108 – A big number in some contexts, small in others. Magnitude is in the eye of the beholder.
It looks like we hit that number sometime around 7:45-7:46 AM PST today. Unfortunately the WordPress Blog stats widget seems to update only every 15 minutes or so (probably to minimize server CPU cycles) so it looks like we’ve missed the actual clickover. It went from 99,999,962 at 7:45AM PST to 100,004,397 views just after 8AM PST.
First I want to say, thanks. Second this really is no big deal. The only reason is is notable is that no other blog dedicated to climate science has announced reaching such a milestone, and contenders like Real Climate haven’t even come close.
In honesty, let me say that WUWT probably passed the 108 mark sometime in the last two days, because in the first year of my blog, it was on the servers of the Chico Enterprise Record (where it started in 2006) and that first year of traffic data (~100,000 views) was lost when I switched to wordpress.com in October 2007 because that server couldn’t handle the load nor provide the features I needed, so the newspaper graciously let me move to a better platform. WUWT is still listed under the ChicoER umbrella at www.norcalblogs.com.
Christopher Monckton muses in his recent guest post Hurrah for 8 orders of magnitude!:
“And it is hard work, 24/7, 366 days a year.”
Well yes, but being a broadcaster trained me to be like this. Before there was blogging, there was me on television, working nights, weekends, some holidays, and sometimes into the wee hours of the morning covering severe weather outbreaks. Blogging has one benefit not found on TV; I don’t have to wear a suit and makeup. But, it does seem like second nature to me.
Ric Werme has chosen a selection of WUWT classics, and offers them in his WUWT Index Page. I’ve repeated them below.
WUWT Classics
Here are some posts that deserve to used as reference works, not just as comment-du-jour. The real reference is usually elsewhere, but a lot of us heard it first here.
- 2008 Jan 28: Warming Trend: PDO And Solar Correlate Better Than CO2
This is Anthony’s summary of work by Joe D’Aleo. It predates my “obsessive” involvement on WUWT by a few weeks, that happened in large part to hearing about this from Joe directly. This convinced me that CO2 wasn’t dominant and with the negative PDO in place things were about to turn interesting.
Latest update 2010 Sep 30: AMO+PDO= temperature variation – one graph says it all The comments raise a number of concerns about looking at correlations between time-smoothed series, and the new paper leaves out the CO2 test, so it’s not as striking as before.
- 2008 Jun 2: Livingston and Penn paper: “Sunspots may vanish by 2015”.
By my reckoning, this is the most fascinating material I’ve read on WUWT. Now in mid-2010 the data is pretty much tracking predictions some four years after the paper was written.
Latest update 2010 Sep 18: Sun’s magnetics remain in a funk: sunspots may be on their way out. This reports on a new paper Long-term Evolution of Sunspot Magnetic Fields. An updated estimate of the majority of sunspots becoming invisible is 2021-2022, but I and others think some of the delay is due to some events already being invisible and hence aren’t included in the average, and that leads to an apparently slower decline.
- 2009 Jun 14: The Thermostat Hypothesis
This revisits the well observed and understood phenomenon of daily tropical thunderstorms from the novel viewpoint that they keep the Earth from overheating.
- 2009 Nov 15: Reference: 450 skeptical peer reviewed papers
- 2009 Nov 19: Breaking News Story: CRU has apparently been hacked – hundreds of files released
I remember where I was when the story broke. I was on my computer surfing the web. Duh. I think I stayed up until 0300 that night. 1,616 comments to this post!
- 2010 Mar 27: Earth Hour in North Korea a stunning success
The nighttime satellite photo says it all. Definitely a solution we don’t want to emulate.
- 2010 Jun 4: Under the Volcano, Over the Volcano
Willis Eschenbach’s description of how CO2 measurements at Mauna Loa are made and the steps they take to exclude measurements with recent CO2 releases from local volcanic and anthropogenic sources.
