Hurricane Irene Threatens US Northeast; Cover Your Assets 202
jfruhlinger writes "Hurricane Irene is bearing down on the heavily populated U.S. Northeast Corridor. If you work in IT, you know that there are few things that are worse for electronics than water; so, what's your plan? Tom Henderson has come up with a checklist, which sensibly includes backing everything up, twice; not that you have time for it now, but for future reference you might want to consider just moving your whole data center to a location that's been conveniently pre-hardened, like a water tower or a boiler room." Note that Irene has been no joke in the Caribbean; in Puerto Rico (with relatively modern infrastructure), about a third of the island lost power.
No worries here... (Score:5, Funny)
I don't worry about Hurricanes, I have TornadoGuard on my iPhone.
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After the earthquake, the server room floor has enough cracks to drain the flooding caused by the holes in the roof.
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Tornado goes WHOOOOSH! (Score:2)
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Re:No worries here... (Score:4, Informative)
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This is actually incorrect. Think of the atmosphere as the surface of a balloon, much like curved space. There are large "mountains" and deep "valleys" (ridges and troughs) - domes of high pressure and bowls of low pressure. When a massive LP system such as a hurricane creates a large dip in the surface, it is steered by (pointed in the direction by) high pressure cells, around the periphery of them, and powered by the general flow of air around them as well.
Low pressure systems are generally attracted to
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This hurricane obviously won't make it over the Appalachia mountains, it isn't even headed that way.
But a really strong gulf hurricane can affect places that far inland, causing thunderstorms and tornadoes. Hurricane Camille or Katrina for instance.
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I'm no weatherman but it seems to me that in addition to flood stage rain event a strong late summer hurricane passing over the U.S. could easily spin off tornadoes. Either of those events usually cause some worries, even to the mighty mid-westerners.
But who the hell cares, what's next?
"No worries here in Australia, mate, for that to reach me, it'd have to be a bloody [and imaginary] category 500"
+1 Insightful (or more maybe)
Re:No worries here... (Score:4, Interesting)
Recently moved there, did you? Hurricane Ike [clipsandcomment.com] did a pretty good number on central Ohio despite only being a category 4 storm. 2008 wasn't that long ago either.
About the only accurate part of your post is the crossing the Appalachian limitation... Hurricanes that reach Ohio tend to dodge the Appalachians by way of that pesky Gulf of Mexico.
Puerto Rico (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Puerto Rico (Score:5, Informative)
No one in Puerto Rico panics like they do in the US when it comes to Hurricanes. 99.9% of buildings are concrete.
My grand parents live down there and went a whole month without power and electricity during the 2004 hurricanes. They have a cistern in the back that collects rain water in case the water supply gets tainted and generators in case electricity goes out.
Lots of people do and live with it. Hurricanes and mudslides are no problem for us.
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"99.9% of buildings are concrete."
As they should be. Wood is fine for furniture and camp fires.
Wood is a shitty construction material.
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The concrete with steel roof I work in held up pretty good to the earthquake. I had a portable hard drive fall over at home, but I hardly count that as damage...more poor design.
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/Seagate+-+FreeAgent+GoFlex+Desk+2TB+External+USB+2.0/3.0+Hard+Drive+-+Black/1335107.p?id=1218251232104&skuId=1335107 [bestbuy.com]
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Don't balance things on their skinny edges.
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It's more about the design than the material. As long as the material is able to flex itself then you should be fine.
Re:Puerto Rico (Score:5, Insightful)
Wood is a shitty construction material.
Tell that to all the people in Haiti, who still haven't recovered from the earthquake there a couple years ago. Or the people in various other 3rd-world cities where everything's made of concrete and they didn't think earthquakes were a concern until one hit.
Concrete is a terrible construction material, unless you reinforce it with a lot of steel. But steel's expensive compared to plain concrete.
