rca logo
rca header flag set
img
ReConnect Africa is a unique website and online magazine for the African professional in the Diaspora. Packed with essential information about careers, business and jobs, ReConnect Africa keeps you connected to the best of Africa.

img1

img2

Current Articles
Library of Articles
Newsletter
Keep yourself updated with our FREE newsletters now!
Name:
E-mail:
 Subscribe  Unsubscribe
  
Fifty-five thousand, but where are they?”
RCA Forum
May 21, 2012, 03:23:47 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
News: Enter latest New here
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register  
Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Fifty-five thousand, but where are they?”  (Read 1678 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
krishre
Newbie
*
Posts: 16


« on: June 30, 2010, 12:16:34 PM »


 At a popular watering hole in Johannesburg's suburb of Melville over the weekend, long-time patrons watched highlights of last week's South Africa vs. Columbia friendly match and offered player profiles over the dull groan of thousands of horns from the TV.

When discussion shifted inevitably to the front page news of the day about terrorist threats, opinions divided sharply over the veracity of those reports. However, all were quick to drive discussion away from terrorist threats to everyday crime. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the 55,000 additional police quickly became the butt of many complaints.

"Fifty-five thousand new police and I still get nervous if I have to walk home alone late at night" moaned one area resident working on a World Cup project. Another long time resident wondered aloud “Fifty-five thousand, but where are they?”

___________________________________________
Driving Lessons Glasgow | Driving Lessons
Logged
Mr 007
Newbie
*
Posts: 18


« Reply #1 on: March 19, 2011, 09:58:52 PM »

Japan to repair damaged undersea cables
By Katia Moskvitch Science and technology reporter, BBC News
MARCUS II robot KDDI will use deep water robots to repair the damaged undersea cables
Continue reading the main story
Related Stories

    * Restoring Japan's communications
    * Japan quake disrupts tech firms
    * Japan steps up cooling operation

Aftershocks are still preventing Japan's telecommunication companies from repairing undersea cables, damaged in the recent earthquake and tsunami.

To restore services, many providers have rerouted traffic to backup cables.

KDDI, Japan's second-largest telecoms operator, said it will send out a ship equipped with remotely-controlled robots as soon as the ground is still.

The robots can dive to a depth of 2,500m to repair the damaged cables - a task that may take months to complete.

In the mean-time, there is enough redundancy in the telecommunications infrastructure linking Japan to the rest of the world to keep the country connected.

KDDI spokesman Shin-ichiro Itoyama, speaking by phone from the company's headquarters in Tokyo, said that the deep water robots had previously only been used to lay cables on the seabed and not for any major repairs as there had never been much damage from previous earthquakes.

More than 5,400 people perished in Friday's 9.0-magnitude quake - the most powerful ever to hit Japan - and the ensuing tsunami.

Some 9,500 people are still missing.

Aftershock hits

At one point, during the interview, Mr Itoyama broke-off: "Oh wait a second, the ground is shaking again," he said.

Powerful aftershocks continue to rattle the devastated country, reaching magnitudes of 6.0 and higher.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

    Oh wait a second, the ground is shaking again”

End Quote Shin-ichiro Itoyama KDDI, Japan

Mr Itoyama said he was one of the few KDDI employees left working in the office. The majority were told to stay at home as long as the aftershocks last.

He explained that it was very difficult to assess the damage to the cables in the Pacific as many were buried in the seabed in those areas most affected by the disaster, including Ibaraki and Miyagi Prefectures.

Although there were serious service disruptions right after the earthquake and tsunami, with communications between Japan and US badly affected, that had since been restored, he added.

"On March 15, we solved all the problems by means of using other cables and back-up systems and we have recovered all the services between Japan and US," he said.

Mr Itoyama added that the traffic had been partially rerouted using the Russia-Japan cable network operated by KDDI and Russia's Rostelecom.
Other companies

KDDI is not the only telecommunications company in Japan badly affected by the disaster.
Whirlpool, Japan Many cables were damaged in the hardest-hit areas, such as Ibaraki Prefecture

The country's biggest operator, NTT, was hit hard as well.

"About half a million of telephone circuits are down," Kazuhiro Gomi, the head of the US branch of NTT, told the BBC.

"Nowadays, the Internet is as important as telephone lines - and about 150,000 internet circuits are down."

Mr Gomi added that mobile phone services have also suffered, especially in the north-east coastal area.

Other companies with undersea cables in the waters around Japan include Australian operator Telstra International, Taiwan's largest phone operator Chunghwa Telecom, and global telecommunications service provider Pacnet, headquartered in Singapore and Hong Kong.

While some of them say their services have been restored, others are still struggling.
marijuana dispensaries
aku seorang bos
Logged
Pages: [1]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.2 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines LLC Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Copyright © 2010, Interims for Development Ltd - All Rights Reserved