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30 of our most Recent Postings:
- Legacy Journal: Current
- Legacy Journal: Friday: Family First
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Two Step: Fire Alarm or Frozen by Fear
- Legacy Journal: Monday, the First Day of Fall
- Legacy Journal: The Sunday Sermon: Economist Moral Hazard
- Legacy Journal:Laidback Saturday
- Legacy Journal: Friday Final
- Legacy Journal: Friday Fish Wrap.
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Time for Truth Telling: 9/11, the Magazine, and the True Myth Makers.
- Legacy Journal: Wednesday Time to Weed out the Word Wars.
- Legacy Journal: Tuesday Tipoff
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Surprises
- Legacy Journal: Saturday Samplings
- Legacy Journal: Friday Fifth: Change, Cultural Divide, B&B, Google Chrome, and Arctic Drilling
- Legacy Journal: Wicked Wednesday
- Legacy Journal:Trifecta: Olympic Games, Democratic Convention, Quad State visit
- Legacy Journal: Olympic Swimming Prep
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal: B&B on the Erie Canal
- Legacy Journal: Summer Swing
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Thoughts: Twitter, Triathlons for Horses, and Obama One on Tour
- Legacy Journal: High Finance, Bad Loans, and Banking Reform
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Chatter x 3: ABC, NBC, and CBS
- Legacy Journal: Monroe County: Politics, the Carousel, and the Onterio Beach
- Legacy Journal: 50th Malin High School Reunion
- Legacy Journal: 2008 mid-point
- Legacy Journal: Walking with Religion---Walking with Nature
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Supplement
- Legacy Journal: Would you believe that ----?
LogRoller® : Keyword searching our LegacyJournal postings begins here.
[ Friday, September 05, 2008 06:46 ]
Legacy Journal: Friday Fifth: Change, Cultural Divide, B&B, Google Chrome, and Arctic Drilling
Section:
Briefs
Summary:
What is in the Air?
* Change is coming. So is __
** Google Chrome browser
*** Drilling for Oil in the Arctic
Main:
* It seems there are two big glitches in the T. Boone Picken’s plan to put wind generated electrical power onto the national grid: distance and capacity. Electrical power is best used immediately close to the site of generation. The electrical grid is not designed for high volume, long distance transmission. Natural gas lines are.
The post conventional wisdom of the professional national press and pollsters continues unchanged. The powerful B & B attorney partnership charisma machine continues to be fueled by mega bucks. The mass of volunteers, like families with kids with special needs working for the other side, are given no reckoning. Further, Alaska is far from the Boston, NYC, Washington, D.C. axis of power. Talk about a change challenge to the continuing cultural divide between the east and the West!
** So, Google is now on the the desktop with a browser and it works well with Vista. Fast is good. Google apps will continue to flow from the Lab to the rest of us.
*** It appears that the widely reported melting of the Polar Arctic Ice Cap is not quite the sure evidence of global warming a once advertised by the advocates of the theory. New interpretation of satellite images say “OOPs, not so fast.
It seems that shallow water pooled on top of the floating ice pack has been misinterpreted a open sea water. In addition the prospect of using the long fabled NorthWest Passage that shortens the freighter run from Rotterdam to Yokahama by 5,000 mile is still a bit of a pipe dream. Shifting summer ice continues to a formidable Arctic hazard for most surface ships. So, the Arctic Polar Ice Cap is almost a floating island just as we begin a long winter of refreezing as the Polar bears continue to thrive.
Meanwhile, the Siberian version of the Northwest Passage appears to have a significant choke point for summer time open water freighter traffic.
More:
Footnotes:
Banking on It: • Basics: • Business and Trade: • Calendar: • Friday: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Northern Exposure: • Culture Clash: • High Brow: • Energy: • Oil: • Environment: • Studies: • Features: • Graphic: • Chart: • Google: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Northern Lights: • Political Watch: • US vs Them: • Voice: • Punditry: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Friday, June 13, 2008 11:24 ]
Legacy Journal: Food for Thought and Summer Snow
Section:
FrontPage
Summary:
The news focus recently has been on:
* Flooding in Iowa. Never-the-less the NCAA Track and Field Finals in Des Moines continue without a pause.
