29 posts categorized "Disaster Recovery"

11/05/2012

New Jersey To Allow Voting By Email, Fax

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On Saturday, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's administration announced that voters displaced by Hurricane Sandy will be allowed to vote via email or fax.

"This has been an extraordinary storm that has created unthinkable destruction across our state and we know many people have questions about how and where to cast their vote in Tuesday's election. To help alleviate pressure on polling places, we encourage voters to either use electronic voting or the extended hours at county offices to cast their vote," said Lt. Governor Kim Guadagno in a press release.

BLOG: Twitter Map Shows Who's Profane and Polite

To cast their ballot electronically, displaced voters must submit a mail-in ballot application either by e-mail or fax to their county clerk. Once the application is approved, the clerk will send a ballot back to the voter, either by email or fax. Voters must email or fax their e-ballots no later than 8 p.m. on election day.

E-voters will also be sent a "waiver of secrecy form" that essentially waives their right to privacy since election officials will have to crosscheck names on the e-ballot application with voter registration lists.

New Jersey is not expected to be a close race, as Barack Obama is currently polling approximately 10 points higher than Mitt Romney.

NEWS: Surprising Factors That Could Affect Your Vote

Had New Jersey been a swing state, considering e-voting's vast potential for fraud, this initiative surely would have come under more scrutiny. But for now, score one for state officials making sure Sandy's fallout doesn't destroy New Jersey citizens' right to vote.

via NJ.com




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11/01/2012

Donate to Red Cross with iTunes: DNews Nugget

Dnews-nuggets-278x225Donate to Red Cross in iTunes: As the United States deals with the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, iTunes now allows users to donate to the Red Cross as easily as buying a song, reports The Verge.

"You can donate anywhere from $5 to $200 via iTunes, but Apple warns that it 'may not qualify for any tax deduction or other tax benefits,'" their post reads. In addition to iTunes donation, you can give directly to the Red Cross through their website, RedCross.org or through any number of other foundations.

With regard to food drives you might be seeing on television, the Red Cross would prefer cash or blood and does NOT accept food donations.

Equally important to a cash gift is blood donation. To find a blood drive near you or make an appointment at a nearby office visit their website RedCrossBlood.org. via The Verge

You can also make a quick donation by texting REDCROSS to 90999. This will give $10 to American Red Cross Disaster Relief. The $10 will then show up on your phone bill. Regular message and data rates will also apply.

GET MORE MUST-READ DNEWS NUGGETS HERE!



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10/30/2012

Top 5 Fake Hurricane Sandy Photos

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As Hurricane Sandy clobbered the the most populated region of the United States, many people took to social media and the Internet to receive and circulate information about what experts called a 100-year storm.

As is typically the case with natural disasters -- especially in this digital age -- viral photos quickly put a face on the catastrophe. However, it turns out many of the most popular images pinballing around the Internet during the storm were either fake or outdated. Even major media outlets got duped.

Here are the Top 5 fake photos that got passed around the Internet during Sandy's wrath:

1.) Ominous Clouds Looming Over Statue of Liberty (above)

As Gawker pointed out, "everyone from the the New York Times' Jodi Kantor to the New Yorker's David Grann to Buzzfeed's Andrew Kaczynski" tweeted this fake photo of what looks to be a lost still from the movie Independence Day. However, the image was a Photoshop job that combined a photo of the New York harbor with a 2004 image of a Nebraska super cell taken by Mike Hollingshead.

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2.) Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (above)

Real photo, wrong day.

NPR tweeted and posted this photo of three soldiers getting pelted with rain as they guarded the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the Arlington National Cemetery, calling it "perhaps one of the more stunning pictures we've come across today."

But the photo was actually taken in September. NPR later updated their blog, disclosing that the photo was "not taken during Sandy." NPR credited the Old Guard's Twitter account the and following tweet for helping with the correction: "Thanks for posting the pic about @The_Old_Guard, but that is not from today. This one is http://goo.gl/OC5lz."