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Almost anything that you see today more than 2 stories high be it in a developing country or not is going to have steel reinforcement. Sure you can make the beams out of concrete as well as the columns but even then they are reinforced with steel rods. And working with steel actually tends to be cheaper than concrete because you spend less time and labor.
Wood structures as you would find in your typical house in the US is actually pretty bad when it comes to earthquakes. Having lived in the US and then havi
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Sorry, but the proof is in the pudding. Haiti->concrete->disaster in an earthquake. Countless wooden structures built by non-engineers->work just fine in earthquake.
Sorry, but wood does NOT need a ton of steel to survive an earthquake. Countless houses across America attest to that. We've had earthquakes here for centuries, yet wooden structures generally do just fine. These things aren't steel-reinforced, they're just plain old houses built by uneducated morons. Wood can do this because, un
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That's the same thing my friends who have family there tell me. And it's generally the same thing I've seen with typhoons in Asia. Most destruction comes from landslides and biblical amounts of rainfall that result in flooding. But otherwise the vast majority of buildings weather the storm unscathed.
I don't understand how the hell it is that states like Florida permit people to build homes out of lumber or live in trailers. Then there's the whole thing of people building homes along the water, having them d
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I see, you have a very low level of abstraction in your buildings. :-)
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How fast were those winds going? 20mph? thats nothing... when you get 75mph sustained winds (thats cat1) to 135mph sustained winds (cat4) then talk to me... That same attitude is what got so many people in Katrina killed.
Be careful of hubris. . . (Score:2)
I don't expect this to be much worse to be honest.
You'd better hope you're right -- and away from the water. If you're wrong, you could end up five feet above sea level with a fifteen-foot storm surge, and need to swim in 100 mph winds and twenty-foot seas.
Don't forget, emergency services (police, ambulance, fire, ...) suspend their services during these severe storms, so there's no help available (even if your phone service still works). The definition of pitiful is recordings of 911 calls made during the landfall of almost any major hurricane. People
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In PR a Hurricane means extra vacation time... =)
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I think we are the only country in the world that actually roots for a hurricane to come because it means there will be a chance to not go to work and still get paid LOL!
Already prepared! (Score:2)
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Let me guess, you also waited until today in order to call all your hardware vendors to ask "how do I set up email alerts?"
Irene? (Score:2)
I thought it was Ilene?
That brings up an interesting question (Score:2)
Where are the "cloud" servers located? It would suck if you backed to Dropbox, Google Docs, or whatever, and Irene wiped THOSE out, along with your local hardware.
Re:That brings up an interesting question (Score:5, Insightful)
If you cannot restore your backups without an Internet connection, you do not have backups.
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If your onsite backups just got blown into a REAL cloud by Irene, you don't have backups either.
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Id rather have my backups on google docs alone than sitting in my house near my computers, alone.
Most good backups will require either a car, or an internet connection, to restore.
We'll be just fine (Score:2)
you know that there are few things that are worse for electronics than water
That's such a crock. Saltwater is actually an excellent conductor of electricity. Electronics need good conductors. Hence, electronics need saltwater.
So relax and stop it with all that plywood and tarp. Have a beer instead.
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you know that there are few things that are worse for electronics than water
That's such a crock. Saltwater is actually an excellent conductor of electricity. Electronics need good conductors. Hence, electronics need saltwater.
So relax and stop it with all that plywood and tarp. Have a beer instead.
Idiot. Modern electronics need SEMICONDUCTORS. Salt water soaked plywood is an excellent semiconductor so it's just perfect. Add the silvery duct tape and you're ready to power up and rock and roll.
WTF, don't you people have windows? (Score:2)
i've been through a few hurricanes in NYC and we have these things called windows to keep the water out. it's a rectangular hole cut into the building with multiple panes of glass with a metal frame and some sealing material around it.
in some instances if there are extremely high winds predicted we put packing tape on the windows in an X shape in order to prevent shatter
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It is stupidity like this that gets people in trouble. The last hurricane of this size to come near NYC was Gloria in 1985. It did several hundred millions of dollars of damage to NYC. If it had been a little closer to NYC and hit at high tide it would have been catastrophic.