- 2010 Jul 9: Aliens Cause Global Warming: A Caltech Lecture by Michael Crichton
This is a superb lecture about what distinguishes science from wishful thinking; the hazards of consensus science; and how science hasn’t learned from the past.
- 2011 Apr 29: Friday Funny – science safety run amok
This started out as a rant about “a chemistry kit with no chemicals.” Disppointing, despicable, disheartening to be sure, but certainly not worthy of being listed here.However, WUWT Nation is full of people who’ve learned chemistry the fun way, from 1960’s chemical sets to making their own rocket fuel. They (we!) hijacked the thread to reminisce about all the chemistry that society (and Homeland Security) frown upon today. Enjoy! BTW, the link goes to the first comment, if you want to read about depressing chemistry sets, you’ll have to scroll up or edit the URL.
- 2011 Sep 15: WUWT’s answer to Al Gore’s 24 hour Climate Reality Project
The CRP was a 24 hour event repeating Al Gore’s new presentation, once per time zone in a particular language of that time zone. Meanwhile, WUWT readers were being treated to a new post each hour with a cartoon by Josh preceeding the details. The result is a very good introduction to Climate science and where Al Gore gets it wrong.
Guest poster Willis Eschenbach always comes up with fascinating posts. Even his autobiographical posts are remarkable. He’s collected An Index to Willis’s Writings up to May 2011 and deserves this special entry here.
###
I’d like to add one of my own favorites to the classics list, since I worked harder on this post than any other. It took weeks of hunting down equipment, long hours of patience in replication, and hundreds of dollars to produce:
Bill Nye was annoyed enough to respond, if you can call this a response. It seems rather science-free compared to what I offered. Heh.
Speaking of responses, it appears that from the Climategate 2 emails, WUWT has been putting a burr in the saddle of the team. E.M. Smith (Chiefio) points out all the emails where I or the blog have been discussed. I’m surprised there were so many.
I suppose that if this blog were not effective, I wouldn’t be attacked so much by defenders of the team, such as the juvenile activist/scientist Peter Gleick (with his B.S. award) and the tree and pig whisperer, James Lenfestney. They seem like burned out 60’s hippies, because they certainly don’t act like professionals. You just have to laugh. I liked this kid’s take on it, who is experiencing similar things. Remember on August 19th 2011, when I reported on the science project for putting solar cells in a tree like arrangement? Novel idea – arrange solar panels like Nature designed it. It seems the kid has made some people angry. From the New York Times story on him this week:
A new way of collecting solar energy has polarized scientists around the world and ignited fierce debate on the Internet, where the innovator in question has been called everything from an alien to the agent of a global conspiracy.
Sound familiar? We skeptics get that a lot. Here’s his response:
He got some constructive advice, said Aidan’s mother, Maureen. “Then there were people who were just—”
“Haters,” Aidan chimed in with a grin.
That’s a great attitude! Yep, haters. WUWT and I have collected a lot of those too. Somehow these haters (and you know who you are) think that by spreading hate, I’ll change my way of thinking and doing things. Nope, it only strengthens my resolve.
As much as I’m denigrated for running this blog, the fact that I’m writing this today, and that I gain new friends worldwide every day, reminds me of a famous line:
Thanks to everyone who makes this community special, from the volunteer moderators, to the regulars and passers by, down to the trolls, and on the bottom, the haters. Thanks to Josh too, who provided the title graphic (from a suggestion by Barry Woods) as a surprise. I’m turning that into a commemorative coffee cup which I’ll offer soon.
Thanks are due Steve McIntyre and the late John L. Daly, who both set the standard, and slogged on for years in obscurity before climate skepticism became a mainstream issue. I’d like to thank Dr. Roger Pielke Senior, for his encouragements too.
I leave you with a video that shows just how much trouble climate change is, in fact, after watching this video it could be argued that it is “worse than we thought”.
