Feral Jundi

Thursday, January 14, 2010

PMC 2.0: Ushahidi Haiti

  The boys and girls at Ushahidi have come through again with another super useful tool for those that are tracking the efforts on the ground in Haiti.  If you are deploying to Haiti, and want a quick run down of what some of the big ticket issues are, then check these various websites out along with the Ushahidi site.  I have no clue if you will be able to use smart phones on the ground there, but I am sure there will be an effort to get networks up and running at full speed. Communications, to include a fat pipe for the internet, will be vital for the relief efforts.

   I have not downloaded any of the mobile apps for Ushahidi, but I still recommend playing around with the app and testing it out. If you have access to wifi and have a browser on your phone, you can still visit Ushahidi Haiti that way.  Knowledge is power, and this is just one more tool for trying to get some clarity out of that sea of information pouring out of the disaster. –Matt

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Our Efforts in Response to Haiti’s Earthquake

We’ve launched Haiti.Ushahidi.com

January 13, 2010

The past 20 hours have been sad, exhausting and inspiring. Sad for obvious reasons. Exhausting because many of us have been working straight through with no sleep. But inspiring because of the incredible community of Crisis Mappers.

Here’s what been happening in the community:

Ushahidi launched a Haiti deployment

Mikel Maron at OpenStreetMap launched this Wiki

Andrew Turner at GeoCommons is updating CrisisCommons

Our friends at Sahana have set up a Development Team

Sahana has also set up a Wiki here

Our InSTEDD friends set up a GeoChat instance

Our friends at MapAction have deployed a team

Einar Bjorgo at UNOSAT is keeping us posted on imagery

InSTEDD is also working on getting +46 numbers for GeoChat, the Emergency Information Service (EIS) and Ushahidi. InSTEDD is also in Santo Domingo deploying EIS. Sahana is exploring the possibility of integrating GeoChat based on some work they did at Camp Roberts a few months ago. InSTEDD is also looking to start testing a Sahana/Mesh4X sync. There are several dozen other ongoing efforts but hard to keep track.

I first heard about the major earthquake around 7:30pm (Boston time) last night and immediately called David Kobia to get an Ushahidi deployment out. I have five close friends from The Fletcher School who have been in Haiti over the past two weeks and it wasn’t until midnight that I finally got word that they were alive.

What happened between 7:30pmm and midnight was inspiring. We went live with a basic deployment within half an hour. I called Chris Blow and got in touch with Brian Herbert. They both worked with David to continue the customization.

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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Industry Talk: The Steele Foundation Expands Latin American Footprint With New Monterrey Office

   This is good to hear, and I am glad that Steele is getting in there with some value added and highly organized services.  What is also interesting, is that most of my readership in Mexico, comes from Monterrey.  So for you guys reading the blog, congrats and I hope business goes well for you down there.  And if you are one of the numerous thugs in Monterrey that are reading this, go play with your Santa Muerte doll.

   One other thing.  The Steele Foundation was really into the Haiti stuff back in the day, and it would not surprise me if those guys were involved with rescuing clients there as we speak. Hopefully someone from the company could pop up in the comments section and maybe add a little to that?  I know Steele was pretty busy during the Katrina hurricane disaster, and this stuff is right up their ally.-Matt

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STEELE Expands Latin American Footprint With New Monterrey Office

January 12, 2010

Focus on Security Consulting, Protective Services and Emergency Response for Mexican and Multinational Companies

SAN FRANCISCO & MEXICO CITY–Responding to a spike in client demand and violence that has destabilized regional security conditions, The Steele Foundation™, a global provider of investigative, consulting and strategic security services, today announced plans to expand its world-class services in Mexico City and Baja California with a new regional office and operations hub in Monterrey focused on security consulting, protective services and emergency response for businesses with operations in the vital Monterrey market.

“Recent months have been marked by a worrisome increase in the level of violence in Monterrey – and by the brazen nature of these acts,” said Greg Pearson, Chief Operating Officer at STEELE. “Organized crime organizations throughout the region have tightened their grip and have no regard for foreign business operations and their associated personnel. STEELE’s expanded footprint in Monterrey will enhance personal safety and access to security services for our clients and their family members on a daily basis.”

