Unthreaded
Remember the NGO woman who also works for the BBC as head of social outreach and did SoICanBreathe season
"Emily Kasriel @ekasriel
People don't like solutions handed down to them by people who know. We need co-creation of solutions #socsent #whatworks2017 "
Times: "Google pledging to ensure that results from reputable sources appear above conspiracy theories and racist material."
We know where that one is going
tricky blogpost
\\Google is asking for your help to spot fake news results.
On Tuesday, Google will have new feedback tools in its search results so users can flag content that appears to be false or misleading. (Facebook launched similar tools earlier this year ...) This will help teach Google's search algorithms to weed out hoaxes and, in theory, keep them buried in search results.
**Google also says its algorithms have now been trained to demote "low quality" content based on signals like whether the information comes from an "authoritative" page.//**
Caliche - that was the word used for the top soil of the desert when I worked in the Nitrate mine in the Atacama
zero % daytime humidity
Stewgreen. Interesting gardening predictions, but would have to see if they are based on projected trends or climate change model fantasies. We in Eastern England already live in semi-desert rainfall conditions (25 inches or less per year) and the only thing that saves us is that rainfall is distributed over the whole year. What may happen in the near future is that rainfall may become more seasonal, being concentrated in the winter with droughts in the summer. This would return us to conditions prevalent during past interglacials when carbonates accumulated in our soils (calcrete or caliche) something currently not happening. Is a projected 5 degree temperature increase even reasonable? I am, however, prepared with a largely gravel garden in the back, and brickweave in the front!
The Westminster Environmental Audit Committee have squeezed out a "devolpement" report - months in the making (2 years actually).
The foundation for all the hundreds (thousands?) of hours work put in ...? Yes, The Global Goals - the obvious intent of their work being to gold plate those goals.
The Government should start a national conversation about implementing the Goals, working with the BBC and other national media, and provide the public with ways to get involved. This could take place as part of Red Nose Day and Comic Relief, and link with charities working in the UK and overseas..
Your taxes at work - we're doomed.
Stewgreen: The RHS is another organisation from which I've just cancelled my subscription and membership! I shall send the RHS a suitably worded email. Well done the BBC and the RHS!!!!
In fact I have suffered from an awful lot of damage in the garden overnight, resulting from severe frost brought on by man-made global warming.
Something just tacked on end of news - Phil a (Gardeners Question time old timer) saying weather is more important to Gardens than climate change ..and recently places were running dry
(well there seems plenty of rain these days) ..raining now ..hailstones yesterday
Must be a reply to Shukmanns new piece Climate change could transform gardens
Clipe, Ross, SandyS, This must stop. Stewgreen will be forced, as previously, to castigate us "old granddads" from cluttering up his precious "Unthreaded".
short BBC WS prog "So I Can Breathe: What Difference Did It Make?
The season So I Can Breathe explored some of the ways the world is seeking to reduce air pollution. How much of an impact did it have. Head of the project Emily Kasriel joins Rajan in the Over To You studio to explain the impetus for the season and listeners from around the world share their thoughts on its efficacy."
Latest tweet
People don't like solutions handed down to them by people who know. We need co-creation of solutions #socsent #whatworks2017
Stewgreen. I hate to correct you about the humidity of the most extreme parts of the Atacama Desert but nowhere on Earth has 0% humidity (although it might feel like it) when I have no direct experience of the central desert area in Chile. I have only visited the Peruvian coastal area where there are fogs. I believe in the driest parts, relative humidity can get down to around 35% - definitely prune making weather.