Sentences with word «tamino»

In 144 I used the phrase «temperature extremes have gotten enormously hotter» which I meant as a paraphrase of Tamino who wrote: «any way you slice it severe hot outliers are increasing.»
See the recent Tamino post for more information.
(Not that WFT compares with what Tamino does, but quite often we can get similar results with limited knowledge of statistical techniques.
Thanks Tamino for going through the data with a fine - tooth comb!
Thanks tamino — those graphs deserve to be disseminated.
Indeed — we could have had more incisive analyses of the data like this one at WUWT, where as tamino shows they (seemingly unwittingly) managed, though some incredibly convoluted number torture, to turn the data upside down without realising.
then, tamino graphed it using 5,10,30 year averages (or something like that) and came up with those «hockey stick» graphs.
Maybe ask Tamino for advice, since he's good at finding flaws.
Thank you John Mashey for the pointer - into - the long Tamino thread.
Walker says he was annoyed by a recent post of our host Tamino here at Open Mind (concerning the statistical relevance of short slowdowns, something beloved by Walker but which specifically makes not reference to Walker's bullshitting).
* [Editor's note: the phrase «more or less» was dropped in the editing process and did not appear in the original post, but was properly re-inserted on 01/25/12 after comments by Tamino]
DD, Tamino just posted solid evidence of Curry's disingenuouness in saying we don't know whether sea level rise has accelerated in the past 150 years or so.
TrueSceptic — Curry's claim was one tailed, so Tamino focused on that tail.
A brief perusal of the literature should make it clear that a great many climate scientists have accepted the hiatus as real, and as a problem, and a great many hypotheses have been published in various efforts to account for it (including a paper Tamino wrote with Stefan Rahmstorf, as I'm sure you are all aware).
Or, at least «look» at the more appropriately scaled graph tamino suggests.
As tamino noted when analysing all the main surface temperature and TLT data sets (emphasis added):
Two examples leap to mind, alongside this stuff: WUWT posting the Daily Mail «u-turn by Prof Jones» story (though he was careful not to actually endorse that story, I note) and this bit of genius that Tamino took apart, where Watts had a guest who, unknowingly it seems, because they were so incompetent, took GISS data and turned it upside down.
[tamino — CAPTCHA ia a bit of a pain at times, but I bet it saves the mods time weeding out some of the more ignorant contrarians — I just clicked the recycle 50 times, only 5 of them were the iffy new style]
Monckton is right that you can do that sort of statistical test, but Tamino actually applied Monckton's test to the Mauna Loa observatory CO2 data since about 1968 and found that the 10 - year slope in the data has been pretty continuously rising, including over the last several years.
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