OK, dear Terry there were very harming outer circumstances
bad strategy, communication, sins, bad luck. However what really made the
trouble (trouble = is a problem you cannot solve)- weakness, unreliabily
ephemerity of excess heat, Incurable in the cradle cell)

Thank you for remembering Chris Tinsley, he was a good frioend we have
traveled together to Kishinev, Moldova to inventor Yuri Potapov.
Chris, Gene and Jed formed one of the fisrt nuclei of CF Resistence and
promotion. Chris has brought Arthur C. Clarke to help CF.
He was wise and nice.
Quote: "Cold fusion is to hot fusion what biochemistry is to chemistry"
He died so young!
Peter

On Wed, Sep 24, 2014 at 1:30 AM, Terry Blanton <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Tue, Sep 23, 2014 at 4:22 AM, Peter Gluck <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > Dear Terry,
> >
> > can you explain how was this possible:
> > "The whole bloody fiasco probably set back CF 30 years".
> >
> > As you probably know (I hope you are reading my Blog, I hope) i
> > have an alternative explanation- the first discovered variant of
> > LENR is not viable and we have to investigate better variants
> >
> > If you don't like the idea just forget iy.
> >
> > Peter
>
> The ensuing feeding frenzy halted the very investigation of which you
> speak.  Dr. Storms said it best in the next paragraph of the article I
> referenced:
>
> "These excuses weren't well received. "Conventional science requires
> you to play by certain rules," comments cold fusionist Edmund Storms.
> "First, thou shalt not announce thy results via a press conference.
> Second, thou shalt not exaggerate the results. Third, thou shalt tell
> other scientists precisely what thou did. They broke all of those
> rules.""
>
> <end quote>
>
> As flawed as our present method of scientific verification is, the
> actions by the university ensured that true verification could not
> happen.  Everyone with a piece of Pd and some heavy water on hand
> threw together a test cell.  The initial reports of a false positive
> by my own alma mater are a perfect example of the sloppy science
> resulting from using the public media to make a monumental
> announcement.
>
>
> http://www.nytimes.com/1989/04/14/us/georgia-tech-team-reports-flaw-in-critical-experiment-on-fusion.html
>
> The thrill and following disenchantment devastated me personally.  It
> was not until a brilliant and kind gentleman by the name of Chris
> Tinsley responded to a comment I made as a forum manager on CompuServe
> (the nascent internet), questioning my dismissal of CF that I opened
> my mind again.  "Are you sure they were wrong?  Why not find out for
> yourself by joining Vortex-l?"
>
> Who knows.  Had greed not caused disclosure through the press and F&P
> followed the normal scientific process of silent verification, where
> might we be today?  We know what happened; but, who is to say what
> might have happened if those two electrochemists had a few nuclear
> physicists to back them?  Or anyone other themselves?
>
> In my opinion, we would be better off today.
>
> But, maybe not.
>
>
>
> >
> > On Tue, Sep 23, 2014 at 3:23 AM, Terry Blanton <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >>
> >> On Mon, Sep 22, 2014 at 8:10 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>
> >> wrote:
> >> > [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> >
> >> >> Was he instrumental in releasing F&P finding to the Press?
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > In the chapter I uploaded, he said no:
> >> >
> >> > "Fleischmann reportedly said (for reasons never clear) that the
> >> > University
> >> > of Utah had required the two investigators to go public when they did.
> >> > When
> >> > I subsequently asked for clarification from the relevant university
> >> > office,
> >> > people there clearly stated that their policy was to honor all faculty
> >> > requests with respect to publication and announcement, not initiate
> >> > them."
> >>
> >>
> >> It meant a lot to the university to be the first to announce.  From:
> >>
> >> http://archive.wired.com/wired/archive/6.11/coldfusion_pr.html
> >>
> >> "In their defense, Pons and Fleischmann explained that they couldn't
> >> reveal all the details because the University of Utah's patent had not
> >> yet been approved. They admitted that the press conference had been
> >> premature, but claimed the University had urged them to go public when
> >> another scientist - a physicist named Steve Jones - turned out to be
> >> pursuing similar work."
> >>
> >> Jones later became one of F&P's greatest antagonists.  The whole
> >> bloody fiasco probably set back CF 30 years.
> >>
> >> Sour grapes indeed.
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Dr. Peter Gluck
> > Cluj, Romania
> > http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
>
>


-- 
Dr. Peter Gluck
Cluj, Romania
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com

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