December 20th, 2006 Yvo
After this week’s lenghty power outage, I learned a hard lesson that disaster is only a moment away. So my next project is to make an earthquake preparedness kit. A quick google search and I quickly discovered that people in California know how to do this already. Not only will this help in earthquakes but also if another wind storm has its way with our evergreens or any other disaster (hopefully).
Click on the link below to see the full list and what my kit will contain.
Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in life | 2 Comments »
December 19th, 2006 Yvo
Almost 5 days (105 hours to be exact)… thats how long it took to get the power back on. On Thursday night the Seattle area was hit with what is called the worst windstorm in 13 years (Inauguration Day 93 was the last). Boy did the area feel it. Usually I brush off any storm alerts because to be frank, weather forecasting in this region is *far* from top notch. Even with the snow storm a few weeks ago they anticipated the bulk to hit on Monday when in actuality it hit Tuesday.
Thursday - Friday early morning
Thursday comes around and the winds start picking up in the late evening. Nothing too strong but a notable breeze. Around midnight is when the *shit* (in a manner of speaking) hit the fan. Strong gusts could be felt against my condo building causing minor sways in the building’s structure. A few flickers here and there but nothing major. My phone kept paging me that the servers at work kept going up and down (ping failures) so I logged in via VPN and shut them down gracefully before the UPS ran out of juice. At 1 am, Friday early morning we (Cam and I decided to go to bed). Right when I was ready to turn on the TV… the power goes out for a moment, comes back on for about 10 seconds and then bam… grid overloaded and we were in the dark. Cam and I just went to bed and assumed that everything will be ok by Friday night. We assumed wrong (the old sayin’ goes assuming makes an ass out of u and me).
Friday
Woke up at 7:30 am to find out my alarm clock wasn’t displaying the blinking “12:00″. Disappointment sets in when I start calling the number at work to see if there is work today (one of those emergency numbers). Fast busy via land line and cell phone. Phone lines are out to my work. Great. Called a friend who was on her way and she said that the power was out. I knew then that there was no point in coming in. Turned around and slept some more. At 10 am Cam and I start making preparations for a day without power. The radio informs us that a lot of people got hit. We surveyed our condo and found that the front of the building had gutters and all torn right off the building (pics later). Thinking that damage was the worse we were in for a surprise when Jose told us about the trees in the back. Root and all pulled from the ground like tooth picks (pics later). A little flabber gasted about the damage and we set out to find food. Dennys along I-405 (exit 7) was without power and the one in downtown Renton was completely packed with people waiting outside. Chang’s had just opened up so we went there and had some grub. We drove to my parents, who were without power and phone (they live in the Fairwood area). Helped my mom to get the generator started and Cam went to work. Watched the news there (good ol’ satellite TV isn’t effecting by any power outage… power the receiver and all is well). Came home to a dark condo and for the first time that I saw the milky way dust in Renton.
Saturday
Cam had to be at work at 10 am (mall still had power all this time). I decided to go to my work as the phones were no longer down. Being right across the street (literally) from the Seattle Times’ newspaper publishing gave me a hint that this certain grid had priority to get everyone a news paper. Sure enough. Power had been restored the night before at around 10:30pm. Got the largest sandwich at Quiznos and spent my day at work surfing, downloading & watching TV shows (such as the mid season finale to Battlestar Galactica and the season premiere and 2nd episode to Sleeper Cell). Also did a check on the servers and the dev servers were fine but our new NAS (Infrant NX NAS + 4x 750GB Seagate drives) won’t boot. Had lunch with Cam at the mall at around 7:30 pm. Then headed off to one of her coworker’s place as he had a ton of wood. All said and done I came home to my place at around 11:00. Spent a good 30 minutes unloading wood from my car. Cam came home to a fire and we just hung out in front of the fire place.
Sunday
Still no power. I thought to myself that Puget Sound Energy should rename themselves to Puget Sound NoEnergy. Their phone messages were as cryptic and self boasting as ever. They were proud to restore so many people in so little time. Hopefully the necessary finger pointing will be done after the dust settles. At this point juices of unknown origin came from our freezer and fridge which we managed to not open one single time in almost 3 days. Everything except a few condiments, waxed wrapped cheese, the salsa dip and Chinese dough was thrown out (probably around $150 - $200 worth). Others in our complex were doing the same. We grabbed clean clothes (thank god for doing laundry on Wednesday) and took a warm shower at my parents, who had their water heater hooked up to the generator. Spent the entire day there and decided to leave the animals there as Monday we’d be at work all day.
