Bob Hennelly/WNYC's "Stucknation: 911 Off the Hook"

In Stucknation: 911 Off the Hook, WNYC’s Bob Hennelly outlines the current problems – basic problems – with the nation’s 911 emergency telephone reporting/dispatch systems in coping with the proliferation of mobile phones:

Almost a decade after the attacks of September 11th the nation’s most essential emergency local lifeline — 911 — remains a local patchwork of antiquated technology vulnerable to failure when people need it most.

In 2010 the Congressional Research Service, CSR, reported the nation’s underlying 911 local call systems “operate exclusively on an analog technology using an architecture of circuits and switches” that date back to when ATT was the “regulated monopoly providing most of the nation’s phone service.”

That monopoly was broken up in 1984, 27 years ago. As we know, digital technology and cell phones have been dominant for years.

Yet even now, CSR finds 911 systems across the country are “unable to accommodate the latest advances in telecommunications technology and are increasingly out-dated, costly to maintain, and in danger of failure.”

Consider the tragic case of the Virginia Tech students in 2007 caught up in that grisly mass shooting. Many thought they could text 911. They could not. And yet even today the overwhelming number of Americans cannot text 911. The college kids must have thought that surely, by 2007, the grown-ups would have figured out how to make that possible and made it happen. Continue reading

Google Chrome – Get a fast new browser. For PC, Mac, and Linux

Google Chrome – Get a fast new browser. For PC, Mac, and Linux.

Pacific Disaster Center Active Hazards Widget

Widget to display PDC Active Hazards

  • Retrieves latest active Hazards from the Pacific Disaster Center.
  • Rows are colored based on severity (refer to CSS).
  • Can change the widget title.
  • Can opt to show 1, 3, 5, 10, or all active Hazards.
  • Each Hazard is hyperlinked to the public information drop-zone.
  • Does not auto-refresh; reads XML from PDC on each page load.
Author: Steve Kunitzer (FesterHead)
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Last Updated: 2011-2-11

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* Helicopter Rope Suspension Technique – Wikipedia

* Helicopter Rope Suspension Technique

[edit] References

1. ? [1]

2. ? FMFM 7-40 Helicopter Rope Suspension Training (HRST) Operations

3. ? Bruce F. Meyers, Fortune Favors the Brave: The Story of First Force Recon, (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2000).

via Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction – Wikipedia.

s

Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction – Wikipedia

The Special Personnel Insertion/Extraction was first designed by the Marines of 1st Force Reconnaissance Company, the Marine division’s 1st Reconnaissance Battalion, and the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing riggers. They created and combat tested several versions of the SPIE before it was officially recommended to be tested. In May 1970, the commanding general of 3rd Marine Amphibious Force coordinated input from the 1st Marine Division and his 1st Marine Air Wing. A request was sent to the Commandant of the Marine Corps and to the Development Center for certification of the SPIE rig and to its safety and use.[3]

The parachute test jumpers of the Naval Parachute Unit (NPU) and Marine Corps, all qualified parachutist designers and engineers, assembled together at El Centro for the initial testing and evaluation of the SPIE rig. After a few test dummies were tried, Marine Major Bruce F. Meyers, and along with four Navy NPU parachutist engineers, successfully attempted the first flight on the SPIE assembly.

[edit] See also

* Helicopter Rope Suspension Technique

[edit] References

1. ? [1]

2. ? FMFM 7-40 Helicopter Rope Suspension Training (HRST) Operations

3. ? Bruce F. Meyers, Fortune Favors the Brave: The Story of First Force Recon, (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2000).

[edit] External links

* Media related to Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction at Wikimedia Commons

via Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction – Wikipedia.

Fulton surface-to-air recovery system – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fulton surface-to-air recovery system

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

The Fulton system in use

The Fulton system in use from below

The Fulton surface-to-air recovery system (STARS) is a system used by the CIA, United States Air Force and United States Navy for retrieving persons on the ground from an MC-130E Combat Talon I aircraft. It involves using an overall-type harness and a self-inflating balloon which carries an attached lift line. An MC-130E engages the line with its V-shaped yoke and the individual is reeled on board. Red flags on the lift line guide the pilot during daylight recoveries; lights on the lift line are used for night recoveries. Recovery kits were designed for one and two-man retrievals.