* Global warming is predicted to eliminate sea ice in the Arctic Ocean this summer, But,new snow means June skiing this weekend in Aspen, Colorado. The Rockies promise to water the streams and rivers of Colorado where the fishing and the hay production will be super.
* Large fresh tomatoes are reported to be the source of some recent clusters of Salmonella. The recommendation is to wash or cook your beefsteak tomatoes before eating. Maybe a ketchup substitute would be prudent.
Main:
Meanwhile: Good news continues.
* Iowa corn futures are Strong.
* May retail sales are OK.
* A record number of Americans are employed and employers are looking for well trained, reliable workers. Illegal immigrants, workers, visitors, family members and students are filing papers and voluntarily returning to their countries of origin.
* There are no major strikes, fuel shortages, transportation slowdowns or empty food shelves. Hospitals are open for business and firefighter are prepared for the summer season, Congress will soon join the school kids for summer recess.
* Kid and parents are learning about organic produce, self pick fruit and vegetable farms, and home grown
tomatoes. Freshness, known supply chain, local support, and even cost may be some of the advantages.
Unfortunately, you still have to put gas in the van whenever you substitute train and truck diesel out of the distribution system.
More:
Footnotes:
Announcements: • Bottom Line: • Business and Trade: • Cal Water Policy: • Calendar: • Friday: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Energy: • Fish Wrap: • Food for Thought: • Heartland: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • News: • Sports: • Window Dressing: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Sunday, May 25, 2008 13:20 ]
Legacy Journal: The facts on Global Warming
Section:
Book Reviews
Summary:
Freeman Dyson, FRS, the Princeton Theoretical Physicist, often writes for the public on science. He has a recent review for the New York Review of Books of two publications on the Question of Global Warming.">Question of Global Warming.
Main:
Dyson quotes the motto of the British Royal Society, translated by some as “ Let the Facts Speak”, in a section devoted to the prevailing intolerance and ostricism by elites in political power towards scientists who express skepticism regarding the current British administration’s stance on the issue of Global Warming: its cause, its nature, and its cure.
Predictably, Dyson begins his piece by giving the back of his hand to climate speculation by some scientists, computer models, and policy groups. He votes in favor data mined from the field of “precise observation science” like the Keeling Curve ---- in all its shapes?
More:
Footnotes:
Black and White: • Calendar: • Sunday: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Climate Chronicles: • Climate Consensus: • Global Warming: • Culture Clash: • High Brow: • Environment: • Advocacy: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Science and Technology: • Physical Sciences: • Weather Watch: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Friday, February 15, 2008 13:19 ]
Legacy Journal: Friday Fun Factory
Section:
Commentary
Summary:
* What a world! Some say that the world is not reading. Yet, e-mails, text messengers, chat rooms, news outlets instruction manuals, PDF documents, online databases and blogs at exploding. Yes, the newsroom staff at the nytimes was reduced by 7.5%. Competition, cost pressures and technology have a way of reducing the drag effect of death weight.
* Global Warming? It the February spike in mid west tornado activity the result of surveillance and reporting , Gulf Warming, or Cooling from northern Canada weather fronts? That eminent climate and ecology authority, Senator John Kerry , seems to have it all figured out is case some of the rest of us seem conflicted, uncertain or confused.
* Meanwhile, seniors in OLLI classes at Osher RIT are taking on science topics like the Physics of Global Climate and Darwin’s five year round-the world voyage of discover aboard the converted bark, H,M.S. Beagle. at the age of 22 beginning in 1832. It took Darwin another 25 years to digest his experiences and publish his work on evolution, natural selection, and the science framework around the biologic time line and path of the human species. Intelligent Design has come under the microscope and is in the cross hairs of this serious minded group.
Main:
: So, thanks from Rochester, NY to Rochester, Minnesota and the staff at Nevin’s shop at EEhosting.com for their recent annual site reregistration work.
:: Thanks for NOAA, the folks at the National Weather Forecasting service, and the good work of Glenn Johnson, the really fine weather reporter at ABC 13WHAM and Democrat&Chronicle Rochester, NY weather columnist.
