Re: Katrina response, private and public -- call/fax/email specific congress-critters (please)

2010-01-20 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

Folks,

I'm trying to keep the competent engineer count at the Boutilliers NAP 
from decrementing to zero in the very proximal future. One of several 
problems being worked by several groups of people.


Specifically, I want to get the paperwork done so that Dominique 
Theodore Guerrier, wife of Reynold Guerrier, Karl Nikolas Guerrier, 
age 3 and Hann Aurelie Guerrier, age 1, may exit Haiti and travel to 
Deerfield Beach, Florida, where Reynold's sister lives. If the wife 
and kids are safe, Reynold will stay on site until relieved.


Dominique holds a valid passport, the young children do not.

I want some of the NANOG list to do something -- a write your 
congress critter exercise. See below for instructions.


Eric


There are three avenues to take: tourist visa from State, humanitarian 
parole from Homeland Security, and a private request by a member of 
Congress. Of these, the third is the most successful, so that is what 
I'm asking NANOG contributors to do.


Here are the three primary targets:

1. Representative Ron Klein (D-FL), who represents the district in 
which Reynold's sister lives (Deerfield Beach)


2. Representative Earl Blumenauer (D-OR), who's staff agreed to look 
into the situation.


3. Senators Cantwell and Murray (D-WA) were both forwarded the 
information on Reynold, but have yet to commit.


Ordered by effectiveness, there is calling the member's district 
office, calling the member's Washington office (particularly if you 
provide service in or near the Congressional District or State), 
followed by fax, followed by email (or ugly webform).


When communicating with the staffers of members of Congress, please 
make the point that this is a key human technical resource for the 
basic function of government. There's not a lot of point in 
entertaining legislation to certify operators if we are indifferent to 
whether there is anyone technically competent left to run what remains 
after a network compromising event of the first magnitude.


Feel free to use Reynold's mail to NANOG of the 19th:


To any of you who wants to help:

We would like to provide to the haitian government a UC systems with several 
branches:

* President office:10 
Endpoints
* PM office: 10 
endpoints
* 12 mayor city hall offices:   3 for each :   36 endpoints
* Ministries(9 differents locations 3 for each)   27
* Communications Center 20
* emergency Clusters  14

Total   117 
endpoints

Redundant communications.

So if someone can provide recommendations, equipment, skilled technician for 
that it would be fine.


Reynold


If, after your message across to the initial contact, usually a 
staffer simply doing phones, you get to an immigration interest, 
either in the initial staffer, or better, the staffer who handles 
either immigration requests or technology (see below), and you want me 
to follow-up, send me email with the contact details and either I or a 
Cornell Law student will follow-up on the wonk details.


In addition to the its-the-right-thing reason, there is a 
self-interest motivation I want you all to be aware of. The three 
members (above) and one more, Rep. Chellie Pingree of Maine's 1st CD, 
are targets because they responded to the Cornell Law effort on MLK 
Day and yesterday. There is another, larger class of Members to be 
informed -- the Members who currently sit on the House Committee on 
Science and Technology and the House Committee on Commerce and Energy.


Our collective self-interest in informing these Members is that we, as 
operators, big and small, are capable of issue advocacy. They already 
know that our employers, particularly the big ones, are capable of 
issue advocacy ;-)


Committee on Science and Technology:
http://science.house.gov/about/members.shtml

Commerce and Energy:
http://energycommerce.house.gov/index.php?option=com_contentview=categorylayout=blogid=160Itemid=61

Having completed this exercise, please drop me a line at 
brun...@nic-naa.net so I can keep count of how many inputs went into 
the system, and where, and possibly infer a causal relation between 
outputs, if any, and inputs, and routing within the system.





Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-20 Thread Max Larson Henry

 Bahamas Telecommunications Company (BTC), the service provider that runs
 the Bahamas Domestic Submarine Network (BDSNi) submarine cable system
 linking to Haiti, reported that service has been disrupted as a result of
 the earthquake that struck the Port-au-Prince area.


