Monday, August 19, 2013

(#302750380) Gmail Forwarding Confirmation - Receive Mail from jwbolt@gmail.com

jwbolt@gmail.com has requested to automatically forward mail to your email
address jwbolt.pocket@blogger.com.
Confirmation code: 302750380

To allow jwbolt@gmail.com to automatically forward mail to your address,
please click the link below to confirm the request:

https://isolated.mail.google.com/mail/ca/vf-ac268d7b78-jwbolt.pocket%40blogger.com-6GB2VDkRYt_f56OO8JyhpIZK-Z4

If you click the link and it appears to be broken, please copy and paste it
into a new browser window. If you aren't able to access the link, you
can send the confirmation code
302750380 to jwbolt@gmail.com.

Thanks for using Gmail!

Sincerely,

The Gmail Team

If you do not approve of this request, no further action is required.
jwbolt@gmail.com cannot automatically forward messages to your email address
unless you confirm the request by clicking the link above. If you accidentally
clicked the link, but you do not want to allow jwbolt@gmail.com to
automatically forward messages to your address, click this link to cancel this
verification:
https://isolated.mail.google.com/mail/ca/uf-ac268d7b78-jwbolt.pocket%40blogger.com-6GB2VDkRYt_f56OO8JyhpIZK-Z4

To learn more about why you might have received this message, please
visit: http://support.google.com/mail/bin/answer.py?answer=184973.

Please do not respond to this message. If you'd like to contact the
Google.com Team, please log in to your account and click 'Help' at
the top of any page. Then, click 'Contact Us' along the bottom of the
Help Center.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Now I Know: The Last Exit on the Information Superhighway

Is this email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.Archives · Privacy Policy
Thanks to Ben D. for telling me about this one. Have a great weekend! - Dan

The Last Exit on the Information Superhighway



Ten years ago, the northeastern part of the United States and much of the Canadian province of Ontario lost power in what is still one of the largest prolonged power outages in history. Over 50 million people lost power for at least six hours, with some not regaining access for a few days (Here's a satellite shot from that evening -- note the dark triangle) . The blackout led to a handful of interesting cultural moments; for example, on the streets of Manhattan, it was not uncommon to see people engaging in ad hoc pizza arbitrage, buying pies at normal prices (kept there due to regulations against price gouging) and then re-selling slices for $3 to $5. With no access to cell phones or in-home Internet, news spread mostly via word of mouth. For a brief moment, the information superhighway came to a sudden halt.

For one region of West Virginia, that latter part is everyday life. They have electricity, and yes, you can go online in your homes, provided that you have an Ethernet cable. But they don't have wifi or cell phones. The federal government doesn't allow for that.

Welcome to the U.S. National Radio Quiet Zone.

Mapped out above, the Quiet Zone is centered around two important radio telescopes -- the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) and the Sugar Grove Naval Radio Station, both in West Virginia. The two are used to collect data from satellites or from whatever else may be out there sending signals from space. While radio scopes, generally, can collect data from great distances, a lot of things interfere with their work. Chief among those things are, of course, radio broadcast towers, but that was an easy thing to account for when the NRAO was first opened in 1956. In 1958, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) created the Radio Quiet Zone, preventing radio broadcasters within NRAO's range. But technology has advanced dramatically since the 1950s, and with it has come many challenges for the FCC in regard to this area. For example, as CBS reported, one can't use a cell phone within the Quiet Zone -- "it would mess up the signals and make it much harder to study [space]," the president of the company which runs NRAO explained.

In May of 2013, a technical specialist at NRAO named Chuck Niday spoke with NBC News about his role in enforcing the Quiet Zone's rules, and it isn't very heavy handed. CB radios and police and fire communications are allowed. As for the stuff that isn't? Niday explained that "we just go in and ask them to turn it [the offending device] off. People are usually pretty cooperative." And as NBC News further reported, if the people aren't cooperative, Niday and others can't do much immediately -- they can simply send a report back to the FCC. But increasingly, this is becoming less and less true. As Slate reported, Green Bank, West Virginia (population 150 or so)  -- where NRAO itself is located -- has become a respite for those who describe themselves as "electrosensitive." One such person, a lady named Diane Schou, moved to Green Bank in 2007 because she believed that various signals were causing her constant headaches. Whether that's true or not is anyone's guess, but despite moving to a town without a grocery store or restaurants, she was happy with her decision.

As for emergency phone calls? Green Bank has a simple if not forgotten solution -- the town still has pay phones.


Bonus fact: Where did all those pay phones go, anyway? In New York, at least, some of them are going under a bridge. As Gothamist reported, a photographer found a "veritable pay phone graveyard underneath the elevated West Side Highway" which runs up the Hudson River's edge. So he took pictures of the hundred or so now-disabled pay phone booths (with phones mostly removed), which you can view, here.


From our sponsors:
Dropbox for Business Keep your organization's files in sync. Dropbox for Business has unlimited space, file sharing, and admin tools to manage your team. Start a free trial at no cost.
(Sponsor this newsletter)



From the Archives: Off the Hook: Pay phones as fishing gear. 

Related: "The Radio Sky and How To Observe It" by Jeff Lashley. Three stars on four reviews, but there aren't a lot of options out there about radio astronomy.

Don't Forget!: "Now I Know: The Revealing Stories Behind the World's Most Interesting Facts" ships October 18th. Pre-order it today, via Amazon or Barnes and Noble!

NOW I KNOW is a free email newsletter of incredible things; you'll learn something new every day. Subscribe now!

NOW I KNOW is a free daily newsletter of incredible things; you'll learn something new every day!

Written and distributed by Dan Lewis.

Click here to learn more about NOW I KNOW, or to subscribe.

Click here to see the
full archives.

Click here to
search the archives.


Copyright © 2013 Dan Lewis, All rights reserved.
You opted in, at http://NowIKnow.com -- or you wouldn't get this email.
Our mailing address is:
Dan Lewis • P.O. Box 320179 • Fairfield, Connecticut 06825-0179

Now I Know is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. Some images via Wikipedia, available for use here under a Creative Commons license, and copyright their respective owners.

Email Marketing Powered by MailChimp