Sunday, February 1, 2009

Mount Redoubt Steaming, Anchorage Waiting, Webcams Watching

Places like Anchorage, Alaska, and Mount Redoubt don't get in the news much, unless there's something like a volcanic eruption. Which may happen any time, now:
  • "Scientist see holes in glacier at Alaska volcano"
    The Associated Press (February 1, 2009)
    • "ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — Geologists monitoring Mount Redoubt for signs of a possible eruption noticed that a hole in the glacier clinging to the north side of the volcano had doubled in size overnight — and now spans the length of two football fields.
    • "Scientists with the Alaska Volcano Observatory on Friday flew close to Drift Glacier and spotted...."
  • "Alaska volcano 'more energetic,' scientists say"
    CNN (January 30, 2009)
    • "(CNN) -- Mount Redoubt, the Alaskan volcano expected to erupt at any time, is getting a bit more edgy...."
  • "Inside Alaska's Explosive Redoubt Volcano"
    LiveScience (January 30, 2009)
    • "Mount Redoubt volcano in Alaska could erupt within days to weeks, say scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey, amazing the rest of us with their certainty...."
One of my favorite headlines is:
  • "Travelers volcano eruption survival guide"
    Alaska Transportation Examiner (January 30, 2009)
    • "In case you had not heard, Mt. Redoubt is set to do another big blow. The last time was about twenty years ago and the spewing of ash disrupted air travel for weeks.""
      (January 30, 2009)
The article's tone is light:"...The problem is that as you can imagine, volcanic ash and jet turbines do not mix very well...." You'll get a pretty good background on why it isn't a good idea to fly through a volcanic ash cloud. And, more to the point, a sensible-sounding list of ways to prepare, if you're traveling past an active volcano.

The University of Alaska has a couple of webcams pointed at Mount Redoubt. One of them was watching another volcano, but they turned it for this occasion. At this moment (about a quarter after 10 in the morning, here in central Minnesota), there's not much to see. Anchorage is west and north of us - so it's still night there.

"Live webcam images of various Alaskan volcanoes"
Alaska Volcano Observatory
Including two for Mount Redoubt:
  • Hut
    "This camera provides a view of the north flank of Redoubt."
  • CI
    "The camera is located on Unocal Platform Anna, approximately 38 miles SE of Mt. Spurr, it was originally pointed at Mt. Spurr."
The Alaska Volcano Observatory looks like a pretty good resource for information about Alaska's volcanoes.

And, on Mount Redoubt: "Redoubt Activity"

Mount Redoubt is roughly a hundred miles away from Anchorage, near the east edge of the Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, west of that long island across Cook Inlet from Clam Gultch.


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Minnesota Winters: Bitter Cold, Springlike Warmth, and Everything in Between

"Record Report"
Hennepin [Minnesota], Wunderground.com (January 31, 2009)

"Statement as of 7:40 PM CST on January 31, 2009

"... Record high temperature tied today at Minneapolis...

"The high temperature at Minneapolis international Airport reached a
balmy 46 degrees on this last day in January. This was enough
to tie the previous record set on the 31st of January 1995.
"

It was a warm day, here in central Minnesota. We've still got our snow, though. Down the road, in Glenwoood, the high was 42°F and the low 17°F: 25°F and 3°F are what's average.

Being near the center of the North American continent, our climate isn't boring. Today's record high over in Glenwood was 40°F, back in 1954: and the record low was -37°F, in 1951. (Wunderground.com)

Google Blacklists Internet - By Mistake

Oops.

For about an hour yesterday morning, Google blacklisted the entire Internet. Or, if I read their blog right, any URL with "/" in it. That's about as inclusive as it gets.

As the HAL 9000 computer on Discovery said, "It can only be attributable to human error."

From the Google Blog:

" "This site may harm your computer" on every search result?!?!"
Official Google Blog (January 31, 2009)

"If you did a Google search between 6:30 a.m. PST and 7:25 a.m. PST this morning, you likely saw that the message "This site may harm your computer" accompanied each and every search result. This was clearly an error, and we are very sorry for the inconvenience caused to our users.

"What happened? Very simply, human error. Google flags search results with the message 'This site may harm your computer' if the site is known to install malicious software in the background or...."

The good news is that any one user only got the "This site may harm your computer" messages for about 40 minutes.

The bad news is that this isn't the sort of publicity Google would want, with it's new "GDrive" coming out. (""Cloud Computing?" Sounds Familiar " (January 26, 2009))

From the StopBadware.org Blog (Google's blog post links to this):

"Google glitch causes confusion"
The StopBadware Blog (January 31,2 2009)

"This morning, an apparent glitch at Google caused nearly every [update 11:44 am] search listing to carry the 'Warning! This site may harm your computer' message. Users who attempted to click through the results saw the "interstitial" warning page that mentions the possibility of badware and refers people to StopBadware.org for more information. This led to a denial of service of our website, as millions of Google users attempted to visit our site for more information. We are working now to bring the site back up. We are also awaiting word from Google about what happened to cause the false warnings.

"[Update 12:31] Google has posted an update on their official blog that erroneously states that Google gets its list of URLs from us. This is not accurate. Google generates its own list of badware URLs, and no data that we generate is supposed to affect the warnings in Google's search listings. We are attempting to work with Google to clarify their statement.

"[Update 12:41] Google is working on an updated statement. Meanwhile, to clarify some false press reports, it does not appear to be the case that Google has taken down the warnings for legitimately bad sites...."

And there are more updates.

StopBadware.org is a non-profit, run by people from Harvard, AOL, and other organizations. Their 'about us' page is, I think, worth looking over: "About StopBadware."

Google's Big Mistake: Lessons to be Learned

From the sounds of it, Google's bosses know that something went wrong, and want to learn from it:

"...'We will carefully investigate this incident and put more robust file checks in to prevent it from happening again,' said Marissa Mayer, vice president of search products and user experience, in the statement." (AP)

Sounds reasonable to me. It's in Google's best interests to make sure that this doesn't happen again. I'm sure they'd like to make sure that something like this never happens again - but given the nature of the universe, glitches will happen.

The trick is not to let the same glitch happen twice.

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