::: Also, congrats to Jon Little for his new faculty member website at Monroe Community College where he teaches Weather and Climate, and Physical Geography. Jon is a first instructor in the Department of Chemistry and GeoScience . Jon’s site includes a PDF file or his University of Delaware Master’s Degree thesis based on field work done in Alaska’s Arctic North Slope, on site photographs, links to climate and weather resources, and information for his western upstate New York students. He interests included extreme weather, permafrost, local real time weather monitoring, regional geography, and the appropriate use of technology in education. He also teaches at SUNY Geneseo
More:
Footnotes:
Announcements: • Basics: • Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Friday: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Forecasting: • Northern Exposure: • Earth Sciences:: • Energy: • Oil: • Environment: • Studies: • Features: • Graphic: • Image: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Website Reviews: • Media Watch: • Print Journalism: • News: • National: • R:: • Recognition: • Religion: • Christian: • Science and Technology: • Physical Sciences: • Sign of the Times: • Truth Telling: • Voice: • Blowback: • Point of View: • Sceptical: • Washington Watch: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Friday, January 25, 2008 12:59 ]
Legacy Journal: Science on the Run, Media Muddle, and the Local Weather
Section:
Environment
Summary:
* New junkies are getting whiplash. First ABC evening news nice guy, Charlie Gibson, polishes his exit with a pretty picture of the first sign of spring. It is a brief view of the sun peaking over the horizon at Pt Barrow Alaska. Then the ABC GMA sunrise crew chirps in with a full light clip on the use of mobile Arctic Norwhales being tagged by a research team with temperatures sensors. The sensors record realtime water temperatures as the pod cruises for food in the open Arctic channels off the west coast of Greenland. The team is assisted by noble and knowledgeable native kayak builders, paddlers, and hunters. Franz Boas of Baffin Bay fame must be smiling. Yet another early morning weekend crew the recent California rain, snow and avalanche deaths to yet further evidence of AGW . They almost came unglued over pictures of a cute Zoo born Polar bear cub.
The disconnect is the light. Most fifth graders know that the Arctic regions are cold and dark in winter. Yet, the GMA report fails to date and time their picture. Is there a problem here?
** Meanwhile, primary politics is piling up and piling on. It is five men standing on the Republican side. One woman, two men and one proxy standing on the
Democrat side. The good news is that one field of candidates appear to be serious about civility and putting their best public faces, feet, and voices forward. The controversy focused media is not pleased, but voters are ecstatic.
*** Today the D&C and ABC WHAM, weather guy, Glenn Johnson explains that space satellites can report images, infrared date, and atmospheric water vapor information. That data can report on jet engine contrails and open ocean water channels through the summer Arctic Ocean ice packs. Apparently, satellites are not able to accurately report the temperature on the earth side of clouds. Nor are they able to take photographs of the North Pole in the dark of winter.
Main:
: Meanwhile, Revkin of the nytimes Dot Earth blog has a piece that outlines the scientific framework of his views. His lead is begins, The world’s largest group of earth scientists says “the human footprint on Earth is apparent.” The UGS, incorporated in Washington, D.C., and its active 12 subgroup leadership including the Atmosphere group are examples. Revkin also mentions the AGS and includes part of their October 2006 policy statement.
“The Geological Society of America (GSA) supports the scientific conclusions that Earth’s climate is changing; the climate changes are due in part to human activities; and the probable consequences of the climate changes will be significant and blind to geopolitical boundaries. Furthermore, the potential implications of global climate change and the time scale over which such changes will likely occur require active, effective, long-term planning. GSA also supports statements on the global climate change issue made by the joint national academies of science (June 2005), American Geophysical Union (December, 2003), and American Chemical Society (2004). GSA strongly encourages that the following efforts be undertaken internationally:
(1) adequately research climate change at all time scales,
(2) develop thoughtful, science-based policy appropriate for the multifaceted issues of global climate change,
(3) organize global planning to recognize, prepare for, and adapt to the causes and consequences of global climate change,
(4) organize and develop comprehensive, long-term strategies for sustainable energy, particularly focused on minimizing impacts on global climate.”
:: TimeInc has a Climate Change piece called Winds of Change. It is not serious science. Sadly, the article is sophomoric in style, superficial in analysis, and scant in originality. Here is an example.
