I have been writ­ing this arti­cle since March 17th, found it in my “not pub­lished” tray so I decided to fin­ish it today, There are dat­a­cen­ters and DATACENTES.   What is a dat­a­cen­ter ? Data cen­ter infra­struc­ture lay­ers are power, cool­ing, tele­com, data rooms and net­work oper­a­tions cen­ter. In May 2008, Jeff Dean spoke at the Google I/O con­fer­ence high­light­ing some infor­ma­tion on the inner work­ings of their dat­a­cen­ter and ambi­tious plans. With already 36 dat­a­cen­ter around the world in 2008 with over 200,000 servers, that is a lot.

Giz­modo

Here are some infor­ma­tion from Wiki on Google’s datacenter

Orig­i­nal hardware

The orig­i­nal hard­ware (circa 1998) that was used by Google when it was located at Stan­ford Uni­ver­sity included:[7]

  • Sun Ultra II with dual 200 MHz proces­sors, and 256 MB of RAM. This was the main machine for the orig­i­nal Back­rub system.
  • 2 × 300 MHz Dual Pen­tium II Servers donated by Intel, they included 512 MB of RAM and 9 × 9 GB hard dri­ves between the two. It was on these that the main search ran.
  • F50 IBM RS/6000 donated by IBM, included 4 proces­sors, 512 MB of mem­ory and 8 × 9 GB hard drives.
  • Two addi­tional boxes included 3 × 9 GB hard dri­ves and 6 x 4 GB hard dri­ves respec­tively (the orig­i­nal stor­age for Back­rub). These were attached to the Sun Ultra II.
  • IBM disk expan­sion box with another 8 × 9 GB hard dri­ves donated by IBM.
  • Home­made disk box which con­tained 10 × 9 GB SCSI hard drives.

Cur­rent hardware

Servers are commodity-class x86 PCs run­ning cus­tomized ver­sions of Linux. The goal is to pur­chase CPU gen­er­a­tions that offer the best per­for­mance per dol­lar, not absolute per­for­mance.[8] Esti­mates of the power required for over 450,000 servers range upwards of 20 megawatts, which cost on the order of US$2 mil­lion per month in elec­tric­ity charges. The com­bined pro­cess­ing power of these servers might reach from 20 to 100 petaflops.[9]

Spec­i­fi­ca­tions:

  • Upwards of 15,000 servers[2] rang­ing from 533 MHz Intel Celeron to dual 1.4 GHz Intel Pen­tium III (as of 2003). A 2005 esti­mate by Paul Strass­mann has 200,000 servers,[10] while unspec­i­fied sources claimed this num­ber to be upwards of 450,000 in 2006.[11]
  • One or more 80 GB hard disks per server (2003)
  • 2 – 4 GB of mem­ory per machine (2004)

The exact size and where­abouts of the data cen­ters Google uses are unknown, and offi­cial fig­ures remain inten­tion­ally vague. In a 2000 esti­mate, Google’s server farm con­sisted of 6,000 proces­sors, 12,000 com­mon IDE disks (2 per machine, and one proces­sor per machine), at four sites: two in Sil­i­con Val­ley, Cal­i­for­nia and one in Vir­ginia.[12] Each site had an OC-48 (2488 Mbit/s) inter­net con­nec­tion and an OC-12 (622 Mbit/s) con­nec­tion to other Google sites. The con­nec­tions are even­tu­ally routed down to 4 × 1 Gbit/s lines con­nect­ing up to 64 racks, each rack hold­ing 80 machines and two Eth­er­net switches. The servers run cus­tom server soft­ware called Google Web Server.

Hard­ware details con­sid­ered sensitive

In a 2008 book,[13] reporter Ran­dall Stross wrote: “Google’s exec­u­tives have gone to extra­or­di­nary lengths to keep the company’s hard­ware hid­den from view. The facil­i­ties are not open to tours, not even to mem­bers of the press.” He wrote this based on inter­views with staff mem­bers and his expe­ri­ence of vis­it­ing the company.

