As Harold Edwards says in "A Normal Form for Elliptic Curves":
Elliptic curves and elliptic functions have been studied ever since Euler’s time, and that study has often been intense, as it is now.
The intensity is not just a function of new developments in computer algebra, but also a consequence of time constraints. We are not only spending time studying time, but also find ourselves in a race /against time/. Fortunately editors at OEIS are working around the clock and around the world. We are happy to report approval of the aforementioned records: A308835, A308836, and A308837, and then to continue on with the next phase of the plan: https://oeis.org/draft/A309008
https://oeis.org/A309008/a309008.png (okay, and with one additional hint)
Sorry if you do not find this fun--sometimes the stress of it all also bothers me, even to the point of psychological breakdown--but if you just have a good scientific attitude, maybe it is possible to survive this crazy world. Unfortunately, sometime yesterday a new and mysterious mission timer was released from Japan, under a QR-code: https://0x0.st/zL-u.txt ( Hint: ArrayPlot[ ToExpression[Map[StringSplit[#, ""] &, StringSplit[Import["https://0x0.st/zL-u.txt"], "\n"]]]] ) I can't say for sure what will follow these events, which are imminent to transpire, but assume the worst. The countdown is already nearing launch time minus thirteen hundred hours. Take all precautions! Seek shelter if necessary! --Brad