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Archive for the ‘Web’ Category
Friday, February 2nd, 2007
There’s a lot written about climate change on web 2.0 – and there’s about to be a lot more written about it over the coming weeks. The impending release of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 4th Assessment Report is going to have plenty for the commentators and bloggers to chew on. If you were so inclined it would take you quite a while to get through it all. But if there is one thing I think you should read about climate change in the light of the latest IPCC report it’s Maragret Wente’s piece (re)posted on Seeker.
The important point raised is that although much gets written about climate change mitigation, it is at the expense of discussion about climate change adaptation.
This is not a new point – Rayner and Malone wrote about it in Nature a decade ago, and I even got the message in my third year undergrad climate modelling course. Although reducing carbon emissions is important it may not halt what has already started, and we would do well to get thinking about the best adaptation strategies to the consequences of a changing climate. Of course, we should continue working to reduce our carbon emissions. But we need to accept that, regardless of whether the change is human induced or not, in all probability the climate is changing and we need to be prepared for the consequences.
I’ve posted what I think is the more relevant section below, but the whole thing is very interesting: read the whole article;
The climate debate focuses almost entirely on mitigation (how we can slow down global warming). But climate scientists and policy experts say that in the short term — our lifetimes — our most important insurance policy is adaptation. Nothing we do to cut emissions will reduce the risk from hurricanes or rising seas in the short term. But there are other ways to reduce the risk. We can build storm-surge defences, stop building in coastal areas and make sure we protect our fresh-water supplies from salination. We also can develop crops that will do well in hotter climates.
‘Adaptation’ is not a word that figures much in climate-change debates. Activists (and much of the general public) think it sounds lazy and defeatist. But the experts talk about adaptation all the time.
Technorati Tags: climate, climatechange, mitigation, adaptiation, IPCC, policy
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Environmental, Political, Social, Web | Comments Off
Friday, January 26th, 2007
OK, so after a little deliberation I’ve signed up for Just Science week. In a response to the strong anti-science presence on the internet (global warming denialists, creationists, the anti-vaccination movement etc.), starting 5th February science bloggers will post about science only, with at least one post per day for the whole week. Issues which are favoured by anti-scientific groups (creationism, global warming, etc.) will be either avoided, or discussed without reference to anti-scientific positions.
The rationale behind this is that many science bloggers end up spending a fair amount of time combating the misinformation spread by anti-science groups at the expense of blogging about actual science. I generally don’t want to get embroiled in these sorts of arguments – I’ll leave it to those with much stronger feelings on the subject, know more about it and are generally much more organised.
What I am more interested in is the relationship between science and policy- and decision-making, specifically from modelling/environmental/resource management perspectives. I’m with Allen et al. (2001 p.484):
“The postmodern world may be a nightmare for … normal science (Kuhn 1962), but science still deserves to be privileged, because it is still the best game in town. … [Scientists] need to continue to be meticulous and quantitative. But more than this, we need scientific models that can inform policy and action at the larger scales that matter. Simple questions with one right answer cannot deliver on that front. The myth of science approaching singular truth is no longer tenable, if science is to be useful in the coming age.”
Just this week I’ve been considering how the recent work emerging from Demos, the UK thinktank, relates to my PhD research (more on this and this in the future no doubt). The Prometheus blog is great source of inspiration and for this sort of discussion too. But, in the interests of Just Science week I’ll try to steer clear of that stuff and focus on some my work on wildfire regimes (that I haven’t talked about in much detail here but have outlined on my website), recent publication in the environmental modelling literature, and also I’m thinking maybe a post on the Geography of Science (seeing as I am Geographer at heart…)
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Geographic, Political, Web | Comments Off
Saturday, January 20th, 2007
On of my good friends has just been putting the finishing touches on the second series of the cult engineering show ‘Mega Moves’ (‘Monster Moves’ in the UK). The series will be showing on National Geographic in the States and Channel Five in the UK. Checkout the trailer below – pretty cool eh?
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6NScqmL5EQY]
View at youTube here
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Fun, Web | 3 Comments »
Monday, January 15th, 2007
The first edition of the Oekologie blog carnival came hot off the press at The Infinite Sphere today. Posts on subjects that may be of interest include Alternative Energy, Ecological Relationships, Conservation, Water Pollution, Population and Landscape.
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Ecological, Environmental, Web | Comments Off
Monday, January 8th, 2007
Jeremy at The Voltage Gate and Jen at The Infinite Sphere have just started the blogosphere’s first ecology and environmental science Blog Carnival – Oekologie.
Oekologie will be published on the 15th of every month, starting this month (Jan 2007), and aims to review the best ecology and environmental science posts of the month from across the blogosphere.
Submissions should be credible, science-centered posts discussing new research and ideas, reviews of the tenets of either field, or evidence-based personal opinions regarding ecology and environmental science. Specifically, they’re looking for posts describing biological interactions – human or nonhuman – with the environment. I’ll be submitting some of my musings from time-to-time I’m sure.
Direction not Destination will be hosting Oekologie in May 2007 but they’re still on the look-out for more hosts in the forthcoming months.
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Ecological, Environmental, Web | Comments Off
Thursday, November 16th, 2006
 I’ve finally got round to tidying up and completing the photos page of my website. Click on the map markers and photos taken at those locations will appear below the map. Use the links above the map to navigate. It may take a while to load first time (so be patient) and you will need JavaScript enabled in your browser.
It took a little while to get to grips with the Google Maps API, but by viewing and ‘borrowing’ code from other websites (London Satellite Photo Map was particularly helpful) I got there in the end! Go check it out! Comments? – leave them here by clicking below.
Categories: photos, photography, googlemaps
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Computing, Fun, Photography, Web | Comments Off
Wednesday, October 4th, 2006
OK, so I may be a little behind the times but I’ve finally discovered del.icio.us. In the side bar you find a link to my del.icio.us page and on each individual post page there is now a link to save that page to your del.icio.us account using the tags on that page (I’m going to slowly go back through all previous posts and add tags to them).
Also, I’ve added a del.icio.us section to the links page on my website detailing my 10 latest deli.icio.us posts…
Just doing my bit to keep the diameter of the web in check…
Categories: del.icio.us, tags, blog, blogging, links, diameteroftheweb
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Web | Comments Off
Monday, October 2nd, 2006
Posted in Political, Social, Web | Comments Off
Saturday, August 19th, 2006
I’ve just discovered a couple of photoBlog directories:
 Check them out – there are some cool sites out there. I’ve linked to a few of my newly found favourites.
 This work by James D.A. Millington is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Posted in Photography, Web | Comments Off
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