“You have Republicans and Democrats getting on board with this,” says Eileen Claussen, president of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, “and the reason why is because the public is increasingly there already.” Think about the logic and the grammar: “ increasingly there already”. As Mrs Van taught in the fourth grade, “ Either we have arrived at the station, or we have not.” End of story.
::: Finally, a very cool blog. Snow biking in Alaska. Now there is something that Californians transplanted to western upstate New York can identify with.
More:
Footnotes:
Bright Lights: • Calendar: • Friday: • Chances are ---: • Certainty: • Cherry Picking: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Critical Questions: • Northern Exposure: • Counter Currents: • Data: • Numbers: • Earth Sciences:: • Environment: • Advocacy: • Studies: • Fact vs Fiction: • Features: • Graphic: • Image: • Have a Good Day!: • Hot and Cold: • Lights Out: • Media Watch: • Smarter than a 5th Grader?: • TV Journalism: • Missing Parts: • Nature: • News: • Good News: • Northern Lights: • Political Watch: • Really? A Reality Check: • Science and Technology: • Natural Sciences: • Physical Sciences: • Show and Tell: • Snow Flakes: • Tall Tales: • Filling in the Blanks: • Tenure: • Truth Telling: • Winter Watch: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Saturday, January 12, 2008 08:11 ]
Legacy Journal: Saturday Breeze
Section:
Climate Change
Summary:
Concerned about:
Winter Tornados in Wisconsin, Whiteouts in the southern Rockies, Frost in Florida, Floods in the Pacific Northwest? African Desert Drought? Clan violence in Pakistan ? Snow is Bagdad.? The cause is fossil fuels and AGCC. The cure? Crisis and Fear driven Action. The Agenda? Education to influence the young , general public opinion and the polls , emergency civic duty advocacy and political activism, and fund raising.
Main:
Meanwhile, the media rush and gush is fixated on events South Carolina. Temperature records from there are interesting. No evidence of warming according to local records.
More:
Footnotes:
Burden of Proof: • Calendar: • Saturday: • Chances are ---: • Cause & Effect: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Climate Chronicles: • Southern Comfort Zone: • Data: • By the Numbers: • Dollars and Cents: • Follow the Money: • Environment: • Movements: • Features: • Permalinks: • Hot and Cold: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Missing Parts: • News: • Good News: • Running Scared: • Voice: • Tribal Chant: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Wednesday, January 09, 2008 06:41 ]
Legacy Journal: Minority Report: Polls, Elections, and Climate Policy
Section:
Commentary
Summary:
* Today, we again learn from New Hampshire that political polls are poor forecasts of election results. Why? Clearly many polls are badly done, many at intended to influence the results, and many voters and consumers disconnect their thoughts, from their verbal reports, and from their actions. The easy analysis is that Granite state voters are independent and make there decisions in the secrecy of the voting booth.
** It is not widely reported, but Mitt Romney corralled one third of the New Hampshire Republican vote in a five candidate field led by a maverick hero. That is not a loss. The contest moves on.
*** Bjorn Lomborg , the climate change maverick from Denmark is interviewed in the Canadian press. His analysis is worth reading.
Main:
* The national presidential campaign is a marathon race. The 71 year old McCain is impressive, but youth must be put into service in the international area.
** Put the pollsters and pundits on the sidelines.
*** Meanwhile, Lomborg , a young and thoughtful social scientist, is not pandering to backyard gardeners when is come to policy. He is numbers and data focused.
More:
Footnotes:
Black and White: • Burden of Proof: • Calendar: • Wednesday: • Chances are ---: • Cause & Effect: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Climate Control: • Forecasting: • Conventional Wisdom: • Data: • Numbers: • Fact vs Fiction: • Features: • Permalinks: • Q & A: • Herd Mentality: • Language: • Spin: • Leading Indicators: • Synthetic: • Media Watch: • Print Journalism: • News: • Regional: • Personalities: • Political Watch: • Polls & Preferences: • PostMorteum: • Tall Tales: • Exaggerations: • Voice: • Chatter Box: • Hired Guns: • Punditry: • Reactions: • Zinger: • Weasel Words: • Worrisome: • Word Play: • Young at Heart: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
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