The Washington Post, the Daily Beast, Talking Points Memo, and other media outlets also posted the photo, followed by later updates and/or corrections. Compliments of the Old Guard's Facebook page, here's a real image of a soldier standing guard during Sandy.

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3.) Sinister Clouds Threaten to Swallow Empire State Building (above)

Again, real photo, wrong day. This one was all over Twitter, Facebook and beyond. The original image appeared in the Wall Street Journal in 2011.

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4.) Waves Crashing On Statue of Liberty (above)

Another quick and easy Photoshop job. The original is wallpaper from the disaster porn movie The Day After Tomorrow.

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5.) Dark Clouds Rolling Over the George Washington Bridge (above)

With its dark, eerie clouds and identifiable NYC landmark, this image has all the right ingredients for a Sandy pic, except for the fact that it's a Getty stock photo from 2009.

via Mashable

Credit: istwitterwrong.tumblr




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Flooding Hinders NYC Power Restoration

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New York City got hit with widespread power outages in the wake of Hurricane Sandy, with some 793,000 in the metropolitan area without power, according to a Con Edison spokesperson.

Getting the power back won't be easy, largely because of the flooding. It will probably be at least a few days before power can be restored. "We're focusing on damage assessment," the spokesperson said. Con Edison Senior Vice President for Electric Operations John Miksad told CBS New York that it was the biggest storm-related power outage in the company's history.

Con Edison serves 3.2 million people in Westchester County and New York City. In Westchester, some 180 roads are closed by downed trees, so crews are going to have a tough time getting to places where trees have hit power lines.

Anatomy of a Power Outage

The utility company cut power for customers south of Wall Street at 7 p.m. on Monday. The same thing was done in parts of Brooklyn. Deliberately cutting the power was necessary as it's more dangerous to have current flowing through equipment that gets flooded -- it can cause short circuits, fires, and other damage.

Con Edison has an outage map showing areas that are currently without power.

In New York City, the water has to be flushed out of the flooded areas first before power equipment can be checked to be sure it's safe to run current through. And the current to damaged equipment has to be shut down before repairs can be made.

Odds are, if your area is served by underground lines, the power should be back in four days; it will be a week or so for those served by telephone poles. But those timelines are approximate; a lot will depend on what the situation is locally. Anyplace there is standing water and downed power lines is dangerous; there have been 10 fatalities in New York City and Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a press conference that a few were the result of people stepping into puddles near live power lines.

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While it's certainly inconvenient, there is also another logic to cutting the power in certain areas. When power is suddenly cut off in one part of the system, it increases the current flowing through other parts of the grid. That can overload the system causing more damage and an even wider power failure.

Could A Smart Grid Curb Blackouts?

Another twist for some Manhattanites is losing the steam heat system. In New York, many buildings are heated by a system of steam pipes from a central plant. Con Edison had to shut down the system in some areas because if water hit the pipes, the temperature difference would weaken the metal, which could lead to explosions. The loss of the steam system means that some people will be without heat and hot water.

At about 8:30 p.m. last night a power plant explosion on the eastern shore of Manhattan was caught on video, though a Con Edison spokesperson said it wasn't clear whether it was caused by flooding or flying debris. After the explosion, power was out south of 39th street. The substation served about 250,000 people.

Photo, top: The Brooklyn Battery Tunnel floods after a tidal surge from Hurricane Sandy (Allison Joyce/Getty Images); bottom: Downed trees in lower Manhattan block streets (Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis)



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10/29/2012

Techie Ways To Weather 'Frankenstorm' Sandy

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As Hurricane Sandy -- aka Frankenstorm -- winds up to wallop the East Coast, many people are bracing for absolute chaos. With wide-spread blackouts, flooding and wind damage all on the menu, millions of people are being advised to take caution and be vigilant.

Compliments of Fast Company, here are a few ways Sandy has disrupted and prompted the world of tech to help people weather the storm.

PHOTOS: Wind Power Without The Blades

So people can monitor Sandy, Google has created an interactive crisis map, complete with weather updates, evacuation routes and other useful information for those stuck in the storm.