- The Teleco Facility that receive the fiber is completely broken (dust) but
must of the Technicians are alive and in Port au Prince


-M


Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-20 Thread Steven Bellovin

On Jan 20, 2010, at 1:20 PM, Max Larson Henry wrote:

 
 Bahamas Telecommunications Company (BTC), the service provider that runs
 the Bahamas Domestic Submarine Network (BDSNi) submarine cable system
 linking to Haiti, reported that service has been disrupted as a result of
 the earthquake that struck the Port-au-Prince area.
 
 
 - The Teleco Facility that receive the fiber is completely broken (dust) but
 must of the Technicians are alive and in Port au Prince
 
There's an article on the subject in today's Wall Street Journal: 
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703657604575005453223257096.html 
-- not sure if it's behind the paywall or not.

--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb








Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-20 Thread Bill Woodcock

On Jan 19, 2010, at 3:56 PM, Martin Hannigan wrote:
 Re your plan to potentially run a cable from SD to PaP. Interesting. Looks 
 like 300nm to me. I think you're going to need op amp and power.

The idea was to do a festoon cable instead, landing at coastal towns along the 
way, and using Ethernet switches to break out local service as well as 
repeating signal.

 On the Columbus run, they're going to need a landing station.

Yep, I expect they hope that the situation will work in their favor, and that 
they'll be granted one, which would break Teleco's current landing monopoly.

 I'm going to speculate that this is part of BTC's problem; no landing station 
 of the subsea route was disrupted by the quake

The landing station building collapsed.  There's no evidence of any damage to 
the fiber, though that's possible as well.

 I'd be thinking microwave and towers. Faster. Cheaper.

They've already got that, but faster only in the sense that it's already 
done...  They're limited to a few STM1s, which were quickly overwhelmed by the 
relief workers.  This is a common problem in disaster relief, we saw it 
particularly when we were working in Indonesia and Thailand during the 
tsunami...  An area that had quite modest Internet usage, and infrastructure 
which may not be great, but is sufficient to its present requirements, gets a 
flood of relief workers in who all want to use Skype simultaneously, and 
determine that the perfectly-functional and previously-sufficient Internet is 
broken and needs to be reengineered.

The existing chain of microwave relays is the Haitian ISPs' fix for the problem 
of Teleco having a monopoly fiber landing and setting astronomical prices on 
access to it.

I'm not interested in reengineering anything, but I am interested in making 
sure that if aid money goes to the incumbent to fix their fiber, at least the 
community gets something out of it in the form of the monopoly being broken.  
Otherwise the fiber being fixed does no one any good, because they still won't 
be able to use it, same as before the earthquake.

It's very easy to spend money and make things worse than they were before.

-Bill






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Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread Seth Mattinen
Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:
 Yesterday the US provided 270 gallons of diesel, and the Dominican
 Republic provided 100 gallons of diesel. Including battery, the Xchange
 Boutilliers is fuel secure through Friday.
 

If I may ask, what's the long term plan? How long is utility power
expected to be unavailable?

~Seth



Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams
I've no idea. I've just been focused on moving the dry tank moment 
to the right, along with several others. Mind, this was the first 
resupply, its not a stable replenishment schedule yet.


The engineers on site had (as of yesterday) personal food and water 
through Thursday, and dependents in need.


Eric


On 1/19/10 1:15 PM, Seth Mattinen wrote:

Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:

Yesterday the US provided 270 gallons of diesel, and the Dominican
Republic provided 100 gallons of diesel. Including battery, the Xchange
Boutilliers is fuel secure through Friday.



If I may ask, what's the long term plan? How long is utility power
expected to be unavailable?

~Seth







Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread Rodney Joffe



On Jan 19, 2010, at 11:31 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:

I've no idea. I've just been focused on moving the dry tank moment  
to the right, along with several others. Mind, this was the first  
resupply, its not a stable replenishment schedule yet.


The engineers on site had (as of yesterday) personal food and water  
through Thursday, and dependents in need.


Is there anything that any of us cab do to help, exert influence, etc  
(short of donating which many of us are already doing).




Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

On 1/19/10 2:27 PM, Rodney Joffe wrote:



On Jan 19, 2010, at 11:31 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:


I've no idea. I've just been focused on moving the dry tank moment
to the right, along with several others. Mind, this was the first
resupply, its not a stable replenishment schedule yet.

