Sytech Technologies 2008 Media Kit
HS Daily Wire – The Business of Homeland Security

Friday, 21 November 2008

Business Continuity, Disaster Recovery, Emergency Response RSS feed

Can China's future earthquakes be predicted?

To predict earthquakes, China relied on GPS data, which showed movements of two millimeters per year in certain areas of Szechwan province where a May 2008 earthquake killed 70,000 people (20,000 are still missing) and destroyed more than eight million homes; scientists examine a better way to predict disasters

Briefly noted

Obama preparing comprehensive technology policy... Germans advance surveillance bill... Report warns incoming administration of of "future military failure"... Senator Clinton welcomes more than $18,000 for Long Island Fire Department

Google offers flu-tracking tool

The tool developed by Google.org, the company's philanthropic department, uses search terms that are commonly entered into the Internet to work out possible flu clusters

SyTech Corporation

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Harris to demonstrate innovative radios at ShakeOut

Great Southern California ShakeOut is the largest-ever earthquake preparedness drill in the United States; the exercise, scheduled for tomorrow, 13 November, will model the effects of a magnitude 7.8 earthquake along the San Andreas Fault; Harris will demonstrate advanced systems for restoring first responder communication links

1918 U.K. Spanish flu records help in solving future pandemics

The 1918-19 Spanish flu killed more than fifty million people worldwide; Aussie scientists study record of the flu out break in the United Kingdom in search for answers about the pandemic quick spread and lethality

DHS releases FY2009 guidance for $3 billion worth of grants

FEMA requests applications for 14 programs for which it has allocated $3 billion; funded programs concentrate on state and local governments and strengthening community preparedness

Pineapp

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Earthquake's trampoline effect

During earthquakes the ground not only shakes from side to side, but also bounces up and down; this has important implications for designing quake-proof structures

Shape of things to come

Using laptops to detect earthquakes

Laptops have a small accelerometer chip built into them in order to protect the delicate moving parts of the hard disk from sudden jolts; same chip is a pretty good earthquake sensor, too

Debate over safety of taser-proof vests

A U.S. body-armor company is selling taser-proof vests to police units; some argue that the vests make officers less safe because taser-toting bad guys would now aim for the officer's head; the response: this is like arguing that bullet-proof vests make officer less safe because the bad guy would aim for the head

The Livingston Group

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