• Home
  • blogosphere
  • Flamebait
  • General
  • Indian Ocean Earthquake
  • Live From the Field
  • Personal
  • Photography
  • Political
  • Snow Leopard
  • Technology
  • World

i-node one

Sysloggin' one day at a time.

  • Home
  • How to Get the WWN of Sun FiberChannel HBAs for LUN Masking
  • Solaris jumpstart info
  • Solaris/SPARC memory errors
You are here: Home / Archives for January 2005

Wednesday Tsunami Update

05-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
Chrenkoff
Wednesday tsunami update
The death toll: In this table.

The big picture: “The United Nations says ‘extraordinary progress’ is being made. The UN says the total amount of aid pledged had risen to between $US2 billion and $US3 billion ($A2.55 to $A3.99 billion).”

This is a handy list of who’s giving what. As the report notes, the aid is coming even “from the world’s poorest: Russian town of Beslan – scene of a bloody school siege last year – pledged 1m roubles ($36,000) from the fund set up after the mass hostage-taking; Mozambique – one of the world’s poorest nations – has donated $100,000; [and] Nepal and East Timor have also pledged donations.”

From Down Under:

“Australia is prepared to spend whatever it takes to help rebuild countries ravaged by the tsunami, Prime Minister John Howard will tell a relief summit in Jakarta today.”

Most of Australia’s effort is directed at Indonesia, which in addition to being the world’s largest Muslim country (and the world’s largest Muslim democracy), is our nearest neighbor, with a see-saw history of relations. It makes a moral sense, it makes a strategic sense, and it’s also an investment in the stability of Indonesia. Hence:

“Australia’s response to Indonesia’s tsunami tragedy has heralded a new era of close relations between the two countries, the Indonesian ambassador to Australia said yesterday, and would be remembered for ‘years to come’. The praise came as the [Sydney Morning] Herald learned that the Prime Minister, John Howard, was the first foreign leader Indonesia’s President, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, contacted after the disaster.”

It’s not just Australia:

“Rear Admiral Doug Crowder of the US Navy was having trouble making out the words of his Indonesian counterpart, Major-General Bambang Dharmono, over the roar of the two US Seahawk helicopters parked behind them on the military airstrip.

“The silvery haired admiral moved closer, his hands still on his hips but his face now within 30 centimetres of the camouflage-clad Indonesian. They were comparing notes on the relief airlifted into Aceh for victims of the tsunami. Admiral Crowder could still not hear.

“So he bowed his head slightly, putting his ear up to General Dharmono’s mouth. Then he placed his left hand on the Indonesian’s shoulder.

“The image would have been unthinkable two weeks ago.”

As the report notes, “military officers on both sides acknowledged they could not have imagined such close cooperation, especially in such a politically sensitive province [Aceh]. Admiral Crowder said later that he expected the joint efforts would improve the prospects for resuming full military ties between the countries.”

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

EFF helps beat RIAA in privacy for accused infringers case

05-Jan-2005 by Jim

Cory Doctorow:
EFF’s helped win another victory this week! We filed a brief in RIAA vs Charter, a case where the music industry was asserting the legal right to require your ISP to turn over your information if you’d been accused of copyright infringement — rather than waiting until they’d proven their case. The court ruled in Charter’s favor yesterday, saying that just because you’ve been accused of infringement, it doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t have the due process right to privacy until you’ve been proven guilty.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), along with 21 other groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the Consumer Federation of America (CFA), and the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA), filed a “friend of the court” brief in the Charter case, urging the Eighth Circuit to determine that the same strong protections applied to anonymous speech in other contexts also apply when copyright infringement is claimed but has not yet been proven. In a victory for privacy and anonymity, the Eighth Circuit determined that DMCA subpoenas could not be used to get this information.

Link
…excerpt from: www.boingboing.net…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Technology

US tsunami relief = 42.27 hours’ worth of Iraq-war spend

05-Jan-2005 by Jim

Cory Doctorow:
Frank sez, “Curious as to how much $350 million in promised US aid for tsunami victims equals in expenditures on the war in Iraq? I did the math so you don’t have to. $350 million equals 42.27 hours of the cost of the war in Iraq. (And yes, the decimal point is in the right place.)”

