https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randonautica
The app takes you to places in your own area that you wouldn't normally go to and some disturbing findings have occurred as a result of people following its directions. You are supposed to think of a general subject when you run the app and the findings seem to relate. As usual, I am skeptical of people's conclusions but I am intrigued because of my own experiments with the number 23 and how creepy the results start to become.
QUOTE: "Randonautica is said to generate three types of coordinates: an attractor, a void, and an anomaly. An attractor is a coordinate with the highest, "most significant" concentration of quantum dots, which could possibly inspire and uplift the users; a void is the antonym of it; and an anomaly can be described as both an attractor and a void.[3] It is inspired by the chaos theory and Guy Debord's Theory of the Derive.[1] The quantum data is powered by the Australian National University."
(This post was last modified: 2020-08-22, 10:19 PM by Brian.)
The app takes you to places in your own area that you wouldn't normally go to and some disturbing findings have occurred as a result of people following its directions. You are supposed to think of a general subject when you run the app and the findings seem to relate. As usual, I am skeptical of people's conclusions but I am intrigued because of my own experiments with the number 23 and how creepy the results start to become.
QUOTE: "Randonautica is said to generate three types of coordinates: an attractor, a void, and an anomaly. An attractor is a coordinate with the highest, "most significant" concentration of quantum dots, which could possibly inspire and uplift the users; a void is the antonym of it; and an anomaly can be described as both an attractor and a void.[3] It is inspired by the chaos theory and Guy Debord's Theory of the Derive.[1] The quantum data is powered by the Australian National University."