Data cen­ters

Google has numer­ous data cen­ters scat­tered around the world. At least 12 sig­nif­i­cant Google data cen­ter instal­la­tions are located in the United States. The largest known cen­ters are located in The Dalles, Oregon; Atlanta, Georgia; Reston, Virginia; Lenoir, North Car­olina; and Goose Creek, South Car­olina.[14] In Europe, the largest known cen­ters are inEemshaven and Gronin­gen in the Nether­lands and Mons, Belgium.[14] Google’s Ocea­nia Data Cen­ter is claimed to be located in Sydney, Australia. [15]

Project 02

One of the largest Google data cen­ters is located in the town of The Dalles, Ore­gon, on the Colum­bia River, approx­i­mately 80 miles from Port­land. Code­named “Project 02″, the new com­plex is approx­i­mately the size of two foot­ball­fields, with cool­ing tow­ers four sto­ries high.[16] The site was cho­sen to take advan­tage of inex­pen­sive hydro­elec­tric power, and to tap into the region’s large sur­plus of fiber optic cable, a rem­nant of the dot-com boom. A blue­print of the site has appeared in print.[17]

Summa paper­mill

In Feb­ru­ary 2009, Stora Enso announced that they had sold the Summa paper mill in Hamina, Finland to Google for 40 mil­lion Euros.[18][19] Google plans to invest 200 mil­lion euros on the site to build a data cen­ter.[20]

Soft­ware

Most of the soft­ware stack that Google uses on their servers was devel­oped in-house.[21] It is believed that C++, Java, and Python are favored over other pro­gram­ming lan­guages.[22] Google has acknowl­edged that Python has played an impor­tant role from the begin­ning, and that it con­tin­ues to do so as the sys­tem grows and evolves.[23]

The soft­ware that runs the Google infra­struc­ture includes:[24]

  • Google Web Server
  • Google File System
  • BigTable
  • Chubby lock service
  • MapRe­duce and Sawzall pro­gram­ming language
  • Pro­to­col buffers

Server oper­a­tion

Most oper­a­tions are read-only. When an update is required, queries are redi­rected to other servers, so as to sim­plify con­sis­tency issues. Queries are divided into sub-queries, where those sub-queries may be sent to dif­fer­ent ducts inpar­al­lel, thus reduc­ing the latency time.[2]

To lessen the effects of unavoid­able hard­ware fail­ure, soft­ware is designed to be fault tol­er­ant. Thus, when a sys­tem goes down, data is still avail­able on other servers, which increases reliability.

Catchup

Apple has been build­ing a MDC (Mas­sive Data Cen­ter) in Maiden North Car­olina, and is said to have gone into oper­a­tion already, but Apple has not made clear on how it is using it at this time. The 500,000 square foot facil­ity is five times larger than the Newark Cal­i­for­nia facil­ity (109,500 square foot, bought from World­Com @ 45 mil­lion, a bar­gain con­sid­er­ing it cost 110 mil­lion to build) it owns, is said to cost Apple more than 1 Bil­lion US dol­lars to build.

Named the iDat­a­cen­ter, many spec­u­late this site to house the cloud based iTunes and other ser­vices that Apple plans to deliver in the future.  With it’s own Newark and Cuper­tino data cen­ter sup­ported by addi­tional ser­vices from Aka­mai and Lime­light, why does it have to spend 1 bil­lion USD in North Car­olina? (The 1 bil­lion USD price tag is about twice what Micosoft and Google spend for their data cen­ter.) The answer is fairly sim­ple, it get a larger tax incen­tive from the state if a com­pany invests more than 1 bil­lion dol­lars over 9 years.

It is said that Eric Schmidt stole all the secrets from Apple dur­ing his days as a board mem­ber of Apple, but know­ing Steve Jobs, I  have a feel­ing that Steve would have picked Eric’s brains on how to con­struct, run and use a data cen­ter as well. I find it unlikely that Apple would launch such an aggres­sive invest­ment (yes, Apple’s data cen­ter is the biggest and most expen­sive in the cor­po­rate world) into data cen­ter if it did not have con­fi­dence on con­struc­tion, oper­a­tion, usage, return and investment.

For What?

On June 7th, 2010, Apple may unveil a new ser­vice of sorts that use the data cen­ter. Apple pur­chase of Lala and Quat­tro may have a direct rela­tion to the MDCs.  I am sure Apple needs iDat­a­cen­ter just to ful­fill the App  and iTunes store sales, so many more may be in the pipeline.

