sound.

Music bright as the soul of light, for wings an eagle, for notes a
dove,
Leaps and shines from the lustrous lines wherethrough thy soul from
afar above
Shone and sang till the darkness rang with light whose fire is the
fount of love.

Love that led thee alive, and fed thy soul with sorrows and joys
and fears,
Love that sped thee, alive and dead, to fame's fair goal with thy
peerless peers,
Feeds the flame of thy quenchless name with light that lightens the
rayless years.

Dark as sorrow though night and morrow may lower with presage of
clouded fame,
How may she that of old bare thee, may Sidney's England, be brought
to shame?
How should this be, while England is? What need of answer beyond
thy name?


III

From the love that transfigures thy glory,
From the light of the dawn of thy death,
The life of thy song and thy story
Took subtler and fierier breath.
And we, though the day and the morrow
Set fear and thanksgiving at strife,
Hail yet in the star of thy sorrow
The sun of thy life.

Shame and fear may beset men here, and bid thanksgiving and pride
be dumb:
Faith, discrowned of her praise, and wound about with toils till
her life wax numb,
Scarce may see if the sundawn be, if darkness die not and dayrise
come.

But England, enmeshed and benetted
With spiritless villainies round,
With counsels of cowardice fretted,
With trammels of treason enwound,
Is yet, though the season be other
Than wept and rejoiced over thee,
Thine England, thy lover, thy mother,
Sublime as the sea.

Hers wast thou: if her face be now less bright, or seem for an hour
less brave,
Let but thine on her darkness shine, thy saviour spirit revive and
save,
Time shall see, as the shadows flee, her shame entombed in a
shameful grave.

If death and not life were the portal
That opens on life at the last,
If the spirit of Sidney were mortal
And the past of it utterly past,
Fear stronger than honour was ever,
Forgetfulness mightier than fame,
Faith knows not if England should never
Subside into shame.

Yea, but yet is thy sun not set, thy sunbright spirit of trust
withdrawn:
England's love of thee burns above all hopes that darken or fears
that fawn:
Hers thou art: and the faithful heart that hopes begets upon
darkness dawn.

The sunset that sunrise will follow
Is less than the dream of a dream:
The starshine on height and on hollow
Sheds promise that dawn shall redeem:
The night, if the daytime would hide it,
Shows lovelier, aflame and afar,
Thy soul and thy Stella's beside it,
A star by a star.


Just a thought... :)
 
Nah, I’m sure the quote was DB, not DW. There was a lot of debate on what it pertained to at the time. If it was DW we would have pretty much known it pertained to the FR mystery, and it would have been a FR mystery thread thing, but as I recall it, the discussion was on one of the Canonn megathreads. I’m also fairly sure it was reasonably close to the trailer that featured what we now think was a Thargoid Structure.

That would fit as it could actually have been the Thargoid Stuctures that we’re being referred to as they were apparently in game prior to the update where the listening points and installations which lead to their discovery got added to the Pleiades.

(If the forum search didn’t miss out large periods of time, I’d track it back that way! 😀)

Might be worth a search through the old Canonn threads for any utterances by FDev & DB in particular, though at the moment I don’t recall anything. Was it in a Canonn thread, or was it in a livestream discussed in a Canonn thread? Don’t recall DB directly commenting much in any of the threads, it was always MB with cryptic comments (bless him) 🙂
 
Princess Astrophel and the Spiralling Stars

After reading Sir Philip Sydney's Arcadia in the Garden of an old English manor house....

I

A star in the silence that follows
The song of the death of the sun
Speaks music in heaven, and the hollows
And heights of the world are as one;
One lyre that outsings and outlightens
The rapture of sunset, and thrills
Mute night till the sense of it brightens
The soul that it fills.

The flowers of the sun that is sunken
Hang heavy of heart as of head;
The bees that have eaten and drunken
The soul of their sweetness are fled;
But a sunflower of song, on whose honey
My spirit has fed as a bee,
Makes sunnier than morning was sunny
The twilight for me.

The letters and lines on the pages
That sundered mine eyes and the flowers
Wax faint as the shadows of ages
That sunder their season and ours;
As the ghosts of the centuries that sever
A season of colourless time
From the days whose remembrance is ever,
As they were, sublime.

