Clouds affect our daily life in many ways. They dominate our perception of weather and, thus, have an enormous influence on our everyday activities and our health. This fact is completely at odds with our knowledge about clouds, their representation in climate and weather forecast models, and our ability to predict clouds. It is their high variability in time and space that makes clouds both hard to monitor and to model. Clouds are the major concern in the climate modeling community, as stated by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC; information available online at www.ipcc.ch) the most urgent scientific problems requiring attention to determine the rate and magnitude of climate change and sea level rise are the factors contr...