Many spe­cial­ists feel that data cen­ter is so large and close to Pen­ta­gon grade, that usage of this power can not be filled by iTunes, SaaS, Lala, Quat­tro, iPhone, iBook­store or the App store.

In an arti­cle in Cult of the Mac, they inter­view Rich Miller who is the edi­tor of Data Cen­ter Knowl­edge, an online trade mag­a­zine devoted to the data cen­ter industry.

CoM: First, any idea why Apple is build­ing this new data center?

Miller: Apple has said very lit­tle about the North Car­olina facil­ity, beyond the fact that it will serve as the company’s East coast data hub. Apple also has a West coast data cen­ter facil­ity in Newark, Calif. Local offi­cials I’ve spo­ken with say they believe the space is pri­mar­ily to sup­port Mobile Me and dig­i­tal con­tent for the iTunes store. The most inter­est­ing ques­tion is whether Apple needs a much larger facil­ity to sup­port growth in its exist­ing ser­vices, or is scal­ing up capac­ity for future offerings.

CoM: Could Apple be build­ing it for cloud com­put­ing apps — cloud ver­sions of its iLife apps for example?

Miller: One of the lead­ing the­o­ries about the size of the NC project is that Apple is plan­ning future cloud com­put­ing ser­vices that will require lots of data cen­ter stor­age. Cloud com­put­ing is a hot trend, and I’d be sur­prised if Apple isn’t think­ing hard – and think­ing dif­fer­ently – about cloud com­put­ing. Many cloud enthu­si­asts say that cloud com­put­ing will elim­i­nate the need for data cen­ters. In real­ity, the only thing will change is the owner of the build­ing. All the appli­ca­tions and data that are mov­ing into the cloud will live on servers in brick-and-mortar data cen­ters. The com­pa­nies that are build­ing the biggest data cen­ters tend to also have the biggest cloud ambitions.

CoM: How big is Apple’s new North Car­olina data cen­ter — big, small, medium?

Miller: The early site plans indi­cate Apple is plan­ning about 500,000 square feet of data cen­ter space in a sin­gle build­ing. That would place it among the largest data cen­ters in the world. For com­par­i­son pur­poses, Apple’s exist­ing data cen­ter in Newark, Calif. is a lit­tle more than 100,000 square feet. Most new stand-alone enter­prise data cen­ters are in the range of 100,000 to 200,000 square feet. So this would qual­ify as a big-ass data center.

CoM: What’s it com­pa­ra­ble to? Do you know of any spe­cific examples?

Miller: In the past sev­eral years we’ve seen a hand­ful of new facil­i­ties that are redefin­ing the scope of mod­ern data cen­ters. These include Microsoft’s new facil­ity in Chicago, the Super­NAP in Las Vegas and the Phoenix ONE colo­ca­tion cen­ter in Phoenix. All of these facil­i­ties house at least 400,000 square feet of space. These data cen­ters are designed to sup­port an enor­mous vol­ume of data, and reflect the accel­er­a­tion of the tran­si­tion to a dig­i­tal econ­omy. All those dig­i­tal assets – email, images, video and now vir­tual machines – drive demand for more and larger data centers.

CoM: Why did Apple chose NC? Are there par­tic­u­larly big pipes in NC? A big pow­er­plant nearby?

Miller: The choice of rural North Car­olina sug­gests that the bot­tom line for Apple is cost, rather than con­nec­tiv­ity. The site in Maiden, NC is not far from a large data cen­ter by Google, which usu­ally chases cheap power and tax incen­tives. Power from Duke Energy is about 4 to 5 cents per kilo­watt hour, com­pared to 7 to 12 cents in Cal­i­for­nia. The com­pany also max­i­mized its incen­tives by pit­ting Vir­ginia and North Car­olina against one another in try­ing to wring the best tax incen­tives out of both states (a pop­u­lar strat­egy in data cen­ter site location).

