Author Archives: Jonathan Soroko

About Jonathan Soroko

Revived from the dead, 18-July-2013

This Football-Sized Robot Sub Handles Law Enforcement's Underwater Beat

This Football-Sized Robot Sub Handles Law Enforcement’s Underwater Beat

From inspecting cargo ships in NYC Harbor to searching for missing persons in South Texas, law enforcement is increasingly supplementing its human divers with these football-sized remote submersibles.

The VideoRay Pro 3 GTO is a tethered, remotely-controlled micro-submersible. The eight-pound machine can dive as far as 500 feet and move at up to 4.1 knots, thanks to its dual 100 mm horizontal thrusters. It’s sensor suite includes, among others, sonar imaging, GPS, water quality sensors, and metal thickness gauges. The Pro 3 GTO, which the NYPD employs also includes a grappling arm, wide-angle front-facing color camera illuminated with Dual 20W Halogen lamps, and an LED-lit HG black-and-white camera on the rear. The submersible is controlled remotely from a suitcase-sized control board.

The device is finding extensive use among in government agencies, like the US Army Corps of Engineers, the EPA, the ICE, and the US Coast Guard. Nearly 2,000 of the $31,000 machines are in use across the country—especially where conditions are too dangerous to prohibit human divers.

via This Football-Sized Robot Sub Handles Law Enforcement’s Underwater Beat.

WWII-era fire apparatus, Australia (image by Kristarella)

WWII-era ladder truck. Image by Kristarella/Kristarella.com

We’ve got a few reasons for publishing this image: Kristarella, an outstanding web designer and software developer, is also a fabulous photographer, and we encourage you to check out her Photoblog for page after  page of images which will capture your curiousity, imagination and awe. But that’s not, strictly speaking, on-topic.  These reasons are:

  1. We’re about to run a series of posts about firefighting apparatus – which is to say vehicles, mobile firefighting equipment, as opposed to infrastructure (fire water mains, sprinklers, hand-held gear and, as important as the rest, prevention), and thought this mid-20th century piece would be a good reference point;
  2. Note the following screenshot: Kristarella is a leader in managing the metadata – EXIF   (Exchangeable image file format, Wikipedia entry; see alsoEXIF.org) which accompanies digital images. We hope to explore the ways in which EXIF data and images might be used to crowd source risk assessment, disaster planning, and disaster response. So we’ll be exploring Kristarella’s Thesography Plugin, and more tools that will exploit EXIF and other usable meta-data.

Predator drones

From blimps to bugs, an explosion in aerial drones is transforming the way America fights and thinks about its wars. Predator drones, the Cessna-sized workhorses that have dominated unmanned flight since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, are by now a brand name, known and feared around the world. But far less known is the sheer size, variety and audaciousness of a rapidly expanding drone universe, along with the dilemmas that come with it.(via) [more inside]

posted by AElfwine Evenstar at 9:07 AM – 62 comments

via MetaFilter | Community Weblog.

MetaFilter | Community Weblog – Simple Comms (sound announcing presence)

“It is startlingly loud,” he warns, “and it’s loud enough that you can actually feel the sound wave going through your torso.” On East Brother Island in California, lightstation keeper Peter Berkhout is caretaker to one of the last working vintage foghorns in the United States.

posted by Laminda at 8:48 AM – 28 comments

via MetaFilter | Community Weblog.

Resources | Data Driven Journalism

Go back and select specific resources for Pop Log 

note cross-post from Discovery Strategist

Introduction to open-source GIS tools for journalists

Location is quickly becoming a core value of journalism and geographic literacy is on the rise. A look at geocoding tools.

Read more

Creating dot density maps with Chicago Tribune’s new open source toolkit

Chicago Tribune hacker Christopher Groskopf explains the tools and techniques behind the creation of dot density maps with U.S. census data.

Read more

via Resources | Data Driven Journalism.

WireCutter.com: Best LED lightbulb

Brian Lam at TheWireCutter.com, having done substantial research, suggests that this Phillips bulb may be the best currently available, and calculates a yearly cost of $1 to $2.50 per year, as opposed to $5/year for a conventional bulb. Of course, economies of scale and competition will bring prices down, but break-even on each bulb is probably no more than five years out – unless electricity prices spike. As we try to game out the post-Fukishima electricity supply, each market segment, or “wedge,” (think of a pie chart) will count. This is a problem which will be solved by massing a large number of small improvements.

