Amazon Web Services recovered Monday morning from a widespread outage that disrupted services for major retailers, airlines, social media apps, financial platforms, and more. AWS infrastructure supports millions of websites and platforms.Air France 447 in 2009, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, and the recent Germanwings A320 incidents have drawn attention due to their significant impact on the airline industry, often attributing blame to pilot suicide, storms, or poor judgment. Similarly, crashes involving electric trains like the Disney Monorail, DC Metro in 2009, and Amtrak 188 are investigated with discussions of safety devices, track maintenance, or mechanical failure taking center stage. 

The public only begins to suspect something larger at play when widespread issues arise. Disruptions in cell phone service are often blamed on blocked tower access or bad weather, while the Blackberry outage in 2008 was attributed to a software glitch. However, engineers maintaining equipment and the grid are not easily deceived. During the Washington DC blackout, an electrical issue initially described as a "surge" hinted at something unusual. 

A key distinction exists between a failed electrical system, a simple outage, and an electromagnetic pulse. A pulse causes a surge—a sudden increase in magnetons and electrons—that disrupts equipment reliant on steady particle flow, leading to a runaway state. Surge protection can guard against lightning strikes, shutting down equipment to prevent damage. Yet, absent a lightning strike, such surges may point to the charged tail of Planet X, also known as Nibiru. 

What lies ahead for the public? As cell phone service and satellite cable TV continue to degrade, and as planes experience increasing electronics failures or cockpit smoke incidents, the challenges posed by such phenomena may become harder to ignore.

Source: ZetaTalk Chat Q&A for May 23, 2015

Views: 62414

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Comment by M. Difato on July 10, 2017 at 12:54am

Three Thomson cabin crew treated for smoke inhalation after fire breaks out INSIDE plane forcing flight to make emergency landing

(July 8) http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/three-thomson-cabin-crew-treat...

Three Thomson cabin crew have been treated for smoke inhalation after a fire started INSIDE the plane forcing the flight to make an emergency landing at Gatwick Airport.

Passengers onboard were escorted from the plane which had been travelling from Manchester to Girona.

Of 201 passengers travelling and six crew members, three of the crew were "being treated by medics".

It is unknown whether the patients have been transferred to hospital.

A spokeswoman for Gatwick airport said: "The flight was diverted because of smoke in the cabin.."

~

Flight Makes Emergency Landing At Miami Int’l Airport

 http://miami.cbslocal.com/2017/07/07/flight-emergency-landing-miami...

MIAMI (CBSMiami) –A plane had to make an emergency landing at Miami International Airport (MIA) on Friday(July 7).

The flight landed just before 3:30 p.m.

Miami-Dade Fire officials responded to the scene and surrounded the plane. However, no smoke or flames could be seen once it landed.

The plane was ‘taxied,’ with fire crews following, to a terminal.

The flight, bound for Cleveland, Ohio, was coming from Kingston, Jamaica, with about 159 people on board before being forced to make the emergency landing.

The plane was directed to a gate and scanned for any possible heat. Test results came back negative so the plane was cleared to continue to its destination.

No injuries were reported.

~

Comment by M. Difato on July 9, 2017 at 7:37pm

Plant explains cause for this week's flaring

 http://www.kiiitv.com/news/local/plant-explains-cause-for-this-week...

 CORPUS CHRISTI (KIII NEWS) - The plant experiencing an operational interruption that resulted in flaring this week and the black smoke that could be seen throughout the Coastal Bend reported Friday that the cause was a loss of steam in the system.

Steam was restored at the plant and the flare has been significantly reduced.

Plant officials said the products being burned in the flare are light hydrocarbons. Directing these materials to the flare for burning allows workers to cleanly handle the materials when there has been an operational interruption.

The incident that initiated the flaring is under investigation and air monitoring shows that the quality of the air was within all regulatory safety standards.

Plant officials send their apologies to residents for any inconvenience this has caused.

~

"Operational interruptions" causing flaring at LyondellBasell plant

 http://www.caller.com/story/news/local/2017/07/06/operational-inter...

 Officials at the LyondellBasell plant in Corpus Christi are investigating is trying to find out the cause of flaring that started Wednesday. 

Around 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 5, the plant, located at 1501 McKinzie Road, experienced an operational interruption that resulted in flaring.."

Comment by Scott on July 9, 2017 at 7:15am

King Country hit by major power outage due to substation fault (July 6, 2017)

Friday night blackout as power out in Hamilton suburb (July 7, 2017)

It'll be a dark Friday night for residents of one Hamilton [New Zealand] suburb.

Power to the Riverlea area cut about 9.30pm and isn't expected back on until 11pm.

The cause is listed as unknown.

This follows a power outage on Thursday, when an insulator failed in Transpower's Hangatiki substation.

That happened around 3.30pm and cutting power to more than 9000 customers for about two hours.

https://www.stuff.co.nz/waikato-times/news/94524148/friday-night-bl...

https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/94469693/king-country-hit-by-major...

Hangatiki (1) and Riverlea, Hamilton (2)

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on July 9, 2017 at 5:17am

http://ktla.com/2017/07/08/electrical-fire-explosion-at-ladwp-plant...

Residents Without Power After Electrical Fire, Explosion at LADWP Plant in Northridge

Posted 7:39 PM, July 8, 2017

Los Angeles firefighters are battling an electrical fire after an explosion at a Los Angeles Department of Water and Power plant.