Link

(Thanks, Frank!)
…excerpt from: www.boingboing.net…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Flamebait, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Six Apart to buy Live Journal

05-Jan-2005 by Jim

Things that make you go Hmmm…

Excerpt from:
Om Malik on Broadband � Six Apart to buy Live Journal
EXCLUSIVE: Folks have been predicting a big year for mergers and acquisitions in 2005, and we are starting the year with a bang. I have learnt exclusively that Six Apart, the parent company behind hosted blogging service TypePad, and Moveable Type is about to acquire Live Journal, for an undisclosed amount. The deal is a mix of stock and cash, and could be announced sometime later
this month, according to those close to the two companies. If the deal goes through, then Six Apart will become one of the largest weblog companies in the world, with nearly 6.5 million users. It also gives the company a very fighting chance against Google%u2019s Blogger and Microsoft%u2019s MSN Spaces.

Filed Under: blogosphere

American stinginess is saving lives

05-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
Telegraph | Opinion | American stinginess is saving lives
But the waters recede and the familiar contours of the political landscape re-emerge – in this case, the need to fit everything to the Great Universal Theory of the age, that whatever happens, the real issue is the rottenness of America. Jan Egeland, the Norwegian bureaucrat who’s the big humanitarian honcho at the UN, got the ball rolling with some remarks about the “stinginess” of certain wealthy nations. And Clare Short piled in, and then Polly Toynbee threw in her three-ha’porth, reminding us that ” ‘Charity begins at home’ is the mean-minded dictum of the Right”. But even Telegraph readers subscribe to the Great Universal Theory. On our Letters Page, Robert Eddison dismissed the “paltry $15 million from Washington” as “worse than stingy. The offer – since shamefacedly upped to $35 million – equates to what? Three oil tycoons’ combined annual salary?”

Mr Eddison concluded with a stirring plea to the wicked Americans to mend their ways: “If Washington is to lay any claim to the moral, as distinct from the military, high ground, let it emulate Ireland and Norway’s prompt and proportionate attempts to plug South-East Asia’s gaping gap of need and help avert a further 80,000 deaths from infection and untreated wounds.”

If America were to emulate Ireland and Norway, there’d be a lot more dead Indonesians and Sri Lankans. Mr Eddison may not have noticed, but the actual relief effort going on right now is being done by the Yanks: it’s the USAF and a couple of diverted naval groups shuttling in food and medicine, with solid help from the Aussies, Singapore and a couple of others. The Irish can’t fly in relief supplies, because they don’t have any C-130s. All they can do is wait for the UN to swing by and pick up their cheque.

The Americans send the UN the occasional postal order, too. In fact, 40 per cent of Egeland’s budget comes from Washington, which suggests the Europeans aren’t being quite as “proportionate” as Mr Eddison thinks. But, when disaster strikes, what matters is not whether your cheque is “prompt”, but whether you are. For all the money lavished on them, the UN is hard to rouse to action. Egeland’s full-time round-the-clock 24/7 Big Humanitarians are conspicuous by their all but total absence on the ground. In fact, they’re doing exactly what our reader accused Washington of doing – Colin Powell, wrote Mr Eddison, “is like a surgeon saying he must do a bandage count before he will be in a position to staunch the blood flow of a haemorrhaging patient”. That’s the sclerotic UN bureaucracy. They’ve flown in (or nearby, or overhead) a couple of experts to assess the situation and they’ve issued press releases boasting about the assessments. In Sri Lanka, Egeland’s staff informs us, “UNFPA is carrying out reproductive health assessments”.

Which, translated out of UN-speak, means the Sri Lankans can go screw themselves.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Many-to-Many: K5 Article on Wikipedia Anti-elitism

05-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
Many-to-Many: K5 Article on Wikipedia Anti-elitism
Slashdot has a roundup of criticism of the Wikipedia, including a pointer to a Kuro5hin article by Larry Sanger, a co-founder of the Wikipedia, making three strong criticisms of the Wikpedia as it stands.

