This file is retained as a verified subject index, not as a final technical table.
The working record confirms that Kidd and McKenna both observed a repeatable relationship between certain cereal-era audio, shape/color sequences, and local carrier behavior. The exact mechanism remains under review pending comparison against additional cereal-physics documents and box-era samples.
1. The discovery belongs to the early Birmingham signal period.
The archive should not present later terminology, later taxonomies, or complete device theory before the receiver encounters them in the manuscript.
2. The file must agree with the canonical charm sequence.
No final claim should be made here until the uploaded cereal-physics documents are compared. Working notes are not doctrine.
3. The file feeds later field devices.
The LOOSH Interference Device uses the safe, post-reconciliation version of the pattern. This file is the first breadcrumb, not the finished map.
McKenna says the historical record matters because someone hid protection inside popular nonsense. I say the measurements matter because nonsense does not move a spectrum analyzer. Diminuto says both of us are irritating and should stop leaving cereal dust near the equipment. All three statements are true. // S.K.
Awaiting: original commercial logs, box-era comparison sheets, charm-sequence tables, field repeatability notes, and Diminuto's review marks.
Do not treat any partial cereal-pattern note as field doctrine until this hold is cleared.
THE CEREAL CARRIER // HOLD FILE // DO NOT REPRODUCE TABLES FROM MEMORY
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