Hi all, I just joined this forum because I have something new to contribute. Can I interest you in the connection I discovered between Larry Warren's alien entity and Jim Penniston's binary code? Please see http://www.treurniet.ca/Ufo/RendleshamBC.htm.
Larry Warren's description of the alien he saw maps onto the image decoded from the binary code Penniston says he received when he touched the alien ship. The decoding algorithm employed was published much later in the spring of 2010 when it was itself decoded from a crop formation at Wilton Windmill in England.
Larry said in "Left at East Gate" that the entities had "large heads with cat-like black eyes". In the image shown in the above link, the head is half the figure's height, and the black eye is very prominent. The long curled tail is consistent with his impression of "cat-like". It appears that the ETs inside the craft that Jim touched gave him an image of the entities that Larry saw. If Larry is still on this forum, I would love to know if he feels a sense of recognition when he looks at the image decoded from Jim's data.
In the above article, I show that the 2010 algorithm decoded images from two crop formations appearing in 2002 and 2010, as well as from Penniston's code supposedly obtained in 1980. Note that none of the images could have been decoded until the decoding algorithm appeared in 2010, even though some of the image data was available as early as 1980 and 2002. All this strongly suggests that there was a long-term strategy at play. Whoever was responsible for providing the data, human or not, did not want the images to be decoded until 2010 at the earliest.
Penniston's data may have existed in 1980 as he claims, but perhaps it is not coincidence that he waited to reveal his binary code until after the Wilton Windmill formation was decoded. After all, it was only then that the image could be decoded. However, we know without a doubt that the data in the 2002 crop formation existed at that earlier time, so there is less reason to think that Penniston invented his data only when it could be decoded.
William