Thousands of U.S. and other multinational companies and major manufacturing facilities are based in Monterrey, the capital of the state of Nuevo Leon and second largest city in Mexico. Security conditions have deteriorated throughout the area over recent months as criminal groups have taken firmer hold of territory, fostering increased risk for kidnappings and other related violence. “The rules have changed and personal safety is clearly under threat. Multinational companies are paying attention to the need for appropriate security not only for their top executives but also for their family members,” said Pearson.

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Industry Talk: The Disposable Worker

    Peter Cappelli, director of the Center for Human Resources at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, says the brutal recession has prompted more companies to create just-in-time labor forces that can be turned on and off like a spigot. “Employers are trying to get rid of all fixed costs,” Cappelli says. “First they did it with employment benefits. Now they’re doing it with the jobs themselves. Everything is variable.” That means companies hold all the power, and “all the risks are pushed on to employees.”

***** 

   I read this story, and I thought they were talking about our industry. lol. Seriously though, this is a great read, and it brings up some issues that definitely apply to us.

   The only thing we really have going for us, is that security needs go up, when wars, crime, and disasters go up.  So with this recession and all the wars we are in, there will continue to be a need for professional security folks.

   But as an observer of the industry over the years, salaries have definitely gone down, qualifications have gone up, demand for jobs has been steady, and benefits are pretty scarce. Oh, and there really is no loyalty to companies.

   The companies involved with security operations are doing the exact same things mentioned in this article, and they are creating the exact kind of results within their disposable workforce they contract.  It may save them money and fatten up the wallets of the corporate leadership, but what a short sighted concept of business?  You are creating a workforce community who could care less about company loyalty or customer service and satisfaction.

    When I hear companies complain about high turn over or quality control problems that lead to defaults on contract, I think to myself, what did you expect?  If you don’t value your people, then why would your people value anything that you care about? It is a cycle that has been created over the years, and both the companies and contractors will always look at each other as ‘us versus them’, and not ‘we’. Until companies take that first step of true leadership and compassion for their people, this cycle will only continue.

   I also think that applying some Jundism will actually save a company more money in the future, get them more contracts, help them to hang on to their current contracts longer, and all of that will help them to destroy the competition and make them more profitable.  But that is just my opinion. –Matt

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The Disposable Worker

January 7, 2010

Pay is falling, benefits are vanishing, and no one’s job is secure. How companies are making the era of the temp more than temporary

By Peter Coy, Michelle Conlin and Moira Herbst

On a recent Tuesday morning, single mom Tammy DePew Smith woke up in her tidy Florida townhouse in time to shuttle her oldest daughter, a high school freshman, to the 6:11 a.m. bus. At 6:40 she was at the desk in her bedroom, starting her first shift of the day with LiveOps, a Santa Clara (Calif.) provider of call-center workers for everyone from Eastman Kodak (EK) and Pizza Hut (YUM) to infomercial behemoth Tristar Products. She’s paid by the minute—25 cents—but only for the time she’s actually on the phone with customers.

By 7:40, Smith had grossed $15. But there wasn’t much time to reflect on her early morning productivity; the next child had to be roused from bed, fed, and put onto the school bus. Somehow she managed to squeeze three more shifts into her day, pausing only to homeschool her 7-year-old son, make dinner, and do the bedtime routine. “I tell my kids, unless somebody is bleeding or dying, don’t mess with me.”

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Disaster Response: Quake Slams Haiti, Thousands Feared Dead

   I have posted the main story about what happened, and below this story is a list of all the ways you can help.  From texting donations to just mailing money to organizations.  This will be a massive effort, and we will see what the true assessment is as soon as the Incident Command Teams send out a report.

   One thing that I am not hearing about, which will be a huge concern as time ticks away, is security.  I have yet to see any advertisements for disaster relief related security operations, but we will keep our eye out.  Haiti is an extremely poor nation (poorest in the western hemisphere), and security issues were a big problem before this earth quake.  My guess is that massive looting and lawlessness will occur after the initial shock, along with attacks against aid workers and innocents in the weeks and months ahead. Providing security for these recovery operations will be very important if we really want to help Haiti.