Philips Ambient LED light bulb – threaded for conventional fixtures

Can we make Trayvon Martin the last child to die this way? (and will we?)

of the Sunlight Foundation, which does outstanding work in making government documents, including statutes, accessible, understandable, and making government itself transparent, has used some of the Foundation’s electronic search tools and concluded that a number of states – at least ten – adopted language identical to the Florida statute which may govern prosecution for the death of Trayvon Martin. See  10 States Copied Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” Law.  Mr. Sibley asked an excellent first question about the Florida law – is it part of a trend? – and we’d like to add to the discussion. We think the self-defense statutes (and their specific retreat provisions)  – and their histories – are important, unquestionably essential to any discussion of these events. But – equally necessary is at least a mention of firearms licensing laws and practices, community-based safety patrols, and the use of deadly force in the United States, not in all circumstances, but when the force is used under color of law – that is, in the name, at least, of the law, crime prevention, and public safety.

I can’t speak to the other 49 states, but New York adopted its Penal Law Article 35 in the 1960’s. Article 35 is about “Justification,” the breaking of any regulation or law when it outweighs the rule to be violated. It’s difficult to write these things well, given the many – perhaps infinite – possible factual permutations. For instance, it’s Article 35 which makes it legal for a police officer or firefighter to run a red light when en route to an emergency, but not when, for instance, on a meal break.
With respect to deadly force, Article 35, under a number of circumstances involving the threat of harm to self or others (deadly force, rape) certain other crimes (such as arson), permits the use of deadly force unless the person acting can retreat with absolute safety to self and others, and knows that safe retreat is possible, and that the threat is over.
What makes this – on the basis of facts as widely reported – unjustified, if we’re using a statute like New York’s, is the lack of anything that might be interpreted as any actual risk of any harm or threat, except, perhaps – in the worst possible case – simple trespass. Simple trespass – for instance, stepping on to property to allow a parent with a baby carriage or walking with a toddler to pass unimpeded on a narrow sidewalk – is committed millions of times a day by polite, upstanding citizens. In New York, it’s only a violation – not even a “crime.”
More recent reports indicate that the officers on-scene apparently made a reasonable assessment: that the killing was not justified, and that it was negligent, thoughtless, but not cold-blooded, calculated or premeditated. Of course, initial charges after arrest aren’t binding on prosecutors.

What’s missing – in my view – from public discussion – is how we’re going to make sure this doesn’t happen again. All the ingredients are ever-present: anxiety about crime, xenophobia, de facto segregation, and ready access to firearms.

At the risk of alienating parties on all political flanks at the same time, I think we could start with the analogy of the automobile. We don’t permit vehicle operation without some training and education, and tests which increase in difficulty in rough parallel with the risks associated with particular types of vehicles: by weight, length, cargo hazards (oil tanker trucks), or passengers (ambulances and school buses).

By way of analogy, if we’re going to permit people to carry handguns, might we not link it to training requirements? Two countries with nearly universal access to firearms, and widely differing cultures, are Israel and Switzerland. Both have more or less universal conscription, and their military training includes instruction in firearms handling, storage, transportation, and, most importantly, use. Both have exceptionally low rates of homicide.

And community patrols: we don’t permit people to join volunteer fire departments, ambulance squads, or search-and-rescue (SAR) teams without applications, background checks, initial and ongoing training and certification, and at least basic equipment and staffing levels. Did this shooter – or other members patrolling with him – have flashlights? With sufficient illumination, it would have been readily apparent that the young man was unarmed. Would Zimmerman have fired on a clearly unarmed man? As he approached, did he simultaneously place cover or concealment (such as an automobile, or architectural/landscaping elements) which would have afforded him some reduction of risk had the young man actually been armed?

This case is horrific – especially because it is so clearly preventable. It is of an entirely different character than the Mississippi case which led to guilty pleas this same month, involving a group of young white men, who decided as a group to find and attack a black man for no reason other than hatred.  SeeThree Plead Guilty to Hate Crimes in Killing of Black Man in Mississippi,” by Kim Severson of Tbe New York Times.

There are, of course, other deeper elements in these events: drug prohibition laws which are heavily enforced against young men of color, in some communities effectively criminalizing the status of being male, black and in public; and school and housing systems which are effectively segregated. None of this helps to break down deeply ingrained attitudes; that may take generations.

But what we can do in the short term is to employ evidence-based policies (training for neighborhood crime patrols, better and more training for police officers) where the damage is being done, and where it can be predicted to recur: street encounters between representatives of the legal system (volunteers or paid) and young men of color.

If we’re not willing to see the pattern AS a pattern, it’s not likely that we’re going to do much about it; and there is no reason to believe that it will end without concerted social political discussion and action.

What, supported by "Proof" and "Evidence-Based," is "Safe, Secure and Vital" for New York?