The high voltage explosion occurred around 6:53 p.m. at a plant in the 18900 block of Parthenia Street.

A 230 Kilovolt equipment caught fire, according to a LADWP tweet.

Parthenia Street is closed in both directions between Vanalden Avenue and Yolanda Avenue until further notice, according to Department officials.

An undetermined number of customers in northern San Fernando Valley are without power.

Comment by M. Difato on July 6, 2017 at 3:29am

Air Canada flight makes emergency landing at Pearson due to electrical fire

https://reportca.net/2017/07/air-canada-flight-makes-emergency-land...

An Air Canada flight from Toronto to Vancouver made an emergency landing at Pearson Airport due to an electrical fire Tuesday night (July 4).

Flight 185 turned back to Toronto and landed before 7:45 p.m.

Peel police said a small electrical fire was to blame and emergency crews responded to the scene.

No one was injured.

Comment by jorge namour on July 4, 2017 at 3:52pm

Tech stocks appear to go nuts after computer glitch

July 4, 2017

http://money.cnn.com/2017/07/03/investing/nasdaq-apple-amazon-share...

The share prices of Amazon and other major tech companies appeared to go haywire on the eve of the July 4 holiday after a market data glitch.
The confusion arose when some websites incorrectly showed Amazon (AMZN, Tech30) plummeting 87%, Apple (AAPL, Tech30) dropping 14% and Microsoft (MSFT, Tech30) jumping 79% late Monday.

U.S. markets had closed early ahead of the holiday. But the crazy moves weren't the result of wild after-hours trading, according to Nasdaq, the exchange where the stocks are listed.
Nasdaq said the misleading prices came from test data it sent out that was "improperly" used by third party companies that supply information to websites.

The bizarre numbers didn't affect actual trades in the stocks, Nasdaq spokesman Ryan Wells said.
If they had, the money involved could have been staggering. An 87% plunge in Amazon stock would have wiped nearly $400 billion off the company's market capitalization.

Comment by Scott on July 3, 2017 at 6:53am

Saturday’s power outage was Costa Rica's second this week

Massive fire at San José power station leaves more than 100,000 buildings without electricity (June 28, 2017)

Wednesday a series of explosions and a fire at an electric substation in Desamparados, San Jose, Costa Rica left more than 121,000 of its customers without electricity for almost 24 hours.

"A total of 10 units and about 35 firefighters attend a fire in Porvenir de Desamparados, San José."

https://twitter.com/BomberosCR/status/880240455627288580

http://www.ticotimes.net/2017/06/28/power-station-blows-southern-sa...

http://www.ticotimes.net/2017/07/02/power-outage-costa-rica

Comment by Scott on July 2, 2017 at 8:26am

Central America hit by massive power outages (July 1, 2017)

A failure in a high-voltage power transmission line in Panama produced an imbalance in the interconnect system of the Central American countries, generating a nationwide blackout in Costa Rica and some parts of Nicaragua.

The Central American countries are interconnected by a 1,820 km network which extends from Panama to Guatemala. If any problems occur in the network, each country has a defense mechanism that regulates the flow of electricity.

However, in today’s case, the event was of such a magnitude that the protections in the Costa Rican system could not neutralize it, causing a shut down of the electrical grid.

Authorities from Panama to Costa Rica to El Salvador scrambled to restore electrical service.

The blackout affected some five million people in Costa Rica alone, where officials largely had managed to restore service after a nationwide power outage lasting about five hours.

Officials said as many as two million people were left in the dark in Panama, with an undetermined number affected in Nicaragua and El Salvador.

https://sg.news.yahoo.com/massive-power-outage-hits-central-america...

http://qcostarica.com/failure-in-panama-cause-of-blackout-in-costa-...

Comment by Scott on June 29, 2017 at 5:42am

Edinburgh Airport suffers power outage (June 28, 2017)

Edinburgh airport lost power at around 9am on Wednesday morning, causing lengthy delays to check-ins and flights.
A spokesman said that the airport had lost power due to a power outage on its high voltage supply, which knocked out the main supply to the terminal.
He said: “The fault also prevented our back up system from operating. This was caused by a catastrophic failure in one of our transformers.
“We are currently working to understand the full cause of the issue and why the redundancy didn’t function as designed.”
A spokesman from the airport confirmed power was returned to the terminal around 10am...
Comment by Scott on June 28, 2017 at 2:46am

Blackout Roils Phnom Penh, 21 Provinces (June 28, 2017)

A fault in electrical transmissions knocked out power to Phnom Penh and 21 of Cambodia’s 24 provinces on Tuesday, disrupting municipal water supplies, interrupting trading in the capital’s markets and leading to renewed calls for the country to further develop its own power generation.

Electricite du Cambodge (EDC), the country’s monopoly energy supplier, did not provide an explanation for the outages, saying only in a Facebook post that there had been an issue at a substation in Takeo province.

According to EDC and the Electricity Authority of Cambodia, the Takeo substation is a key link between Phnom Penh and Vietnam, just 50 km away, from where Cambodia imports a significant portion of its electricity supply.

Large swaths of the country intermittently lost power for more than about two hours [about 2pm to 4pm].

https://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/blackout-roils-phnom-penh-21-pro...

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