The engineers on site had (as of yesterday) personal food and water
through Thursday, and dependents in need.


Is there anything that any of us cab do to help, exert influence, etc
(short of donating which many of us are already doing).


Yes there is Rodney. The visa problem isn't solved yet, and 
fundamentally it is a call-your-congress-critter problem. I'll have 
more on that this evening (EST).


TiA,
Eric



Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread Bill Woodcock

On Jan 19, 2010, at 11:27 AM, Rodney Joffe wrote:
 Is there anything that any of us can do to help, exert influence, etc (short 
 of donating which many of us are already doing).


I'm sure other people involved in the relief work can suggest other things, but 
a few comments from my point of view:

  - Communications capability underpins the ability of other relief workers to 
do their jobs effectively, so although we, as a community, aren't feeding 
people or tending to their medical needs, we are helping those who are doing 
those crucial jobs by allowing them to focus on their work.

  - In the short-term, the equipment that's been requested by people on the 
ground has either already been delivered, is onboard a ship that left 
Jacksonville about twelve hours ago, or is being containerized to load on a 
ship that's leaving from Port Everglades tomorrow.

  - Also in the short-term, keep an eye out for con-artists who are trying to 
lure people in to fake aid-donation web sites with spam.  Law enforcement is 
coordinating internationally to take those offline as promptly as possible.  If 
you get fake aid-donation spam, please forward it to Tom Grasso 
thomas.x.gra...@ugov.gov or Randy Vickers randal.vick...@dhs.gov.  Either 
of them or I can pass things along to the international coordination group 
that's addressing this.

  - In the mid-term, what our community needs to do is to make sure that 
backhaul infrastructure gets into place to move traffic in the 1Gbps-10Gbps 
range from Port au Prince to Miami.  There are several cable systems which land 
in Santo Domingo, and Columbus has a branching unit off Guantanamo, so our main 
efforts have been focused on getting a festoon cable run around from the Santo 
Domingo landing (the University of Puerto Rico Marine Research labs have 
committed their cable-laying ship, crew, and divers, but we're still looking 
for an appropriate spool of armored singlemode in the 12-24 core range (more 
certainly wouldn't hurt, as this would be unrepeatered), and on finding funding 
to get Columbus to run the spur in from their BU.  BTC apparently has fiber 
already existing or in process of turn-up between Port au Prince and the 
Bahamas, but nobody's been able to get a response from them yet about its 
status.

  - More generally, as a community, we do good when we make sure that places 
like this, places that may not have large or lucrative markets, are still 
served by diverse fiber, rather than by a single fragile monopoly, or not at 
all, as in Haiti's case.  There are many countries as vulnerable as Haiti, and 
many of them have no fiber.  Most humanitarian disasters happen in poor 
countries and these are generally the countries our community currently has the 
least capacity to serve.  We can think a little more broadly than that, looking 
to a future when people in poor countries have more smartphones, and students 
and small businesses are getting online.  We don't need to wait for markets to 
develop...  we can invest in those markets, and _cause_ them to develop.  Then 
they won't be as vulnerable to disasters like this.

  - Thinking to the longer term...  The majority of people who die in 
humanitarian disasters die of second-order effects like starvation and disease 
that come in the wake of an earthquake or flood or whatever.  That's just 
beginning now in Haiti, and will continue for some time.  The people who died 
in the earthquake itself will be far outnumbered by those who will die as a 
result of insufficiently prepared emergency response.  PCH and Cisco have been 
trying for _years_ to get donors to support a ready-to-go emergency 
communications team for disaster response, but it's been impossible to get 
donors to fund _preparedness_ rather than after-the-fact response.  But 
immediately after an emergency is the _most expensive_ time to acquire 
generators and fuel and solar panels and wind generators and batteries and 
satphones and fiber and space-segments and so forth.  All of that can be _much 
more cheaply_ purchased or contracted for beforehand, and delivered on-site 
weeks earlier.  And those weeks are the weeks of effective response that reduce 
second-order deaths in the wake of an emergency.  People who think they're 
being helpful with a donation now should understand that the donation would 
have saved ten times as many lives if it had been made a year ago, than if it's 
made now.  If your companies have charitable foundations, please get them to 
think about that.

