More delays for the James Webb Space Telescope?
More delays for the James Webb Space Telescope?
More delays for the James Webb Space Telescope?
An evening pause: The modern optimism.
Battle of the browsers: Internet Explorer continues to lose market share to Chrome, Firefox, and others.
The pigs begin squealing again: According to a report written by a D.C. advocacy group, the national parks face serious problems due to a lack of sufficient funds.
It’s never enough. The National Park Service budget [pdf] has grown from $2.5 billion in 2003 to $3.1 billion in 2011. At the same time, they have increased fees on all public lands, often introducing fees where none had ever existed before.
Somehow, they managed for decades on smaller budgets. At this time of unimaginable federal debt, I have no sympathy for them, despite the fact that I am a passionate lover of the natural wonders contained in the national parks.
Seems a bit long to me: NASA foresees a two year period after the last shuttle lands to retire the program completely.
The world’s longest sea bridge opened in China yesterday. With some cool images.
The families of the Challenger astronauts come out in favor of commercial private manned spaceflight.
In the last week there has been a flurry of avalanches and rockfalls at Mt. Rainier. On June 25 two climbers had cameras rolling when a major rockfall started on Nisqually Glacier. Below is the better of the two videos.
We’ve got to repeal this piece of crap: Starting in 2014, Obamacare will punish those who work and those who are married.
A computer chess program has been stripped of its four titles and its programmer banned because of accusations of plagiarism.
An independent panel of scientists has found that a $1.4 billion plan put forth by environmentalists to save the salmon of the northwest by destroying four hydroelectric dams and restricting water use was based on junk science.
According to the just-released 350-page assessment, funded by the Fish and Wildlife Service, experts expressed โstrong reservationsโ that the expensive effort could significantly increase the Chinook salmon population in the Klamath River system. . . . The report also states, โThere are many pieces of information we do not know about the Klamath system, and none we know with absolute certainty. The process of developing the model, trying to reproduce historical conditions โฆ must be internally consistent.โ