Bill

@billault
11 Followers
84 Following
75 Posts
Canadian. 63 trips around sol. Small business owner, podcaster, serial entrepreneur & environmentalist. Talk sports, music, climate & where we're headed as a species.
New Northern Latitudes episode — and the timing matters.
The CRASH Clock dropped to 2.5 days today. Prof. Samantha Lawler (University of Regina) helped develop it. We talked about what it measures, what's driving it, and why the night sky is already measurably different than it was six years ago.
No meaningful regulations. One company. Two-thirds of orbit.
🎙️ https://rss.com/podcasts/northernlatitudes/2791123

The "crash clock" — how long before a collision cascade becomes likely in low Earth orbit if Starlink satellites stop maneuvering — has dropped from 5.5 days to 3 days in under a year.
Prof. Samantha Lawler @sundogplanets on the latest Northern Latitudes. It's a number worth sitting with.
🎙️ https://rss.com/podcasts/northernlatitudes/2791123

#Astronomy #SatellitePollution #Starlink #NorthernLatitudes

The Number That Should Alarm You

One company owns 2/3s of every satellite currently in orbit.

That happened in 6 YEARS.

We sat down with the astronomer who's been tracking what that actually means.

New Northern Latitudes episode today.

https://rss.com/podcasts/northernlatitudes/2791123

#Satellites #SpacePolicy #Podcast

The Number That Should Alarm You

One company owns 2/3s of every satellite currently in orbit.

That happened in 6 YEARS.

We sat down with the astronomer who's been tracking what that actually means.

New Northern Latitudes episode today.

https://rss.com/podcasts/northernlatitudes/2791123

#Satellites #SpacePolicy #Podcast

New episode of Northern Latitudes — Small Wings, Old Bones
Two science conversations.
Noria Morfin (University of Manitoba Honey Bee Lab) on bee health, varroa mites, colony loss, and cautious optimism.
Dr. Danielle Fraser (Canadian Museum of Nature) on a 23-million-year-old Arctic rhinoceros and what it means to name a new species.
https://rss.com/podcasts/northernlatitudes/2755906
#Bees #Paleontology #CanadianScience #Podcast

New podcast episode out today. Allison Criscitiello an ice core scientist. An amazing guest, Ali is exactly the reason I started the podcast. Smart, funny and I learned so much.

https://rss.com/podcasts/northernlatitudes/2538731/ or wherever you get your podcasts.

Northern Latitudes - Alison Criscitiello: What the Ice Remembers | Podcast Episode on RSS.com

What the Ice RemembersPreserving Climate History with Alison CriscitielloIce is one of the planet’s most faithful historians. Layer by layer, it records volcanic eruptions, atmospheric chemistry, temperature shifts, and traces of human activity stretching back tens of thousands of years.In this episode of Northern Latitudes, Bill Ault speaks with Alison Criscitiello, Director of the Canadian Ice Core Lab at the University of Alberta, about what ice cores reveal.Beyond the science, this conversation explores the human side of polar research. Alison reflects on building a career in remote, high-latitude field science as a queer woman in a discipline that has not always been welcoming, and why visibility and inclusion matter for the future of climate science.In This EpisodeWhat ice cores are and how scientists extract themHow ice preserves a detailed record of Earth’s atmosphereWhy the Arctic and high latitudes are warming faster than the rest of the planet Key TakeawaysIce cores are not projections; they are direct physical recordsClimate change is already visible in the planet’s deepest archivesWho does science—and who is supported to lead—shapes what we learnAbout the GuestAlison Criscitiello is the Director of the Canadian Ice Core Lab at the University of Alberta. Her work focuses on ice core science, climate reconstruction, and the preservation of irreplaceable polar climate records. Further Reading & LinksCanadian Ice Core Lab – University of Albertahttps://www.ualberta.ca/en/science/research-and-teaching/research/ice-core-archive/index.html

RSS.com

Apple to Europe: „Your laws are bad for us, therefore we are withholding unrelated features from your citizens and do everything possible to lobby against your laws.“

Apple in the USA: „We only follow the laws and orders of our authoritarian government, there is nothing we can do against it.“

In a sudden epiphany, he realized that both the Catholic church and the Church of the SubGenius were now intrinsically linked by "Bob".
This handsome fellow was up at the lake this weekend. #photography
Among 40,000 Farmerettes during WW II, woman says helping feed Canadians was 'hard' but wonderful work | CBC News

During and after the Second World War, thousands of Ontario girls became Farmerettes, taking on the work to support Canada’s food supply. Their contributions were largely forgotten — until now. The new documentary We Lend a Hand premieres in Sudbury on Friday, and features first-hand accounts from surviving women.

CBC