The first criticism is that the Wikpedia lacks the perception of acccuracy:
My point is that, regardless of whether Wikipedia actually is more or less reliable than the average encyclopedia, it is not perceived as adequately reliable by many librarians, teachers, and academics. The reason for this is not far to seek: those librarians etc. note that anybody can contribute and that there are no traditional review processes. You might hasten to reply that it does work nonetheless, and I would agree with you to a large extent, but your assurances will not put this concern to rest.

This analysis seems to be correct on the surface, and at the same time deeply deeply wrong. Of course librarians, teachers, and academics don%u2019t like the Wikipedia. It works without privilege, which is inimical to the way those professions operate.

This is not some easily fixed cosmetic flaw, it is the Wikipedia%u2019s driving force. You can see the reactionary core of the academy playing out in the horror around Google digitizing books held at Harvard and the Library of Congress %u2014 the NY Times published a number of letters by people insisting that real scholarship would still only be possible when done in real libraries. The physical book, the hushed tones, the monastic dedication, and (unspoken) the barriers to use, these are all essential characteristics of the academy today.

Filed Under: blogosphere

Why cool is good for your brain

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Just what every geek wants to hear! :)

When I found out that it’s ok to buy something because I think it’s cool, I was relieved. I like buying things that are cool (even if they are a little more expensive :-). Turns out that “cool” is good for your brain. How cool is that?

When I use the term “cool”, I’m really talking about aesthetics. What is aesthetically pleasing obviously varies from person to person, but there are certain things that seem to be more aesthetically pleasing than others. How about the Apple iPod? The iPod is the runaway best seller in MP3 players, even though the iPod was late to market compared to other MP3 players, and it’s generally more expensive than similar models. So why is it the best selling MP3 player out there? Need I say it — it’s cool. It looks good. It feels good.

So how is cool good for you? Donald Norman discusses this idea at length in his book Emotional Design: Why we love (or hate) everyday things. When something is aesthetically pleasing, it makes you feel good. And when you feel good you are more creative. You think outside the box. You have new ideas about how to use things. “Feeling good” about something is an emotion, and that emotion has a huge impact on us as consumers and users.

Scientists used to think that emotion got in the way of thinking; that it impeded our ability to make good decisions. However, we’ve learned that, in fact, emotion is actually

…excerpt from: headrush.typepad.com…

Filed Under: blogosphere

Users shouldn’t think about YOU

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Do you care what your users think of you?

STOP IT.

Our best advice for creating passionate users is:

Care ONLY about what your users think of themselves as a result of interacting with your creation.

That’s a major shift for a lot of people, especially our tech book authors (and instructors). It’s so natural to write with a critic sitting on your shoulder representing the person who isn’t even in your target audience anyway, slamming you for leaving something out, or not being technical enough, or not proving how smart you are. I have a little story about this…

One of my jobs at Sun was to help raise the customer ratings of the Java instructors–to help instructors find more strategies for making every student/customer happier with the classes. A big mystery was why some of the most technically proficient instructors, who really knew their stuff and were good at delivering it, were getting average scores in after-class surveys. Meanwhile, the technically stronger instructors were pissed off that some of the less-competent instructors were getting fantastic scores.

The typical response was, “The instructors getting the good scores are just better entertainers. The post-class scores aren’t a good reflection of what’s REALLY important–delivering technically correct and advanced material.” They’d complain that there was no line item on the survey that measured the things that mattered like, “Does the instructor know the material?”< %

excerpt from: headrush.typepad.com…

Filed Under: blogosphere

100 things we didn’t know this time last year

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Selected items from:
BBC NEWS | UK | Magazine | 100 things we didn’t know this time last year
26. The full names of Scooby Doo’s Mystery Inc members are: Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley, Scooby “Scoobert” Doo. Shaggy is actually Norville Rogers.

31. Herrings break wind to communicate and keep the school together.

43. In 1911, Pablo Picasso was one of the suspects arrested for the theft of the Mona Lisa.

70. And reports of UFOs have dwindled since the late 1990s. In the UK, sightings have gone from about 30 a week to almost zero; it’s a trend echoed in the US and Norway.

