Archive for January, 2009

Very Interesting Experiment: Strong Angel III

Strong Angel III | Strong Angel III
THE DEMONSTRATION

What will happen? Organizations and individuals participating in Strong Angel III are volunteering their time and resources to explore innovations in humanitarian response capabilities. This is not a trade show or a technology fair, with vendor booths, demos, and product literature. Nor is it an Exercise in the usual sense, with teams of first responders and a highly-scripted scenario. Instead, SA-III will focus on simulating those aspects of post-disaster conditions that specifically impact communication, information sharing, and coordination. The week-long demonstration will consist of a series of collaborative technical and non-technical experiments based on both lessons learned in past disasters and on emerging requirements for integrated operations. They are designed to test the interoperability, reliability, and flexibility of proposed social and technical solutions. Strong Angel III is a chance for vendors, humanitarian practitioners, First Responders, the military, and community leaders to explore capabilities, inter-operability, usability, and deployment with the specific intent that the solutions proposed be accessible globally. Strong Angel will provide an adverse environment designed to maximize learning, sharing and experimentation.

Some interesting stuff from Hugo Teufel, departing chief privacy officer at the Department of Homeland Security

Q&A: Advice to the next Homeland Security CPO

Your last public act as DHS CPO was to release a report (download PDF) critical of data practices at European hotels. What do you hope this will accomplish? Critical of hotels? No. We issued a report that set forth the facts and the law, as we currently understand them, about data protection in the “third pillar” and in certain EU member states with regard to security service collection and use of hotel guest registration data, a common practice throughout Europe. If we were critical, it was of the officials who were reluctant in being transparent about what their security services do with hotel guest registration data.

Text messaging meditations in an emergency

The media loves these kinds of “silly-thing-was-important” stories, but mass text messaging from an emergency can serve a huge purpose in recovery effort (”careful– there’s gas leaks everywhere, “there’s a pocket of air in the bulkhead”, “approach fromthe left”, etc.)

OMG: Text messaging an important part of response - Yahoo News
Snodgrass was one of the last people off the plane. He told The Herald of Rock Hill that he called his wife as he stood in shin-deep water on the wing, waiting to be rescued. She was distraught, watching television and fearing the worst after getting that text message, but all was well.

NYT: Using Technology in Disaster Preparedness

Good roundup of links for disaster prep:

The Fix - Getting Ready at Home in Case Disaster Strikes - NYTimes.com
So emergency organizations are beefing up efforts to make sure that homeowners and renters are prepared if disaster strikes. As troubling as that prospect is, the programs — from information services to technological advances involving e-mail alerts and text messages — aim to at least make people think about the possibility of an emergency and what to do at home should one arise.

All 155 survive plane crash in NYC’s Hudson River - Yahoo News

Ferry boat captains and passengers helped in pulling all crash survivors to safety:

All 155 survive plane crash in NYC’s Hudson River - Yahoo News
The plane was submerged in the icy waters up to the windows when rescuers in Coast Guard vessels and ferry boats arrived, opened the door and pulled passengers in yellow life vests from the aircraft, whose fuselage appeared intact. The plane was sinking in the near-freezing water on one of the coldest days of the year, with the mercury around 20 degrees.