Unfortunately Google had to cancel an event in New York where the company was expected to launch a new 10-inch tablet alongside the Nexus 4 smartphone. Facebook also had to cancel an open engineering day, plus a Gifts event at FAO Schwartz.

However, both the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times have lifted their online paywalls during the storm so that anyone can use their websites to stay informed. Typically, online digital and print subscribers can view extended online content.

ABC's Johanna Stern put together a useful list of apps that help people stay on top of the storm's developments. The list includes Apple's Dark Sky, a $3.99 app that monitors the storm in HD and gives users minute by minute information. Also on the list are disaster information apps from FEMA and the Red Cross.

Finally, for an arty, filtered perspective of Hurricane Sandy, check out Instacane, as well as MTA's Flicker stream.

BLOG: 'Fankenstorm' Sandy Lashes East Coast

If you're like me -- bunkered down and waiting for the you-know-what to hit the fan -- good luck. If you're out of harms way, feel free to send a care package. 

via Fast Company

Credit: Google Crisis Map




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07/10/2012

Nuclear Accidents: Preventable ‘Man-Made’ Disasters

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A report released by the Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission has concluded that the Japanese nuclear accident and meltdown last year could and should have been prevented.

The exhaustive 641-page report was sharply critical of the Japanese government and plant operator’s claims that the accident was the unavoidable result of an unpredictable double-disaster of a severe earthquake followed by a tsunami. In fact, the report noted that given the high number of earthquakes in Japan (and the well-known association of tsunamis with earthquakes), much more could have been done. Basic safety measures were ignored, backup systems were not implemented and government regulators who were charged with enforcing safety standards did not follow through.

PHOTOS: 3 Positive Outcomes from the Fukushima Nuclear Accident

Fukushima is the second preventable nuclear crisis in history. Though sometimes considered a technological failure, the nuclear meltdown at Russia’s Chernobyl power plant was a man-made disaster caused by human error. In 1986, a group of scientists intentionally deactivated several safety systems in order to test a cooling system at reactor 4. The experiment failed, leading to the worst nuclear accident of all time. There are several psychological and social factors common to both Chernobyl and Fukushima.

Underestimating Risk

In both nuclear accidents, the public and those running the reactors were assured that the risk of any accident -- much less a full-fledged core meltdown -- was so remote that it need not be of concern.

As a New York Times story noted, “Tepco [the plant’s operator] has contended that the plant withstood the earthquake that rocked eastern Japan, instead placing blame for the disaster on what some experts have called a ‘once in a millennium’ tsunami that followed. Such a rare calamity was beyond the scope of contingency planning, Tepco executives have suggested, and was unlikely to pose a threat to Japan’s other nuclear reactors in the foreseeable future.”

By portraying the risk of accident as unimaginably rare (“once in a millennium”), Tepco officials overstated its safety. As Zhores Medvedev notes in his book The Legacy of Chernobyl (1990, W.W. Norton), the same minute risk mentality pervaded the culture at Chernobyl; one plant operator said that “in the classrooms of their institutions [nuclear reactor technician students] had beaten into their heads: a reactor cannot explode.... And it was only in October 1986 that the regulations were changed to include the grim warning: ‘When there are fewer than 30 [nuclear reaction dampening] rods the reactor goes into a situation of nuclear danger.’”

The irony is that in both cases the risk of accident actually was very remote -- assuming that established safety protocols were followed.

Culture of Complacency

In both nuclear accidents there was an entrenched culture of complacency. Corners were often cut and safety procedures ignored. At Chernobyl the danger of a nuclear meltdown was systematically downplayed and rules became lax. Igor Kazachkov, one of the shift operators at Chernobyl, stated “We didn’t have any foolproof safeguards against this particular thing happening... There are lots of safeguards but nothing that controls the number of rods. We have often had less than the required number of rods [controlling the reaction] and nothing happened. No explosion, everything proceeded normally.”