This system was developed by inventor Robert Edison Fulton, Jr. for the Central Intelligence Agency in the early 1950s. It was an evolution from a similar system that was used during World War II by American and British forces. The earlier system did not use a balloon, but had a pair of poles that were set in the ground on either side of the person to be retrieved, with a line running from the top of one pole to the other. An aircraft, usually a C-47 Skytrain, would trail a grappling hook and engage the line, which was attached to the person to be retrieved.

via Fulton surface-to-air recovery system – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

File:Airborne wind generator-en.svg – Wikimedia Commons

File:Airborne wind generator-en.svgAirborne_wind_generator-en.svg? SVG file, nominally 720 × 720 pixels, file size: 46 KBThis image rendered as PNG in other sizes: 200px, 500px, 1000px, 2000px.[edit] SummaryDescription Airborne wind generator-en.svgEnglish: Helium or hydrogen inflated airborne wind generator. Unit is 17 m by 9 m.

via File:Airborne wind generator-en.svg – Wikimedia Commons.

MIT Mobility Lab's "Leveraged Freedom Chair" (Core 77, BoingBoing)

This open-source tech, constructed with bicycle parts, is designed so that it can be constructed for under $100 USD.

3rd Gen Leveraged Freedom Chair - MIT Mobility Labs

 

Link to Cory Doctorow’s piece, Wheelchair for the developing world: cheap, rugged and easy to maintain, on BoingBoing.

The Core77 Article: Case Study: Leveraged Freedom Chair, by Amos Winter and Jake Child.

The Freedom Chair’s own website.

The MIT Mobility Lab site.

Using oysters for remediation of rivers

Architect Kate Orff:

sees the oyster as an agent of urban change. Bundled into beds and sunk into city rivers, oysters slurp up pollution and make legendarily dirty waters clean — thus driving even more innovation in “oyster-tecture.” Orff shares her vision for an urban landscape that links nature and humanity for mutual benefit.

Video here: Kate Orff: Reviving New York’s rivers with oysters (TEDTalks)

 

Kate Orff is, among other things, Director of The Urban Landscape Lab.

Reflective Clothing from RAF

Reflective Apparel Factory makes OSHA/ANSI compliant clothing, has what look like pretty competitive prices – and takes the trouble to explain most of the OSHA/ANSI standards on its website.  We’re not sure whether the rules  apply – but here in New York, I’ve had a number of conversations about the failure of delivered-food restaurants to give their delivery workes (usually on bicycles, or mopeds) reflective clothing and fit the vehicles and foodcontaners with Reflexite or Scotchlite.  My guess is that those workers don’t have a lot of bargaining power to spare.

Back to RAF – as we try to provide more information about responder gear characteristics, performance, and pricing, we’ll have more to say.  But Reflective Apparel Factory seems a good resource. They’ll sell single units, don’t engage in the dodge of declining to post prices – a practice, which while legal, should give purchasers pause – and the prices seem quite reasonable, and the range of garments and sizes pretty good.  Certainly worth a look for anyone planning a CERT  or SAR team.

Three Cases of Cholera Confirmed by City Officials – NYTimes.com

Cholera Bacteria viewed in electron microscope. From Dartmouth University via Wikimedia Commons

By AL BAKER on The CityRoom blog at NYTimes.com:

The first known cases of cholera in New York since the outbreak of the disease in Haiti last year were confirmed on Saturday by city officials.A commercial laboratory notified health officials on Friday that three New Yorkers had developed diarrhea and dehydration, classic symptoms of the disease, after returning from a wedding on Jan. 22 and 23 in the Dominican Republic, where the government has been trying to prevent the disease from spreading from neighboring Haiti.The three who contracted cholera were adults who returned to the city within days of the wedding.None were hospitalized. Continue reading

President Reagan's Legacy

As we consider the Centennial of President Reagan’s birth, it is important to note that while he cut taxes on some taxpayers, he raised taxes on other taxpayers. As the graph, presented by Barry Ritholtz at Business Insider, shows, the deficit shot up under President Reagan, as it did under Presidents Woodrow Wilson, Herbert Hoover, Franklin Roosevelt, George H. W. Bush, and George W. Bush.

