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Kind of funny they say they're making the data public... 61,000 raw keck observations should be... ~600 GB?

I kind of wonder if they were forced. Most proprietary observations with Keck or Hubble or whatever come with a little caveat that you only get the data for 1 or 2 years before it get's publicized. I'm guessing that running their code on their released data set _after_ they've published is gonna come up with a big fat nothing new. But maybe mixing with dupe detections from RAVE / LAMOST / SDSS / APOGEE (massive spectroscopic surveys free to the public after proprietary times) and running their code might turn up one... highly doubtful though.

Anyways, there's loads of huge data sets out there that are free. TGAS-Gaia was free to the public as soon as it was made free to the community, so that's where all the big boys are playing right now (The _really_ big fish are fighting it out with the Gaia-raw, minus the tycho supplement that makes TGAS). This summer Gaia2 is coming out to the public the same time as the community again -- people are already setting up war rooms around the world to hack out papers in week long sprints the day after release.

If you're super into planets for some reason, Kepler's been free for years. Google "NASA Mast" for all Nasa data. Google "Vizier CDS" for any European catalog. Gaia has light curves I guess, but it's not good enough yet, I'm pretty sure) If there's a specific telescope you like... like CFHT for example, just google it and they got free data.


I always find this kinda shit happening, something amazing happens like drones, people get desensitised to how actually incredible it is, and soon enough everyone's complaining about it.

Like can you just step back for a second? This is actually a dataset of 16000 stars. Free. For anyone to look at. Stars. I can't understand what your problem is.


So basically if the average person wants to try to discover something, they're going to have to use the Gaia-raw or soon-to-be-released Gaia2 datasets? Do these teams use any sort of deep learning to work on the data?


Of all the things the world has to offer to be cynical about... this is your beef.


Behind the cynicism seems to be useful information. While negative attitudes are not helpful, they can often motivate people to speak up about things that normally would not be widely known. For instance, the gist of what this person is saying is that the released information probably has already been combed over. And that if you want to spend your time actually looking for something, there are better sets out there. But also be prepared to get behind entire teams doing the same thing. Not that you wouldn't find anything, but otherwise you get the impression that there's only a handful of researchers looking through this stuff. Therefore, I actually found the comment useful.


Did she really mis-spell Hitler's name?

Also, I highly suggest everyone making the Hitler comparison actually read the definitive work "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany," so we can perhaps have some more intelligent comparisons than: "You know who else used repetition? Hitler."

Every article I read seems to have become a fun little exercise in "How can I put both Trump and Hitler into this seemingly innocuous article about cognitive fusion?"

It's obnoxious and old. If you want to actually do a Trump-Hitler comparison, read a book on the topic and write an actual paper about it instead of just flinging it out willy-nilly so you can fear-monger your readership into believing that actual dystopian eugeno-fascism is just on the horizon.


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