Comment Ancient hebrews had it right.... (Score 1) 446
Stone tablets, translate your data to Aramaic, and carve it into them. Those things will last for thousands of years, and nobody understands Aramaic, so it's safe.
Stone tablets, translate your data to Aramaic, and carve it into them. Those things will last for thousands of years, and nobody understands Aramaic, so it's safe.
How are software development and computer engineering not included in the IT field? Or are you one of those people who, completely inexplicably, say "IT" when they really mean "System Administration"?
Lunatic pulls a gun on you, and you're just going to stand there, rather than trying to get away?
Maturity is about knowing when to stop, and I think we've way beyond reason...
Anybody want a peanut?
"not being what it purports to be" sounds exactly like a signal that's pretending to be a distress signal, but is actually a warning.
Someday Sheldon Cooper is going to dump a bunch of slime out of the ceiling of your lab right onto your boss's head.
Sure, there's a lot of stupidity and lameness. It's April 1st. WTF did you expect? Lighten up.
No satire. Less subtlety than a Nomad. Lame.
FTFY.
But Slashdot staff are semiliterate poorly educated idiots who couldn't hold a real job if their
lives depended on it, so crap this this is what they serve up.
Oh, the irony. Or are you insinuating that you're a
thats waterloo region not london. And waterloo prices are still going up.
London prices are still going up, too. Our house is worth about 60-70% more than we paid for it roughly 12 years ago.
traveled
And we can spell.
Oooh. I missed one repeated letter while typing on a netbook minikeyboard, so I must be completely wrong about absolutely everything.
Google is your friend. (Unless you're searching for drugs, bombs, or how to commit jihad, I suppose....)
The late Ordovician Period ice age is the one I'm referring to.
A choice quote from one of those links:
The highest concentrations of CO2 during all of the Paleozoic Era occurred during the Cambrian Period, nearly 7000 ppm -- about 18 times higher than today.
The Carboniferous Period and the Ordovician Period were the only geological periods during the Paleozoic Era when global temperatures were as low as they are today.
To the consternation of global warming proponents, the Late Ordovician Period was also an Ice Age while at the same time CO2 concentrations then were nearly 12 times higher than today -- 4400 ppm.
While it doesn't say this, and I'm going from memory here, so I could be mistaken, I believe the Ordovician ice age started with CO2 concentrations at about 7000 ppm, and they dropped to 4400 ppm during the course of the ice age. But even if it was only 4400 ppm, that's still 10 times what it is today.
GGP: "There is no chance of another glacial period occurring until CO2 levels drop well below 300 ppm again."
That wasn't my statement. I didn't claim that CO2 was the only thing affecting ice ages. The post I was replying to was the one that did that. Please do try to keep up.
http://www.sodahead.com/united-states/temperatures-were-warmer-than-today-for-most-of-the-past-10000-years/question-4723358/
Fifteen thousand years ago, temperatures rose 10 to 20 degrees in just one century.........
About 12,800 years ago we plunged into the Younger Dryas...... When we came out of the Younger Dryas, temperatures again
shot upward, rising 15 degrees in just 40 years.
http://www.climatedepot.com/2015/01/16/scientists-balk-at-hottest-year-claims-we-are-arguing-over-the-significance-of-hundredths-of-a-degree-the-pause-continues/
Climatologist Dr. Roger Pielke Sr., commenting on claims that 2014 was the warmest year on record: 'We have found a significant warm bias. Thus, the reported global average surface temperature anomaly is also too warm.'
Oh...sorry....you just wanted me to post a single already-posted graph. I guess I didn't follow your instructions properly, huh?
Well, considering that most professors of geology and such state that various ice cores are quite good proxies for global temperatures, and that they correlate well with other indicators of global temperatures, such as glacier advances and retreats, then I'd say it relates quite well to global temperatures. After all, it's the experts that say that, not just me.
The current rate of change is around 2 orders of magnitude greater than it was coming out of the last ice age.
I keep hearing AGWers saying that, but it's just not supported by evidence. The end of an ice age is marked by a global increase of 10-15 degrees in a matter of a few decades; maybe 100 years, tops. We're warming at no where near this rate, right now.
http://www.oarval.org/Foster_20k.jpg
Variables don't; constants aren't.