2038: here we come
Bernard Boase (169) 208 posts |
With this week’s news about RISC OS Developments Ltd, can we look forward to bright green future in which 5-byte centisecond counts from 1-Jan-1900 carry us well beyond the dreaded Unix problem expected at 2038.01.19 03:14:07 UTC? See Wikipedia Some of us won’t even have reached 100 by then and may still be using RISC OS. |
John Williams (567) 768 posts |
I expect to be dead. At 92 I would otherwise expect to have other priorities! Like breathing? Sorry to be a bit downbeat! |
Rick Murray (539) 13851 posts |
Oh, I’ll be 65ish. Retirement age. Oh wait, I retire…Uh… When is it now? Help me out here, am I supposed to die before or after I retire? |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
I shall be 88 – older than any known male ancestor reached, but younger than most of my female ancestors. Not sure what chance I’ve got…but all still all there and reading and writing until very close to the end, so if I’m still around… |
Frederick Bambrough (1372) 837 posts |
I understand gender changes are quite popular. Maybe something to think about? :→ |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
Not sure it helps with longevity – at any age, especially when one’s already in one’s late sixties… |
Rick Murray (539) 13851 posts |
On my father’s side, I passed that milestone a while back. For the female part, just one crazy (I mean that very literally) granny. But we’re not a close family so I can only name the grandparents on my mother’s side, and a long distant relative in Ireland (too distant to say “hey, I’m Irish”).
Just dress in girl clothes and adopt a falsetto. The, um, procedure… It doesn’t bear thinking about. [years ago: was bored, watched a documentary on C4, then wished I hadn’t]
UK average: woman 82.9 years, men it is 79.2 years. But can you cheat the system? ;-) |
Patrick M (2888) 115 posts |
I would be 50. But I’m worried the world is going to change drastically in the time between then and now due to global warming. Who knows what could happen. |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
Oh, sure, females live longer, definitely in my family tree – but do trans females live longer? My suspicion is that they probably don’t. Not sure the numbers have been high enough for long enough to have any stats yet. |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Nope, it’s largely about the genes in your jeans1
Well quite likely “more of the same” for Florida, but the ‘merkins’ tend not to subscribe to “global warming” so that could be interesting.
The info is out there if you look in the right places. 1 I quite like that one. |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
You refer to the “sunny weather” in Florida? I could surely do with more of that over here. I am deeply impressed that the Britains fear a slightly warmer climate. I guess you don’t want to lose your unique selling point “bad weather”? |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
I’ve only been to England once, but it was warmer than the “cold and dark” stories had implied. However, whenever I mentioned this I always got the same excuse: “We’re having a heat wave”. It’s the only place I’ve been to where the people apologise for good weather! |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
A reference to the slightly strong breeze they had remodelling the state, which I suspect you wouldn’t be wanting.
I must be part cat1 or something because the only thing that really bothers me is being out in the rain but I normally carry an umbrella anyway. “Variable” sums things up. 1 Although one of our cats pretty much ignores the wet stuff unless it’s absolutely hosing down. |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
Ah, now I understand. But where is the connection to Climate Change? Science says that there is no correlation to be found since recording of hurricanes started. At least the scientific articles I read and checked for statistical validity. Do you have different evidence? |
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Interesting because the prevailing theory1 suggests that the likely change effects (apart from the melting of icecaps that gets much publicity) will largely be more variable/extreme conditions. For places like the UK (and near continent) that’s all the stuff we’re used to but more so. For areas that get large storm systems (hurricane/typhoon) they are likely to see more and stronger – and that’s what the US of A has been seeing for a number of years, more and stronger. 1 Interestingly very recent reports suggest the time period to see the effects is actually going to be shorter than previously predicted. So unless people reading this move to “pushing up daisies” real soon they are likely to see the effects themselves. |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
Where can I read about that prevailing theory? AFAIK, there is no solid statistical evidence that weather gets either more variable or more extreme or both.
