Entries tagged as 'dubai'
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Posted Sunday, 6 July 2008
An 80-story building in Dubai will feature floors that spin around the building’s central axis, using electric motors powered by wind and solar energy.
Occupants can control their floor through a voice command system, although this demonstration video implies that the rotation will be centrally controlled. I would have used the Clapper, myself.
The building looks like it is doing a hula, although in real life, the floors would move very slowly.
I can only wonder what the Outdoor Circle might say if a similar building were proposed on Oahu. Similar towers have been proposed for Moscow and Manhattan. The Dubai project is scheduled for completion in 2010.
There’s more information at architect David Fisher’s web site, this CNN article titled Dubai ‘shape-shifting skyscraper’ unveiled and in Dynamic Tower Skyscraper: Every Floor Self-Rotates, Powered by Wind and Sun at Gizmodo.
Tags:
architecture,
building,
Dubai,
Honolulu,
Oahu,
safety,
solar,
voice,
wind
ism tech
Posted Thursday, 7 February 2008
Last Thursday, I posted a brief article about Internet problems in India, Africa and the Middle East. Two undersea cables had been cut in the Mediterranean Sea, near Egypt.
In the following days, two more undersea cables were damaged. The International Herald Tribune printed an article about the third cable cut, and Wired followed suit with its own article, including a helpful map.
This Tuesday, as Reuters was reporting that a repair ship had reached one of the cut cables, reports surfaced of a fifth cable cut in the same region. BoingBoing has been following the cable cut story, and linked to a report from a Dubai newspaper. CrunchGear also reported on the fifth cut, and added a global map of high-speed fiber-optic connections. Wired claims the fifth cut is actually a cable failure that occurred before the Egypt cuts.
Bruce Schneier has a brief article with several links that I’ve used in this article.
All of these cable failures can be repaired. Here’s a link to pictures of various cable repair ships.
In the meantime, attention is focused on something most Internet users take for granted: the fiber backbone that supports the Internet.
Tags:
Africa,
data,
Dubai,
EU,
hardware,
help,
India,
Internet,
ISP,
map,
reliability,
telecom
ism tech
Posted Thursday, 31 January 2008
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From VNUnet.com and UPI: Earlier today two undersea cables that carried Internet traffic to the Middle East, Africa and the Indian subcontinent was damaged. The outage is most noticeable in India, Pakistan, Kuwait and Dubai. Internet traffic has mostly be rerouted to slower cables, and the damaged cables may not be repaired for another week.
No word yet on how this has affected outsourced operations in India. A CNN report claims that Dubai’s financial sector, television stations and telephone services have been affected by the outage. CNN also quotes sources who state that the damage was caused by a ship’s anchor.
Heather Paulson of revenews.com posted a comment that software development firms and their clients are panicking a bit over the situation.
Tags:
Africa,
Asia,
cloud,
Dubai,
India,
Internet,
outsource,
pakistan,
reliability,
telecom