Photo 51 is a 1952 X-ray based fiber diffraction image of a paracrystalline gel composed of DNA fiber[1] taken by Raymond Gosling,[2][3] a postgraduate student working under the supervision of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin at King's College London, while working in Sir John Randall's group.[4][5][6][7][8] The image was tagged "photo 51" because it was the 51st diffraction photograph that Gosling had taken.[9] It was critical evidence[10] in identifying the structure of DNA.[11]
How hard is it to not clickbait?
It's not clickbait. I am really fine either way, whether you click or not. I just found it interesting and shared it. That's part of the joy of Wikipedia. It is nonprofit and there is no dark agenda to grab your attention. Pure information for its own sake
Clickbait has more to do with how it's presented. It doesn't need a dark agenda, just an attention grabbing headline with nothing else to go on.
It's just bad form imo, it is very easy to include the first paragraph in the post.
How hard is it to not clickbait?
It's not clickbait. I am really fine either way, whether you click or not. I just found it interesting and shared it. That's part of the joy of Wikipedia. It is nonprofit and there is no dark agenda to grab your attention. Pure information for its own sake
Clickbait has more to do with how it's presented. It doesn't need a dark agenda, just an attention grabbing headline with nothing else to go on.
It's just bad form imo, it is very easy to include the first paragraph in the post.
For real, thank you.
I guess that's what you're here for.
Thanks for the contribution.