
In about the time it takes to bake a tray of cookies, watch a show on Netflix, or be the shortest reigning King of France, an average Russian hacker can infiltrate a computer network.
Written by Tyler Durden

In about the time it takes to bake a tray of cookies, watch a show on Netflix, or be the shortest reigning King of France, an average Russian hacker can infiltrate a computer network.
Written by Dr Klaus L E Kaiser

This is a follow-up to my recent post on “5G Wireless Broadband and how (not) to Boil Eggs.”
As I had tried to point out, there is a one-plus order of magnitude difference in the photon (electromagnetic wave, EM) energy between the current 4G communication (4G) and the proposed 5G systems (5G).
Written by Dr Susan J Crockford

Times have changed: where once many scientists worried that polar bears could not survive the Arctic with 40% less ice, now the concern is that people of the Arctic might not be able to keep themselves safe from growing numbers of increasingly fearless bears.
Written by Kenneth Richard

Zhokhov Island in the Siberian High Arctic today exhibits inhospitably severe climate conditions, desolate tundra, and year-round pack ice in the surrounding sea.
Written by John O'Sullivan

In recent years, the public has gradually discovered that there is a crisis in science. But what is the problem? And how bad is it, really?
New Corbett Report video shines a spotlight on the series of interrelated crises that are exposing the way institutional science is practiced today, and what it means for an increasingly science-dependent society.
Written by Dr Tony Phillips

Cosmic rays in the stratosphere are intensifying for the 4th year in a row. This finding comes from a campaign of almost weekly high-altitude balloon launches conducted by the students of Earth to Sky Calculus.
Written by James Edward Kamis
Written by Dr Tim Ball (Climatologist)

Here is what to do when the title is a lie. Confirm it also lies within the text. Confirm the lies in a historical and political context. Expose the lies and the people responsible.
Written by Herb Rose

This article comes from a discussion of an article on black holes published in PSI.
It was clear from that discussion that some did not understand the consequences of a constant speed of light, relativity, time dilation, or special relativity.
Written by Don Lincoln

Written by Dr Benny Peiser

Nearly four years after the worst bleaching event in the state’s history, coral reefs in West Hawaiʽi are stabilizing and poised to recover, according to scientists from The Nature Conservancy. —Maui Now, 22 January 2019
Written by Ed Hoskins

This post gives indicative, (back of the envelope), estimates of the net capital and net 60 year long-term costs of Weather Dependent Renewables as compared to the use of Gas-firing for electricity generation in the UK.
Written by Chris Morrison

It has been a difficult year for the icons of the climate alarmist industry. Wherever you look, from polar bears to penguins, numbers are on the rise.
And why won’t all those Himalayan glaciers hurry up and melt? Don’t they know there’s a climate war on?
Written by James Taylor

During last week’s Natural Resources Committee climate hearings, an alarmist witness – I believe it was Deborah Bronk – smugly proclaimed that a ‘fair’ hearing would have 97 of her warmist allies testifying against three skeptics.
Written by John O'Sullivan
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New Facebook open discussion group invites readers to engage in discussion on the position that contemporary science isn’t really science but obedience.
The argument follows one long made by skeptics of man-made global warming, and to a lesser extent, critics of government-funded cosmology.
Written by Brian Handwerk, SMITHSONIAN.COM
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Can the minds of machines teach us something new about what it means to be human? When it comes to the intricate story of our species’ complex origins and evolution, it appears that they can.