107
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Initially, I was pleasantly enjoying the warming after the 70’s. Even thought about investing future seaside property. But, in doing the homework discovered the hoax, which really angered me (grumpy old fart syndrome?). I purchased the movie “The Great Global Warming Swindle” of which I shared a plenty (educational purposes of course). Finally, this site came to light, providing a great variety of articles, deeper discussion (over my head), and a great source of links to others work. And thanks to the internet, speed to information has thwarted the hate driven greed behind AGW zealotry. Being a scientist of other sorts (aviation oriented), weather and climate are critical factors in survivability, thus my interest expanded. Darn, I was all set to buy palm trees for the area around the BBQ…
Point here is thanks for all the enlightenment.
p gosselin says:
January 8, 2012 at 10:13 am
Ric Werme,
Suppose I were motivated to start a climate blog. Bloggers like to be read. Would I be better off starting and advertising my own blog or just become guest poster at WUWT? In my case, especially considering I’m more useful helping out with keeping some images and other stuff updated, I’m much better off attached to WUWT instead of my own blog.
You have enough time for NoTricksZone and the theme “Climate news from Germany in English”. I have neither the time (I blame WUWT for that, of course), or a good theme, so hanging out on WUWT seems to be the place for me.
Just The Facts says:
January 7, 2012 at 10:25 am
I’m a bit disappointed you are the only one to respond. I’ve added that, but in a different way. I added a whole new section on the navigation bars and use the sea ice page as the example for using the top bar.
Stuff I’ve added to http://home.comcast.net/~ewerme/wuwt/index.html follows. More context would be useful, this is just massaged output from a file compare program. I’ve added a little in brackets.
WUWT Navigation Bars
Every so often, please take a break from reading the recent posts and comments to check the two navigation bars.
The top bar (with labels from “Home” to “WUWT stuff” goes to permanent posts that are updated frequently, sometimes automatically, sometimes manually. The most important label is “Resource Pages”. When you hover the cursor over it, a submenu appears listing the the various domains WUWT covers. The most popular of these is the Sea Ice Reference Page. Many readers like to follow the progression of Arctic sea ice extent each summer because of the frequent handwringing from Al Gore and the NSIDC about how soon we’ll have an ice free Arctic. Given that we’ve only had good data for this since polar satellites started returning images of ice cover, no one can make authoritative predictions for the current season, let alone the next.
The right side nav bar is a potpourri of information and links to internal and external sites. The search box searches the content WUWT posts but not the comments. It’s a good way to hunt down some post on a subject you remember reading about. Some links go to Anthony’s business, Weather Shop (please buy stuff there!), some have current images of a subject and a link to more information. Anthony’s lists of other blogs is unique in that he links to blogs that are major detractors of WUWT, most of which disparage WUWT but don’t link to it.
Everything else is pretty much self explanatory. It changes frequently enough so a periodic check is worthwhile to see what’s new and what you’ve forgotten about.
WUWT Classics
[After Climategate]
Update 2011 Nov 22: Climategate 2.0 emails – They’re real and they’re spectacular! A second round of leaked messages, greater in number than the first, provide more confirmation and insights on subversion of science that is rife in the climate research field. There are “only” 1,264 comments to this post, but many more posts and Emails are referenced in the subsequent days and weeks by 50 updates.
Latest update 2012 Jan 6: See Over 250 noteworthy Climategate 2.0 emails for another starting point that will keep you busy and make your blood boil.
[After Aliens Cause Global Warming: A Caltech Lecture by Michael Crichton]
Latest update 2011 Aug 18: On the other hand, this alternative view, a peer reviewed paper, that the media blew out of proportion is a Bizarre, craptastic theory from the Guardian, Penn State, and NASA: “ET will kill us because global warming will tip them off that we are a bad species”. I’m including it mainly because NASA’s name is attached to the story. This was not sponsored by NASA, but a co-author is a post-doc affiliated with NASA. The useful lesson is that peer-reviewed journals have a much lower bar to accepting papers with alarmist elements than papers with much more work behind them that conclude the climate is not as sensitive to CO₂ as some claim.
