Paul Douglas is a nationally respected meteorologist with 33 years of television and radio experience. A serial entrepreneur, Douglas is Senior Meteorologist for WeatherNation TV, a new, national 24/7 weather channel with studios in Denver and Minneapolis. Founder of Media Logic Group, Douglas and a team of meteorologists provide weather services for media at Broadcast Weather, and high-tech alerting and briefing services for companies via Alerts Broadcaster. His speaking engagements take him around the Midwest with a message of continuous experimentation and reinvention, no matter what business you’re in. He is the public face of “SAVE”, Suicide Awareness, Voices of Education, based in Bloomington. | Send Paul a question.



Dogs Like Halloween Too! Or maybe their idiot-owners have too much free time. Thanks to Newsblues (newsblues.com) for making me do a double-take. That last one is just plain troubling. Have fun out there later today!
Halloween Outlook For The Twin Cities: Witch Watch, Werewolf Warning in effect. Partly cloudy and dry, late afternoon/evening temperatures in the low 40s, a light east breeze at 3-8 mph (no real wind chill to speak of). All in all pretty typical for the last day of October. We've seen far worse! 19 years ago today 8.2" of snow fell at MSP, on our way to 28.4", the record-smashing "Halloween Superstorm."

Major Outbreak. SPC reported close to 70 tornadoes Tuesday and Wednesday of this week as one of the strongest storms in U.S. history intensified over the Upper Midwest, dragging a squall line across much of the Ohio Valley. It was the largest 48 hour outbreak of tornadoes since late June. There were 336 reports of damage caused by high winds. More from SPC here.





3G On The Summit Of Mount Everest. You heard right - if you ever had the urge to fire up your iPad during a rigour climb of the world's tallest mountain - now you're all set. "Nepali mobile network operator Ncell has installed the first 3G base station at the base camp of Mount Everest, giving visitors, climbers and people living in the Khumbu Valley the ability to make calls and wirelessly connect to the Internet. To test out the new facility, Ncell also made the world’s highest video call at 17,388 feet." Great news! The complete story is here.


Paul's Star Tribune Outlook for the Twin Cities and all of Minnesota:
HALLOWEEN: Bats on Doppler, nothing else. Plenty of sun, light winds. NE 5-10. High: 48
SUNDAY NIGHT: Mostly clear and chilly. Frost likely late. Low: 30
MONDAY: Plenty of sunshine, still quiet. High: 52
TUESDAY: Dry roads for Election Day, ample sunshine. High: 54
WEDNESDAY: Blue sky, touch of Indian Summer, a few degrees milder. High: 56
THURSDAY: Clipper cools us off again, sunny and brisk. High: 49
FRIDAY: Still sunny, still boring (for meteorologists). Good news for you. High: 48
SATURDAY: Partly sunny, no weather worries. High: near 50
Partly Spooky
Look at the bright side: we could be knee-deep in snow right now. 19 years ago the Halloween Superstorm dumped over 8" on Oct. 31, on our way to 28.4" in the cities, a single-storm record. Duluth picked up an astounding 36.9" with 5-10 foot drifts. The Duluth NWS reports that last Tuesday's 28.21" barometric pressure at Bigfork was probably the strongest storm ever observed between the Rockies & the Appalachians. A 1913 storm over New York & a 1932 storm over Rhode Island registered central pressures of 28.20"; We missed a lower 48 non-tropical record by .01" millibar!
The all-time record low pressure: 26.34" during a small, incredibly powerful hurricane that leveled the Florida Keys in 1932. That said, Tuesday's storm was extraordinary.
Halloween '10 will be cooler than average, but the sun will be out with light winds, under 8 mph. Kids will need hefty jackets under those costumes, but rain gear (or boots) will be optional this year. Quiet weather lingers into next week, no rain (or snow) in sight, just mid 50s by midweek, followed by a cooling trend late week. No arctic smacks brewing, but by next weekend the east coast may feel the full fury of a classic Nor'easter.


"IVY.TV" Talk about disruptive technology. Now you can get live streaming TV stations (and the major networks) on your computer. Free for the first month, then $4.99/month after that, for a buck more you can even record programs to play back later (on your PC or Mac!) I found out about this site during the Cablevision/Fox squabble - apparently Cablevision was directing people to this site to see the World Series (since Fox was withholding their signals for nearly 3 million households). Apparently the major networks are suing Ivytv.com for Copyright Enfringement, but Ivy claims it's all perfectly legal, and they will be sending royalty checks to the ABC's, CBS's, Fox's and NBC's of the world. It will be interesting to see how this plays out - but at least for now you can stream (live) TV on your PC/Mac - the local stations are from New York City and Seattle, with a few other channels thrown in. It's definitely worth checking out. (images above from KIRO and KING-TV in Seattle, which I was streaming live yesterday). Yes, it's a brave new media world out there. What happened to music, publishing, magazines and newspapers is about to happen to local TV. Welcome to a new ala carte, always-on, all-you-can-eat digital world.
World's Most Amazing Monorails. I don't know why this struck a chord - but it did. I remember riding the Disneyland Monorail, brought back some good memories. They are so futuristic in a Buck Rogers kind of way. Gizmodo has a great story about the most memorable monorails on the planet here.


As Seas Rise, Future Floats. Worldwide sea levels rose just under 8" during the 20th century. The IPCC is predicting sea level rises of anywhere from 18 - 59 centimeters this century. 11 of the world's 15 largest cities are situated on coastal estuaries, very much at risk of rising water levels. So the notion of floating factories, homes, even entire cities, isn't quite as far-fetched as it may sound. Cue Kevin Costner. The article is here.
China Wrests Supercomputer Title from U.S. A Chinese research center has just built the fastest supercomputer ever made, thought to be about 1.4 times faster than the U.S.'s fastest machine, in Tennessee. The possible implications here.ADVERTISEMENT
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