75. Freak conditions above Everest can cause the sky to “fall in”. An analysis of weather patterns in May 1996, by University of Toronto researchers, said eight people died when the stratosphere sank to the level of the summit.

81 . When people are in love, weird things happen. Men get more female hormones, and women get more male. Scientist Donatella Marazziti says it’s as if nature wants to eliminate what can be different in men and women, perhaps to help the mating process.

89. Continuing in this cheery vein, more than 1.2 million people die in traffic accidents worldwide each year. The first was Bridget Driscoll, knocked down by a car travelling at 12mph in London on 17 August 1896. The coroner recorded a verdict of accidental death, and warned: “This must never happen again.”

99. Dom Perignon, the Benedictine monk, was originally employed by his abbey to get the bubbles out of the champagne, according to Gerard Liger-Belair’s new book, Uncorked: the Science of Champagne.

Filed Under: blogosphere

Tsunami satellite images from U. of Singapore

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Xeni Jardin:
Another collection of satellite photos of affected areas, including Aceh and Nicobar. Link (Thanks, Catherine Giayvia)
…excerpt from: www.boingboing.net…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

P2P tsunami alerts: ARC relays SMSes for emergencies

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Xeni Jardin:
Following up on this previous BoingBoing post:

Problem — No effective system of mass, international alert existed in South Asia to quickly warn those in harm’s way of the tsunami’s approach.

One approach to a solution, created in the span of about 24 hours by an impromtu volunteer geek corps — A tech system called Alert Retrieval Cache (ARC) which collects, sorts, and routes SMS messages for the puposes of alerts and relay communication. An early warning system based on SMS, short message service.

Rohit Gupta in Mumbai (one of the folks behind DesiMediaBitch, excellent tsunami coverage in recent days) says,

When you need a genius, invent one. We are a genius. Last 24 hours we spent in creating a system of sending and receiving SMS messages through a network of relief people. Here is the page in progress — Link. These messages you see are SMSes, sent directly from Sri Lanka onto a webpage. ARC was created by Neha Vishwanathan, Rohit Gupta, Taran Rampersad, and Dan Lane.

Link to more on DesiMediaBitch.

Here’s a snip from the

…excerpt from: www.boingboing.net…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, Technology, World

Somalia Seeks Aid

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

I’ve not seen it discussed much at all, the damage in Africa. Let’s not neglect that the tsunami hit there, too.

Tsunami-Info.org…
Somalia Seeks Aid for 50,000 Victims

NAIROBI, Kenya – Somalia appealed Monday for international aid to victims of the deadly tsunami that slammed its shores, with an official saying at least 50,000 people urgently need food, water, shelter and medical help after losing their homes and livelihoods.

Read more in this AP article.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Tsunami-Info.org

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Tsunami-Info.org…
News Feeds & Blogs From Around the World, Collected by Andy Carvin

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Bloodletters – Hack Yourself

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
Bloodletters – Hack Yourself
Stop assigning blame. This is the first step. Stop assigning blame and leave the past behind you.

You know whose fault it is that your life isn’t perfect. Your boss. Your teachers. Your ex-lovers. The ones who hurt you, the ones who abused you, the ones who left you bleeding. Or even yourself. You know whose fault it is %u2014 you’ve been telling yourself your whole life. Knowing whose fault it is that your life sucks is an excellent way to absolve yourself of any reponsibility for taking your life into your own hands.

Forget about it. Let it go. The past isn’t real. %u201CThat was in another country, and besides, the wench is dead.%u201D If we’re not talking about something that is real and present and in your life right now, then it doesn’t matter. Nothing can be done about it. If nothing can be done about it, then don’t spend your energy dwelling on it %u2014 you have other things to do.

I may sound cruel, I may sound simplistic, I may sound like I’m saying you should just %u201Cget over it,%u201D by suggesting that you should let go of your past. I’m sorry for that. But life won’t hold still and wait for you to lick your wounds. The race is still being run. Get up and keep moving. You can’t do anything about yesterday.

