Author Archives: Jonathan Soroko

About Jonathan Soroko

Revived from the dead, 18-July-2013

Brooklyn-based Sudia Lab's outdoor PV table

The Sun Table – which has no moving parts, adjustable stainless-steel legs – and whose wooden frame is made of teak – comes with an inverter and internal battery. Four hours of direct sunlight, according to Sudia, will yield enough energy to use a laptop for hours via the battery. (Use the laptop at/on the table on a sunny day, and the the useful life will be more than four hours, of course).

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The current price is $2,200 and ships within 4 – 6 weeks of order.Our quick calculations suggest that – deductibility aside – this would knock about $30 per month from a New York City residential electric bill.

Back-of-the-envelope calculations based on data from the Public Policy Institute of New York State and Michael BlueJay, aka Mr. Electricity

Sun Table from Sudia Labs

(Cross-posted at Caton Avenue

). Via Solar Today

(March 2008 issue).

Iran and Britain expel diplomats after Iranian presidential election – Wikinews, the free news source

Via WikiNews:Iran and Britain expel diplomats after Iranian presidential election.

We note that while attacks from President Obama’s political right have urged him to be more aggressive, in the UK David Cameron has reminded the P.M. that the “Iranian elections [are] an internal Iranian conflict, between Iranians and other Iranians.” If this ends with a full end of diplomatic relations, what impact will this have for formal and informal communications and intelligence-gathering between Iran and the west? Not good, we suspect.

The expulsions come in the wake of the recent Iranian presidential election, and hostility directed by Iran to the United Kingdom by Iranian leaders and official news services, including statements made by Supreme Leader of IranAli Khamenei

calling the British government the “most evil” of foreign governments.

Commenting upon the expulsion as it was announced, Leader of the Opposition in the British House of Commons, David Cameron , urged people to remember that this was not a conflict between Iran and the United Kingdom, but was an internal Iranian conflict, between Iranians and other Iranians.

Continue reading

Wired/Washington Post: Construction Crew Severs Secret ‘Black Line’

Another reminder of how effective government can be once it’s decided to be vigilant:

A construction crew working on an office building in Virginia in 2000 severed a fiber optic cable that wasn’t on anyone’s map. Apparently it was a ‘black line’ used for carrying secret intelligence data, according to sources who spoke recently with the Washington Post.

Within minutes of cutting the cable, three black SUV’s pulled up carrying men in suits who complained that their line was severed.

“The construction manager was shocked,” a worker told the Washington Post. “He had never seen a line get cut and people show up within seconds. Usually you’ve got to figure out whose line it is. To garner that kind of response that quickly was amazing.”

Construction Crew Severs Secret ‘Black Line.’

Fiddler on the Roof hd

Hard-Boiled hd

The Forbidden Kingdom ipod




Email traffic patterns may have predictive value

Many thanks to David Pescovitz of Boing Boing for spotting this, originally published in New Scientist – “Email patterns can predict impending doom

The Boing-Boing post, Mining email traffic for bad omens, in its entirety:

Researchers examined Enron email logs during the 18 months before the shit really hit the fan. Amazingly, just analyzing the number of emails and their paths, without peeking at the content, hinted at the crisis to come. Of course, hindsight is everything. Still, the stiudy, by computer scientists at the Florida Institute of Technology, is provocative. From New Scientist:

After US energy giant Enron collapsed in December 2001, federal investigators obtained records of emails sent by around 150 senior staff during the company’s final 18 months. The logs, which record 517,000 emails sent to around 15,000 employees, provide a rare insight into how communication within an organisation changes during stressful times…

(Rolando) Menezes says he expected communication networks to change during

Hub and spoke; spokes have no direct connection with eachother. Courtesy of NetworkWeaving.com

Hub and spoke; spokes have no direct connection with eachother. Courtesy of NetworkWeaving.com

moments of crisis. Yet the researchers found that the biggest changes actually happened around a month before. For example, the number of active email cliques, defined as groups in which every member has had direct email contact with every other member, jumped from 100 to almost 800 around a month before the December 2001 collapse. Messages were also increasingly exchanged within these groups and not shared with other employees.

Menezes thinks he and (Ben) Collingsworth may have identified a characteristic change that occurs as stress builds within a company: employees start talking directly to people they feel comfortable with, and stop sharing information more widely.

Of course – as a large organization breaks into smaller networks which don’t communicate with each other, it loses the robustness associated with redundantly connected social systems.

See, e.g.,

Project 3-2: Robust Wireless Communications in Complex Environments,Principal Investigators Arogyaswami Paulraj and George Papanicolaou,

Effective military wireless communications require robust networks that can operate in complex environments. Links must be reliable, rapid, and multimedia-capable, connecting large, dynamic, mobile networks of users. Such networks must resist hostile jamming and signal “spoofing” while minimizing consumption of electrical power. Designing such communications systems requires the rapid, high-throughput resources provided by high performance computing.

However, enemy action is not required in cases like Enron, where the leadership itself has pointed the ship directly at the iceberg.

Passenger jet lands safely at Newark Airport after pilot dies

A Boeing 777 operated by Continental Airlines managed to safely land at Liberty Airport

in Newark, New Jersey, today after the pilot died from natural causes en route, reports from officials say.

The flight had departed from Belgium, and safely landed at 11:49 A.M. Eastern Time.

“The captain of Continental Flight 61, which was en route from Brussels to Newark, died in flight, apparently of natural causes,” said a spokeswoman for the airline in an email.