HOWSTUFFWORKS: How a Nuclear Reactor Works

In other words, the plant had operated safely and things turned out okay when safety rules were ignored, so operators became complacent. This is human nature, and can be seen in the psychology of drunk drivers who think, “Well, the last few times I drove home safely, so I can do it again.” Getting away with breaking the rules -- especially repeatedly -- makes the action seem less dangerous.

The Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation report also contained pointed criticism of the Japanese culture and its role in creating the disaster and failing to mitigate its aftermath. Kiyoshi Kurokawa, chairman of the commission, stated that “What must be admitted -- very painfully -- is that this was a disaster ‘Made in Japan.’ Its fundamental causes are to be found in the ingrained conventions of Japanese culture: our reflexive obedience; our reluctance to question authority; our devotion to ‘sticking with the program’; our groupism; and our insularity.” The problem was so pervasive, Kurokawa noted, that “Had other Japanese been in the shoes of those who bear responsibility for this accident, the result may well have been the same.”

After each high profile accident there are reports and investigations calling for changes to be implemented to make sure it “never happens again.” The nuclear power industry did not learn lessons from Chernobyl, and likely will not learn lessons from Fukushima. There will be future nuclear accidents of this scale--and probably worse. Not because the technology isn't improving, for it surely is, but because humans are the weak link, and human nature will continue to endanger us all.

Photo: The underground water storage tank installation at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station as seen on June 18, 2012. Credit: Tepco / Jana Press




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06/28/2012

Web App Tracks Exploding Colorado Wildfire

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The Waldo Canyon wildfire that exploded into Colorado Springs this week created Jerry Bruckheimer-esque scenes. The fire has already claimed about 300 houses and displaced thousands of people. A local computer programmer hoping to help just released a Web-based app that organizes the onslaught of fire-related updates.

TOP 10: Social Networking Sites

Colorado Springs resident and 20-year-old computer programmer Robbie Trencheny lives about five miles from the fire. He told CNN's Amy Gahran that as an avid Twitter user he wanted to make it easier for residents to keep up with news about the fire. So he and another programmer, Scott Siebold, spent less than an hour coding a Web-based app to do that.

"We figured we'd use our tech skills to help, since not many people in Colorado Springs have the skills to do this quickly," he told Gahran.

The result is the Waldo Canyon Fire Tracker. Instead of an app that you have to download, it's a Web page that displays tweets containing hashtags such as #WaldoCanyonFire in the middle, posted photos on the left column and official messages to the right. Preferences can be set to show or not show retweets, to pause the updates, and enable sound to indicate new tweets. Official updates will ding no matter what your sound preferences.

HOWSTUFFWORKS: Can You Really Fight Fire with Fire?

I loaded the app about an hour ago and so far it's been interesting to watch, and it's easy to see how this page could be more useful than downloadable apps like HootSuite or TweetDeck that allow you to track a hashtag. With TweetDeck I'm only able to get a single column of #WaldoCanyonFire tweets.

The Waldo Canyon Fire Tracker isn't perfect. In Chrome, the center column tweets started bleeding into the right-hand column with official messages and enabling sound didn't always work. That said, for spending 45 minutes coding while the fire only got closer, it's still a potentially helpful app. The programmers told CNN they're going to continue working on it and might add pages for other fires in the state.

PHOTOS: Western Wildfires

Beyond this Web-based app, there are several other real-time applications that help users track wildfires. The Geospatial Multi-Agency Coordination Group (GeoMAC) is an Internet-based mapping app that shows fires nationwide in its viewer. You can jump to a specific fire and zoom into satellite images. But nothing really conveys the enormity of this natural disaster like the photos being posted to social media sites. See this.

Credit: A photo of Waldo Canyon wildfire invading Colorado Springs that appeared in a new Web app that tracks it. Credit: Twitter user @ZombieStephi



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05/24/2012

Lightning Rod Prevents Strikes

Antirod

A lighting rod developed by the Japanese company, Lightning Suppression Systems, does the exact opposite of conventional rods. Normal lightning rods collect the ground charge, move it up the pole and discharge it in the air space between the rod and the clouds.