Monday
Woke up to find… no power again. Beginning to get annoyed I tried getting through the phone tree but there was no hope. PSNE was a hopeless cause. My work thankfully has two showers so I showered at work. Continually calling home throughout the day (answering machine picks up after 5 rings when there is power present) kept my mind further occupied. Trying to deal with a broken NAS was pushed back 24 hours. Hung out at Matt’s until 10:30pm then went home and waited for Cam. We got some Duraflame at a QFC in Normandy Park (where our wood supplier lives) and also received a lot more wood.
Tuesday
No power yet again at 6am (notice the specific time). Cam had to get up at 6 to be at work at 7. I decided to turn around and just snooze my cell phone (very persistent alarm clock btw!) every 10 minutes until 9am. At 9am I finally decided on one more snooze until I looked up and suddenly I saw flashing digits. Looking around the room to confirm my thoughts (I thought I was been delusional) I saw the night light on and Cam’s alarm clock flashing digits as well. I immediately got up noticed how incredibly cold it was but went into the room. Turned up all the heaters (sorry power company I am not going to conserve like you want me too, the people across the street never lost their power and have had their outside Christmas lights on the last 4 days). Checked the water heater to see if it was going and bam we were in business. Until 9:30 when the power went out again. Thankfully the PSNE phone tree was easier to navigate and I got to talk to a real human who said they just had to perform some tests. Power has been on consistently since 10am.
Conclusion
So what have I learned… be more prepared and having power is truly something I have become dependent on but at the same time there are ton of alternative ways to get showered and food. Overall I’m glad its over. Almost 5 days without power when you live 0.5 miles away from an interstate in the metropolitan area is… well inexecuseable and I hope someone will do something about the fact that PSNE needs to improve their network within the cities. I know we have some natural things and cities farther away from Seattle such as North Bend or Fall City can expect a power outage but the close metro area like Kent, Renton, Kirkland and Everett need to get a better infrastructure when it comes to power. No excuses.
Posted in life, rants | 2 Comments »
December 11th, 2006 Yvo
On the Debian servers I administer recently an update to the apt & gpg package has caused me to get this message when ever I run apt-get update:
There are no public key available for the following key IDs: A70DAF536070D3A1
To fix this you must either be
a. root
or
b. have proper sudo privileges.
I will use sudo in my example.
sudo gpg --recv-key --keyserver wwwkeys.eu.pgp.net A70DAF536070D3A1
sudo gpg --export A70DAF536070D3A1 | apt-key add -
So far it only seems to be affecting my debian installs that use testing as the favored repository but I’d imagine that once etch goes stable that my stable favored servers will complain (or the debian team will have fixed it by then).
Posted in tech tips, work related | 1 Comment »
December 11th, 2006 Yvo
It’s fun to see what I missed last year. Last year my job at the time required me to work nights and I basically did 100% of my shopping online. This year I’ve had the pleasure to actually do something shopping in the busy malls again. Sure I can’t stand large crowds (mall booth operators are more aggressive then ever, I had less aggressiveness from a car sales men earlier this year), but it is fun to walk in Macy’s and look at perfumes for Cam. I came out smelling like a high end escort (since they don’t sell the ‘cheap’ stuff) but it is stuff like this that I really missed last year. Not to mention that my pay check is larger then that of last year so there is more to go around (not really, saving up for a trip to Europe this summer).
Then there is the Xmas party which was last Friday. Started at noon (for myself and Matt because of a contractor coming in to redo our server room and everything needed to be powered down) and while the big party was over with at 2pm, a group (of 9) decided to go to the Ale House in Bothell and we didn’t leave until 8-9pm. It definitely does help being 21 though, I’d imagine that if I had been 20 things would’ve been different.
I have pics some where of these events and I’m sure they will make their way to my gallery in the coming weeks.
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December 11th, 2006 Yvo
From digg.com
File this one under: Lighten the F up! There will be no more Christmas trees at Sea-Tac Airport this season after the Port of Seattle received at least one complaint about them. According to airport spokeswoman the two sides could not reach an agreement before the lawsuit was to be filed, so the trees were removed instead.
read more | digg story
Great another “victory” for the minority. I’m all for respecting people’s beliefs but why is it that sometimes the smaller groups have to literally ruin it for the big groups. It’s not like the majority were dissing on the minority or “hating” as the modern youth would call it. I think thats where the line should be drawn. Oh well… its just another step toward everyone wearing the same clothes and eating the same food because it might offend someone. Could you imagine if vegetarians were to get meat banned? Might seem like an immature and stupid comparison but if you said 50 years ago that Christmas trees would be taken down because one individual opposed it, people would’ve thought you were stupid too.
Posted in digg.com, life | No Comments »