I am sure you will show me some evidence for that hypothesis. I am following Climate Change science since reading the first IPCC report in 1990. I have since learned that most of the media reports about Climate Change are greatlyexagerated, mostly because model output is falsely taken as evidence for anything. For software developers, a good start is to look at the ModelE source code to quickly lose faith in anything those models predict. So back to that prediction about “more and stronger”. As a start, how much more likely and how much stronger? Error bars of that prediction? I have followed some of the model’s predictions over the years, and usually after less than 10 years they are outside their suggested error bars. Don’t believe in anything that the models “predict”.
I guess the double negative was not intended… You mean it was stronger than those Category 4 hurricanes hitting Florida in 1945, 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1950? How do you know? Al I know is that Michael was Category 4. You remember Hurricane Andrew? Now when was that, and what Category? Climate Change is an extremely complicated subject. We know very little about many of the mechanisms (you can even read that in the IPCC reports). We still don’t know if cloud feedback is likely negative or positive. We have no idea how constantly changing ocean currents like PDO or AMO are affecting the whole climate system. I am always impressed by the certainty many people show when they demand spending of billions of bucks (of other people’s money of course) in the face of the complete uncertainty of the effect of that spending. But that is probably because believing is much easier than knowing. Those who know nothing must believe everything. |
Rick Murray (539) 13851 posts |
Yes.
By reading. Michael, with sustained winds of 155mph (135 knots), is the first category 4 hurricane to make landfall on Florida’s Panhandle and the fourth strongest storm ever to strike the United States. Only three category 5 storms have made a US landfall: the Labor Day hurricane of 1935 (160 kts), Hurricane Camille (1969: 152 kts) and Hurricane Andrew (1992: 145 kts).
Here’s my Savage Garden Affirmation bit…
|
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Based on the statement from the state governor reading a prepared text. Of course as a politician he’s entitled to exaggerate.
I think it would be better if the climate change sceptics paused before spending on schemes that certainly contribute to the known greenhouse gas problems. Sometimes it isn’t high spend to try and tackle a problem, its not spending on the cause that is required. |
Rick Murray (539) 13851 posts |
Everything based upon 32 bit time_t might fail, but RISC OS will be fine:
|
Steve Pampling (1551) 8172 posts |
Yeah, I think they rather missed the global in Global Warming i.e. it’s a global effect but the local aspects are, with more energy in the system, more extreme versions of what you always had1 which has always been rather variable, hence the British fascination with weather.
I think that’s the bit where my home city of Sheffield may be a seaside town on a fairly long inlet. Rather depends on the rise as Sheffield at it’s lowest is 95ft above sea level but 1700ft+ at the highest. One thing is certain the label “British Isles” will be majoring on the Isles bit but even at worst the majority of Sheffields wonderful hills will be high and dry. 1 Of course if one of the effects is weakening the conveyor belt of warm water known as the Gulf Stream then the UK is likely to be a bit cooler. |
Steve Drain (222) 1620 posts |
Michael is reported to be slightly stronger than Andrew at landfall on the Florida Panhandle, but both Cat 4. Neither is stronger than the huge Labor Day Hurricane that hit the Florida Keys in 1935. This is the use of selective criteria to make a point. I hate that. When faced with someone talking about Climate Change, I ask “What is the most important greenhouse gas?”. If I get the correct answer, I expect that a sensible discussion will follow. Otherwise I walk away, because there is no point in wasting my time. Sensible discussion is necessary, but it is in short supply.
I can go along with most of that. ;-) |
Bernard Boase (169) 208 posts |
Is or will be? Surely it will be methane, even if it’s not yet been released in quantity from earth and subsea. (I suppose climate change is on topic, since I gave the thread a title with a future date! Silly me.) |
Bernard Boase (169) 208 posts |
Thanks, Rick. Obviously Wikipedia should be apprised of this limit, while we are discussing the discomforts of future generations. |
Steve Drain (222) 1620 posts |
No. I walk away. ;-) |
Clive Semmens (2335) 3276 posts |
Well – technically, water vapour is. It’s also by far the most complicated to analyse, since it has this awkward propensity for converting back and forth between vapour and water droplets, with very different greenhouse properties. Of the others, carbon dioxide is for the foreseeable future – not because it’s potent (others are far more potent) but because it’s present in relatively enormous quantities. Methane is unlikely to match it (globally) in the foreseeable future, releases notwithstanding. |