   The current privatised security operations, in my opinion, will be mostly rescuing clients–hotel guests, businessmen, travelers, or securing banks and other institutions vital to Haiti and foreign investors. Also, expect some of the aid groups to have some security folks. It looks like the various governments throughout the world are looking at this in the same way, with sending teams to rescue citizens, along with trying to help the Haitians with rescue and disaster relief.

   I would also like to remind the readership that the private military company response to hurricanes like Katrina was excellent, and because Haiti is relatively close to the U.S., PMC’s could be contracted to do all sorts of things to help in that response.  Blackwater was able to provide a helicopter, and hundreds of security contractors, all equipped and ready to work in that disaster zone, and they did an excellent job.  BW saved lives and was able to keep the peace at the various disaster relief centers with guards. Other companies were able to respond quickly to the Katrina disaster, and were easily able to offer those services until no longer needed. I would also suggest security for the key communications infrastructure which will insure communications for people and aid will not be hindered.  Security must be a priority, if in fact folks want the rest of the disaster relief operation to be successful. –Matt

Edit: I just found out that the main prison has collapsed, and prisoners have escaped. Also, the IPOA has just created a page for companies that are offering their services for the Haiti relief operations. Check it out here.

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Quake Slams Haiti; Thousands Feared Dead

A Magnitude 7.0 Earthquake and a Series of Aftershocks Hit Just 10 Miles From Capital

By NED POTTER, DEAN SCHABNER, STEPHEN SPLANE, AMMU KANNAMPILLY and BRIAN BRAIKER

Jan. 13, 2010 —

A major earthquake struck just off the coast of Haiti late Tuesday afternoon, reportedly causing extensive damage in the capital of Port-au-Prince, and one aid worker said, “There must be thousands of people dead.”

The quake had a magnitude of 7.0 according to the U.S. Geological Survey, and was centered just 10 miles from Port-au-Prince.

The center was also relatively shallow, less than 10 miles below ground, raising the risk of damage.

Karel Zelenka, a Catholic Relief Services representative in Port-au-Prince, told U.S. colleagues before phone service failed that “there must be thousands of people dead,” a spokeswoman for the aid group told The Associated Press.

“He reported that it was just total disaster and chaos, that there were clouds of dust surrounding Port-au-Prince,” Sara Fajardo said from the group’s offices in Maryland.

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Technology: Israeli Robots Remake Battlefield

“We’re trying to get to unmanned vehicles everywhere on the battlefield for each platoon in the field,” says Lt. Col. Oren Berebbi, head of the Israel Defense Forces’ technology branch. “We can do more and more missions without putting a soldier at risk.”

*****

    Hmmmm. A UAV per platoon huh?  Sounds like drone archer material if you ask me, and it is usually the Israelis that push the envelope on this stuff. I also posted a small deal on Scout Helicopter pilots being replaced by UAV’s for really dangerous missions.  You know, the ones where they try to draw fire in order to locate the enemy. The Hummingbird, Fire Scout, or even the AH 6X Little Bird UAV would all be good choices for such a mission. –Matt

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Israeli Robots Remake Battlefield

Nation Forges Ahead in Deploying Unmanned Military Vehicles by Air, Sea and Land

January 12, 2010

By CHARLES LEVINSON

TEL AVIV, Israel – Israel is developing an army of robotic fighting machines that offers a window onto the potential future of warfare.

Sixty years of near-constant war, a low tolerance for enduring casualties in conflict, and its high-tech industry have long made Israel one of the world’s leading innovators of military robotics.

“We’re trying to get to unmanned vehicles everywhere on the battlefield for each platoon in the field,” says Lt. Col. Oren Berebbi, head of the Israel Defense Forces’ technology branch. “We can do more and more missions without putting a soldier at risk.”

In 10 to 15 years, one-third of Israel’s military machines will be unmanned, predicts Giora Katz, vice president of Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Ltd., one of Israel’s leading weapons manufacturers.

“We are moving into the robotic era,” says Mr. Katz.

Over 40 countries have military-robotics programs today. The U.S. and much of the rest of the world is betting big on the role of aerial drones: Even Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Shiite guerrilla force in Lebanon, flew four Iranian-made drones against Israel during the 2006 Lebanon War.

When the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003, it had just a handful of drones. Today, U.S. forces have around 7,000 unmanned vehicles in the air and an additional 12,000 on the ground, used for tasks including reconnaissance, airstrikes and bomb disposal.

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