Jim Roepcke's weblog have browser, will travel (est. 1999)

6Sep/05Off

My American English Linguistic Profile

Blogthings: What Kind of American English Do You Speak?

My Linguistic Profile:

75% General American English
10% Yankee
5% Dixie
5% Midwestern
5% Upper Midwestern

Thanks for the link (10% dixie) Justin. :-)

3Sep/05Off

What is the population of NOLA?

I have heard so many population figures in the last week. 450,000, 480,000, 4.5 million, 1.4 million... what is the actual population?

Filed under: Uncategorized 1 Comment
3Sep/05Off

mac mini, shipping in 24 hours?

A break from the Katrina news. A couple of weeks ago I bought a 1.42GHz/512/80/SD mac mini from CompuSmart in Victoria. They had a great promotion going, do not pay for a year, and free Apple wireless keyboard, free Apple wireless mouse, free Lexmark all-in-one printer, and free MS Office Student and Teacher edition, and a rebate on a 17" LCD monitor.

I wasn't surprised when they said they had none in stock. I'm not surprised that two weeks have passed and nothing has arrived. So why am I surprised that on the Apple Canada Online Store, they have 24 hour shipping times for that model?

I should call Apple and ask them to ship one to CompuSmart for me. :-D

2Sep/05Off

Re: Mayor Nagin is pissed, so am I

After work I decided to check on Irish Trojan again. I wasn't surprised to see yet another post blaming NOLA Mayor Nagin for screwing up the evacuation process last weekend.

He pointed to this page on JunkYardBlog which puts it pretty plainly... there were hundreds of buses available in New Orleans to evacuate people over the weekend.

So I'm about to post that link on my weblog when I noticed Brian Carnell had replied to my previous post saying essentially the same thing. Maybe he saw the same story I just did?

I totally agree that those buses could have and should have been used. But I think the logistics planning for an event like this was so poor that it wasn't even in the cards. Imagine Mayor Nagin says on Saturday morning or Saturday evening, "anyone who doesn't have a way out of town should make their way to the Superdome or the Convention Center or (INSERT THE NAMES OF A DOZEN PLACES PICKUPS COULD HAVE HAPPENED HERE)".

How many people would have come? How many people would have gotten that message? (If they had planned for it there would have been police or other officials in the city bullhorning the message in every neighbourhood) If people did respond en masse, would their have been chaos? Would it have affected the people trying to evacuate on their own? I think it would have been quite a challenge. Don't forget the roads out of New Orleans were already extremely congested.

I think cities need to have these things thought through and ready, and the public (including kids via their schools) need to be educated about these procedures. Like fire drills, but without actually going through with the packing of people on buses and taking them out of town. This way the populous will gradually learn where their evacuation assembly location is, and what to expect when they get there, and people who aren't using those services know how to avoid the crowds there.

How is it that a city in New Orlean's situation didn't have a plan like that ready? What was the plan? Obviously they knew they had a massive amount of people who had no way out. What was their plan for hospital residents? For the prisons? Everything has seemed rather ad-hoc. But is Mayor Nagin to blame for all of this? Surely some, as are lots of people, and that blame is going to be passed around for a long, long time. Mayor Nagin was elected in May 2002. Even if he'd made it his first priority from day one I'm not sure they could have done enough. I've read money tagged to improve the levees was diverted to funding the war in Iraq (but admittedly I have no concrete source for that, can someone confirm that?), so it's not like he wouldn't have been fighting an uphill battle.

Here in Victoria, it's popular belief that if the "Big One" hits (ie: a massive earthquake very close to Victoria), Victoria will be underwater from tsunami flooding. I don't know what the city's plan is for dealing with that, so even if they do have a plan they obviously aren't communicating it well enough.

2Sep/05Off

Mayor Nagin is pissed, so am I

CNN.com: Mayor to feds: 'Get off your asses'

"I need reinforcements, I need troops, man. I need 500 buses, man. We ain't talking about -- you know, one of the briefings we had, they were talking about getting public school bus drivers to come down here and bus people out here. I'm like, "You got to be kidding me. This is a national disaster. Get every doggone Greyhound bus line in the country and get their asses moving to New Orleans." That's -- they're thinking small, man. And this is a major, major, major deal. And I can't emphasize it enough, man. This is crazy. I've got 15,000 to 20,000 people over at the convention center. It's bursting at the seams. The poor people in Plaquemines Parish. ... We don't have anything, and we're sharing with our brothers in Plaquemines Parish.It's awful down here, man."

This is from a transcript of an interview with NOLA Mayor Nagin and WWL reporter Garland Robinette. There is audio available too. Brendan Loy is very critical of Mayor Nagin for not issuing the evacuation sooner, but I've heard counter-arguments that if he had made the evacuation mandatory on Saturday, it would have caused so much panic that the evacuation might have been even slower than it ended up being, and some people think too many would have believed it was crying wolf. How terrible must it be to be a mayor of a city in crisis and be essentially powerless.

