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The world of Colonel Wingnuts

March 28, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

The Press Democrat, Monday, April 21, 1986 1B   Photo Caption: Colonel Wingnuts at the microphone of radio station KOZT in Fort Bragg The world of Col. Wingnuts Ex-Air Force lieutenant part showman, part meteorologist By PAT McKAY Correspondent FORT BRAGG – Can you believe a weatherman by the name of Colonel Wingnuts really is … [Read more…]

Posted in: California History, California Newspaper Archive, Climate Change, Environment, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Flying, History, Politics, Science, the Anthropocene, Thinking about Tagged: 1986, astronomy, climate change, Colonel Wingnuts, Fort Bragg, futuristics, KOZT, Mendocino Coast, meteorology, The Press Democrat, Walter J. McKeown, weatherman

Don’t Even Think About It

March 10, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

I wrapped up “Don’t Even Think About It” by George Marshall and I want to write my notes up before I go off and kill myself to do my bit to reduce our carbon debt. Yep, it’s that kind of book, I just finished chapter 37 “Degrees of Separation – How Climate Experts Live With … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Environment, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Politics, Science, the Anthropocene, Thinking about, What I Read Tagged: anthropogenic climate change, carbon, carbon debt, climate, climate change deniers, Climate Experts, Don't Even Think About It, George Marshall, the future

Risotto crisis

February 29, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/feb/29/risotto-crisis-the-fight-to-save-italys-beloved-dish-from-extinction-aoe The age of extinction Risotto crisis: the fight to save Italy’s beloved dish from extinction After drought devastated prized arborio and carnaroli harvests in the Po valley, new rice varieties offer a glimmer of hope. But none are yet suitable for use in the traditional recipe By Ottavia Spaggiari

Posted in: Climate Change, Environment, Faits Divers, Future of Work, Politics, Science, the Anthropocene, Thinking about, Uncategorized Tagged: 2022, 2023, arborio, carnaroli, climate crisis, drought, extinction, Ottavia Spaggiari, Po valley, RICE, Risotto, The age of extinction, The Guardian

Charles V. Hamilton, an Apostle of ‘Black Power,’ Dies at 94

February 18, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Charles V. Hamilton, an Apostle of ‘Black Power,’ Dies at 94 He popularized the term “institutional racism” and, with Stokely Carmichael, wrote a book in 1967 that was seen as a radical manifesto. “Equitable distribution of power must come from mutual self-interest, not altruism or guilt feelings,” Dr. Hamilton wrote

Posted in: Faits Divers, Obituaries, Politics, Racism, Science, Thinking about Tagged: Black Power, Charles V. Hamilton, Civil Rights, Columbia University, Dr. Hamilton, institutional racism, Jeh C. Johnson, Kwame Ture, manifesto, N.A.A.C.P., political scientist, Social Welfare Policies, Stokely Carmichael, Tuskegee Institute, University of Chicago

Faraday, Maxwell, and the Electromagnetic Field

February 18, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

CERN Courier review. Faraday, Maxwell, and the Electromagnetic Field: How Two Men Revolutionized Physics 27 November 2014 By Nancy Forbes and Basil Mahon Prometheus Books My review: This was a snap to read, light on the equations, but with enough math to make sense, the story line follows the lives of Michael Faraday and James … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, History, Science, the Anthropocene, What I Read Tagged: 1790, 2000, Einstein, Electromagnetic Field, electromagnetism, Faraday, James Clerk Maxwell, Josiah Willard Gibbs, Maxwell, Michael Faraday, Oliver Heavyside, physics

The Worlds I See by Dr. Fei Fei Li

January 27, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

The Worlds I See by Dr. Fei Fei Li, borrowed from my local library after a two month wait in the queue. This is a “Moment of Lift” book which supports “publishing original nonfiction by visionaries working to unlock a more equal world for women and girls.” I didn’t know this until I had finished … [Read more…]

Posted in: Ethical and green living, Future of Work, IT Failures, Politics, Racism, Science, Thinking about, What I Read Tagged: AI, AI4ALL, artificial intelligence, computer vision, Dr. Fei Fei Li, Fei Fei Li, ImageNet, John Etchemendy, Olga Russakovsky, Stanford, Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI

The Double Helix by James D. Watson

January 27, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

While at the library earlier this week to return Dr. Fei Fei Li’s book, I stumbled across another science memoir, this one The Double Helix by James D. Watson. It is a very easy read, fast paced, on topic, and rather funny in many ways. He tells on how, by working with chemists of various … [Read more…]

Posted in: History, Science, What I Read Tagged: 1968, Dorothy Hodgkin, Francis Crick, Jack Dunitz, James D. Watson, Leslie Orgel, Linus Pauling, Maurice Wilkins, Max Delbrück, Max Perutz, Raymond Gosling, Rosalind Franklin, Salvador Luria, Sir Lawrence Bragg, Sydney Brenner, The Double Helix

Human ‘behavioural crisis’ at root of climate breakdown, say scientists

January 13, 2024 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Place holder for The Guardian article “Human ‘behavioural crisis’ at root of climate breakdown, say scientists”   “We’ve socially engineered ourselves the way we geoengineered the planet,” says Joseph Merz, lead author of a new paper which proposes that climate breakdown is a symptom of ecological overshoot, which in turn is caused by the deliberate … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Environment, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Feminism, Finanace, Future of Work, IT Failures, Pandemic, Politics, Racism, Science, the Anthropocene, Thinking about Tagged: behavioural, carbon emissions, climate breakdown, climate change, consuming, consumption, crisis, geoengineered, large families, neuropsychology, norms, Population, renewable energy, social signalling, waste

White Holes – Carlo Rovelli

December 18, 2023 by sergneri Leave a Comment

  This is a small book, in the genre of possible science. Rovelli has his ideas about the existence of “white holes” and explains the development of the theory in a rather charming way, citing Dante most of the way through the process. While I was able to follow along with his reasoning I wasn’t … [Read more…]

Posted in: Science, Sea Stories, Thinking about, What I Read Tagged: black holes, Carlo Rovelli, Einstein, gravity, physics, Planck Stars, quantum mechanics, Quatum Gravity, Relativity, Time, white holes

The Dawn of Everything, A New History Of Humanity” by David Graeber and David Wengrow

December 10, 2023 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Non-fiction Finished the 524 pages of “The Dawn of Everything, A New History Of Humanity” by Davids Graeber and Wengrow. A challenging book, well written and somewhat academic in tone, both authors are professors at their respective British schools, Graeber of economics and Wengrow of comparative archeology. The authors propose that there were actually few … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Environment, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, History, Politics, Racism, Science, Sea Stories, Slavery, Thinking about, What I Read Tagged: Amerindian, ancient cities, Andean, antiquity, archeology, comparative archeology, council leadership, David Graeber, David Wengrow, Economics, Egyptian, ethnology, freedom, Mesoamerican, Mesopotamian, paleontology, self-governance, The Dawn of Everything
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