Some large com­pa­nies use dis­trib­uted data cen­ters to man­age their latency and con­tent deliv­ery costs. That may be part of Apple’s think­ing, since they’re a major cus­tomer for CDNs (I believe they use both Aka­mai and Lime­light Net­works). Face­book cited latency to Europe as a key fac­tor in its deci­sion to add data cen­ters in Vir­ginia. Before that, MySpace added a data cen­ter in Los Ange­les to reduce its reliance on CDNs. But in both cases, those com­pa­nies sought out Inter­net hubs where they could con­nect with dozens of other net­works to man­age their Inter­net traf­fic. You don’t get that in rural North Car­olina, soApple seems more focused on cost and scale than on con­nec­tiv­ity – which again would sug­gest a cloud focus.

Unfo­tu­nartluy this inter­view does not reveal or hint what Apple may use the data cen­ter for, only to spec­u­late that it will han­dle a lot of data.

Lot’s of Data? (IMPORTANT READ HERE)

Yes, lots. What uses a lot of data? Hum, video comes to mind. With the iPhone 4G unmasked and it’s frontal cam­era and 5mega pixel rear cam­era (Apple is also said to have 8mega pixel cam­era ver­sion in the field), and con­sid­er­ing that it is an inno­va­tor in dig­i­tal lifestyle appli­ca­tion, it is not far fetched to think that Apple may have a new “Video Social Net­work” planned that may put Face­book, Twit­ter, Foursquare, Ustream and You Tube to rest. With Vimeo qual­ity HD video (as iPhone most likely will be named “iPhone HD” for a rea­son, not fad), face and loca­tion recog­ni­tion, AR and AR (Arti­fi­cial Real­ity and Aug­mented Real­ity), this would be a killer offer­ing if it came true. Apple with it’s new iPhone and SaaS may store every­ones video, tag them, add face, voice and text recog­ni­tion to them and use this data to cre­ate and sug­gest rela­tion­ship with peo­ple. Apple may have more infor­ma­tion on it’s users that FBI’s col­lected data over the decades.

Video is the miss­ing link in SOCIAL. Yes­ter­day I did an event and streamed it live. I had 4,410 view­ers (2,638 unique) of this show. I am just amazed that some­one like me goes live and you get 4k peo­ple watch­ing the show at one time or the other. Twit­ter of course enhances Ustream, the plat­form which was used for the event. All I needed was a Mac­Book Pro note­book and 2 video cam­eras, 4 micro­phones and a audio mixer.

VIDEO is KING of ALL THINGS DIGITAL

I said this and I will say this again, there is noth­ing to clear and easy to under­stand than mov­ing pic­ture. If 2 peo­ple read a book, their expe­ri­ences may be com­pletely dif­fer­ent. With mov­ing pic­tures it is always the same. If geo tag­ging, short mes­sages, moods, AR and AR can be part of ” what are you going now” twit­ter post­ing, then there will be no more need for any of the SNS ser­vices which are now frag­mented and dif­fi­cult to under­stand. You Tube and Ustream is show­ing Apple how good a poten­tial busi­ness this is, what You Tube and Ustream lack in ease of use and depth of con­tent since nei­ther makes hard­ware and oper­at­ing systems.

Apple has been in a unique posi­tion to watch closely the devel­op­ments of VIDEO SOCIAL (although they are only avail­able in frag­ments and encom­pass mul­ti­ple ser­vices and hard­ware and oper­at­ing sys­tem plat­form thus caus­ing chaos to some users), it is sin­gle­hand­edly in a posi­tion to offer a seam­less solu­tion via it’s OS, hard­ware and deliv­ery plat­form. One but­ton and your done with video, geo and text.

If Apple really wants to embark on video, some ana­lysts say, they may need more of these 1 bil­lion dol­lar data cen­ters around the world to fight latency and sheer num­ber of uploads each iPhone HD will store.

Who else ?

Ora­cle and the US gov­ern­ment are also speed­ing up the con­struc­tion of MDCs in 2010.  Ora­cle stopped con­struc­tion of the MDC in Salt Lake City but then again has recently resumed work on the 240,000 square foot 285 mil­lion dol­lar project. Oracle’s main busi­ness is CRM SaaS (soft­ware as ser­vice) and needs these cen­ters to take on more speed and cus­tomer demand. MDCs are being built in Lon­don, Wales, Tokyo, Tsukuba and many other cities around the world.

