20 Mar 2007 06:19
Re: Hiccup Bar BOF
Fred Baker <fred <at> cisco.com>
2007-03-20 05:19:46 GMT
2007-03-20 05:19:46 GMT
There were a lot of things that didn't work in Katrina. Fuel trucks that would have run communications diverted to fuel hospitals, for example. The delayed recognition at the state level of the emergency that legally prevented the deployment of federal resources, later reported as a delay on the part of FEMA. The fact that wireless networks deployed for use by first responders were swamped by well- meaning volunteers who set up their web sites over those same networks. ... The fact that COs were ripped out of the ground bodily, or being 25' below sea level had their generators flooded, really didn't help. There are a lot of issues above the application layer. Note that this refers to "times of crisis". I don't think it has in view times when one has to parachute in a new network because the old one has been swept away bodily. It has to do with the one we've got. On Mar 20, 2007, at 5:32 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine wrote: > Fred, > > I'm out in the middle of Joshua Tree, so I won't be at the bar. > > After the Katerina landfall the wireless volunteer efforts, plus > the Naval Post-Graduate School group that had prior exercise in the > Boxing Day Tsunami aid effort found some pretty banal problems. > > Nothing sexy like QoS, but lack of "I am alive (or not)" db app and(Continue reading)
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