We missed this, I think, the first time around, and we think it’s noting for its intrinsic value (an  unscheduled nuclear plant shutdown is, we think, newsworthy, and trends  should be noted).   Power failure forces nuclear plant to shut down in Illinois – New York Daily News  But it’s also worth noting that we found this AP piece on the website of the New York Daily News, and, at least during our visit to that page, Google Ads delivered the following message (without the raised bullets.  In FireFox only – put the same URL into

Both links lead to “SafeSecureVital.com” – which is a site maintained by Entergy, operator of Indian Point.  Here’s where it gets interesting, we think. This is part of what Entergy says about safety:

 

The area approximately 10 miles around the Indian Point is called the Emergency Planning Zone. The federal government set the 10-mile radius as the area requiring emergency plans for protecting health and safety in radiological emergencies.

Emergency Planning Zone – Indianpoint Website (accessed 28 March, 2012)

There’s a map, which we reproduce. For the record, we did not crop this image in any way.

"Indian Point Protective Action Areas" (caption as in original)

Let’s examine the claims thus far. We’re not going ignore any evidence Entergy has offered on behalf of Indian Point – and in fact with respect to one element – how we’d replace that electricity, estimated by Entergy at 25% of the greater New York area (excluding suburbs in Connecticut and New Jersey, if we understand the grid correctly), estimated by others to be as high as one-third – – taking Indian Point out of the equation might be painful, might be a good thing in the long run, but – no matter how it’s done, it’s going to be a very big adjustment.

The “Emergency Planning” tab of the Indian Point website makes the affirmative statement:

The federal government set the 10-mile radius as the area requiring emergency plans for protecting health and safety in radiological emergencies.

Broken out, the implications are:

  1. Assuming that the federal government is competent with respect to the risks attendant to nuclear power, the federal government has said to Entergy, “You are responsible for ten miles around your plant, which includes the populations of Westchester, Rockland, Putnam and Orange Counties;” in other words, the company’s legal responsibility is limited to a ten-mile radius;
  2. It seems safe to assume that Entergy doesn’t feel any moral obligation to take into account the safety of anyone outside the “Emergency Planning Zone,” because, it seems safe to assume, had it taken steps to widen its area of responsibility, Entergy might also want to reassure people both within and without the “Emergency Planning Zone” of its diligence in assessing and managing risk.  Since the safety of Indian Point does seem to be a matter of some public debate, it’s hard to imagine that Entergy wouldn’t want to take credit for taking safety seriously, for erring on the side of caution.

Here’s how Entergy describes its emergency preparedness;  our comments will be bold-faced and in red (depending on browser settings, of course) and within [square brackets].

Westchester, Putnam, Rockland and Orange counties have Emergency Operations Centers (EOCs) staffed with personnel [we’ll address budget, staff levels and training as we proceed] to assess the potential off-site effects of the incident. County EOCs dispatch [“dispatching” suggests that this system does not include a distributed network of radiation sensors]   field radiological monitoring teams that independently measure levels of radioactivity within the 10-mile EPZ. Personnel from the emergency planning organization in each county participate in a full-scale, federally evaluated exercise once every two years. This exercise is evaluated for FEMA for off-site responses, and by the NRC for Entergy’s on-site response. In alternate years, the counties participate in state-coordinated drills to maintain their preparedness and train new staff. [In other words, one major exercise per year, whose function is, at least in part, the training of new emergency staff. It would take a new staff member two years to have participated in one state-coordinated and one “fully-funded” federal exercise. No mention is made of surprise drills, or ongoing evaluations of security vulnerabilities].

County plans call for the activation of their EOCs when Entergy declares an Alert of higher incident classification at Indian Point. All four counties have provisions to be notified by Entergy as soon as any emergency classification is made at the site. Westchester, Putnam, Rockland and Orange County emergency managers and county executives can activate their EOCs at any time they determine it is necessary.

Each county has emergency plans that can be implemented in the event of an emergency at the plant. One or more of the following protective actions may be taken for residents within the 10-miles EPZ:

  • Evacuation – KI-potassium iodide administration – Everyone in specific Emergency Planning Zone is instructed to leave the area and, if they have a KO-potassium iodide, to ingest one dose (130mg tablet). Children under one year should be given a 65mg dose or on half of the adult tablet.
  • Sheltering – everyone in a specific Emergency Planning Zone should stay indoors.

Though the Federal Emergency Management Agency has approved Indian Point’s emergency plan, Entergy will continue working with federal officials, the four surrounding counties and New York State to enhance the plan and make it a model of emergency preparedness for the entire nation. We will not waiver from our responsibility to protect public health and safety. [Note the use of the word “waiver,” which has to do with being relieved of a responsibility; rather than the word “waver,” which describes movement. “We will not waver” is, fairly, the equivalent of “we will give no ground.” Assuming that it’s a typographical error, descriptions of nuclear disaster preparations should be the last documents to be given half-hearted copy-editing.]