Make no mis­take about it, Apple and Google are  at war, but come June 7th, Apple may throw in some new weapons to com­bat Googles announce­ments that it made at Google I/O, or it may not, since it may announce a ser­vice so ambi­tious and close to our daily life, our method of shar­ing notched up to a higher level. In such case, oth­ers will play catch up with new ser­vice offer­ings and data cen­ters, but once Apple takes the lead, it may be hard for Google to orga­nize HTC and other man­u­fac­tur­ers to have a com­mon user inter­face prod­uct to pro­vide the seam­less user expiri­ence pro­vided by a com­pany that makes everything.

Ever since 1985, I have been involved with Apple, not because I am an Apple freak (in hon­esty I am but), but because it makes good busi­ness sense to trust a com­pany that has a solid vision (not dur­ing Job’s absence I must say), owns and can con­trol the direc­tion it wants to go. To me the HTC Desire is like a Fer­rari 430 with a Toy­ota engine,  while the Nexus One is like a Fer­rari Cal­i­for­nia with a Nis­san engine, not bad but in the end, i will no longer buy Fer­rari since what I am buy­ing is nei­ther a Fer­rari, Toy­ota or a Nissan.

It may be a really good time to be in a con­struc­tion com­pany or a com­pany mak­ing con­tainer unit mod­ule for data centers.

twitterを始めて@onebeatで一年4ヶ月。知り合いにコメントすると「あんただ〜れ?」と思われる事も多くあった。また超名人、有名人が最近twitterを始める場合、殆どが実名と自分の写真を利用している。そこで長く悩んだあげく、@onebeatを本名へ変更する事とにた。

一番大きな問題は新しい名前取得ではなく、旧名を他人に取得されて失う可能性がある事だ。

昨日シャンパン飲み放題の会に参加したが、もう体が持たず早退。ありがとうございました。多くの人はFranc Francの2,000人パーティーへ行ったらしい。

旧名を失うと、住所移転案内や電話番号変更案内サービスの無いtwitterでは、フォロワーや全く知らない人がDMやメッセージを旧名に送っても、新しい名前では「知る事」が出来なないこと。当然旧名を取得され、悪用される可能性も大きい。

そんな訳で心臓移植に匹敵する作業、心配だったが、実行する事に。

変更前:

@onebeat  7,023 ツイート、893フォローしている、3,347フォローされている

変更後:アカウントが二つになります

@HidekiOnda  7,023 ツイート、893フォローしている、3,347フォローされている

@onenbeat 0ツイート、 0フォローしている、0

フォローされている
参考にしたのはこの記事

フォロワーや読者を失わずにTwit­terのアカウント名を変更する方法

設定のここで新しい名前を入れるだけ

設定で名前を変更するとフォロワーもフォロイングも一緒に新しい名前に着いてくる。

注意:必ずtwit­terで利用していない新しいメールアドレスを用意しましょう。

「新規登録」で新しいユーザーとして先ほどまで利用していた名前を取り直す。その場合twit­terで利用していないメールアドレスが必要です。

旧名にはちゃんと「私の新しい名前はこちらです。新しい名前は本物です」と書き込むと良いかもしれない。

Our fam­ily cel­e­brated my dad’s 74th in Azabu Jyuban tonight. Miche­lin Guide has become my last choice for find­ing a din­ing set­ting for a spe­cial occa­sion. I have already tried a few estab­lish­ments since the 1st Issue when they first received their awards. How­ever on sec­ond vis­its, lot of them had turned into tourist traps and “must eat once before you” die joints for the masses. Food and ser­vice qual­ity had changed. My EOD5DmkII is still in repair so I used the Canon S90 ultra com­pact camera.

今日は父の誕生日を祝うためGaspardで食事をした。Gaspardへ行くのは初めてだ。2008年はミシュランを使いレストランを選んだが、2009年再度同じ店へ行くとそこは観光名所になっており、サービスも質も下がっていたみ瀬が多かった。写真はEOD5DmkII修理中なので今日はCanon S90コンパクトで撮影した。

Gas­pard is located in Azabu Jyuban next to Rop­po­ing in Tokyo

In Japan, the spread on an out­ing is huge.. Some can charge 3 times the price and some can do with 1/3 the price for a same qual­ity out­ing.  Places like Casa Vini Italia charges a meger 6400 Yen for a full and won­der­ful evening out while XXXX can charge 20,000 yen. You might actu­ally get bet­ter food at Casa Vini.