You can do something about tomorrow. And about the next day. Focus your energies there.

Filed Under: blogosphere, General

The Darker Side

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
The Command Post – Global Recon – The Darker Side
Amidst all the stories of heroism and humanity by the relief workers, there are some stories showing that we’re a very imperfect species.

Concerns have been raised in Indonesia that children orphaned by the earthquake and tsunami disaster in Aceh are being taken away by unidentified adults claiming to be relatives, or wanting to adopt them.
[...]
Last Friday, Raja, a 5-year-old boy who lost his parents in the earthquake was among hundreds of Acehnese on board a Hercules transport plane that landed at an Air Force base in the North Sumatra provincial capital of Medan, where many have taken refuge.

He has become a focus of attention, his story appearing on the front pages of local newspapers in the past few days.

Soon after his arrival, a couple who claimed to be his parents tried to take him away but they were stopped by Ms Mutiara, who noticed that the couple did not look Acehnese.

Suspicious of their intentions, Ms Mutiara put several questions to them.
[...]
Under questioning, the couple finally confessed they were not Raja’s parents, but claimed they lived next door to his family.
Ms Mutiara suspected that the couple had in fact been paid by someone, perhaps a member of a child-trafficking syndicate, to collect the child.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Elephants Aid Thai Rescue Teams

03-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
The Command Post – Global Recon
“We find them by the smell,” says Kerg-Reut Khaolamai, manager of the Ayutthaya Elephant Palace and Royal Krual, as the body is bagged and carried out.

“Then the elephants clear the way and lift them out. They have not done this kind of work before.“

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Get my stuff done

02-Jan-2005 by Jim

Boing Boing: Get my stuff done
This animation just nails the procrastinator’s mindset and is incredibly infectious. You’ll see. Link to Quicktime (Thanks, Imaginary Foundation!)

Filed Under: blogosphere

You 2.0

02-Jan-2005 by Jim

It’s never too late to reinvent yourself.

Imagine someone holds a gun to your head and demands that you tell him what you really wish you were doing in your life. Now imagine he tells you that if you don’t start taking steps toward making that happen, he’ll kill you. He knows where you live, and he’ll be watching.

That scenario is one my favorite scenes in Fight Club.

And thanks to the overwhelming new brain research, we now know that it’s virtually never too late to reinvent yourself. To start something totally new. To learn, even master, something completely different from what you’ve been doing for the past five, ten, forty years.

From my current favorite brain book,The New Brain, Richard Restak puts it this way:

“As recently as only a few years ago, most neuroscientists believed that brain plasticity largely ceased by adolescence or by early adulthood at the latest. At this point the brain became fixed in its structure and function–at least that was the prevailing assumption. But this assumption, too, turned out to be wrong.”

He goes on to talk about how people–regardless of age–can still achieve superior, even expert-level performance in things they haven’t done before.

The more we lear

…excerpt from: headrush.typepad.com…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Personal

Tsunami Missing Persons

02-Jan-2005 by Jim

Tsunami Missing Persons
Find Missing Persons from Tsuanami affected areas.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Counting The Cost

02-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
The Command Post – Op-Ed – Counting The Cost
The human toll of the recent [tsunami] tragedy will never be known exactly. It looks like it will never be known even approximately. All the official figures are, as at 01 January 2005, neccessarily drastic under-estimates. To see why, and what the difficulties are in estimating even approximately the toll in human life, read on.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

HELP ARRIVES:

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

HELP ARRIVES:

RAHAM LINCOLN – Desperate, homeless villagers on the tsunami-ravaged island of Sumatra mobbed American helicopters carrying aid Saturday as the U.S. military launched its largest operation in the region since the Vietnam War, ferrying food and other emergency relief to survivors across the disaster zone.

From dawn until sunset on New Year’s Day, 12 Seahawk helicopters shuttled supplies and advance teams from offshore naval vessels while reconnaissance aircraft brought back stark images of wave-wrecked coastal landscapes and their hungry, traumatized inhabitants.