BLOG: Lucky Strike: Lightning Brings Seismic Surprise

The rod from Lightning Suppression Systems prevents the ground charge from coming up to meet the lightning in the first place. And the company claims that the rod prevents strikes from happening in a measurable circumference around the rod. This can be useful for tall structures that have sensitive electronics, such as communications towers and outdoor surveillance cameras. A home version of the device is being planned and the PDCE for commercial use is already available.

via DigInfo TV

Credit: DigInfo TV




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05/21/2012

Disaster Tracker Reveals Safe Zones

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An earthquakes strikes, toppling buildings. How do residents know where to go next? What areas are safest?

A new software uses Google Maps could tell people within seconds which buildings are still standing where the safest areas are to seek shelter.

PHOTOS: Google Maps Tries To Save the Planet

The software prototype is the brainchild of David Kane, a computer engineering student at the University of Abertay Dundee in Scotland. It works by using an existing infrastructure, home broadband routers, to check on addresses in a given area. Once those locations are pinged, they're converted to longitude and latitude values that are shown in Google Maps. The resulting visual map would show disaster areas in real time.

Currently the software would only work with routers where the home or building owner has supplied an address. However, if Internet Service Providers support the system, the whole thing could be automated, according to Kane.

"I wanted to prove if it was possible to use an ordinary piece of technology we all have -- a home broadband router -- to map natural disasters in real-time," he said in a University of Abertay Dundee article about the work.

NEWS: Wildfire Season Off to a Burning Start

Although the software is still an undergrad project that hasn't quite been perfected, Kane said he plans to publicly release the open-source code following his participation in the university's digital graduate show, which ends this weekend. That way the larger computing community can put the code directly into existing disaster management systems and improve on it.

This software reminds me of a proposal to ping cell phones in areas evacuated when a hurricane approaches. That way the authorities can locate the stragglers and get them to safety. Once a disaster has occurred, though, it's vital to get accurate maps to the responders. A little pinging could make a huge impact.

Photo: Software showing a disaster warning on Google Maps. Credit: David Kane, University of Albertay Dundee


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04/04/2012

Seismic Wallpaper Stabilizes Walls in an Earthquake

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During an earthquake, regular walls get shaken much like humans do. The side-to-side strain causes the masonry to crumble. This year, German materials scientists are producing seismic wallpaper that can hold a wall together.

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology's Institute of Solid Construction and Construction Material Technology has been simulating quake conditions to find better ways to shore up walls since the 1990s. Early attempts involved bonding thin carbon fiber slats to masonry, but that only made the crumbling worse.

ANALYSIS: An Invisibility Cloak for Heat

Several years ago, they came up with another approach, one in which the surface of a whole wall could be reinforced using special wallpaper. In 2010, the institute's director, Lothar Stempniewski, and his colleagues began perfecting the material.

They used stiff, high-strength glass fibers woven together to form a strong, elastic covering. The fibers run in four directions to distribute energy evenly when the walls are shaking, according to an article by Brigitte Osterath in Deutsche Welle.

This special spun-glass covering alone isn't enough, though. Standard wallpaper glue can't hold up to an earthquake, so the KIT group collaborated with the polymer makers in the materials science division of the chemical company Bayer. They made a flexible, soft adhesive from water and a large amount of polyurethane beads.

Once the adhesive penetrates grooves in the masonry, the water evaporates to anchor the substance in the wall. Similarly, when the wallpaper goes on, it gets completely surrounded by the beads. Together the whole setup won't tear during an earthquake.

To find out just how well it works, the seismic fabric was tested on a replica house in an earthquake simulator.

NEWS: When Hurt, Self-healing Plastics Turn Red

"Because of the earthquake wallpaper, we were unable to make the building collapse," KIT researcher Mortiz Urban told Deutsche Welle. In a recent press video, Bayer indicated that the wallpaper will start going into commercial production this year through partner companies. It's expected to cost more than regular wallpaper, but the drastic difference for people living in earthquake-prone areas should be well worth the price.

Photo: The earthquake wallpaper is fixed to walls with a special adhesive. Credit: Bayer Material Science.

 




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