Yes, but "watching paint dry" is ultra-exciting if the payoff is trillion$.
Gibbs appears to be happy writing Forbes filler-pieces. He should get more creative. Anyone who has CF/LENR tech that they are confident in would certainly be happy to have it showcased in Forbes. It would be Win-Win-Win. The lab would get invaluable publicity. Forbes would have a story that goes viral. Gibbs would become a star journalist. Jed Rothwell wrote: > <pagnu...@htdconnect.com> wrote: > >> >> Forbes has deep enough pockets to send Mark Gibbs, along with a >> technically sophisticated companion, to a lab claiming CF or LENR >> anomalous energy or transmutation evidence. He should publicly issue a >> challenge to CF/LENR researchers to allow him to witness and monitor >> their experiments. > > > Sure. They could visit U. Missouri, SRI or U. Osaka, for example. The > technically sophisticated companion can read their papers beforehand to > confirm he or she can understand them. They would have to call ahead to be > sure an experiment is actually in progress. Most of the time nothing is > happening. They are getting ready to do a test, or evaluating the previous > test. > > It is not all that exciting. Unless you understand calorimetry, it does > not > look like anything. As Ed Storms says, it is like watching paint dry. > > - Jed >