“They came from all directions, crawling under the craft, knocking on the pilot’s door, pushing to get into the cabin,” said Petty Officer First Class Brennan Zwack. “But when they saw we had no more food inside, they backed away, saying `Thank you, thank you.’” . . .

More than a dozen other ships were en route to southern Asian waters, with the USS Bonhomme Richard, an amphibious assault vessel carrying Marines, headed for Sri Lanka, which along with Indonesia was the worst-hit area. The mission involves thousands of sailors and Marines, along with some 1,000 land-based troops.

Read the whole thing.

UPDATE: More her

…excerpt from: instapundit.com…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

HERE’S AN INTERESTING LIST of tsunami blog links.

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

HERE’S AN INTERESTING LIST of tsunami blog links.

…excerpt from: instapundit.com…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

OOPS!

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Oops… It looks as though you may have to be an actual Canadian in order to have the Canadian government match your donation, as I stated here recently. I’m not entirely certain of how this would work in practice, however, as there are Canadians all over the world, all of whom should qualify to have their donations matched, and I’ve read that the great majority of donations are being made via the Internet. I suspect that the government’s qualification may come after the fact of someone having not fully worked out the implications of the quasi-post-geographical nature of the present (happens to the best of us): They may simply not be expecting non-Canadians to start donating via .ca charities.
…excerpt from: www.williamgibsonbooks.com…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Rain drenches epicentre of tsunami suffering; Sri Lanka hit with flash floods

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
CJAD 800 : News
BANDA ACEH, Indonesia (CP) – After the devastation wreaked by the seas, a deluge from the skies deepened the misery for tsunami-stricken areas of southern Asia on Saturday, triggering flash-floods in Sri Lanka that sent evacuees fleeing and increasing the threat of deadly disease as survivors shivered in relief centres.

The death toll was expected to hit 150,000. A magnitude 6.5 aftershock jolted Sumatra as the world’s aid efforts shifted into high gear in ways big and small: elephant convoys working in Thailand, global assistance reaching $2 billion with a fresh pledge from Japan and the U.S. military launching one of the biggest relief missions in history.

The confirmed death toll from the quake and tsunamis that hit a week ago Sunday passed 123,000 and the United Nations has said the estimated number was approaching 150,000. Thailand said it expects its death toll to reach 8,000.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

The Australian: Gerard Baker: Tsunami must be fault of the US

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
The Australian: Gerard Baker: Tsunami must be fault of the US [December 31, 2004]
INEVITABLY, confronted with a tragedy of unimaginable scale, the human mind looks for someone to blame. In the Dark Ages, disasters were ascribed to the wrath of God. Now, in an odd inversion that we like to think of as progress, they are adduced as evidence of no God.

In the absence of a deity to decry or appease when the earth moves in such devastating fashion, humankind reaches for the next best thing – worldly authority. Authority should have known it was coming. Authority didn’t do enough to prevent it. Authority was too preoccupied with its own nefarious priorities to care.

There is plenty of authority to blame for the devastation caused by the Sumatran earthquake this week. Governments in Bangkok, Jakarta and Colombo will shoulder some of it. Governments farther afield will be inculpated for the poverty of their response. Media organisations will be attacked for being too callous and too mawkish. Unsurprisingly, perhaps the most inviting target is the US.

In the past three days I have been impressed by the originality of the latest critiques of the evil Americans. The earthquake and tsunami apparently had something to do with global warming, environmentalists say, caused of course by greedy American motorists. Then there was the rumour that the US military base at Diego Garcia was forewarned of the impending disaster and presumably because of some CIA-approved plot to undermine Islamic movements in Indonesia and Thailand did nothing about it.

To be fair, even the most animated America-hater, though, baulks at the idea of blaming George W. Bush for the destruction and death in southern Asia. But the US is blamed for not responding generously enough to help the victims of the catastrophe. A UN official this week derided Washington’s contribution as stingy.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

BBC NEWS | World | Asia-Pacific | Asian disaster: How to help

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
BBC NEWS | World | Asia-Pacific | Asian disaster: How to help
Global aid organisations have launched urgent appeals for donations to help survivors of Sunday’s Indian Ocean earthquake disaster.