-Bill






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Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread JC Dill

Bill Woodcock wrote:
- Thinking to the longer term... The majority of people who die in 
humanitarian disasters die of second-order effects like starvation and 
disease that come in the wake of an earthquake or flood or whatever. 
That's just beginning now in Haiti, and will continue for some time. 
The people who died in the earthquake itself will be far outnumbered 
by those who will die as a result of insufficiently prepared emergency 
response. PCH and Cisco have been trying for _years_ to get donors to 
support a ready-to-go emergency communications team for disaster 
response, but it's been impossible to get donors to fund 
_preparedness_ rather than after-the-fact response. But immediately 
after an emergency is the _most expensive_ time to acquire generators 
and fuel and solar panels and wind generators and batteries and 
satphones and fiber and space-segments and so forth. All of that can 
be _much more cheaply_ purchased or contracted for beforehand, and 
delivered on-site weeks earlier. And those weeks are the weeks of 
effective response that reduce second-order deaths in the wake of an 
emergency. People who think they're being helpful with a donation now 
should understand that the donation would have saved ten times as many 
lives if it had been made a year ago, than if it's made now. If your 
companies have charitable foundations, please get them to think about 
that.


Well said Bill.

In addition, make sure everyone in your company has taken a CERT 
(Community Emergency Response Team) course.  Aside from cash donations, 
the most important thing you can do is get CERT training so you can be 
effective in an emergency situation.


http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/

The biggest problem in Haiti is a lack of an incident command 
structure.  Because of the lack of organization, resources are not 
effectively used and people die - the tools needed to rescue them aren't 
found in time, water isn't distributed in time, food and shelter isn't 
made available in time, etc.  Yes, all of these things are in 
desperately short supply, but the problem is greatly magnified when 
there's a lack of organization.  If they had better organization, then 
their scarce supplies would be used more effectively to benefit more people.


If every US tourist visiting Haiti or US citizen working in Haiti who 
survived the quake unharmed had CERT training, they could have helped 
organize and mobilize uninjured Haitian survivors to band together and 
be more effective.  This means being more effective at rescuing people, 
at triage, at providing emergency medical care, at communicating with 
municipal services (hospitals, doctors, police, fire departments), at 
determining what resources you have at hand (food, water, fuel, 
materials to build shelters) and how to best protect it, to ration it, 
to share and distribute it.  It will be a long time before we can get 
CERT training in-place in third-world countries to ensure that their 
citizens can have this training, but we have it here in the US - just 
about every fire department offers the courses, often for free.  Most 
offer the course to anyone who lives or works in their area.


I don't know what CERT-like programs exist outside the US, but I'm 
pretty sure that other developed countries have similar programs.


Brent Chapman has a presentation he gave at the USENIX/SAGE LISA 
Conference in San Diego on Thursday, 8 December 2005, and at the BayLISA 
meeting on Thursday, 20 October 2005:


http://www.greatcircle.com/blog/author/brent_chapman/2005/10/

The presentation is about how CERT training applies to IT disasters.  So 
not only will you be better positioned to provide personal help if you 
ever find yourself in a disaster situation like Haiti, you will also be 
able to apply the training to your day job in network operations.   :-)


You can also read about Brent's experience helping setup network 
communications in New Orleans after Katrina.


jc




Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread Reynold Guerrier
To any of you who wants to help:

We would like to provide to the haitian government a UC systems with several
branches:


   - President office:10
   Endpoints
   - PM office: 10
   endpoints
   - 12 mayor city hall offices:   3 for each :   36 endpoints
   - Ministries(9 differents locations 3 for each)   27
   - Communications Center 20
   - emergency Clusters  14

Total
117 endpoints

Redundant communications.

So if someone can provide recommendations, equipment, skilled technician for
that it would be fine.


Reynold

On Tue, Jan 19, 2010 at 2:27 PM, Rodney Joffe rjo...@centergate.com wrote:



 On Jan 19, 2010, at 11:31 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:

  I've no idea. I've just been focused on moving the dry tank moment to
 the right, along with several others. Mind, this was the first resupply, its
 not a stable replenishment schedule yet.

 The engineers on site had (as of yesterday) personal food and water
 through Thursday, and dependents in need.


