Schlagwort: mobile phone

  • Social media helps aid efforts after typhoon Haiyan

    Social media helps aid efforts after typhoon Haiyan

    Reading Time: 4 minutes

    Ten million people affected. Half a million displaced. Ten thousand feared dead. As the numbers roll in it is becoming clear that typhoon Haiyan, which left a trail of destruction across the central Philippines on 8 November, is living up to its status as one of the fiercest storms ever recorded to hit land.

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    Now it is being followed by another flood – of information. Disaster relief teams are pouring into the Philippines from all over the world, trying to get aid to victims amid a jungle of severed roads, shattered buildings and downed power and telecommunications lines. But they have a new ally. For the first time, social media is being mined by an army of volunteers to provide aid workers with real-time maps of who needs help, and where.

    The Philippines is no stranger to heavy weather. According to the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters in Brussels, Belgium, it is the third most disaster-hit country of the past decade – exceeded only by China and the US. Most of its disasters are storms or floods.

    And it’s getting worse. „We have had an unusually large number of tropical cyclones this year,“ says Jun Yumul of the University of the Philippines in Quezon City. „The average is 19 or 20. This year 25 made landfall.“ What’s more, weather patterns are changing and sea levels are rising (see „Climate change worsened disaster„, below).

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    Hazard maps

    The Philippines has a huge national programme to cope with the risk of typhoons and flooding – with natural hazard maps distributed and explained. Despite this, people are facing conditions they never experienced before: designated shelters that were expected to withstand the storm collapsed as Haiyan hit. The projected death toll far surpasses the country’s previous deadliest storm – Thelma in 1991 – and previous strongest typhoon, Bopha, just last December.

    Delivering aid in such circumstances is always hard. „We’re operating in a relative black hole of information,“ says Natasha Reyes, emergency coordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières in the Philippines. „No one knows what the situation is in more rural and remote places, and it’s going to be some time before we have a full picture.“

    That might be changing. These days, a problem facing relief workers is too much information, in too many places and too many formats. The need for triage becomes enormous, says John Crowley of the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative. „A decade ago, disaster relief workers got a few emails a day over sporadic satellite phones,“ he says. „Now the flood of messages reaches one per second, 24/7.“ That’s thanks to emergency telecoms infrastructure, such as the inflatable broadband antennas being deployed in the Philippines by Luxembourg firm, Emergency.lu. Relief workers cannot possibly sift through it all.

    Enter MicroMappers’s global network of volunteers. „I had an email last night [Monday] from a relief worker in the Philippines saying they didn’t know what was going on outside the cities,“ says Andrej Verity of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA). Verity sent a real-time map of where people were asking for help and where destruction was greatest, created using data from MicroMappers. „They were ecstatic,“ he says.

    Tweet mining

    MicroMappers harnesses volunteers who sift through social media coming out of disaster zones. „Anyone can join,“ says Verity. A volunteer is given a few tweets, for instance, tags them according to whether they are requesting or offering help, notes whether the tweets have imagery, and rates the scale of destruction pictured.

    Volunteers are also helping to keep maps up to date using OpenStreetMap, which allows expatriates and people in the vicinity to work in a Wikipedia-style collaboration. „As of Monday, we had 770,000 edits of maps of the affected area,“ says Verity. The volunteers fill in roads and details not available on published maps.

    The next step will be to create open software that lets relief agencies exchange information and data. „A lot of data is generated about an affected area during a disaster, which just disappears afterwards,“ says Crowley. That includes where and how the destruction happened. Relief agencies cannot share this information as they use incompatible systems.

    So UNOCHA is leading an effort to develop a Humanitarian Exchange Language, which will allow data to be shared. This would let groups coordinate their response, see the big picture, and later analyse what happened. Ultimately this trove of data could help efforts to prepare for the next storm, by showing which locations and buildings were most vulnerable. If we can share the data we get from responding to disasters now, it may help prevent disasters in the future, says CJ Hendrix of UNOCHA.

    „Collecting and analysing information learned from this event can help build resilient communities,“ agrees Yumul. „But climate uncertainty is a reality, so what we learn from Haiyan may only serve as a guide.“

    To participate in MicroMappers efforts, go to micromappers.com

     

    Official Source: http://micromappers.com/

    http://www.rappler.com/move-ph/issues/disasters/typhoon-yolanda/43436-crisis-tweets-micromappers-unocha-tagging

    http://giscorps.maps.arcgis.com/apps/OnePane/basicviewer/index.html?appid=cf6031322a334cc3bfe3f9a74f23b384

    http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn24565-social-media-helps-aid-efforts-after-typhoon-haiyan.html#.UoNRw_lWxcY

  • Samsung Galaxy Gear Ads Compare Smart Watch to Sci-Fi Inventions

    Samsung Galaxy Gear Ads Compare Smart Watch to Sci-Fi Inventions

    Reading Time: < 1 minute

    Are we living in the future? Samsung seems to think so, as two new ads for its Galaxy Gear smart watch compare the gadget to famous watches from television and movies.

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    Posted on YouTube, the first spot (above) shows off watches with advanced functionality — fromDick Tracy’s communication watch to KITT’s smart watch in Knight Rider.

    In Samsung’s second spot (below), film and TV characters are shown talking into their watches, including the Predator, Penny from Inspector Gadget and Agent 86 from Get Smart. If anything, the ad reminds us that wrist communicators were really popular between the 1960s and the 1980s.

    Official Source: http://mashable.com/2013/10/06/samsung-galaxy-gear-ads/?utm_cid=mash-com-fb-main-photo

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2AjPfHTIS4&feature=player_embedded

  • Android 4.4 KitKat UI leaked images surface

    Android 4.4 KitKat UI leaked images surface

    Reading Time: 2 minutes

    The images above might be our first look at redesigned stock apps in Google’s upcoming Android 4.4 “KitKat” update.

    We’ve been reporting on a lot of Nexus 5 and Android 4.4 leaks since we first discovered an unannounced Nexus device in Google’s promotional video for the upcoming OS update.

    While images of the Nexus 5 have leaked several times– we posted exclusive photos and video of the device earlier this week– we have yet to get a good look at Android 4.4 KitKat.

    Today another reader reached out with the photos above claiming to show redesigns of the phone dialer and messaging apps on KitKat.

    The images show new lighter color, grey icons on the status bar, which lines up with our leaked video of the Nexus 5 and a screenshot for a Google Keyboard update spotted by AndroidPolice yesterday.

    The images also appear to show a colored status bar that changes depending on the color scheme of the app.

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    Official Source: http://9to5google.com/2013/09/21/new-leaked-shots-show-redesigned-android-4-4-kitkat-phone-messaging-apps/