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You are here: Home / Archives for Indian Ocean Earthquake

Scientific data on Earthquake and Tsunami

31-Dec-2004 By Jim

Xeni Jardin:
Comprehensive collection of materials related to the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, including animations, charts, links, and seismograph recordings, and helful explanations on how to read them. Link (thanks, Ben)
…excerpt from: www.boingboing.net…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Tsunami media bubble: a trickle or a flood?

31-Dec-2004 By Jim

Xeni Jardin:

Choire Sicha deconstructs wildly contradictory headlines related to the Asian disaster. “I’m all for opinionated reporting and interpretation, but this I find this actually quite disturbing and very sad, particularly when one gets a whiff of agenda in the headlines.” Link
…excerpt from: www.boingboing.net…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Tsunami Reconnect Project: Update

31-Dec-2004 By Jim

Xeni Jardin:
BoingBoing pal Mike Outmesguine gives us an update on the blog-driven project to provide free wireless communication services to areas cut off by the disaster:

Here’s a rough update. Smartbridges located in Singapore has pledged 5 access points to begin with and more as specific needs arise. They can be used to connect remote locales over a distance or to create coverage in a local area.

Individuals have pledged spare antennas and radio bridges. Several people have volunteered their time and expertise, including volunteers from the US and Europe prepared to travel to the area to help set up the equipment.

I have been asked specifically to help rebuild communications from people in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and an island near the epicenter without any telecom connection to nearby Sumatra.

We are now working in coordination with the efforts of the Wireless Comm Association International, and I will be attending the Jan. 13th disaster relief meeting in san jose. Other wireless activists and group leaders have contacted me about working together, which I am thrilled to do. I am in touch with companies that want to help, but are working with us to determine what specific models we could put in use.

Bloggers without Borders has pledged 10% of current donations will go to so

…excerpt from: www.boingboing.net…

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Asian Tsunami Disaster, update at Yahoo

31-Dec-2004 By Jim

Yahoo! News – Asian Tsunami Disaster
Photo of a full warehouse
Aid Arrives in Asia; Deaths Pass 121,000
AP – 48 minutes ago

The United States upped its tsunami relief aid tenfold Friday as the world’s ships and planes converged on devastated shores. Bottlenecks of supplies built up, fears of epidemics grew, and in an echo of 9/11’s aftermath, people at a Thai resort scoured a bulletin board of 4,000 photos in search of the dead and missing

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Indonesia Needs Help, Death Toll Expected To Exceed 400,000 :: Bernama.com

31-Dec-2004 By Jim

Indonesia Needs Help, Death Toll Expected To Exceed 400,000 :: Bernama.com…
KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 30 (Bernama) — The death toll in Acheh, the region worst hit by last Sunday’s tsunami, may exceed 400,000 as many affected areas could still not be reached for search and rescue operations, Indonesia’s Ambassador to Malaysia Drs H. Rusdihardjo said Thursday.

He said the estimate was based on air surveillance by Indonesian authorities who found no signs of life in places like Meulaboh, Pulau Simeulue and Tapak Tuan while several islands off the west coast of Sumatera had “disappeared”.

He said the latest death toll of more than 40,000 in Acheh and northern Sumatera did not take into account the figures from the other areas, especially in the west of the region.

“Aerial surveillance found the town of Meulaboh completely destroyed with only one buiding standing. The building, which belonged to the military, happens to be on a hill,” he told reporters after receiving RM1 million in aid for Indonesia’s Tsunami Disaster Relief Fund here Thursday.

Rusdihardjo said there were about 150,000 residents in Meulaboh, which was located 150km from the epicentre of the earthquake while Pulau Simeuleu had a population of 76,000.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

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