Your nice little X of packing tape is going to do a whole lot to stop a tree limb or 2x4 that is carried in 90MPH winds.
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i remember Gloria. we put some tape on the windows and stayed home watching TV. the damage was probably in the burbs or the burb parts of NYC. believe it or not most of NYC by area is private homes where you can't see manhattan at all. the part where all the work gets done is completely hurricane proof
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Yep. As one of our MDs quipped "we have a 4MW server farm with one of the most expensive views in Manhattan."
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Our servers are flood-proofed (Score:5, Funny)
Our IT guys assured us we are OK. Cheetos absorb 47 times their weight in water.
Cheetos Sandbags (Score:2)
Can't wait to see the orange-stained pools afterwards. Something tells me they'll look positively radioactive.
Don't Forget . . . (Score:2)
Lay in supplies of wadded beef, creamed eels, and corn nog to feed the IT staff shackled to the A/C units.
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... wadded beef, creamed eels, and corn nog
Are those porn euphemisms?
D'oh! (Score:2)
Obligatory Simpsons References.
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You FEED the IT staff?
What unwarranted luxury is this? Ours are powered by floggings. Much more efficient and great for morale.
pre-hardened locations? (Score:2)
"consider just moving your whole data center to a location that's been conveniently pre-hardened, like a water tower or a boiler room."
So, move it to a place where if something does go wrong, in addition to the disaster you also have a huge tank of water nearby to douse your whole center? I'm not so sure I'd like that idea.
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Well the article got it wrong.
They moved it to an old water tank. It was not a tower.
Those tanks are all concrete 8" thick actually and are ground level.
They never fail and yes I am in Florida and been there and done that. I fear that New York is going to be an epic disaster since they have NO clue how to deal with this.
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New York City will be fine. We deal with planes flying into buildings, sovereign defaults, and rats the size of polar bears.
The NY suburbs might need to be told what do do, though.
wow (Score:2)
So .. in the last few days we've had Tornados, Earthquakes and now a Hurricane? Someone is pissed at us.
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Yeah, this is exactly what happens if you don't make the proper offerings to Poseidon. Well, except possibly the tornado part.
Not a water tower... (Score:2)
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PR Is just a step up from a 3rd world country (Score:3)
"Note that Irene has been no joke in the Caribbean; in Puerto Rico (with relatively modern infrastructure), about a third of the island lost power."
Dont fucking insult me. Relatively modern infrastructure? We don't build our buildings with fucking wood and gypsum board... We use armed concrete... that is why we can take a Category 5 Hurricane (like Hugo) or Category 4 (like Georges or Katrina) and survive it without the DRAMA the US experienced with Katrina... When we get a hurricane like that, we receive it with Don Q Rum and in a Beach Chair...
Now If you had said that the island was a step up from a third world country, I couldn't agree with you more... If the goverment agencies did their job right one third of the island wouldn't have lost power and water for more than a day... The services down there are such a fucking joke compared to 20yrs ago when a Category 5 Hurricane would cause the same inconveniences that this Category 1 hurricane caused.
Don't let me get started on the "puppet" we got as a governor... he makes Obama look competent...
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... the end is near... (Score:2)
Earthquakes on the east coast, an impending hurricane too, then Steve Jobs resigned as CEO of Apple, CmdrTaco gone too...... I think the apocalypse is upon us.
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In what way is that particular XKCD obligatory?
An appropriate xkcd mention would go more like this:
I'm not worried. I think it's just that there's too many people constantly refreshing the weather radar. xkcd.com/831/ [xkcd.com]
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So, north sea storms are just imaginary?
What about Ice storms, are those imaginary as well?
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Name the location. I bet we can find a nice natural hazard.
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Please name such a place.