日本では同じ料理でも価格差が3倍近くあることもある。片やカサ・ヴィーニ・イタリアで6,400円の素晴らしい世界し高級の料理があるとおめば、20,000円近く出しても印象の薄い料理もある。

My Dad

So I turned to “KUCHIKOMI”, (口コミ)mean­ing “WORD OF MOUTH”. Because the nation has high pop­u­la­tion con­cen­tra­tion, and peo­ple com­mute and work in cen­tral­ized paths, the word of mouth is very impor­tant in mar­ket­ing sucess. Some prod­ucts sell so well due to word of mouth, that com­pa­nies actively pur­sue this method to increase aware­ness and post­pone tra­di­tional mar­ket­ing methods.

そこで今回はクチコミを利用している食べログの本を買った。twitterやジオタグで舌の肥えた人たちのイベントが増え。2008年より2010年はtwitterやfacebook and SNSの普及で食べ物の情報量と意見サンプルが飛躍的に増えたのだ。

With geo­t­ag­ging and word of mouth twit­ter­ing (along with face­book, blogs, estab­lish­ment review sites, blogs, foursquare etc..), peo­ple began to gather. Twit­ter and SNS events are pop­ping up every­where. Peo­ple began to meet new peo­ple online and began to gather.  Estab­lish­ments that offered WiFi with tweet­ing celebrity owner got a lot of traf­fic. Most attend­ing peo­ple in my events were also promi­nent blog­gers and tweet­ers, so they get more traf­fic and so on.  I myself did a twit­ter gath­er­ing last night with about 20 people.

So today I bought a book my TABELOG 食べログ, one of Japan’s top eatery review online and book. I pur­chased the book which had food types and user scor­ing nicely arranged into sec­tions. I found tonight’s din­ner, we decided to go to the 13th ranked GASPARD.

The guide­book was very use­ful and trust­ful, as it is ranked by hun­dreds of peo­ple who review them and are very online and trendy spot savvy.

The below is a mix of the 8,400 yen and 12,800 yen din­ner set we ordered, cho­sen from 5 choies of a 6 – 9 course din­ner, so that is close to 40 choices we had.. Enjoy the pic­tures below.

We went to a pork cut­let place in Nishi­az­abu today. My staff run­ning the online store gath­ered about 18 peo­ple and we had good com­pany, good food and drinks. The restau­rant run by Mr. Naka­mura, a vision­ary in SNS and food ser­vice busi­ness owns this place along with a few oth­ers. The food here in excel­lent, even bet­ter than the Butagumi Shabu Shabu place in Rop­pongi which is also good. I highly rec­om­mend this restau­rant if you want to get your hands on the finest pork cut­let. It has Wifi and excel­lent for SNS events and gath­er­ing. Details are HERE, sorry only could find a Japan­ese Page

今日は中村さんのもう一軒の豚屋さん、トンカツ豚組西麻布へ行きました。弊社@focalstoreが毎月行っている「ユーザーと触れ合う会」ですが、弊社が招待するのではなく全員で楽しく割り勘で食事をすると言う趣旨のもので、私も初参加のうえ、発西麻布豚組しました。古くからの友人や@nobiさんも来てくれて、会は大いに盛り上がりました(声の大きい古くからの友人も来てくれて嬉しかった)。しゃぶしゃぶより私はコチラにハマリそう。

余談ですが、写真、今までの物と比べるとあまり綺麗じゃない?そうこれはEOS7Dのフラッシュ付き撮影でレンズもF4の17-40mm. EOS5Dは床に落としすぎたのでいま調整中。本体のペンキは剥がれ、まるで戦場のカメラマンの持ち物状態。Twitterでも某大先生カメラマンに「そんな粗末に扱うな、早く調整に出しなさい」とアドバイスを頂いたのでCanon行きです。早く帰ってこい、5Dちゃん。

