Google has done it Again: Open StreetMap Gives Kashmir To China, Pakistan

Google was recently under fire for displaying PoK as part of Pakistan on the Google Maps. The issue was raised by the minister of state for communications and IT Sachin Pilot. Google seemingly responded and amended the map, giving Kashmir back to India.Katonda  discovered that OpenStreetMap has gone a few miles further and chopped the North Eastern part of Jammu Kashmir from India and shown it as part of China. The North-Western part of Kashmir has been shown as part of Pakistan, along with Azad Kashmir. POK is shown within the political borders of Pakistan.

TOI had earlier reported about the Google Maps matter that “The ministry wrote to the website that maps available through http://www.google.com/insights showed certain parts of J&K as part of a different country. The notice also informed that wrongful depiction of Indian map could attract action under Sections 69A and 79 of the IT Act.”

Common Wealth Games are around its about time Indian map get fixed on the OpenStreetMap.

OpenStreetMap (OSM) is a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. The maps are created using data from portable GPS devices, aerial photography, other free sources or simply from local knowledge. Both rendered images and the vector graphics are available for download under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 licence.
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Frankfurt Tower’s Power Trick

You don’t need to seal yourself in to live green. That’s the message from the engineers of the Westarkade, a colorful high-rise that officially opened in Frankfurt in July.

The 15-story glass tower glows with natural light and offers windows that open—a comfort that can wreak havoc with energy efficiency. But the Westarkade’s first-of-a-kind “pressure ring” facade and sophisticated, sensor-rich control scheme promise to consume no more than 100 kilowatt-hours of energy per square meter per year. That would make it a world-class energy miser, using half as much energy as a conventional office building in Europe and as little as a third of the U.S. average.

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Role of Clouds on Earth’s Climate:Iris Hypothesis

Climate change is an interrelated system that involves the atmosphere, biosphere, land, and oceans. A change in one can cause a chain reaction in all the others. By studying ancient climate change patterns, scientists are better able to predict what might happen in future events. However, one factor that remains far from understanding is the role of clouds — how they will react to and influence a changing climate.

Clouds provide shade for the surface of the planet and effectively reflect incoming solar radiation back into space. Therefore, a rise in cloudiness will result in a cooler planet. On the other hand, clouds are made up of water vapor which is in itself, a powerful greenhouse gas. This would mean that more clouds would trap more heat than would be reflected.

The question is not just how much cloud cover there is, but where it is and what type of cloud. Would a warming world create more dark, storm clouds (stratus)? More great, big, puffy clouds (cumulus)? More high, wispy clouds (cirrus)? How each type would influence, and be influenced by, higher temperatures remains unknown.

The study of clouds is ongoing, and there are many projects in the works to better understand them. MIT scientist, Richard Lindzen has proposed the Iris Hypothesis, which states that increasing humidity as the Earth warms will create a shift from cirrus to cumulus clouds which better reflect sunlight. This would create a counterweight to global warming. There is also a real-world experiment called the GEWEX (Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment) Cloud System Study conducted by multiple government agencies. The GEWEX team observes clouds from aircraft, ships, and remote sensing instruments, and then compares them to models that simulate clouds on those same scales.

The consensus among climate modelers is that global warming would lead to more evaporation of the oceans, which would create more water vapor in the air and more clouds. Yet, more water in the atmosphere may not necessarily lead to more clouds, because higher temperatures would require more water vapor to become saturated. This means that more water vapor would be needed to form clouds, leading to the same amount of cloudiness that there would be otherwise.

So far, the preliminary assessment suggests clouds will accelerate warming, but the results are far from definitive. Yet most scientists say that the case is getting stronger. Some say that even if clouds have a cooling effect, they would not be sufficient to halt rising temperatures. One thing that all scientists will freely admit, like all climate science, is that they do not understand everything. But if they are anywhere close to being right, we are in for a warmer future.

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Hurricane Karl may hit Mexico with floods and mudslides

Central and southern parts of Mexico’s Gulf Coast braced for flash floods and mudslides as Hurricane Karl closed in on the Mexican coast for the second time Friday.Karl, building up its winds and bringing the potential of up to 15 inches/ of rain, was about 70 miles/ east-northeast of the city of Veracruz as of 5 a.m./0900 GMT, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.

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