Is there anywhere that has no natural disasters?
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I used to say Maryland...but it looks like we are right on the path. The earthquake was interesting, but didn't do anything out here...
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Re:Data centers (Score:5, Funny)
The virtual world has no natural disasters!
Just virtualize your virtual servers so your system is 100% virtual with no hardware, and you have a completely unusable system that can't be damaged because it doesn't exist! Wait, what was the question again? ...to the cloud!
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Isn't it funny how all the cloud spin states that there'd never be a problem with spinning clouds?
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Yeah, I'm not a big fan of all this "cloud" stuff, especially after the Amazon outage... They should be incredibly embarrassed about that.
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Actually... (Score:2)
A sufficiently "virtualised" data centre could potentially be distributed around the country/world, negating any local effects, naturally for any clients willing to pay a disaster premium.
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Arizona seems to be pretty safe from natural disasters. It's too dry for tornadoes to form (we do get "dust devils" frequently, but those are harmless). We're not close enough to the east coast to be affected by any hurricane. We don't seem to get any significant earthquakes, though it's conceivable we could get some very minor tremors if any big quakes hit California which isn't that far away. It's much too hot for any ice storms or other winter weather (in fact, it almost never snows). As long as you
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Arizona seems to be pretty safe from natural disasters.
What about wildfires [kold.com]?
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Wildfires, by definition, happen in the wild, not in cities.
I'm talking about southern Arizona, which as you may or may not know, is a desert. There are no significant trees here, and predictably, there's no wildfires. Those happen in the parts of the state which have trees. Take a look at that link of yours. Notice all the fires on the map are in places that are green. Those are places where trees grow. The brown parts are desert; that's there Phoenix, the capital city with 4+ million people, is loca
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http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/graphics_at4.shtml?5-daynl?large#contents [noaa.gov] And NYC is already developing an evacuation plan in case the storm does come close.
http://gothamist.com/2011/08/25/hurricane_irene_is_coming_heres_a_m.php#photo-1 [gothamist.com]
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Well, I feel threatened, but that's mainly because Irene is due to hit exactly where and when I planned on driving for vacation. It's altering my vacation plans and that's majorly annoying. We're taking a 10th anniversary trip without the kids. Do you know how RARE trips like that are? (No kids, not 10th anniversary.)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Carol [wikipedia.org]
BTW: As far as I am concerned no hurricane in my entire lifetime has had a major impact on the 'Northeast' (i.e. the 6 New England states). This trolling guy from Massachusetts says Pennsylvania is about as much 'Northeast' as Westchester County is 'Upstate
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"Northeast" and "New England" really aren't the same thing. The northeast region [wikipedia.org] is New England, plus N.Y., N.J. and Pennsylvania.
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To a New Englander, Pennsylvania is practically the deep south.
Western Pennsylvania actually kind of feels that way in some places.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Bob [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurricane_Gloria [wikipedia.org]
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1938 New England hurricane [wikipedia.org]
Some pretty good stories in the article.
Re:We're not shaking in our boots. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:We're not shaking in our boots. (Score:5, Funny)
That's ok. We think of Texas as a part of Mexico.
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"Googling for Santorum confirms"
The thinner you spread Santorum the weaker it gets.
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yay hurricane season, exciting! *gets popcorn* great to be a european!
Keep it up buddy and we'll shut down the Gulf Stream and stop sending you all that heat, then see how you like dealing with an ice age...
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You might want to check out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_windstorm#Historic_and_notorious_European_storms [wikipedia.org]
And I seem to recall a cyclone getting into the Med, reaching Greece.
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Eh, ignore this moron, maybe his power was out and he was without tv or internet, probably does not even lives here. Irene did hit us directly, the eye of the storm entered through Humacao and left through the city of Dorado. It was a tropical storm at the time (winds 65-70mph), it became a hurricane on top of us. Most of the problems here are with:
That's mostly it all we have