A front-page article
in Le Monde (& carried by the Financial Times?) on Wikipedia
interviews some Wikimedia France members (Anthere, Ryo); and related articles
include a few questions put to the esteemed Mr. Wales, and a few more put to editors of Larousse and Robert. If you
saw this syndicated elsewhere, drop a line.
Archive for September, 2005
LeMonde practices Wikilove
Friday, September 2nd, 2005Identifying refugees
Friday, September 2nd, 2005If you are near a refugee center, or a church or home, (I’m talking to
you, Houston) that has taken in Hurricane Katrina refugees, please help
locate and identify them. At proper shelters, please check with
the shelter to coordinate with others tracking the refugees in other
ways. For details on how to help with just a camera and a pencil,
see the latest post from Andy Carvin (permalink)
about locating and identifying Katrina refugees. I have reformatted and edited it
slightly here.
Stormchannels
Friday, September 2nd, 2005I’d like to know where you turn for hurricane information; and where
you’ve gotten breaking tidbits from, at different points in the past
two weeks.
- Web : Wikipedia itself [cf. Mcall, et al], though not Wikinews
- Radio & Television : Air America
- [e-]Paper : The Australian surprised me with some of their coverage.
- Overviews : BBC, Chronicle
- Other : Friends in Texas & LA, watching different local news sources
Right on schedule, it’s… National Preparedness Month!
Friday, September 2nd, 2005The site maintainer[s? I’ll be kind and assume it’s one overworked
webmaster with other obligations] hasn’t had the time to update their
main page content to mention Katrina or link to relief efforts.
Clearly a northerner. A 6-page press release sent out today had two mentions of Katrina edited in at the last moment. The title of the release, “COALITION FORCES MORE THAN DOUBLE IN SIZE TO JOIN HOMELAND
SECURITY AND THE AMERICAN RED CROSS FOR NATIONAL PREPAREDNESS MONTH 2005“,
like its subtitle and leading paragraph, read like so much meaningless
copy, as though there were no disasters actually taking place at the
moment.
If you see Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff or American Red Cross Chairman Bonnie McElveen-Hunter
during their appearances today in DC, please thank them for me; each of
them added a single sentence about Katrina to their quotes in the
release. Ms. McElveen-Hunter is quoted as saying,
terrible aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, there could be no more
important message than the need for Americans to get prepared for the
next disaster.
I hope the need to help with the current disaster is next on the “important messages” priority list.
Some local reps to contact to find out how well these national activities are preparing citizens for emergencies :
- Tom Kirkpatrick of Louisiana Citizen Corps (tkirkpatrick@ohsep.louisiana.gov | (225) 925-1766 )
- Suzanne Lewis of the
Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (slewis@msema.org | (601) 352-9100 ).
BBC reader commentary
Friday, September 2nd, 2005Thoughts
on the adequacy of the Katrina response, from around the world. I
wish I were there with a relief group… from the USA Freedom Corps
site (needless to say, a federal program):
As recovery and relief efforts begin to assist victims, well-meaning
volunteers are being urged not to report directly to the
affected areas unless directed by a volunteer agency. Please
be patient and allow the professional first-responders and aid
workers to do their job. In the coming weeks, months and years,
please visit the
USA Freedom Corps Volunteer Network to find opportunities to
engage in ongoing relief efforts and prepare for future disasters.
I’m all for professionalism and training. Untrained volunteers
can make an awful mess. But this is no way to build on current
sentiment. Start training willing volunteers now; note that we’re
likely to have another killer storm like this within the next decade;
give people remote tasks like PR outreach, name collection, even
federal support for some of the grassroots communications efforts that
already exist. Get a new server for the katrinahelp wiki, for
crying out loud.
Without actually
listing “volunteer agenc[ies]” who might direct these energies towards alleviating the disaster, this
is an awful warning to hand out. Rather like encouraging people to
support the responses to 9/11 and the last Gulf invasion by ‘going
about [their] normal business’ and shopping. .
Katrina Chaos
Thursday, September 1st, 2005FEMA was unprepared. The engineers in New Orleans, despite insisting at some point this wasn’t as bad as their worst fears, were unprepared. Even Fats Domino was unprepared. The governors of
Louisiana and Mississippi were unprepared even to fight for order, and
have already thrown up their hands and claimed salvage impossible,
repair “in the hands of a higher power.”
But this wasn’t unexpected.
It has been talked about and thought about, for decades, by people at
every level from city district planners to various branches of the
federal government and the military. Louisiana isn’t the only
region of the US that talks about “The Big One”
and when it will come, but they have one of the better reasons to
expect it to happen soon; everyone knew the chances a disaster were
only increasing year by year. We have advanced hurricane tracking
systems that allowed us to start worrying about Katrina long
before landfall. But what was the response? Is there
some way to see how forces, experts, and materials were mobilized in
the run up to the past week?
I know more about catastrophes in Texas than in Louisiana, so a few
comments from across the border: the extensive flooding in
Southeast Texas a few summers back was no wake-up call, either; and
improvement plans made then have yet to be implemented in Houston (to
pick a nearby and wealthier city). Anything readily survived can
be readily forgotten.
Why are good contingency plans so scarce? Why are people so
shy about demanding them? In Houston, I remember, people had
known for ten years before the last flood that measures promised after
the preceding flood hadn’t been implemented… but there was only
occasional grumbling.
And most importantly, why are there so few community-based disaster
groups who know what to do and how in such situations? This
disaster proved again that waiting for national or global organizations
to come and help often takes too long. The health and
looting problems have worsened rapidly (currently, active Marines have
been called in and the governor’s orders include “shoot looters on
sight”). People let in the area feel stranded, don’t know what to
do, and are in many regions making the situation worse.
This was a MINOR natural disaster, for all the destruction it caused — it was trackable, predictable, and came in a familiar form.
Yet hundreds of communities proved themselves incapable of coping with
it. Just imagine the results of a real cataclysm.
Jamming, Jam on, like Jameanit
Thursday, September 1st, 200524-hour extreme prototyping jams.
Regular ad-lib game development jams.
Tool-mediated jam platforms that change how people prototype.
101 Interfaces that Should Be Canonical
Thursday, September 1st, 2005Spurred on by the heady smell of hay here in the wagon, and inspired by
Jimmy Wales’ blogging chez Lessig recently re: 10 things that want to
be free, I thought I would propose my own list of interfaces that should surely be canonical.
One downside of this plan : it will push all recent posts off the main
page very soon, and Manila has no archival offerings to speak of.
Another downside: Manila also has no categorization to speak of, so you can’t just ignore what I’m about to post.
An upside: Manila is nowhere in
the set of chainlinks in the chains on the bandwagon floor, so I should
be picking up another one in any case. Look for a collection of drupal (nice translation setup), wiki, the-other–wp (smooth wagon appeal), lj and blogger.
I would like to separate out personal/science/invention,
translation/interfaces, wiki[media]/knowledge, communication/society,
and robotwisdom/odd-news channels… with a healthy dose of abbreviated
interlinking to avoid stagnation.
Feel free to
A. suggest other excellent setups I should be trying,
B. suggest which topics would go best with which platforms, and
C. suggest how open the collaboration should be for each (topic, platform) —
First up, on the list : self-aware management and status ice
for computers (for those following along at home, a few songs may come
in handy in the heady months to come) — auto-detection of the need for
displays of memory, battery, CPU and network monitors, and improvements
on the current bloodless defaults.