Mayor Nagin also mentions that drug addiction is to blame for a majority of the worst problems in the city. He says the drugstores and hospitals have had looters because those addicts are looking for a fix.

I noticed earlier Apple finally has a SMALL link on the bottom left of their home page for donating to the Red Cross. When the tsunami hit asia last December, Apple very quickly replaced their huge main home page image with a link to the Red Cross. It's taken an entire work week for them to make a little version of that image? I guess their Mighty Mouse is more important.

I looked a couple of days ago and Microsoft had nothing on their home page. Just looked, they have a big link, right at the top of their content area.

This summer I went to SF for WWDC. We were bussed to Cupertino for the Beer Bash. I couldn't believe how many buses were required to get the people there... and probably only 2-3 thousand people. There are still tens of thousands of people in New Orleans that need transportation. Mayor Nagin is right, they really do need every bus they can find. At least it appears the people at the Convention Center have finally been brought some food and water (after days of going without).

How would you feel if it was your city in this situation and you've been waiting for help, neck deep in toxic water in your attic, since Sunday or Monday? Don't try to downplay the seriousness of this. I said it a couple of days ago and I'll say it again, we need to find out if our city officials have adequate disaster recovery plans. It's pretty clear from this situation that there's no guarantee they do.

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2Sep/05Off

Excellent sources of Katrina aftermath information

The best blogs I have found regarding New Orleans and Katrina so far are:

The Irish Trojan's blog - Brendan Loy's homepage

Brendan's blog has been amazing and the attention he's received is well-deserved. He had excellent coverage even before the hurricane hit, he taught me a lot about Hurricanes. I didn't know that Hurricanes have "eye replacement cycles" before I visited his site.

I think I found this site via Google doing some Hurricane searches on Saturday afternoon when I first heard Katrina was a threat to NOLA.

The people behind The Interdictor are an amazing story unto themselves. They are living in the datacenter they work at, in a 27 floor building IN NEW ORLEANS, because it's their job to keep the thing running. And they're taking that responsibility EXTREMELY seriously. They have a diesel generator powering the data center and at least part of their network backbone is still functioning. Amazing pictures and video there too. I pity any looter that makes the mistake of trying to mess with those guys.

2Sep/05Off

Not so easy to send in more troops to New Orleans

Sorry if this is super obvious, and I'm just thick to have not realized it before, but it's not necessarily simple to send in thousands and thousands of extra troops to the New Orleans area.

I've read on other blogs that there are tens of thousands of National Guard in other states ready to mobilize when given the word, the response from those bloggers being "what the hell are you waiting for?"

That was my first reaction too. More troops are needed to regain control of the city so that rescues can proceed at maximum speed.

But where are all of those extra thousands of troops going to get drinking water from? Obviously they have the same problem in Iraq because drinking water is (or was last time I read about it) very scarce there too. I would also assume the military "has ways and means" to provide their troops with drinking water, but I'm guessing the military was so unprepared for a domestic event of this magnitude that there just aren't adequate supplies on hand to make this speedy.

The buildup to deployment in Iraq was a months-long procedure, not immediate.

So, assuming there are massive logistic issues preventing national guard from blanketing New Orleans, I can understand the delay... but if not, shame on the powers that be for dragging their feet.

1Sep/05Off

Katrina is magnitudes worse than 9/11

Dave Winer: Scripting News: 9/1/2005

"I've had a chance to think about the US Open tennis tournament going on in NYC, and I am very angry about it. How dare the citizens of NY, who received so much help from the rest of the country, host a sporting event, while this tragedy is unfolding. September 11 was an instant event, it destroyed a large complex of buildings and killed thousands of Americans, but it was over quickly, and except for emotional damage, the city went on exactly as it did before. This is so much bigger, it effects so many more people, and its effect will be felt for the indefinite future. New York must stop right now, and reflect on exactly how it can now come to the aid of the rest of the country. It is completely inappropriate for a sport tournament to be going on now, while so many are suffering, while so many are dying."

I totally disagree. After 9/11 the games stopped, not because of respect, but because there was no air transport and citizens were rightly cautious, unwilling to go to public events (potential terrorist targets).

After 9/11 the President said "keep shopping, rebuild our economy, don't let the terrorists win". This time the terrorist is Mother Nature. America should not cow to this event. There has been enough economic disaster, we don't need more by stopping an event which brings a significant amount of jobs and money to that area. Not to mention people need things to think about other than the disaster! After watching CNN or FOX news for hours on end, it's nice to wind down by watching some tennis.

But, I do agree with Dave's other comments that the response by the media and the government has been totally insufficient, especially in comparison to 9/11. This situation is orders of magnitude worse than 9/11. Why are people afraid to say that? It is. Perhaps it's just the magnitude of this that is hard to fathom. Of course no-one wants to disrespect the suffering from 9/11, but let's give the victims of Katrina the respect they deserve.

And before too long you should think, is your city prepared. Is my city, I don't know. I seriously doubt it.

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Jim Roepcke specializes in development and mentoring for iPhone and Mac OS X / Cocoa, WebObjects, and Python.

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