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In reply to the discussion: The Climate Change Deniers Have Won - Guardian/Observer [View all]ProSense
(116,464 posts)25. Website to help Americans understant climate change impact:
White House gets geeky on climate problem
By John Upton
To see how the world is changing around you, sometimes it helps to lose yourself online.
The White House is plunging into a new geeky approach to climate adaptation. It has consolidated online climate tools into a new hub, climate.data.gov, intended to help Americans understand how weather and sea levels will continue to change in their states and even their neighborhoods.
OK, so its not the most awesome online thing to happen since Google mastered search. But The New York Times explains some of the laudable ambition behind the effort:
<...>
UPDATE: Google, Microsoft, and Intel have all committed to help develop the climate.data.gov project. Microsoft will donate close to one terabyte of cloud storage space, as well as sponsor a competition for climate scientists to win a year of free access to cloud computing resources. Google, not to be outdone, will provide one petabyte (for those not caught up on their Greek: thats one thousand terabytes) of cloud storage for climate change research data, and will help create a map of the Earths terrain in high resolution to illustrate the effects of climate change on the landscape. And Intel has planned hackathons that will bring together students in Chesapeake Bay, New Orleans, and San Jose to build apps to measure and track climate change using government data.
http://grist.org/news/white-house-gets-geeky-on-climate-problem/
By John Upton
To see how the world is changing around you, sometimes it helps to lose yourself online.
The White House is plunging into a new geeky approach to climate adaptation. It has consolidated online climate tools into a new hub, climate.data.gov, intended to help Americans understand how weather and sea levels will continue to change in their states and even their neighborhoods.
OK, so its not the most awesome online thing to happen since Google mastered search. But The New York Times explains some of the laudable ambition behind the effort:
In theory, climate.data.gov would be a powerful tool, allowing local governments or home and business owners to type in an address as they do on sites like Google Earth to quickly see how the projected rise in sea levels might increase the chance that their house will be flooded in the coming years. But in practice, until climate science and mapping applications can live up to the sites ambitions, it will remain very much in its testing phase.
At the beginning, the website will serve chiefly as a clearinghouse for climate science data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the United States Geological Survey, the Defense Department and NASA, according to (White House advisers John) Holdren and (John) Podesta. The first batch of data will focus on coastal flooding and the rise in sea levels.
Average users will not be able to do much yet on their own. Instead, NASA and the NOAA will call on researchers and private companies to create software simulations illustrating the impact of sea level rise.
<...>
UPDATE: Google, Microsoft, and Intel have all committed to help develop the climate.data.gov project. Microsoft will donate close to one terabyte of cloud storage space, as well as sponsor a competition for climate scientists to win a year of free access to cloud computing resources. Google, not to be outdone, will provide one petabyte (for those not caught up on their Greek: thats one thousand terabytes) of cloud storage for climate change research data, and will help create a map of the Earths terrain in high resolution to illustrate the effects of climate change on the landscape. And Intel has planned hackathons that will bring together students in Chesapeake Bay, New Orleans, and San Jose to build apps to measure and track climate change using government data.
http://grist.org/news/white-house-gets-geeky-on-climate-problem/
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10024693725
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We aren't operating on an infinite time frame on this issue, some rather serious consequences
TheKentuckian
Mar 2014
#11
"More think the news exaggerates the seriousness than in 2001." I hate to say this.....
AverageJoe90
Mar 2014
#31
Then I'm afraid you haven't been paying much attention, sad to say. It does happen, and more often..
AverageJoe90
Mar 2014
#40
I'm cool with breaking the evil bastards but they can't even begin to cover their damage.
TheKentuckian
Mar 2014
#12
I Don't Think He, Or Anyone, Is Celebrating... Rather It's Another Alarm Bell...
WillyT
Mar 2014
#21
Not really. We'll likely still be here 100,000 years from now, unless.....
AverageJoe90
Mar 2014
#33