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...only one in the company with any knowledge of business, and he learned it at a communist-run school. The company (at www.virtusphere.com) has won 15 prizes at international shows, but it has yet to find a backer. Nurahmed, better known as Ray, says: "I am a scientist, not a businessman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High Tech, Hard Sell | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...Research by M.I.T. atmospheric scientist Richard Lindzen suggests that warming will tend to make cirrus clouds go away. Another critic, John Christy of the University of Alabama in Huntsville, says that while the models reproduce the current climate in a general way, they fail to get right the amount of warming at different levels in the atmosphere. Neither Lindzen nor Christy (both IPCC authors) doubts, however, that humans are influencing the climate. But they question how much?and how high temperatures will go. Both scientists are distressed that only the most extreme scenarios, based on huge population growth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Feeling the Heat | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...Even if such a tipping point doesn't materialize, the more drastic effects of global warming might be only postponed rather than avoided. The IPCC's calculations end with the year 2100, but the warming won't. World Bank chief scientist, Robert Watson, currently serving as IPCC chair, points out that the CO2 entering the atmosphere today will be there for a century. Says Watson: "If we stabilize (CO2 emissions) now, the concentration will continue to go up for hundreds of years. Temperatures will rise over that time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Feeling the Heat | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...That could be truly catastrophic. The ongoing disruption of ecosystems and weather patterns would be bad enough. But if temperatures reach the IPCC's worst-case levels and stay there for as long as 1,000 years, says Michael Oppenheimer, chief scientist at Environmental Defense, vast ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica could melt, raising sea level more than 9 m. Florida would be history, and every city on the U.S. Eastern seaboard would be inundated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Feeling the Heat | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

...thousands of these micromirrors into a soccer ball and have enough capacity to connect everyone on the planet simultaneously to everyone else without the time and expense of converting the light to electronic impulses and back again--as today's networks require. Kick that around. Declares Bell Labs scientist David Bishop, who led the development team: "You will either have a technology that does this, or you will have a going-out-of-business sale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Telecom Stocks: Busted By Broadband | 3/26/2001 | See Source »

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