According to the airline, there was an additional relief pilot on board who took over control of the plane after the initial pilot died.

247 people were on board. There are no reports of any injuries.

Via WikiNews.

EPA declares ‘emergency’ asbestos cleanup in Montana town – Wikinews, the free news source

EPA declares ‘emergency’ asbestos cleanup in Montana town – via Wikinews.

For the past ten years, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has been overseeing the asbestos clean-up in the small town of Libby, Montana, which has been on the EPA’s Superfund National Priorities List since 2002.   Continue reading

Ekahau: Heat Mapper – free app for visualizing wifi networks

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Ekahau [pronounced eck-uh-how]Heat Mapper – freeware application from the Helsinki-founded but now multi-continental firm Ekahau – lets users visualize wi-fi coverage on a map or building diagram (which one needs – and which can be imported into Heat Mapper).What’s it useful for:

  • Visualize Wi-Fi networks
  • determine the physical reach of a given network
  • display access points -and analyze their combined coverage, and/or individual characteristics
  • identify security problems and open networks

Continue reading

StatPacks Clearance Sale

StatPacks Clearance Sale: a wide selection of StatPacks paramedic and other responder bags – from the larger (largest?) Manager, marked down from $300 to $150 – down to smaller modules.

Good deals – and from what we’ve seen of StatPacks – for reasons not clear to us, other brands seem to dominate the market in New York – they’re very sturdy.

Be careful about drawing inferences about New York’s purchasing policies. Please recall that on September 11th, 2001, our firefighters went into the Twin Towers with radios known to have been defective by municipal authorities and the manufacturer.

StatPacks clearance sale – with free shipping for domestic customers until June 30th.

8th grader builds four-passenger-plus cargo solar/human powered bicycle

If an eighth grader can do it – albeit an exceptional eighth grader – why can’t they be mass-produced at affordable prices?

8th Grader Builds Solar-Powered Bike With GPS, iPod Dock

The base vehicle used, and the priciest part of the project, was a Switzerland-built ZEM (Zero Emission Machine) 4cycle. It’s made out of an aluminum frame

and each rider can pedal at their own pace. In fact, the 4cycle took 3rd place at the human powered vehicle world championships at Interlaken, Switzerland.

And while the ZEM 4cycle is no longer produced,  they got one from a dealer in Maryland who purchased the last 3 from the US distributor. It cost them $3,900.

“[The SOHH] has replaced our cars for errands around town, and it has grown into more than we envisioned with a lot of interest from the community,” David Dixon Sr. told Wired.com

.

And for the win, they documented the project on their website with all parts and schematics so that anyone can build one. They don’t plan to mass produce the vehicle but would love it if someone else does. Though David Sr. did express an interest in updating the bike with a lighter battery “such as lithium polymer, but no budget for it yet.”

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Sources: Wired.com , The SOHH Project and Gas 2.0

AZ data center goes solar

Rich Miller at Data Center Knowledge

reports that

Phoenix IT infrastructure provider i/o Data Centers

is installing a huge array of solar panels on the 11-acre roof of its new Phoenix ONE data center. The company says the photovoltaic panels will generate up to 4.5 megawatts of power to supplement the energy needs of the massive facility.

The installation planned for Phoenix ONE will dwarf all previous efforts to integrate solar power into a working data center. Its output will be nearly three times the 1.6 megawatts produced by the solar panels covering the roof of the Googleplex.

The first phase of 5,000 solar panels in Phoenix is scheduled to be operational in January, and will generate 500 kilowatt-peak (kWp), the company says. The array will be expanded in four additional phases during 2010 to reach a total capacity of 4.5 megawatts-peak.

That’s just a fraction of the 80 megawatts of power capacity that the 538,000 square foot Phoenix ONE data center will need upon completion. The solar power is also expensive, costing about 18 cents per kilowatt hour to generate in a market where grid power is 7 cents.

However, there’s more cleverness and  cost-savings afoot – and Rich Miller of Data Center Knowledge explains some of it in his post Solar Power at Data Center Scale. Read the rest of it there.

Thanks to Preston Gralla of Greener Computing for spotting this and reporting it in his post Will Your Next Data Center Be Solar Powered?

The takeaway for disaster planners is this: if an entire data center can be powered by solar – we can certainly power cloud networks, radio over IP, and enough bandwidth to run, for instance, Sahana, and copper-pair phone lines to keep communications going – on and off the net during emergencies

More evidence of the salutary mental/cognitive effects of exercise

In her ongoing “Well” series,” the Times’ Tara Parker-Pope has published An A.D.H.D. Student Finds Confidence on the Track

– by  Michael Edwards. Tis should

be well-established, based on the evidence – but since it isn’t, we think it’s a point that bears repeating. SeeJohn Ratey

‘s most recent book, Spark.

FDA Warning on Zicam cold remedy

, according to Gardiner Harris of the Times. Federal drug regulators warned consumers to stop using Zicam, a popular homeopathic cold remedy, because it could damage or destroy their sense of smell.

The action is an early indication that the Obama administration is likely to take far more aggressive enforcement actions against drug companies than the Bush administration did.

The Food and Drug Administration received 130 reports from consumers and doctors of people losing their sense of smell after using one of the Zicam nasal products, which include Zicam Cold Remedy and Zicam Cold Remedy Swabs. The reports date to 1999, when Matrixx Initiatives of Scottsdale, Ariz., first introduced the products. Continue reading