2011 Aug 24: Andrea Rossi’s E-cat fusion device on target.
I generally do not go out of my way to create controversy, but by far the most controversial topic I’ve posted on was about Cold Fusion, or LENR (Low Energy Nuclear Reaction). This is a field that hasn’t had the decency to collapse like polywater did, but it’s also been a field where no one could build something simple like a residential water heater. That may have changed with an invention by Andrea Rossi involving hydrogen-nickel fusion and that seemed worthy of a WUWT post. This is the best of the three, and is plenty controversial. Most of mainstream physics refuses to accept any of this, with good reason, but some other, older(!) physicists leave the door open or support Rossi’s work. One told me “it’s painfully clear that you don’t have a clue that you don’t have a clue,” So do take all this with healthy skepticism.
Latest update2011 Oct 28: If you believe Rossi, his demonstration of a system that can produce 1 Mw of heated water resulted in a sale to the US military (and a repeat order of a dozen more). The discussion following my post Test of Rossi’s 1 MW E-Cat fusion system apparently successful resulted in the topic being banned until there is an adequate third party review of Rossi’s claims. It may take a while, he is working on producing a million residential water heaters by the end of 2012.
2011 Aug 24: CERN Experiment Confirms Cosmic Rays Influence Cloud Seeds
The CERN CLOUD experiment is a test of Henrik Svensmark’s hypothesis that incoming cosmic rays can help trigger cloud formation clean maritime saturated air. This post is from Nigel Calder who is quite bitter about some of the political delays that led to it taking 14 years from hypothesis to CERN experiment and then not acknowledging Svensmark work. Nevertheless, the cosmic ray influence may be an extremely important phenomenon as it provides a means for a small signal to have a significant influence on Earth.
2011 Oct 18: Replicating Al Gore’s Climate 101 video experiment shows that his “high school physics” could never work as advertised
Good science is repeatable. Videos purporting to demonstrate good science may not be repeatable. I don’t know where Anthony found the time, but he decided to repeat this experiment, even to the point of buying the same equipment and props. His effort wound up documenting all the stagecraft fakery and exposed the video as propaganda, not science.
2011 Dec 7: In China, there are no hockey sticks
Given the bad reputation of tree ring studies by critiques of any such research that involves Michael Mann, this study needs a good skeptical review itself. However, in many ways it’s a simpler study target, so may stand up to that review. On the plus side, it demonstrates the Medieval Warm Period and the Little Ice Age, so that’s a good sign. It’s impressive for both the long (2,485 year) record and the projection that calls for steady cooling from 2006 to 2068. That provides support for some other claims, e.g. Nils Axel Mörner: Arctic Environment by the Middle of this Century
¡Felicitaciones, desde España!
Thanks and congratulations Anthony, moderators and contributors!
I come here to learn, and I do learn here.
How does it handle this: when FF is up, I have 4 tabs permanently open: Home Page, Sea Ice, Tips&Notes, and a ‘currently reading’ tab? The latter gets the links from “New Post” emails, most recent of the links to (the floods of) the New Comments on posts I’m following, and any interesting outside links. So It may change many times an hour, or stay open for some time as I read a comment stream, or am off reading other posts or sites.
Braggart! Very few sites can claim the same. Congrats to both.
Oh, I think he censured them! But he didn’t dare censor them, or he’d have had no traffic.
😉
What?!??! When you could be updating the index?
DVR the games, and watch at double-speed. Much more dramatic, and saves lotsa time.
😉
;p
‘Grats, Thermostat Man. I’ve seen nothing since that hypothesizing post that challenges or invalidates it. The Tropical Heat Pipe Rulz!
One small milestone for man one giant leap for mankind~
What? Neil Armstrong doesn’t own that kind of phrase, we used to say it here all the time before the end of the 60’s, so I’m told. LOL 🙂