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Home » 'Canes » Disaster Tech Pushes Ahead

Disaster Tech Pushes Ahead

So many things went wrong in the government’s suck­tas­tic response to Hurricane Katrina, it’s hard to know where to begin to make fixes. One place might be the basics — com­mu­ni­cat­ing, and get­ting a sense of the scene.
saIII_up.jpgIn the days after the storm, while the feds and local offi­cials floun­dered, ham radio oper­a­tors and teams of guer­rilla geeks took it upon them­selves to keep Katrina sur­vivors informed. Drone-​​makers sent unmanned spot­ters into the skies above New Orleans, to get a look at the dev­as­ta­tion.
The efforts — and so many oth­ers like them — were beyond inspi­ra­tional. But the impact of these self-​​starters was muted, because they couldn’t share infor­ma­tion or resources all that well. The infra­struc­ture (both hard­ware and soft) just wasn’t in place.
That’s the prob­lem a dis­as­ter response drill, con­ducted last week in San Diego, aimed to cor­rect. Everyone from IBM to Sprint to Google to U.S. Joint Forces Command par­tic­i­pated in the test, called Strong Angel III. And every­thing from inflat­able anten­nas to high-​​speed wire­less net­works to text-​​message news feeds to games for human­i­tar­ian aid was tried out.
It didn’t all work per­fectly, as the New York Times notes.

Last Monday, the group began to assem­ble a makeshift com­mand cen­ter at an aban­doned build­ing near the San Diego air­port. But a state-​​of-​​the-​​art wire­less net­work, intended to route video images, satel­lite map coor­di­nates and other data from an impres­sive array of mobile com­put­ers, soft­ware analy­sis tools and com­mand pro­grams failed to come to life.
“Finally I said, ‘Lights out! Everyone turn every­thing off and lets start over,’” said Brian D. Steckler, a com­puter sci­en­tist at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif., who was in charge of more than a dozen inter­lock­ing net­works at the heart of the com­mand cen­ter.
Hundreds of com­put­ers and even cell­phones were shut down, and then the net­work was slowly turned back on, seg­ment by seg­ment. Too many high-​​bandwidth appli­ca­tions had clogged the net­work, includ­ing a pow­er­ful video cam­era and “rogue” trans­mit­ters set up by par­tic­i­pants intent on cre­at­ing their own mini-​​networks.

But Strong Angel did meet its #1 goal — to “map­ping and devel­op­ing” rela­tion­ships for dis­as­ter response. Programmers from Microsoft and Google, for exam­ple, teamed up “to allow shar­ing [of] a sin­gle set of dig­i­tal satel­lite maps seam­lessly and to over­lay event data relayed from emer­gency work­ers through­out the San Diego area,” the Times said.
Most observers, like Defense Tech pal John Scott, agreed if these projects take the main lessons of the drill to the heart — by keep­ing col­lab­o­ra­tion tools sim­ple, low-​​bandwidth, and platform-​​agnostic — they should be “hugely help­ful for the next dis­as­ter.”

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August 28th, 2006 | 'Canes, Homeland Security | 325129 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2006/08/28/disaster-tech-pushes-ahead/Disaster+Tech+Pushes+Ahead2006-08-28+17%3A41%3A33noahmax You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. Allan says:
    August 23, 2007 at 4:27 pm

    The old­est and proven form of true comu­ni­ca­tions when all oth­ers fail, is the Amateur Radio also known as “Ham Radio” it has pulled many hours of desaster hours and has been around well before WW2. Most ama­teur clubs have been trained to just such oper­a­tions and they work weather watch as well as res­cue they pro­vide the best form of com­mu­ni­ca­tions around when all other forms of com­mu­ni­ca­tions fail includ­ing cell phones.
    During Katrina there were many hams trans­mit­ting infor­ma­tion and even some CB’ers but you did not hear much about them and what they were doing and what they did and thats the way it hap­pens.
    Allan

    Reply
  2. Brant says:
    May 2, 2008 at 10:46 am

    I agree with Allan. Ham radio is really the way to go in this sit­u­a­tion, it is inher­ently dis­trib­uted, avail­able to every­one and can be set up within a mat­ter of hours.

    Reply
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