Monthly Archives: August 2006

Dewpoint

When Houston’s KPRC-TV, Channel 2 News, dropped the dewpoint readings from its on-air weather forecast (though the web site still has it), some meteorologists got rather exercised over what they saw as an attempt to dumb down the populace while making television news consultants (yes, they have those) happy.

I confess I have never understood the utility of mentioning the dewpoint. But Bob Rose says for athletes, for one, it has more value than knowing the relative humidity, for which I also confess I have only a vague appreciation.

"I hear a lot of people in the summer talk about the humidity being around 35 percent and thinking the air is dry when in fact it’s not," Bob writes. "It’s just that the temperature is so high, the air can hold more water vapor, so the humidity reading ends up being lower."

He says the dewpoint is actually an easier concept since it doesn’t change with the air temperature. 

"Basically, anytime the dewpoint gets in the 60s, or higher, the air is going to feel pretty humid.  And the closer the air temperature and dewpoint readings are, the more humid the air will be." 

Houston is a very humid town, so you’d think they’d want to figure this out. But not KPRC.

Under fire

Barry Silverberg, an Israeli English teacher, brings a new look at living under the incoming and outgoing. He clearly likes the latter better.

"The explosion tears through the walls of the house and tears through your body with a deafening crack, rattling the windows and shoving the doors. You jump, but you’re not worried. It’s one of ours. Then there’s another one: A bursting report followed by an echoing sound, as if superman were flying off to save Metropolis. KAPOW! Wungawungawunga wunga wunga…. .The howitzer batteries deployed not far from our town are firing their 70 kilo shells. They fly way over our heads and into Lebanese territory, where they are providing cover for Israeli military action, or destroying the rocket launchers that have turned our summer into chaos. God guide their flight and give us something in return for this constant noise."

UPDATE  Strained eloquence from an IDF ground unit leader who fears the worst. "We have lost the war and the army has the ability to beat Hizballah, Syria and the Palestinians all at the same time, but the cowards will not let us."

Blogosphere in action

Intrepid blogger Michael J. Totten ventures to Tel Aviv and thence to Metulla in northernmost Israel, just in time for the big IDF offensive, for podcasting and other reporting. I donated $10 to his effort because he did a good job illuminating events in Iraq and Lebanon. But I did worry some when he described a shot of a C-130 with its wheels down over the Tel Aviv beach as a warplane enroute to bomb Lebanon.

UPDATE  He may have a short journey and wind up interviewing disgruntled soldiers, because after a very confusing 24 to 48 hours, it seems that PM Olmert has accepted the UN’s cease-fire deal. Which, if history is still on its tracks, probably means another, bigger war to come before much longer.

While the rockets keep falling

The IDF sits, waiting for orders to advance that may never come, and, meanwhile, is a sitting target.

"Over the past 30 days of fighting Hizbullah, the army has lost 83 soldiers, 35 of them this week. ‘That is what happens when you sit still and don’t move,’ the officer said. ‘The enemy fortifies its positions and gains the upper hand.’"

Israeli blogger Shiloh Musings says the troops’ loved ones are bitter: "Terrible stories are coming off the front-lines from wounded soldiers. This isn’t the legendary IDF, which once could do no wrong."

And the N man and the hez see their victory. "In the latest video aired on Al-Manar TV the terror group says it ‘defeated the invincible army’ and ‘July-August 2006: Legend shattered.’"

UPDATE Then PM Olmert ordered his sitting army to move north to the Litani River. "Orders to widen the ground offensive doesn’t mean it is impossible to stop if there is a decisive diplomatic move, which is accepted by Israel," an Israeli source said.

Today’s pretty picture

HubbleViewofOrionNebula.jpg

Hubble’s take on the Orion Nebula, the nearest star-forming region.

The aerial bomb plots

"Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said there was no indication of plotting in the United States but said officials cannot assume that the terror operation in Britain had been completely thwarted."

Odd, to me, that the focus would be on liquid explosives carried on when the vulnerability of baggage holds hasn’t changed much since 9/11. Afterall, the Pan Am 103 747 explosion over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988 was a baggage hold bomb. 

One thing that rarely changes in the reports of these plots is the squeamishness about the Islamic identity of the perps. Although Chertoff did say Al Q seemed to be involved, you might need to go as far as Belfast, Northern Ireland to get the actual detail.

"Police have arrested 21 people, thought to be young British Muslims, in London, the Thames Valley area and Birmingham."

“Green Helmet,” the director

German journalists show how Hez orchestrated the display of a dead child for the cameras, with the able assistance of the man the blogosphere is calling "Green Helmet" for his distinctive chapeau and multiple appearances in "news" photographs.

Via NRO’s Media Blog. And comment here.