Minor Disaster

Claude Joseph Vernet - A Shipwreck - Public Domain - click for large original

Claude Joseph Vernet – A Shipwreck – Public Domain – click for large original

This site had a minor disaster yesterday. The plugin that manages the downloads lost them all, and I had to manually rebuild them. Coincidentally, the server hosting Green Comet had some problems of its own, giving me intermittent, slow access. So I spent most of yesterday laboriously, haltingly restoring download links.

However, it was just a minor disaster and I think it’s all better now. It doesn’t look as if anything was irretrievably lost, so I’m counting myself lucky. Does that make me an optimist?

I’m pretty sure it’s okay now, but I’d appreciate it if some of you could try out a few of the download links and let me know in the comments.

Thank you

rjb

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State of the Commons

creative-commons-logo

Creative Commons has published an infographic, called State of the Commons, illustrating the extent of CC licensing in 2014. According to them, the number of Creative Commons licensed works is approaching one billion. The most common license in use is Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike, the one I’ve used for Green Comet. CC-BY-SA is the third most open license, and the least open to still be called a Free Culture license.

creative-commons-state-2014

This is encouraging news.. I’m glad to be part of it.

rjb

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Fractus

Photo credit - cwPhotography - cc-by

Photo credit – cwPhotography – cc-by

Cloud of the Day – Fractus

Fractus are subsidiary clouds, also referred to as accessory clouds. This means that they are associated with primary clouds such as cumulus or stratus. That’s why fractus clouds are always named in combination with the cloud type that they are accessory to. When associated with cumulus they’re called cumulus fractus, with stratus, stratus fractus.

Photo credit - Andrew Basterfield - cc-by-sa

Photo credit – Andrew Basterfield – cc-by-sa

They’re called fractus because they have a ragged or shredded appearance. Cumulus fractus, for instance, looks like a nice, puffy cumulus cloud that has been torn up. Stratus fractus looks as if it’s been torn off the bottom of a layer of stratus cloud. Fractus clouds that form under the main cloud are often seen moving in a direction different from the overall movement. This can indicate what the wind is doing there and, if the speeds and directions differ significantly, can show instability and wind shear. This can be useful to pilots, who tend to call it scud cloud, for the way it scuds along. There’s also an acronym: scattered cloud under deck.

Photo credit - Dominiktesla - cc-by-sa

Photo credit – Dominiktesla – cc-by-sa

Fractus clouds are good weather indicators. They often form under rain clouds, including cumulonimbus, and at the leading and trailing edges of weather fronts. If the stormy weather hasn’t struck yet, fractus can be a sign that it soon might.

Photo credit - Merikanto - cc-by-sa

Photo credit – Merikanto – cc-by-sa

No precipitation comes from the fractus itself, but may come from its parent cloud.

Click photos for larger originals.

rjb

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