Uncertainty in Risk Assessment: The Representation and Treatment of Uncertainties by Probabilistic and Non-Probabilistic Methods
Terje Aven, Enrico Zio, Piero Baraldi and Roger Flage
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Explores methods for the representation and treatment of uncertainty in risk assessment In providing...
The Register of Edward Story, Bishop of Chichester, 1478-1503
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Edward Story, fellow of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, and later master of Michaelhouse, was also, in two...
First Aid & Emergency
Medical and Health & Fitness
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The official New Zealand Red Cross First Aid and Emergency App. Developed for Aotearoa as part of a...
Coping with Regional Vulnerability: Preventing and Mitigating Damages from Environmental Disasters: 2016
Kiyoko Hagihara and Chisato Asahi
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Whether a natural event turns into a disaster depends on the severity of the hazard as well as the...
The Spirits and the Law: Vodou and Power in Haiti
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Vodou has often served as a scapegoat for Haiti's problems, from political upheavals to natural...
Exodus (Valen's Pack #2)
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Survival of the fittest? Not when chaos rules. Rivvie does his best as beta, but he’s lonely...
MM Paranormal Romance BDSM Dystopian
A Study of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Accident Process: What Caused the Core Melt and Hydrogen Explosion?: 2015
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Written by an expert in the field, this book is perfect for those who would like to know what...
Public Health Law: Power, Duty, Restraint
Lawrence O. Gostin, Lindsay F. Wiley and Thomas R. Frieden
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Lawrence O. Gostin's seminal Public Health Law is widely acclaimed as the definitive statement on...
Gareth von Kallenbach (980 KP) rated Geostorm (2017) in Movies
Jun 19, 2019
In the new movie “Geostorm” we are given a threat lifted directly from the headlines, the weather. It is revealed that a series of natural disasters ranging from flooding, heat waves, and climate change have left humanity in serious peril. As such the leaders of the world agree on a costly and ambitious plan to save humanity.
The resulting program is called “Dutch Boy” and it is the brainchild of Jake Lawson (Gerard Butler), and his team of international scientists and technicians.
The project is a global satellite system that controls the weather, and when a threat is detected, it is able to stop it in its tracks.
All has gone well for years under the program and humanity is now safe from weather related threats and continues on as usual. Jake has run afoul of the politicians overseeing the project and is removed from it by his brother Max (Jim Sturgess), who is tasked as his replacement.
Years later as the U.S. prepares to hand over control of Duty Boy to the international community, a series of odd things happen from unexplained weather incidents to an accident on the space station overseeing the system.
With the clock ticking before the handoff and Election Year politics playing a factor, Jake is tasked with going to the space station and getting to the bottom of the system issues.
The film cleverly switches gears at this point as it soon becomes clear there is a conspiracy at work that wants the system to fail and when it is learned that this may result in a mega-storm called a Geostorm, Jake and Max must put aside their differences and find out who is turning the salvation of humanity into a weapon of ultimate destruction.
The film has some really good effects and the weather disasters bring out some impressive visuals as do the scenes set in space.
The film does take some serious leaps of logic and science that requires the audience to simply follow along for the good of the story, but the strong cast and winning effects make the film more enjoyable than I expected it to be and I was entertained from start to finish.
http://sknr.net/2017/10/20/geostorm/
Capital and the Common Good: How Innovative Finance is Tackling the World's Most Urgent Problems
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Despite social and economic advances around the world, poverty and disease persist, exacerbated by...