I guess that's why the Dutch Army might be doing experiments with the
weather as of lately, without informing the public?
- creating fog (during the new years celebratoin i heard huge
atmospheric booms which were not caused by fireworks,
and despite being a normal temperature far above zero, more like 10+
celcius, when i went up the highways at spots where there is living
very few persons,
there was a very close fog, which obviously was not the fireworks but
some military fog. Some people got killed that night because of the
close fog in traffic
accidents. The newsreport already mentionned the fog *before* it was
there, so how did they know about this fog (and in previous years
they never
warned for this during the new years celebrations) ?
- creating rain
- creating clouds that cause thunder and lightning
Very local effect sometimes, sometimes nationwide.
Vincent
On Jun 30, 2008, at 9:36 PM, Toon Moene wrote:
Jim Lux wrote:
So.. if your (foreign person) buddy is designing thermonuclear
devices in their garage, and they complain about how slow it is to
run the hydrocodes to simulate stuff, better not hand them that
old copy of Sterling, et al., or even worse, give them rgb's
website. (the latter would be too suspicious, since rgb *is* a
physicist, doing monte carlo simulations no less, while Tom
Sterling is *just a computer scientist*)
You are making this far too complicated. A well-placed tropical
cyclone can easily kill 10^5 people and - thus - should be
considered a WMD.
--
Toon Moene - e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - phone: +31 346 214290
Saturnushof 14, 3738 XG Maartensdijk, The Netherlands
At home: http://moene.indiv.nluug.nl/~toon/
Progress of GNU Fortran: http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2008-01/
msg00009.html
_______________________________________________
Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org
To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit
http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf