Épisodes

  • Perfect Storms (The Final Episode)
    Nov 21 2024

    Show Notes

    Hosts: Jeff Cunningham and Ryan Harris

    Description: In the final episode of The Triple Point Podcast, Jeff and Ryan look back on the impacts of Hurricanes Helene and Milton across Florida and other parts of the southeast, and Ryan talks about his experience in the eye of Hurricane Milton. Originally recorded on October 17th just before the U.S. elections, there was plenty of conspiracy theories racing across social media about whether the government has the ability to create or control hurricanes. Jeff and Ryan dive into weather modification and geoengineering, Russia's propaganda disinformation campaign, and of course talk at length about the continual problem of risk communication, risk psychology, and decision making.

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    1 h et 18 min
  • The Accelerating AI Landscape in Weather with Amy McGovern
    Aug 19 2024

    Oceanography & Senior Technical Staff Member

    Description: A lot has changed in the AI-weather prediction space since the summer of 2023. Dr. Amy McGovern from the University of Oklahoma joins the Triple Point® again, a year since she last joined Jeff and I, to catch listeners up on the state of Artificial Intelligence in numerical weather prediction. We talk about the need to create policies and guardrails around AI that are broad and flexible enough that innovation can still happen alongside responsible AI principles and protection against nefarious uses. There are several areas where AI is going to continue accelerating weather prediction, but arguably none more so than in the way we assimilate data into our weather models. It's likely to be a space where, in a year, we will be looking back at how rapid a transition occurred.

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    50 min
  • NOAA Science Outside the Box with Sarah Kapnick
    Jun 10 2024

    Show Notes

    Hosts: Ryan Harris and Guest Host Wayne MacKenzie

    Guest: Dr. Sarah Kapnick, NOAA Chief Scientist

    Description: When NOAA selected Dr. Sarah Kapnick as the agency's Chief Scientist, in many respects she was an "outside of the box" selection. True, she already had a strong pedigree of science experience, something one would expect for the Chief Scientist. But what made her uniquely qualified and yet still "outside the box" was her diversity of experience across public, academic, and private, including heavy work in the finance sector. In the latest Triple Point™, you'll hear from the current NOAA Chief Scientist about how she is encouraging the agency to think beyond the status quo. Incentivizing innovation through simple measures in performance workplans, encouraging a mantra to follow your curiosity, and using unique consortia to advance research through Industry-University Cooperative Research Centers (IUCRCs) are just a few ways Dr. Kapnick is helping NOAA think outside the box.


    The Triple Point™ Podcast Website

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    45 min
  • Talent Management Outside the Box with Kris Saling
    May 21 2024

    Show Notes

    Host: Ryan Harris

    Guest: Colonel Kris Saling, Director of Innovation at U.S. Army Recruiting Command

    Description: Technology across career fields, from artificial intelligence to cloud computing and more, is advancing so rapidly. But technology is just one of many tools in our toolbox, and at the end of the day, communities, governments, private businesses, and organizations still rely on people to advance the world around us. Managing people through human resources and talent management still largely remains a transactional process. Thinking outside the box in talent management requires us to holistically and deliberately manage people across their careers and teams rather than just filling a gap. Thinking outside the box also means seeing risk like diversifying a financial investment portfolio to include understanding the risk of maintaining the status quo. Innovation will best thrive when we find champions to help align values and work and consider setting up small innovation cells that are separate from the main bureaucracy but still together enough to build trust. Want to know some secrets to build a high-performing super hero team? Tune in to the latest outside the box episode where Colonel Kris Saling from the U.S. Army joins The Triple Point to share her lessons learned in accelerating talent management innovation.


    Click for Episode Website

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    51 min
  • Re-thinking Coastal Adaptation with Rob Young
    May 5 2024

    Show Notes

    Host: Ryan Harris

    Guest: Dr. Rob Young, Director for the Study of Developed Shorelines at Western Carolina University

    Description: Next up in our series of “Outside the Box” conversations is a discussion with Dr. Rob Young on how “the box” for coastal resilience may actually be inside out. Conventional wisdom for coastal adaptation is all about communities trying to protect their map and their tax base. Better management, monitoring, systems thinking to minimize unintended consequences, and taking time to study whether adaptation measures are actually working or not are some basic measures that can improve resilience strategies. Outside the box thinking in this space also requires legislative progress and what many are increasingly calling for a National Adaptation Plan. Hard choices are required by local municipalities and businesses when it comes to adaptation, and we need to be honest with ourselves and where we invest in coastal adaptation if we are going to truly move the needle on making our communities more resilient.


    For complete show notes: The Triple Point™ Podcast Website.

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    44 min
  • Weather Outside the Box with Scott Mackaro
    Apr 4 2024

    Host: Ryan Harris

    Guest: Scott Mackaro, Head of Insights and Innovation, Vaisala X-Weather

    Description: What if NOAA’s global weather model didn’t exist in 10 years? It’s a provocative question that challenges conventional wisdom, but it’s a question worth considering as Google, NVIDIA, and others are challenging the weather modeling space with their rapidly advancing AI technology. The government should still probably play some sort of role in shaping and regulating this potential future paradigm shift similar to how the government regulates the safety of insulin and other pharmaceuticals while still promoting innovation. Scott Mackaro from Vaisala X-Weather joins the show for what may turn out to be the first in a series of Outside the Box episodes.


    For complete show notes:

    The Triple Point Podcast Website

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    45 min
  • Salient Innovations in Seasonal Prediction with Matt Stein
    Feb 19 2024

    Show Notes

    Host: Ryan Harris

    Guest: Matt Stein, CEO, Salient Predictions

    Description: The atmosphere is the main driver of our daily weather. But it's the oceans, with its long-term thermodynamic memory, that drive our climate patterns from seasonal, to decadal, and beyond. NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center and an increasing number of private industry companies like Salient Predictions use signals in long-term ocean patterns, soil moisture, sea ice, and snow cover to make much longer predictions than what you might see on your daily weather app. Such signals give us long-term oscillation patterns like El Nino, the Arctic Oscillation, and more. And these companies are helping industries from energy, to agriculture, to insurance buy down sub-seasonal to seasonal environmental risk. It’s one of the frontiers in the weather and climate world where climate science meets data science head and where unique machine learning techniques are finding new signals in the noise of our chaotic climate.


    See Podcast Website for Complete Show Notes

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    55 min
  • Evolving Public Risk Perception with Brian LaMarre
    Jan 15 2024

    Show Notes

    Host: Ryan Harris

    Guests: Brian LaMarre, NWS Meteorologist in Charge, Tampa Bay

    Description: In 1900, an estimated 8,000 people lost their lives in the Great Galveston Hurricane that September. Our understanding of hurricane risk has improved immensely since then, but still over 100 were killed just 18 months ago in Hurricane Ian. Risk is defined as the probability of some hazard occurring multiplied by the impact that hazard may have on an individual, population, or system. The first problem here is that humans don't always understand probabilities, and the second problem is that humans have a psychological bias to downplay or plain ignore the risk of hazards because they haven't personally experienced the hazard before. Hurricane Ian was a perfect example of poor risk perceptions, and it's the first topic we uncover this year as Brian LaMarre from the National Weather Service joins The Triple Point™. Hear about how the Weather Service is improving risk perceptions with better technology and communications strategies, and also the importance of personal accountability and trusting authoritative sources.


    For complete show notes: https://triplepointpodcast.com

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    54 min