Annual Emergency Procedure Drills

Under Nuclear Regulatory Commission requirements and supervision, the staff conduct several plant-wide drills each year to test their response.

“Evidence-Based;”  “Proof Integrated Communications”

The domain SafeSecureVital.com is registered to Proof Integrated Communications of 230 Park Avenue in New York City.  That is XXX miles from Indian Point. Proof is part of the  “Evidence-Based” public relations firm Burston-Marsteller, itself a subsidiary of Young & Rubicam.

Proof’s senior staff includes Dallas Lawrence, a George W. Bush administrator and onetime spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq.

Washington D.C., May 3, 2010 – Proof Integrated Communications, an advertising, digital and integrated communications agency, today announced it has appointed Dallas Lawrence as Managing Director. Lawrence is well-known for his combination of social media and digital media expertise as well as his crisis management and corporate reputation experience. Lawrence will be based in Washington D.C. and report to Proof Integrated Communications Chief Executive Officer Jay Leveton. Most recently, he was Vice President and Global Practice Chair of Social and Digital Media at Levick Strategic Communications, a crisis communications and public relations firm based in Washington D.C.
“We are working hard to ensure we have a team of the strongest digital strategists available to counsel our clients,” said Leveton. “Dallas’ experience integrating social media, issue advocacy and crisis management will help us deepen our capabilities in these critical areas, which are increasingly determining the reputations and communications outcomes of corporations, associations and issue advocates today.”

Dallas Lawrence (@DallasLawrence) has more than 12 years of experience in international, public and private sector leadership developing winning integrated marketing and strategic communications strategies that protect reputations and build brand equity on blogs, websites, social networks and other online and traditional media forums. During his tenure at Levick, Lawrence guided digital strategies for many of the firm’s highest profile clients in the energy, oil and gas, pharmaceutical, consumer products, global financial and defense and aerospace industries.

Previously, he served as Vice President for Communications and New Media for the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) and served for more than five years as a trusted member of President Bush’s communications team as Director of the Office of Community Relations and Public Liaison for the Department of Defense under Secretaries Donald Rumsfeld and Robert Gates. He also served as Spokesperson and Director of Regional Media Outreach for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad.

Lawrence obtained his Bachelor’s in Political Science from the University of California, Berkley and his Master’s in Government from The John Hopkins University. He is a reserve public affairs officer in the United States Navy.

SOCIAL MEDIA AND CRISIS EXPERT DALLAS LAWRENCE JOINS BURSON-MARSTELLER’S PROOF AS MANAGING DIRECTOR, http://www.proofic.com/social-media-and-crisis-expert-dallas-lawrence-joins-burson-marsteller%E2%80%99s-proof-as-managing-director, accessed 28 March 2010.

 

xx

Marine One hangar to get solar roof

Marine One

Marine One, White House

Charis Michelsen, writing in January at CleanTechnica, reported that the Quantico hangar where Marine One (the designation of the helicopter used to transport the President – the rotary-wing equivalent of  “Air Force One”) will be getting a 120-kilowatt array, estimated to produce 150,000 kWh/year:

The solar array will be installed by FLS Energy and the solar panels will be provided by Suniva, which was chosen by FLS Energy CEO Michael Shore specifically because of its panels’ high efficiency and because it builds American. (Suniva’s panels contain more than 80% U.S. content, according to Suniva.)

Solar Arrays for the Marine Corps & Obama’s Marine One Helicopter Hanger

 

 

Notre Dame researchers: new way of cleaning up and recycling nuclear waste

Physorg reports a new way to clean up the waste from nuclear operations:

A new paper by researchers at the University of Notre Dame, led by Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt, professor of civil engineering and geological sciences and concurrent professor of chemistry and biochemistry, showcases Notre Dame Thorium Borate-1 (NDTB-1) as a crystalline compound which can be tailored to safely absorb radioactive ions from nuclear waste streams. Once captured the radioactive ions can then be exchanged for higher charged species of a similar size, recycling the material for re-use.
Nuclear power plant symbol By Hendrik Tammen via Wikimedia Commns
If one considers that the radionuclide technetium (99Tc) is present in the nuclear waste at most storage sites around the world, the math becomes simple. There are more than 436 nuclear power plants operating in 30 countries; that is a lot of nuclear waste. In fact, approximately 305 metric tons of 99Tc was generated from nuclear reactors and weapons testing from 1943 through 2010. Its safe storage has been an issue for decades.