 Is there anything that any of us cab do to help, exert influence, etc
 (short of donating which many of us are already doing).




-- 
===
Reynold Guerrier
IT Consultant
509-3446-0099
IM: rey...@hotmail.com
Skype: reygji


Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-19 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Tue, Jan 19, 2010 at 3:34 PM, Bill Woodcock wo...@pch.net wrote:


 [ snip ]




 certainly wouldn't hurt, as this would be unrepeatered), and on finding
 funding to get Columbus to run the spur in from their BU.  BTC apparently
 has fiber already existing or in process of turn-up between Port au Prince
 and the Bahamas, but nobody's been able to get a response from them yet
 about its status.



*Not speaking for BTC/AS8014*

Bahamas Telecommunications Company (BTC), the service provider that runs
the Bahamas Domestic Submarine Network (BDSNi) submarine cable system
linking to Haiti, reported that service has been disrupted as a result of
the earthquake that struck the Port-au-Prince area.

http://www.fiercetelecom.com/story/btcs-haitian-cable-suffers-damage-isps-remain-operational/2010-01-15

I forwarded the DHS contacts to them.

Also, re your plan to potentially run a cable from SD to PaP. Interesting.
Looks like 300nm to me. I think you're going to need op amp and power. On
the Columbus run, they're going to need a landing station. I'm going to
speculate that this is part of BTC's problem; no landing station of the
subsea route was disrupted by the quake and depending upon the route that
UPR is going to take I'd think harder about the effectiveness of this plan.

I'd be thinking microwave and towers. Faster. Cheaper.

Best,

-M



-- 
Martin Hannigan   mar...@theicelandguy.com
p: +16178216079
Power, Network, and Costs Consulting for Iceland Datacenters and Occupants


Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-17 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams
As of this hour Reynold Guerrier has managed to obtain 56 gallons of 
diesel, moving the NAP's dry tank fail point some 8 hours, into the 
morning of the 18th.


No other fuel has been delivered to the NAP. The SitRep of the 16th to 
the State Department has just been updated with information current as 
of this hour.


Eric

On 1/16/10 5:36 PM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:

At around noon, Eastern, the State Department was provided with
information on the fuel situation at the Port au Prince NAP, which has
used 2/3rds of the available diesel (8gal/hour run rate, 160 gal
remaining) keeping the microwave backhaul to the DR up, and all
remaining governmental and NGO network access.

Eric

On 1/16/10 10:43 AM, Reynold Guerrier wrote:

Guys

The buggest issues in the 2 coming days will be energy. And I can't
assure that we will be able to get fuel for the generator. Equipment
with Solar energy will be our best shot.


Reynold Guerrier
AHTIC
Treasurer
Network Engineer
Haiti Earthquake Survivor

On Fri, Jan 15, 2010 at 10:40 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams
brun...@nic-naa.net mailto:brun...@nic-naa.net wrote:

Folks,

After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people
started organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around
Waveland. There was also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who
worked on the Boxing Day Tsunami aftermath.

Does anyone have a similar contact set?

Eric




--
===
Reynold Guerrier
IT Consultant
509-3446-0099
IM: rey...@hotmail.com mailto:rey...@hotmail.com
Skype: reygji










RE: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-17 Thread Nathan Eisenberg
Isn't there a US destroyer taskforce off the coast now?  One would think they'd 
have a supply of diesel available.

Best Regards,
Nathan Eisenberg

From: Eric Brunner-Williams [brun...@nic-naa.net]
Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2010 3:02 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Katrina response, private and public

As of this hour Reynold Guerrier has managed to obtain 56 gallons of
diesel, moving the NAP's dry tank fail point some 8 hours, into the
morning of the 18th.

No other fuel has been delivered to the NAP. The SitRep of the 16th to
the State Department has just been updated with information current as
of this hour.

Eric

On 1/16/10 5:36 PM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:
 At around noon, Eastern, the State Department was provided with
 information on the fuel situation at the Port au Prince NAP, which has
 used 2/3rds of the available diesel (8gal/hour run rate, 160 gal
 remaining) keeping the microwave backhaul to the DR up, and all
 remaining governmental and NGO network access.

