Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, 900 Convention Center Blvd., New Orleans, LA
The theme of the 2012 AMS Annual Meeting was, Technology in Research and Operations—How We Got Here and Where We’re Going.” With the 1951 delivery of UNIVAC I, arguably the first government “supercomputer,” and the 1960 launch of TIROS I, the first weather satellite, the stage was set for a revolution in meteorology—later in oceanography, geography, space weather, land-observing, and climate. This technology-driven revolution now encompasses the full spectrum of our professional society’s physical and social sciences... Read More
Visit http://annual.ametsoc.org to see the latest information about the next AMS Annual Meeting!
Updates
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Blog Posts from The Front Page
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3 February 2012
Avid Surfer, Forecaster Receives Joanne Simpson Award for Sustained Mentorship of Colleagues
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30 January 2012
Hazardous Weather Testbed Team Wins 2012 Spengler Award for Severe Storm Collaboration
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26 January 2012
That’s All, Folks!
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26 January 2012
2012 Remote Sensing Prize Winner Sees Polarimetric Radar Research Go Nationwide
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26 January 2012
The 2012 Jule G. Charney Award Winner Strives to Simulate Complex Clouds, Rid Models of Errors
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26 January 2012
Is Meteorology Turning Into Computer Science?
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25 January 2012
Driving Home the Point about Listening