The season that bred and that cherished
The soul that I commune with yet,
Had it utterly withered and perished
To rise not again as it set,
Shame were it that Englishmen living
Should read as their forefathers read
The books of the praise and thanksgiving
Of Englishmen dead.

O light of the land that adored thee
And kindled thy soul with her breath,
Whose life, such as fate would afford thee,
Was lovelier than aught but thy death,
By what name, could thy lovers but know it,
Might love of thee hail thee afar,
Philisides, Astrophel, poet
Whose love was thy star?

A star in the moondawn of Maytime,
A star in the cloudland of change;
Too splendid and sad for the daytime
To cheer or eclipse or estrange;
Too sweet for tradition or vision
To see but through shadows of tears
Rise deathless across the division
Of measureless years.

The twilight may deepen and harden
As nightward the stream of it runs
Till starshine transfigure a garden
Whose radiance responds to the sun's:
The light of the love of thee darkens
The lights that arise and that set:
The love that forgets thee not hearkens
If England forget.


II

Bright and brief in the sight of grief and love the light of thy
lifetime shone,
Seen and felt by the gifts it dealt, the grace it gave, and again
was gone:
Ay, but now it is death, not thou, whom time has conquered as years
pass on.

Ay, not yet may the land forget that bore and loved thee and
praised and wept,
Sidney, lord of the stainless sword, the name of names that her
heart's love kept
Fast as thine did her own, a sign to light thy life till it sank
and slept.

Bright as then for the souls of men thy brave Arcadia resounds and
shines,
Lit with love that beholds above all joys and sorrows the steadfast
signs,
Faith, a splendour that hope makes tender, and truth, whose presage
the soul divines.

All the glory that girds the story of all thy life as with sunlight
round,
All the spell that on all souls fell who saw thy spirit, and held
them bound,
Lives for all that have heard the call and cadence yet of its music
sound.

Music bright as the soul of light, for wings an eagle, for notes a
dove,
Leaps and shines from the lustrous lines wherethrough thy soul from
afar above
Shone and sang till the darkness rang with light whose fire is the
fount of love.

Love that led thee alive, and fed thy soul with sorrows and joys
and fears,
Love that sped thee, alive and dead, to fame's fair goal with thy
peerless peers,
Feeds the flame of thy quenchless name with light that lightens the
rayless years.

Dark as sorrow though night and morrow may lower with presage of
clouded fame,
How may she that of old bare thee, may Sidney's England, be brought
to shame?
How should this be, while England is? What need of answer beyond
thy name?


III

From the love that transfigures thy glory,
From the light of the dawn of thy death,
The life of thy song and thy story
Took subtler and fierier breath.
And we, though the day and the morrow
Set fear and thanksgiving at strife,
Hail yet in the star of thy sorrow
The sun of thy life.

Shame and fear may beset men here, and bid thanksgiving and pride
be dumb:
Faith, discrowned of her praise, and wound about with toils till
her life wax numb,
Scarce may see if the sundawn be, if darkness die not and dayrise
come.

But England, enmeshed and benetted
With spiritless villainies round,
With counsels of cowardice fretted,
With trammels of treason enwound,
Is yet, though the season be other
Than wept and rejoiced over thee,
Thine England, thy lover, thy mother,
Sublime as the sea.

Hers wast thou: if her face be now less bright, or seem for an hour
less brave,
Let but thine on her darkness shine, thy saviour spirit revive and
save,
Time shall see, as the shadows flee, her shame entombed in a
shameful grave.

If death and not life were the portal
That opens on life at the last,
If the spirit of Sidney were mortal
And the past of it utterly past,
Fear stronger than honour was ever,
Forgetfulness mightier than fame,
Faith knows not if England should never
Subside into shame.

Yea, but yet is thy sun not set, thy sunbright spirit of trust
withdrawn:
England's love of thee burns above all hopes that darken or fears
that fawn:
Hers thou art: and the faithful heart that hopes begets upon
darkness dawn.

The sunset that sunrise will follow
Is less than the dream of a dream:
The starshine on height and on hollow
Sheds promise that dawn shall redeem:
The night, if the daytime would hide it,
Shows lovelier, aflame and afar,
Thy soul and thy Stella's beside it,
A star by a star.

Just a thought... :)

This poem is from the collection Astrophel and Other Poems, Book I of The Collected Poetical Works of Algernon Charles Swinburne, Vol. VI. 1894
 
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