 Eric

 On 1/16/10 10:43 AM, Reynold Guerrier wrote:
 Guys

 The buggest issues in the 2 coming days will be energy. And I can't
 assure that we will be able to get fuel for the generator. Equipment
 with Solar energy will be our best shot.


 Reynold Guerrier
 AHTIC
 Treasurer
 Network Engineer
 Haiti Earthquake Survivor

 On Fri, Jan 15, 2010 at 10:40 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams
 brun...@nic-naa.net mailto:brun...@nic-naa.net wrote:

 Folks,

 After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people
 started organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around
 Waveland. There was also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who
 worked on the Boxing Day Tsunami aftermath.

 Does anyone have a similar contact set?

 Eric




 --
 ===
 Reynold Guerrier
 IT Consultant
 509-3446-0099
 IM: rey...@hotmail.com mailto:rey...@hotmail.com
 Skype: reygji












Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-17 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

There are significant US naval and land assets in place.

However, resupply to the NAP/microwave backhaul out of the FERA (Front 
Edge Rescue Area, to delta off the usual FEBA acronym) and local 
government data communications continuity apparently aren't on the 
first day task order, nor any subsequent day's task order.


Drill. Drill Now. Drill Baby Drill. Palin may be insane, but skipping 
on emergency procedures and drills, which at least one government has 
done, is not sane. (Doing something twice, e.g., failure to prepare 
for Katrina class events, and expecting a different outcome measure of 
sanity.)


Eric

On 1/17/10 10:22 PM, Nathan Eisenberg wrote:

Isn't there a US destroyer taskforce off the coast now?  One would think they'd 
have a supply of diesel available.

Best Regards,
Nathan Eisenberg

From: Eric Brunner-Williams [brun...@nic-naa.net]
Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2010 3:02 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Katrina response, private and public

As of this hour Reynold Guerrier has managed to obtain 56 gallons of
diesel, moving the NAP's dry tank fail point some 8 hours, into the
morning of the 18th.

No other fuel has been delivered to the NAP. The SitRep of the 16th to
the State Department has just been updated with information current as
of this hour.

Eric

On 1/16/10 5:36 PM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:

At around noon, Eastern, the State Department was provided with
information on the fuel situation at the Port au Prince NAP, which has
used 2/3rds of the available diesel (8gal/hour run rate, 160 gal
remaining) keeping the microwave backhaul to the DR up, and all
remaining governmental and NGO network access.

Eric

On 1/16/10 10:43 AM, Reynold Guerrier wrote:

Guys

The buggest issues in the 2 coming days will be energy. And I can't
assure that we will be able to get fuel for the generator. Equipment
with Solar energy will be our best shot.


Reynold Guerrier
AHTIC
Treasurer
Network Engineer
Haiti Earthquake Survivor

On Fri, Jan 15, 2010 at 10:40 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams
brun...@nic-naa.netmailto:brun...@nic-naa.net  wrote:

Folks,

After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people
started organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around
Waveland. There was also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who
worked on the Boxing Day Tsunami aftermath.

Does anyone have a similar contact set?

Eric




--
===
Reynold Guerrier
IT Consultant
509-3446-0099
IM: rey...@hotmail.commailto:rey...@hotmail.com
Skype: reygji


















Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-16 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

On 1/15/10 11:52 AM, Bill Woodcock wrote:
On Fri, 15 Jan 2010, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:
After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless 
people started

organizing a relief effort...

 There are quite a lot of us working on it, is there something specific
 you're volunteering to do?

  -Bill




Thank you Bill,

As I'm in Geneva this morning so the only thing I can share that is 
immediately accessible is the experience of living for four of the 
past five years off-grid.


My best generator was the Honda 2000 watt, 120V, super quiet, 15 
hours/gal unit. My second best was the (PRC knock-off) Pony 1000 Watt 
120V super quiet. Everything begins at the generator. Gas is useful.


For batteries a series of 6V AGM. A single 6V AGM can power a VSAT 
(HughesNet) for several hours. With three and even a 1000 watt 120V 
genset a VSAT link can be kept up a large part of 24/7. They are heavy 
and never pre-positioned (gensets aren't either), but they are the 
stable, long-term uptime must have.


