Why is NASA Throwing Away Reusable Engines?
01 Jan 2023 Leave a comment
in transport economics Tags: space
Bering Land Bridge formed surprisingly late during last ice age, say researchers
31 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
Credit: alaskapublic.org
A researcher said: “Remarkably, the data suggest that the ice sheets can change in response to more than just global climate,” calling into question some long-held ideas. A professor connected to the study commented: “These findings appear to poke a hole in our current understanding of how past ice sheets interacted with the rest of the climate system, including the greenhouse effect.” Well, fancy that. The commentary notes that ‘global temperatures were relatively stable at the time of the fall in sea level, raising questions about the correlation between temperature, sea level and ice volume’. In short, the ice sheets grew faster than scientists had thought.
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Princeton scientists found that the Bering Land Bridge, the strip of land that once connected Asia to Alaska, emerged far later during the last ice age than previously thought, says Eurekalert.
The unexpected findings shorten the window of…
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Offshore wind with a capacity of “3.5 nuclear power plants”
31 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
In her interview in the Flemish newspaper (subject of previous two posts), our Minister of Energy not only said that the wind always blows somewhere in Europe, and especially at sea, but she also made following remark about Belgian offshore wind (translated from Dutch, my emphasis):
When I became minister, I hoped that our new offshore wind farm would be operational by 2027. It has a capacity of 3.5 nuclear power plants and can supply all Belgian households with electricity.
I heard members of the current Federal Government draw (variations on) this analogy between offshore wind and nuclear power plants quite a lot lately, especially (and unsurprisingly) by members of the Flemish Green party.
For the record, there is a core of truth in this statement. It is true that the capacity of offshore wind in Belgium is expected to be 3500 MW in 2027 and since most…
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Preparing for 1916 – The Year of Battles I THE GREAT WAR – Week 75
31 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War I
Why have Ukrainian ATGMs destroyed so many Russian tanks?
31 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: Ukraine
40-Year Study Finds Mysterious Patterns in Temperatures at Jupiter
30 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
Jupiter [image credit: NASA]
Unexpected patterns and teleconnections. Some new light is shed on the workings of the solar system’s largest planetary atmosphere.
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Scientists have completed the longest-ever study tracking temperatures in Jupiter’s upper troposphere, the layer of the atmosphere where the giant planet’s weather occurs and where its signature colorful striped clouds form, says Subaru Telescope.
The work, conducted over four decades by stitching together data from NASA spacecraft and ground-based telescope observations, found unexpected patterns in how temperatures of Jupiter’s belts and zones change over time.
The study is a major step toward a better understanding of what drives weather at our solar system’s largest planet and eventually being able to forecast it.
Jupiter’s troposphere has a lot in common with Earth’s: It’s where clouds form and storms churn. To understand this weather activity, scientists need to study certain properties, including wind, pressure, humidity…
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Batman: The Movie (1966) Review
30 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
Batman: The Movie (1966) Director Leslie Martinson
“Pow!” “Wham!” “Ouch!”

Holy film review, Batman! Every bit as campy and goofy as the 1960s television show starring Adam West and Burt Ward, Batman: The Movie is an ironic and all-around ridiculous comedy that is so self-aware, it is often difficult to follow the wandering plot all the way to the end. Directed by Leslie H. Martinson and written by Lorenzo Semple Jr., the film was hurriedly patched together and released between seasons one and two of the Batman television show. It conveys the convoluted rise of a criminal group known as the “United Underworld” which consists of the all-star villains from the show –Penguin (Burgess Meredith), Catwoman (Lee Meriwether), Joker (Cesar Romero), and Riddler (Frank Gorshin) as they develop various unfolding plots to take over the world. In each case, Batman and Robin stumblingly thwart their efforts at word…
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Russia’s tactics are obsolete, not its tanks
30 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: Ukraine
2023 PREDICTIONS
29 Dec 2022 Leave a comment

Here are my (political) predictions for 2023 … in for a penny, in for a pound. Feel free to argue the toss …
Jacx will not lead Labour into the election
National and ACT will form the next government
The Greens will struggle to hold onto their ten seats
NZ First will not be in parliament.
Te Pati Maori will pick up two additional seats … one List seat and Tamaki Makaurau
John Campbell will lose his cool on election night
David Seymour will be Deputy PM
Nicola Willis will be Finance Minister
Gerry Brownlie will be Speaker
ACT will pick up Education, Local Government, Defence & Veterans’ Affairs plus one other ‘name’ portfolio as well as having two ministers outside cabinet
Post the election there will be a bruising battle for the ‘soul’ of the Labour Party.
Tough Year for Investing (with one little-known, totally safe exception)
29 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
There’s still a few more days left in the year, but at this point it is safe to say, unfortunately, that it was a very bad year for investing. This Google chart shows most of the bad news. Note: nothing in this post is investment advice about the future, just a summary of the past.

The S&P 500, the typical benchmark for US equities, was down 20%. Bonds, usually a safe haven, were down over 14% as measured by the Vanguard Total Bond fund (more on bonds later).
Gold, the traditional hedge against bad times, was flat. I guess that’s not so bad. But gold is also traditionally considered a hedge against inflation, and inflation will probably end up being somewhere in the range of 5-7% this year (depending on your preferred index). So in real terms, even gold was down. And the supposed new hedge against fiat currency? Bitcoin…
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#climateemergency
29 Dec 2022 Leave a comment
in environmental economics, global warming Tags: climate alarmists, global cooling

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