This is the website of Abulsme Noibatno Itramne (also known as Sam Minter). Posts here are rare these days. For current stuff, follow me on Mastodon

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Gustav Again

When last we left Gustav, I was teasing my friend Ivan about going to Jamaica as it was approaching. But the odds had diminished to 30% to 50% that Jamaica would get tropical storm force winds, and less than a 10% chance of hurricane force winds.

As of the 12 UTC charts from the NHC, in Jamaica the odds are now 80% to 100% for tropical storm force winds depending on which part of Jamaica you are talking about. For hurricane force winds those odds are 5% to 15%. Non-trivial. Worth worrying about, but still an 85% chance of NOT having hurricane force winds. Tropical storm force winds are pretty close to certain though, so I’m sure Ivan is in a bar somewhere enjoying it and watching the show. :-)

Which brings us to New Orleans. For the last 48 hours, people have been getting increasingly agitated that New Orleans will get slammed by a major hurricane early next week. The “track” aims right at new Orleans. The mayor is rushing home. The Republicans are making contingency plans to adjust their convention schedule if needed, etc.

But lets put it into perspective.

This morning’s NHC update finally shows New Orleans with a greater than 5% chance of hurricane force winds in the next five days. Before that, the odds of New Orleans getting hit by hurricane force winds were less than 5%. (Tropical storm force winds are another story, but we’re not really worried about those, are we?) But yet people were getting all worked up.

Now, I understand why given what happened a few years ago. But…

Right now it looks like for New Orleans the chance of tropical storm force winds is about 35%. The odds of hurricane force winds are about 7%.

Now, 7% is not zero. It is not something to ignore. If you are anywhere within the area with 5% or greater odds, you should be making proper preparations, including preparing to get the hell out if you are in a place like New Orleans. By the way, that 5% area also includes a lot more of Louisiana than New Orleans, the entire Mississippi and Alabama coastlines, western Cuba, Jamaica (as discussed) and the northern Yucatan in Mexico. Now, that means prepare and pay attention and be smart… NOT panic and act like the world is ending.

In New Orleans there is still a 93% chance they will NOT get hurricane force winds in the next five days. NINETY THREE PERCENT.

There is a 65% chance they won’t even get tropical storm force winds.

Now, 7% can still happen. Um… about 7% of the time in this kind of situation it would.

But really, people are getting a little ahead of themselves with the increasingly feverish talk about this.

Now… if over the next few days that 7% turns into 15% turns into 25% turns into 50% turns into 70%… then that is a completely different story.

Biden’s Speech

A lot better than I had thought it would be. I really liked the family stuff at the beginning though. (Including the introduction by his son.) That stuff about the car crash gets me every time. That got my attention a lot more than the rest of the speech. Although it did build in energy as it went.

And then Obama came out at the end.

Expectations are really high for him tomorrow.

We shall see.

Watching Bill

I had to watch Bill on delay (thank you C-Span!) because I had a work thing while it was live. And I admit, I sort of multi-tasked while watching it too, so didn’t pay full attention. My rough impression was that he said what he was expected to say and needed to say, but I didn’t get all roused by his speech or anything. For the moment I’ll stick with the fact that the only speeches worth listening to so far have been Kennedy’s, Michelle Obama’s and Schweitzer’s.

I’m now trying to catch up to real time on my Tivo. Watching Kerry right now.

I now remember why I didn’t like him four years ago. Bleh.

At this point I’m not all that hyped about Biden.

Maybe Obama will really bring it home tomorrow. But so far this has been very blah.

[Edit 3:21 UTC – Oh yeah, and Hillary. I forgot already, but hers was great too.]

Officially Obama

And the Democrats now have a nominee. Officially. By acclamation.

Without finishing the roll call. At Clinton’s request.

Last numbers were 1549 Obama, 341 Clinton.

(All the votes submitted earlier in writing will eventually be counted it seems, just not in the roll call.)

Anyway, there it is.

New York…

And here we go… Here comes Hillary.

After All That, Michigan

Obama wins Michigan too, and he wasn’t even on the ballot.

125 delegates for Obama. 27 delegates for Clinton. (And 5 missing delegates.)

And we are more than half way to the magic number.

After All That, Florida

Obama wins Florida, 136 delegates to 51. (With 1 abstention.)

Bleh.

(Wait, that doesn’t add up to 211, they are still doing odd things. Oh well, won’t matter in the end…)

Lots of Flippers

A lot of Hillary delegates are indeed voting for Obama. As opposed to a count that is somewhat close, as of Delaware, we’re at 275 Obama, 71 Clinton.

I wish they would have all stuck to their guns. It would have been more interesting.

Absentions Going On

Starting with Alabama, which had 60 votes. 48 went to Obama, 5 to Clinton… which leaves 7 delegates missing.

Interesting.

But of course, in the end, without meaning or significance.

Unless of course they are just holding some back intentionally in the effort to make New York be the state (with Hillary Clinton speaking) to push Obama over the edge.

Abbreviated Roll Call

They will do part of the roll call, then move to declare Obama the nominee by acclimation rather than finish it and get an actual final count.

I think that sucks.