An efficient pure-sine wave inverter completes the electrical basic of 
a mobile programmer's electrical infrastructure. Non-pure-sine eats 
voltage and phase delta sensitive gear.


Learning about Electrical Cost of Link Characteristics (ECLC, a low 
energy pun on the PILC WG abbreviation) was the most important thing I 
learned going off-grid.


Some of these points are made within the larger ICT donor framework, 
at 
http://www.inveneo.org/download/Inveneo_ICT-Sustainability_Primer0809.pdf
, the Inveneo ICT Sustainability Primer, which is worth the read 
(particularly on why donated kit and Windoz are wicked expensive to 
field), see pages 2 and 3.


Things overlooked in the Inveneo paper is the role of portable 
generators, 6V battery management, and VSAT, which are what I see as 
the off-grid critical toolkit.


I had educational and medical requirements in addition to my 
always-connected-to-my-racks-in-Maine needs.


I'm wicked pleased to see the NSRC kit in route, and as I'm in Geneva 
I'll start on our IRC PoC and our own donor commit. When I get back to 
Cornell I'll start there too, as I know there is an interest at 
Cornell Law in the Maison des Infants de Dieu orphanage in Port au Prince.


Eric



Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-16 Thread Reynold Guerrier
Guys

The buggest issues in the 2 coming days will be energy. And I can't assure
that we will be able to get fuel for the generator. Equipment with Solar
energy will be our best shot.


Reynold Guerrier
AHTIC
Treasurer
Network Engineer
Haiti Earthquake Survivor

On Fri, Jan 15, 2010 at 10:40 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams brun...@nic-naa.net
 wrote:

 Folks,

 After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people started
 organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around Waveland. There was
 also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who worked on the Boxing Day Tsunami
 aftermath.

 Does anyone have a similar contact set?

 Eric




-- 
===
Reynold Guerrier
IT Consultant
509-3446-0099
IM: rey...@hotmail.com
Skype: reygji


Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-16 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams
At around noon, Eastern, the State Department was provided with 
information on the fuel situation at the Port au Prince NAP, which has 
used 2/3rds of the available diesel (8gal/hour run rate, 160 gal 
remaining) keeping the microwave backhaul to the DR up, and all 
remaining governmental and NGO network access.


Eric

On 1/16/10 10:43 AM, Reynold Guerrier wrote:

Guys

The buggest issues in the 2 coming days will be energy. And I can't
assure that we will be able to get fuel for the generator. Equipment
with Solar energy will be our best shot.


Reynold Guerrier
AHTIC
Treasurer
Network Engineer
Haiti Earthquake Survivor

On Fri, Jan 15, 2010 at 10:40 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams
brun...@nic-naa.net mailto:brun...@nic-naa.net wrote:

Folks,

After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people
started organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around
Waveland. There was also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who
worked on the Boxing Day Tsunami aftermath.

Does anyone have a similar contact set?

Eric




--
===
Reynold Guerrier
IT Consultant
509-3446-0099
IM: rey...@hotmail.com mailto:rey...@hotmail.com
Skype: reygji





Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-15 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

Folks,

After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people started 
organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around Waveland. There 
was also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who worked on the Boxing 
Day Tsunami aftermath.


Does anyone have a similar contact set?

Eric



Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-15 Thread Steven G. Huter
After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people started 
organizing a relief effort, culminating in work around Waveland. There was 
also a group from the NPGS in Monterey, who worked on the Boxing Day Tsunami 
aftermath.


Does anyone have a similar contact set?


hello eric

i rec'd email yesterday from a colleague at inveneo.org that they and 
nethope.org are putting together a team to travel to haiti and work on an 
emergency comms wireless network for the numerous NGOs/relief workers so 
they can communicate more efficiently. they were part of the katrina 
relief effort team.


contact Kristin Peterson kris...@inveneo.org for more info on how to 
help.


steve




Re: Katrina response, private and public

2010-01-15 Thread Bill Woodcock
  On Fri, 15 Jan 2010, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:
 After the Katrina landfall a diverse group of wireless people started
 organizing a relief effort...

There are quite a lot of us working on it, is there something specific 
you're volunteering to do?

-Bill