Gross Federal Deficit over GDB, 1900 to present

See also CNN Money Report.

Continue reading

Plastic Bags: a not-so-disposable problem, and the aggregate of small solutions

From reuseit.com, here are some  Fast Facts on Plastic Bags:

Market Tote from GraniteGear.com

  • 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags are used every year, worldwide.
  • About 1 million plastic bags are used every minute.
  • A single plastic bag can take up to 1,000 years to degrade.
  • More than 3.5 million tons of plastic bags, sacks and wraps were discarded in 2008.
  • Only 1 in 200 plastic bags in the UK are recycled (BBC).
  • The U.S. goes through 100 billion single-use plastic bags. This costs retailers about $4 billion a year.
  • Plastic bags are the second-most common type of ocean refuse, after cigarette butts (2008)
  • Plastic bags remain toxic even after they break down.
  • Every square mile of ocean has about 46,000 pieces of plastic floating in it.

We’re talking about, we suspect, two main uses: bags used in the transportation of goods – and bags used to transport “waste,” including the garbage bags themselves, discarded shopping bags – and sometimes shopping bags re-used as garbage bags.

Tara Lohan, in The Great Plastic Bag Plague,  (On Alternet, 2007), cites industry sources for the proposition that American retailers spend $4 billion/year on plastic bags – adding, of course, to the cost of goods – without reflecting their full environmental cost. Lohan cites other sources for the proposition that 12 million barrels of oil are used , annually, to produce plastic bags used in the United States. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates that average daily use of petroleum products in the United States – the world’s largest consumer – is 18,771,000 barrels/day. Assuming we’re not in a leap year – 1/365th is .0027 (rounded) of our energy consumption. Put another way, slightly over one-quarter of one percent (0.27%). And 12 million barrels would be about two-thirds of that.  Thought of another way – 18 million barrels per day – 365 days per year – 6.5 billion (6,570,000,000).  So plastic bags amount to 0.18% of our petroleum consumption.  1 component of  6,570 equal components. So what difference does it make if you accept a plastic bag, or bring your own reusable bag?

In WW II ((One of the ways in which the  Allies gradually wore down the Axis was by depriving it of – no surprise, we hope – petroleum.  Richard Overy, in Why The Allies Won, contends that Allies’ gradual degradation of Axis energy supplies made a great contribution to the eventual Allied Victory.))     , three million soldiers retook the continent (the invasion of Western Europe, sometimes referred to as Operation Overlord)  during and after D-Day. Each soldier’s contribution amounted to 0.12%  One in three million – without counting the various Resistance groups, support troops and civilians in the United Kingdom and the United States.  Total U.S. troop count: 16.5 million. The Philippines suffered over 50,000 military deaths alone. (For total WW II casualties, see Wikipedia entry of that name).

So  – the aggregate of many small, coordinated contributions is dramatic. Get a reusable shopping bag, and use it. In future posts, we hope to point out some good deals on reusable bags, and revisit the principle of aggregating small acts. For an always-brilliant take on individual action about energy, particularly heating, check out Ellen Honigstock’s  ToePrint Project.

And:

Our earlier post, International Herald Tribune: Ireland rids itself of a plastic nuisanceIreland’s early success with a small tax on disposable bags.

Australians Take Cover as Cyclone Lashes Coast

Are there connections between burning fossil fuels and cyclones in Australia? We have burned so much coal, oil, and natural gas the last 150 years that the concentration of atmospheric Carbon Dioxide has increased by about 40% – from about 270 PPM to about 390 PPM, from about 2.5 trillion tons to 3.67 trillion tons. (Click here or here).

From Meraiah Foley’s “Australians Take Cover as Cyclone Lashes Coast,” posted on The New York Times:

SYDNEY, Australia — One of the most powerful cyclones ever to strike Australia ripped dozens houses from their foundations, uprooted trees and shredded millions of dollars worth of sugar and banana crops when it slammed into Queensland’s northeastern coast in the predawn hours on Thursday. Continue reading