This is Menchi Katsu, a minced pork flat­tened and fried, but uses the Span­ish Iberia Pork. イベリコ豚のメンチ、ソースなしで頂いても美味しい。最高の味だった。

This is TON-KATSU mean­ing PORK-CUTLET. コチラがトンカツ。最高に美味しい。

その昔、私が初めて働いたお店は「とんかつ屋」でした。その後フレンチの世界に転じ、様々な経験を重ねて参りましたが、このたび、「単品勝負」の奥深さに惹かれ、再びとんかつの世界に挑むこととなりました。これまで経験を最大限に活かしながら、私たちにしかできない「究極のとんかつ」をご提供すること。それが私たち「豚組」の唯一にして最大の目標です。豚肉はもちろん、油や付け合わせ、おもてなしに至るまで、高い志で徹底的にこだわって参ります。私たちの思う「究極」を、是非一度ご体験ください。

西麻布 豚組 詳しくはコチラ

料理長 大石智

大石さんのページを見ても気合の高さが判ります。単品物の奥深さを味われる店です。

おこし頂いたお友達、仲間と私を含む変態さん、ありがとう。。。

今日は朝からレースに参加するため富士にいた。昨夜は10時に寝て、朝3時に起き、何気なくtwitterを見ていると、チリ沖地震で津波が発生し、太平洋を横断していることを知った。その後ハワイのヒロ湾が危ないとの情報と#hitsunamiなるハッシュタグを発見。ページを開くと、そこにはUstreamで流れるハワイ・ローカルテレビと下にはtwitterのTL。また同ページには数多くのリンクで色々な情報がダッシュボードのように見れる。Ustreamされているテレビの映像では、現地ローカルの個人がSkype, twit­ter, Utreamを利用し現状を細かく報告。Ustreamの中にUstreamがある世界が新鮮だった。日本人が多く居住するハワイなのにNHKはオリンピック放送を続けていた。私はリアルタイムで津波が迫るハワイの人たちの目撃証言を360度リアルタイムで聞いたり見たりできた。私が島に住んでいたら大変貴重な情報だったと思う。

私が泊まった宿はホテル・グリーン富士。ネットも何もない山上のホテルだ。emobileで繋げていたが、度々信号を失う中、再接続し画面をずっと見ていた。私も外のモバイル環境、電波の無い中このような災害を見ていると人事とは思えなかった。今回再確認したのは電波のインフラが持ちこたえていれば、SNSは非常に優秀な「予防」情報源になる。チリのな「瞬時の破壊」の場合はレスキューや家族探し、危険箇所情報の共有等が出き、予防は出きないが災害後の支援はできる。

しかし情報操作や間違った情報が流れる危険性もあり、何らかのオーソリティーも今後必要となるだろう。国民総ジャーナリスト時代が到来してもう少し成熟すると、初期のインターネットと同じように危険な使い方をする個人や企業も出てくるのは間違えない。

このような災害を事前に想定し、ページと情報の準備をしている米国に比べ、日本は多少遅れていると思う。そのためにしか利用されない地震予報装置等は過去の消物、できるだけ政府も速いうちtwitterで携帯へ警報のpushも導入した方がいいだろう。

昨日早朝のtweet

my tweet 地震数時間後世界の裏を襲う災害「津波」は「瞬時の災害」と違い、発生するまで時間がかるので現実感が無く、計測も難しいので多分甘く見ると一番怖い災害なのかもしれない。

my tweet 日本人が多く居るハワイなのにNHKはオリンピック優先か?#hit­sunami Ustreamで42000人が見ているチャンネル http://hitsunami.info/ 前島全員低地や海岸避難、サイレンが鳴り響くハワイ約21時間前 via web

my tweet テレビ局もSkypeとUstream, Twit­terでチリもハワイも実況中。#hit­sunami

my tweet ハワイの船は全て沖にだしたらしい。そちらの方が被害が小さい。またヒロ湾の形状は津波を増幅するので危険らしい。#hit­sunami

my tweet 後数分でハワイに津波が到達するらしい。何も無いといいが。。。NHKは依然天気予報。。#hit­sunami

my tweet ヒロ ハワイ津波到着まであと15分

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