Satellite may disrupt Bush communications

WEB AND PHONES: GCI outages are expected to begin Wednesday

By KYLE HOPKINS
Anchorage Daily News

August 9th, 2010 07:52 AM

http://www.adn.com/2010/08/08/1401433/zombie-satellite-likely-to-disrupt.html


As many as 35,000 people in rural Alaska may lose Internet access, 
long-distance phone service or both for hours at a time this week 
because of a "zombie" satellite that has wandered off course and is 
expected to scramble the signals of the Bush's main telecommunications 
provider.

"Almost every single person out in rural Alaska uses one of those 
services somehow," said David Morris, spokesman for General 
Communication Inc.

GCI is airing radio ads, posting fliers and plans to send text messages 
to cell phone customers warning residents in roughly 100 communities -- 
mainly in Western and Northern Alaska -- of the potential outages.

The disruptions to GCI service are expected to begin Wednesday morning 
and continue until Saturday morning in blocks of time that will last 90 
minutes to 5 1/2 hours, mostly in the morning and at night.

Picture the YouTube droughts. The silent cell phones and unanswered 
e-mails. Virtual "FarmVille" gardens withering and neglected on Facebook.

For Gordon Brower Jr., the 19-year-old son of a whaling captain, the 
outages mean exile from the online battlefields of what he calls 
Barrow's favorite Xbox game -- "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2."

Brower said he spends endless hours playing the online shooter with 
other gamers above the Arctic Circle as the snowmachine he's been trying 
to sell on Craigslist sits in the yard outside. He's thinking an 
Internet break might not be such a bad thing.

"It makes me a couch potato anyways," Brower said.

The tale of the zombie satellite, mindless but moving, began April 5 
when a roughly 4,000-pound and 46-foot-wide communications satellite 
called Galaxy 15 malfunctioned 22,300 miles above the Earth. It's still 
powered up, but no one can steer it as it meanders near other satellites.

"It's gone rogue," said John Concilus, director of educational 
technology for the Bering Strait School District, and a self-described 
satellite and rocketry geek.

News reports blamed the failure on a solar storm, but a spokeswoman for 
Intelsat, the Luxembourg-based company that operates the satellite, says 
no conclusive cause has been determined.

"We understand that there are sacrifices involved here and that we are 
working hard with our direct customer, GCI, to minimize the impact to 
the citizens in Alaska," said Dianne VanBeber, an Intelsat vice president.

The satellite's path is taking it in wide, north-south arcs as it 
approaches a different satellite GCI uses to provide phone and Internet 
service to much of rural Alaska. When it gets too close to the "good" 
satellite, the rogue satellite is expected to disrupt the GCI signal.

Most of the villages either don't have local 911 service or the service 
won't be affected by the outages, Morris said. In five, however -- 
Ambler, Deering, Gambell, Kiana and Shungnak -- GCI doesn't know if the 
interruption will cause 911 calls to fail.

The company estimates 4,000 residential customers, about 1,000 
businesses, 78 village clinics and 49 schools could lose Internet access.

That means ATMs won't work. Grocery store clerks won't be able to 
electronically process credit cards.

For the Bering Strait School District, the timing couldn't be worse, 
Concilus said. The four days of expected outage come as about 160 school 
employees converge on the Norton Sound village of Unalakleet for 
training that demands Internet access.

The district rescheduled some of the training to avoid the outage 
windows, while GCI set up a temporary dish in the village that will 
provide some Internet connectivity during the week, he said.

While it's easy to picture the teeth-clenching outrage that would follow 
a 5-hour Internet blackout in Anchorage, the communities that GCI says 
could be hit by outages include towns connected by rivers and airplanes 
rather than roads, villages closer to walruses than Wal-Marts.

As a result, many rural residents say they're used to all manner of such 
breakdowns, interruptions and inconveniences in everyday life.

"When you live where we live and play where we play, you have to be 
prepared for that kind of thing to happen," said Bill Pearch, spokesman 
for the Bristol Bay Area Health Corp.

GCI has arranged for regional hospitals like the health corporation's 
Kanakanak Hospital in Dillingham to remain connected to the Internet 
during the outages, allowing telemedicine services to continue, Morris 
said. Nearly 80 village clinics, however, are expected to lose Internet 
access.

In the Bristol Bay region, village health aides who lose long-distance 
phone service and Internet access should be able to dial hospitals on a 
satellite phone to retrieve crucial information, like whether a patient 
is allergic to certain medicine, Pearch said.

It helps that the Internet outages are expected mainly before the 
clinics open or after they close, he said. "It's gone from what could 
have been a catastrophe to something that's just an inconvenience."

Ruth Barr works at the Deering village clinic and like many rural 
residents seemed to shrug at the notion of a few hours offline each day. 
This time of year many people are outside -- looking for caribou and 
fishing, picking berries and bagging musk ox, she said.

"There's quite a bit to do besides Internet, I guess."

Read The Village, the ADN's blog about rural Alaska, at 
adn.com/thevillage. Twitter updates: twitter.com/adnvillage. Call Kyle 
Hopkins at 257-4334.

Details on the expected Internet disruption GCI warns that because of an 
off-course satellite rural long-distance phone and Internet customers in 
the northern, northwestern, western and southwestern regions of the 
state may experience limited service or no service beginning Wednesday 
morning.

Customers on the road system, in urban centers like Anchorage and 
Fairbanks, and in most of Southeast Alaska shouldn't be affected.

Bethel and surrounding Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta villages will also avoid 
the outages because GCI recently switched their services to a different 
satellite, a company spokesman said. Callers in Barrow, Kotzebue, Nome 
and the greater Bethel region will be able to make long-distance calls 
normally, according to GCI.

But village residents may have to dial a toll free number 
(1-888-991-8199) in order to call people outside their hometowns, the 
phone company says. Cell phones will be able to handle local calls but 
not long-distance.

Cable TV won't be affected anywhere, according to GCI, but the Internet 
outages could be widespread, including rural hub cities and remote villages.

The anticipated outage times, according to GCI:

Wednesday: 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 6 to 10 p.m.

Thursday: 6 to 10:30 a.m.; 5 to 10:30 p.m.

Friday: 5 to 10 a.m.; 5:30 to 9:30 p.m.

Saturday: 5 to 9:30 a.m.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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