Hmm .. it helps to have the resources of the San Diego Supercomputer
Center at UCSD behind you in an emergency. 

Fyi,

Adam Bogacki.

----- Forwarded message from UCSD University Communications <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
-----

X-Envelope-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: UCSD University Communications <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: San Diego Supercomputer Team Backs Firefighters in Recent
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-to: UCSD University Communications <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

"Horse"

The following news release and any accompanying images can be accessed on
the web at http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu/newsrel/science/hpwren06.asp.

3 August 2006 

Comment: Hans-Werner Braun, 760-788-6687 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                  Frank Vernon, 858-534-5537 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Media Contact: Paul K. Mueller, 858-534-8564 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]

San Diego Supercomputer Team Backs Firefighters in Recent "Horse" Wildfires

Firefighters facing fast-spreading wildfires, especially in remote areas
where communications and other resources are scarce, can now add
"cyberinfrastructure" to their firefighting arsenals.

Such combined hardware and software proved useful in the recent "Horse Fire"
in California's Cleveland National Forest, when experts from the San Diego
Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at the University of California, San Diego,
responded to the urgent request of state firefighters for quick and reliable
wireless communication among widespread teams.

That communication was speedily provided by the High Performance Wireless
Research and Education Network (HPWREN), a resource supported by the
National Science Foundation and staffed by researchers at the SDSC, UC San
Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO), and San Diego State
University.  Within a day, SDSC experts were on the scene, establishing
high-speed wireless data links.

HPWREN teams are no strangers to wildfires and catastrophes, but this was
the first time that vital communication lifelines used
Voice-over-Internet-Protocol (VoIP) technology - allowing wireless links
from the Horse Fire command post to the Internet and to deployed
firefighting teams.

Hans-Werner Braun, principal investigator on the program, and SIO
seismologist Frank Vernon, co-principal investigator, lead the SDSC effort
for HPWREN, and both recognize the value of cyberinfrastructure in
responding to crises.

"Reliable communication is absolutely essential in emergencies and
disasters," said Braun, "especially when response teams may be spread over a
wide area, where some forms of communication aren't available or won't work.
The wireless links to the Internet we provide through the HPWREN
collaboration can keep everybody talking and responding effectively - a
practical, lifesaving application of our research that we find especially
gratifying."

Vernon agrees. "Although our primary roles are research and education, very
important in themselves, we never forget that the ultimate aim of science,
scholarship and study is improving people's lives - sometimes even saving
lives."

To help support the firefighter's command post, the HPWREN team worked
closely with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, the
U.S. Forest Service, Viejas tribal leaders, and the San Diego Sheriff's
Department. 

The HPWREN team's contributions to the fire-fighting effort did not go
unnoticed. The National Science Foundation featured the team on its news
page, in a story titled "Communication Team Erects Lifeline for Firefighters
Battling California Wildfire" (available here:
http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=107121&org=OLPA), footage of
the fire and its fighters has been broadcast regionally, and Braun has been
interviewed by local television reporters about the participation of the
SDSC and HPWREN staffers.

"Network connectivity, VoIP, and other technologies - backed up by the
phenomenal computing resources available at the SDSC - give firefighters and
other first responders fast, reliable tools in a crisis.  High-performance
wireless technology helps them work smarter and better - and that benefits
everybody."

UCSD news on the web at http://ucsdnews.ucsd.edu.



----- End forwarded message -----

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Digital signature

-- 
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/
Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html

Reply via email to