Skip to content

Biting the hand that feeds IT

The Register ®

Science:


Related Whitepapers

Comments on ‘China aims artillery for a blue-sky Olympics’

A silver bullet, not a silver lining

Published Tuesday 17th July 2007 10:38 GMT

« Back to article page

Export the tech! 

By JP
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 10:44 GMT

If the Chinese are doing it for the Olympics, why the heck can't London do it for Wimbledon?!? Or is it just too much of a tradition to have tennis players running in and out for their matches?

Mind you, up-wind would dump all the rain in the north-west again, causing even more troubles for the already flooded...

Ship some to UK coastal defences... 

By Ash
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 11:02 GMT

That way we can rain off all these clouds over the Channel and Irish Sea and have some clear skies this summer!

Hey, you could shoot it over Scotland! They're used to rain...

Oooh... 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 11:04 GMT

I just know that something bad is going to happen.

(Coat, etc)

created ? 

By Steve Mason
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 13:02 GMT

"250 billion tonnes of rain was artificially created "

artificially encouraged to fall rather than created would be closer to the mark... and even that's wild speculation considering the "best-guess" approach weather experts have to take w.r.t predictions.

There's a well known fact (tm) to counter these claims... Sensitive Dependance on Initial Conditions.

I rest my case m'luddites

Is this safe 

By Mark
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 13:10 GMT

I mean what happens to silver iodide once it is in the atmosphere.

From my quick googling long term chemical, physical and toxicological properties have not been thoroughly investigated

May Day parades 

By Mike Richards
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 13:28 GMT

The Soviet Union used to claim that suitable airborne application of cement dust to clouds around Moscow ensured bright skies for the annual proletarian marching and scaring the bejesus out of the West event.

I assume it had a side effect of producing instant car parks in the outer suburbs.

Wow 

By Register Reader
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 14:40 GMT

Couldn't they just build a roof? Or have a retractable canopy? -.-

Dubya is going to love that 

By Andy
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 15:19 GMT

What happens when the Americans see thousands of Chinese people rolling out weaponry? They'll be there quicker than you can say "Chinese oil supply".

Re:Wow 

By Tony
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 16:13 GMT

I am currently in the process of developing a personal rain-deterrence device which I have code-named "umbrella" in order to keep the Chinese from divining my secret system.

I would welcome private investment from obvious forward thinkers such as yourself to bring my device to market before the "08 Olympics.

While your suggestions of "roof" and "retractable canopy" are imminently sensible, I believe there is much greater profit potential in my invention due to the potential of higher unit sales of personal protection instead of mass protection.

I can be reached through Tonyumbrella.con.

I don't think Madam Zhang will be able to stop the "drizzle" with her "crack force".

Better women have tried, all have failed.

Bang 

By Simon
Posted Tuesday 17th July 2007 16:52 GMT

It may create rain(?) but having lived in Beijing, I can tell you now, it scares the sh*t out of you when they start firing at 2am.

Cloud seeding is a must to save mankind from impacts of Global warming 

By prof.T.Shivaji Rao
Posted Wednesday 18th July 2007 02:31 GMT

China is going to succeed in providing clear skies for the Olympics of 2008 if only Chinese take the help of Experienced Russian and American experts who previously worked on similar problems.Weather Modification can be done to either augment precipitation or to suppress precipitation by adjusting the amount of Chemical dosage to be usd as per guide lines on cloud seeding formulated by several countries like US states like Texas,Australia etc.

prof.T.Shivaji Rao.E-mail;profshivajirao@hotmail.com

Pragmatism 

By b shubin
Posted Wednesday 18th July 2007 03:30 GMT

my observations of modern Chinese culture and methods reveal a stark practicality in most of their actions. policies practiced by the state are rarely sentimental, and corporate culture seems even more hard-nosed.

their interest in safety is, shall we say, situational.

as for controlling weather, well, i reserve judgement until more tangible proof is available.

whitepaper title

Enabling the Data Center Metamorphosis

This independent analyst paper gives real world advice on transforming your datacenter into a streamlined, dynamic, liquid engine capable of handling growth..
whitepaper title

Gartner Paper: US Data Centers - The Calm Before the Storm

U.S. enterprise data centers face considerable space and energy constraints over the next few years. Download this free independent report to read more..

Top 20 storiesAll The Week’s HeadlinesArchiveSearch