Hope you don't mind a new guy busting in here, I'll intro later...
I am wondering, what a Scientist's view would be of some of the things we have discussed in here, and some of our own ideas and conclusions?
I had the chance to work with "Rocket Scientists" for a long time, and was able to interact with them in the way you are describing. Interested laymen with nuts and bolts experience in the daily workings of the science eating lunch with guys in labcoats.
First of all, you have to realize that there are two types of "scientists", one is the working in the lab type, the other is the sitting around thinking type. Lab and research.
The lab guys didn't have the time in a work week to hear what we had to say. After being frustrated with them for a couple years, I finally came to the realization that they were right and I was wrong. They really don't have time to hear my ideas, they were busy implementing the researchers ideas.
The research guys didn't really have the time either, but at least there was a path to them. They had probably 30 hours a week of reading to do, journals, specifications, legal foolishness, on top of the 40 hours a week of preparation, lecturing, conferences, and thinktanking. If you wanted them to read your ideas, you had to send it through their niose filter first. nEither you had to become a Scientist yourself, and propose your idea in the journals or conferences, or you had to use the Suggestion Box... the box that led to a dark and scary place...
Administration. A special purgatory where Good Ideas are made bad and Bad Ideas are made Holy. There is (was) no chance your idea would make it to the Scientist in it's original form, even if it was recognizable, it would have someone else's name attached to it. But at least it
might get through.
Probably 1/1000 of what they got ever passed the filter. And probably with good reason. 90% had already been debunked when suggested by other hardhats. 9% was too expensive. 0.9% was already being done. 0.09 was secretly sold to industry - leaving that one in a thousand idea that made it back to the floor.
The internet is a good place with a potential to bypass administration, but again, the signal to noise ratio is too high for anyone who actually matters to wade through. Those guys are busy working. The folks who are cruising the internet at NASA aren't the ones who really need to hear the good ideas.
The filter here is probably the shareware designer. When an idea is good enough to attract someone with the skills and ambition to actually make a working product, and if that product becomes a hit, then maybe a 'quote Scientist unquote' will get a chance to see it.
Maybe not...