Not exact matches
To the list
of predicted outcomes from global warming, researchers have added a particularly
troubling possibility in recent
years: increased incidence
of disease.
Granted, forecasting this far in advance is obviously imperfect: Though we correctly
predicted on this site at this time last
year that Argo, Zero Dark Thirty, Beasts
of the Southern Wild, and Lincoln would be major Oscar players, we also ventured that Hyde Park on Hudson and
Trouble With the Curve would be frontrunners.
Automakers spend tens
of millions
of dollars each
year conducting research and taking consumer surveys in order to track the habits and
predict the needs
of car buyers.After spending a few hours touring the Central Florida International Auto Show with this
year's panel
of Sentinel readers, critiquing the class
of 2000 and discussing cars in general, one wonders if some
of that research money could be saved.Our panelists want a good - looking, comfortable,
trouble - free vehicle that performs well and holds its value.
I just have
trouble believing that after five plus
years of sales data on their signature product line the company wouldn't be able to better
predict their initial sales for 90 days out with greater accuracy.
It's a warning published more than 15
years ago that pretty accurately
predicts the kind
of trouble we are getting ourselves into.
And the
trouble NOAA seems have in
predicting an accurate recent past is well examplified in Ole Humlums in one
of the graphs on his Climate4You website, the one he calls» the GiSS maturity graph» (link below): so it's not only Goddard (though he shouts more and louder about it) that is critical
of the slowly but unidirectionally widening gap between the past and present, as for example like in this day instance
of the diffrence between the anomalies
of the two values for the same day
of the month 70
years apart, as the more resent days value heads for heavenly heigth's, while the older anomaly is clearly speeding down the higway to underworld inferno.