“The framework of the NDTB-1 is key,” says Albrecht-Schmitt. “Each crystal contains a framework of channels and cages featuring billions of tiny pores, which allow for the interchange of anions with a variety of environmental contaminants, especially those used in the nuclear industry, such as chromate and pertechnetate.”

 

"Surveillance" doesn't necessarily afford prediction or prevention

The prime suspect in the recent spree of murders in France turns  out to have been under police surveillance, in Afghan custody at one point, American military custody at another – none of which seems to have had any effect on his actions. From Scott Sayare’s account, Cornered Suspect Admits Killing 7 in France, Officials Say

TOULOUSE, France — A 23-year-old Frenchman of Algerian descent claimed responsibility on Wednesday for the methodical killings of four men and three children in this region over the past 10 days, officials said, after barricading himself in a small apartment building in Toulouse surrounded by hundreds of police officers.

The French authorities said he had traveled to Pakistan and Afghanistan, called himself a mujahedeen, or freedom fighter, and had been under surveillance for years. In a standoff that stretched past 14 hours, he fired several heavy volleys at the hundreds of police officers ringing the building, injuring two, though neither seriously. At one point the suspect threw a .45-caliber pistol from the window, the same kind used in each of the three attacks. The prosecutor leading the investigation said the man, Mohammed Merah, made a series of disclosures to a negotiator, including that he had been trained by Al Qaeda, and that the attacks were meant to avenge the deaths of Palestinian children, and to protest French military deployments abroad as well as a recent French law banning the full Islamic facial veil in public. He admitted to planning at least three more killings, said the prosecutor François Molins, speaking at a news conference on Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Merah claimed responsibility as the helmeted motorcyclist who killed three paratroopers in Toulouse and the nearby city of Montauban, all three of Arab descent, over the past 10 days, Mr. Molins said. Boasting that he had “brought France to its knees,” he also admitted to a brutally cold attack on Monday outside a Jewish school that killed a rabbi, two of his young children, and an 8-year-old girl, the prosecutor said. In that attack, the gunman held the girl by the hair to execute her, pausing to switch to a .45 when his 9-millimeter pistol jammed. Investigators believe he was wearing a camera around his neck at the school to record his murders. Mr. Merah had planned to kill a soldier Wednesday morning, and at some point to kill two police officers here, Mr. Molins said. The chief editor of France 24 said in a televised interview that she had spoken by telephone to a man who claimed to be the shooter in the hours before the police surrounded Mr. Merah’s building. “He was calm, was speaking in very good French and punctuated by Arabic expressions,” said the editor, Ebba Kalondo. She also said he spoke of planning more attacks and intending to post video of his killings online. The suspect had been detained by Afghan police at one point during his travels in Afghanistan and Paksitan, Mr. Molins said, and was transferred into American custody and returned to France. Afghan authorities did say a man named Mohammed Merah had escaped from a prison in the city of Kandahar in a mass jail break orchestrated by the Taliban in 2008. but that he was definitely an Afghan citizen.

Interior Minister Claude Guéant said that the Mr. Merah cornered in Toulouse had been under surveillance by the French domestic intelligence service for several years, “though nothing whatsoever allowed us to think he was at the point of committing a criminal act.”

"Gunman Reportedly Filmed Lethal Shooting Spree at French Jewish School"

This is now even more disturbing; off-hand, we don’t remember a similar fact-pattern. From   Jewish School Shooting in France – by Scott Sayare and Steven Erlanger at The New York Times (10:04 today):

¶ TOULOUSE, France — A day after an attack outside a Jewish school here killed a rabbi and three young children, the French authorities offered fresh details on Tuesday of an assault that has stunned the nation and terrorized the city, saying the lone gunman seemed to be filming his actions as he coolly shot his victims to death.

Claude Guéant, the interior minister, told a French radio station that surveillance footage from the school’s security cameras showed what appeared to be a video camera strapped to the gunman’s chest — adding a lurid detail to the most deadly attack against Jews in France in 30 years.

With the nation’s terrorism alert at its highest level — “scarlet” — the French authorities pursued a broad and high-profile search on Tuesday for the assailant, but Mr. Guéant said little was known about him.

The attack has been linked to two earlier shootings of French paratroopers, with the police saying that the same gun, a .45-caliber automatic pistol, was used in all three assaults. The authorities have also said that the methods were the same — a man on a powerful motorbike, also the same in each instance, who killed and then fled.

– – –

The “scarlet” alert level, one step short of a formal state of emergency, gives security forces wide powers that include the authority to close some public places like railroad stations and deploy mixed patrols of police officers and soldiers, news reports said.

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