We're starting to see some rather broad unique ways of successful remote viewing. I want to touch on 4 variations. But I don't really want to use names like "SRV CRV" or so on. This is just formats and what they look like.
First I want to name has examples like "Cowboy RV" or what you'll see done by Dave2 at Uncontrolled Remote Viewing. The Viewer stands, blindfolded, moving around and moving frames like they would on a computer touch-screen. I think Yeme really does well in this niche and ought to explore it more.
Second there's the regular paper sessions like you see in the old CRV and SRV adaptations. This is sitting in a calm quiet room with minimal distractions, meditating, than using lots of blank paper and markers. Having a structured set of writing actions like ideograms, matrices, low level descriptions based on a strict set of language, then followed by natural elaboration. After the paper session you can present it on a whiteboard or "light board" etc.
Third there's more along the lines of Birdie's Transdimensional Mapping. You're basically starting to do an art project out of your viewing. Many colours, felts, and AOLs are something to "open up" rather than lay aside. Good to keep an audio-video recording and biofeedback as you go.
Then there's group RV, which I'm seeing a little more of now. People join on zoom or in person and basically feed each other information. This may often be just sitting and talking, recording as they talk. Possibly blindfolded. Participants might sketch as they go, but the focus is on keeping the audio going.
Anyhow, a lot of these seem to be getting quite successful and there doesn't seem to be one single type that so far takes dominance as the best method. Farsight is a bit ahead of the game, but they had an alien boost as it were. Probably was paper sessions just because this was an easy way to record when videography was complicated and expensive. This would probably be the way to go again if we lost technology and went back to low tech society. I start to wonder if this was some of the written stuff that was burned so obsessively like the Library of Alexandria.
Anyhow, I encourage anyone to try any sort of method.