More than 120,000 people are confirmed killed by the waves and millions more are homeless.

Many governments and organisations – including the US, Canada, Australia, the EU and the UN – are sending aid.

The UN has warned that supplies are urgently needed to support the survivors and to try and prevent disease which, it says, could double the death toll.

The Disasters Emergency Committee – www.dec.org….uk – is an umbrella group of UK aid organisations – including Action Aid, British Red Cross and Oxfam – working to provide clean water, food and shelter to thousands. To call from the UK, dial 0870 60 60 900.

The United Nations World Food Programme – www.wfp.org… – is seeking donations to feed victims of the earthquake.

Medecins Sans Frontieres – www.msf.org… – is sending aid workers to the region, focusing on medical care for survivors and displaced people after the rescue operations.

The United Nations Children’s Fund, Unicef – www.unicef.org….uk – is working to meet the “urgent needs of hundreds of thousands of people” affected by the tsunami disaster.

Read the rest at the link at the top of this post…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Google News Search: tsunami

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Google Search: tsunami

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Overhead Costs of International Relief Organizations

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
Overhead Costs of International Relief Organizations
Below, I’ve highlighted in blue those organizations with less than a 10% overhead rate, and in orange those organizations above the 10% mark, but that may still be worthy of your consideration. For instance, the Doctors Without Borders organization has a high overhead rate, but presumably this is because it’s more expensive to have doctors on staff than other kinds of disaster relief workers. Still, their website does not have as much transparency as one would like, in terms of how and where they spend their money. Also, Oxfam also has a high overhead rate — again, making me curious why this is so. Some, like Save the Children were a surprising find (not one of the ‘usual suspects’ that people had emailed me about). Apparently, they had the “largest international organization presence” in the Aceh Province when the tsunami hit (see their web site below). Also, note that AmeriCares has one of the lowest overhead rate, at 1.5%.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

“Fill the Plane” Campaign

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
The Command Post – Global Recon – Operation Give: “Fill the Plane” Campaign
Operation Give, a charitable organization that sends toys and other goods to the children of Iraq and Afghanistan, have found a way to collect supplies for the relief effort and get them over there quickly, thanks to the generosity of FedEx.

Rev. Donald Sensing best described the operation at his weblog, so I took the liberty of excerpting what he wrote to best explain what OpGive is doing.

Chief Wiggles (aka Army Chief Warrant Officer Paul Horton), who founded Operation Give while serving in Iraq, just announced he has arranged for free FedEx relief flights to aid tsunami victims. Paul explains all here.
[Read more...]

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Snow leopard project faces finish

01-Jan-2005 by Jim

Excerpt from:
BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Snow leopard project faces finish
Central Asia’s tiny surviving group of snow leopards may soon lose a lifeline that is helping them cling to survival.

A project run jointly by Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, and funded by the Global Environment Facility, is scheduled to end in the middle of 2006.

It is successfully enlisting the help of local villagers in protecting the animals, but needs political support.

If the project is not renewed, there are fears the leopards will not be able to withstand the poachers much longer.

There are thought to be only 4,500-7,500 snow leopards in the wild, living in an arc stretching from Mongolia through to Pakistan.

Filed Under: Snow Leopard
Newer Posts »

Recent Posts

  • SoBe Bottle Cap Qoute
  • How to Identify Good Chocolate
  • Mediocrity by “areas of improvement”
  • WWdN: In Exile: Seeking a potential Marrow Donor
  • Jupelo spends a year and $100K at Walt Disney World

Archives

  • February 2006
  • January 2006
  • December 2005
  • November 2005
  • October 2005
  • September 2005
  • August 2005
  • July 2005
  • June 2005
  • May 2005
  • April 2005
  • February 2005
  • January 2005
  • December 2004
  • November 2004
  • October 2004
  • September 2004
  • August 2004

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • WordPress.org

Return to top of page

Copyright © 2012 · Delicious Theme on Genesis Theme Framework · WordPress · Log in