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Thread is about the various issues surrounding Japan in the aftermath of the recent earthquake. Don't bring the shit side of the internet to the thread, and post with the realization that this thread is very important, and very real, to your fellow members.
Do not post speculative and unconfirmed news you saw on TV or anywhere else. Generally the more dramatic it sounds the less likely it's true. |
On March 16 2011 02:26 fanta[Rn] wrote: Please tweet this: People in Tokyo, please stop panic buying! Your fellow countrymen face possible starvation! #japan #tsunami #earthquake Haven't been able to comment on the NHK ustream via Twitter or Facebook these past few days for some reason... hmm...
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Can you or someone else translate that into Japanese and tweet it please?
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On March 16 2011 02:57 fanta[Rn] wrote: Can you or someone else translate that into Japanese and tweet it please? I hardly know how to use Twitter, but if you can send it out, here's the translation: 買いだめやめてください!東京で人が飢えてます。
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Tweet this please: 買いだめやめてください!東京で人が飢えてます。 #japan #tsunami #earthquake #panic
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I finally got some more information about the refinery fires that are still ongoing in various parts of Japan, courtesy of another poster on a different forum.
TOKYO (Dow Jones)--Cosmo Oil Co. (5007.TO) said Tuesday that fire-fighting operations are continuing at its Chiba refinery near Tokyo.
Cosmo Oil Co. has shut its 220,000-barrel-a-day Chiba refinery after a magnitude-9.0 earthquake and an accompanying tsunami hit Japan Friday.
The company had said Monday that the fire at the plant was getting smaller but hadn't been extinguished as of 1000 GMT Monday.
A Cosmo Oil spokesman said Tuesday there has been no change in the refinery's status. (Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20110315-703984.html, behind paywall)
![[image loading]](http://i.imgur.com/Bz5BZ.jpg)
(Reuters) - JX Nippon Oil and Energy Corp said on Tuesday that the refinery of subsidiary Kashima Oil Co has remained shut since a strong earthquake and tsunami hit the northeast coast of Japan on Friday.
There is a possibility of some damage to the refining and shipping facilities at Kashima Oil, in Ibaraki prefecture northeast of Tokyo, but further details were not immediately available, a JX spokeswoman said.
JX said earlier on Tuesday that it had begun work to extinguish a fire at its quake-hit Sendai refinery. (Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/15/refinery-operations-jx-idUSTKZ00683720110315)
At least the fire in the JX Sendai refinery seems to be extinguished for now.
![[image loading]](http://i.imgur.com/S0gTG.jpg)
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Elderly couple sobbing and shouting in the rubble looking for their son.
I can't watch anymore. I'm turning off NHK.
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Us Canadians being easily fearmongered by the US media?!
What a suprise!
That's pretty sad. Nice to see the pharmacists telling people to stop doing that, though. That's very responsible.
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oh man I though that the radiation level isn't going to get anywhere... Also, would like for people to give out their thoughts to Japanese, My mom's there and I fear for her and my step family 
Also manifesto please be careful and your family, as well to all the TLers in Japan
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people so love to worry about stuff
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Okay, this is just disgusting exploitation.
They feature an article about how people are irrationally buying iodide tablets, and then they sell them on Bing.
+ Show Spoiler +
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A german electronics shop sold a few hundred Geiger counters and those things cost 300 to 500 euro. People should rather inform themselves and donate this kind of money if they apparently don't need it
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Not sure about Germany, but the people here really should be buying earthquake kits. We're on the ring of fire and we're totally unprepared.
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Saw this interesting Tweet while on Twitter earlier. Kudos to Apple. It really demonstrates the power of technology, even in tragic situations.
+ Show Spoiler +As you all must have heard, the 5th largest earthquake in recorded history hit us on Friday, 2:30pm Japan Time. As Alex often says on TWiM, stories on the ground are often quite different from the stories in the news, and there is a tech story that I'd really like to tell: the story of Apple Inc in Japan.
Full disclosure: I work at Apple at one of its stores in Japan. The earthquake hit while I was working on the first floor of one of their stores. As the entire building swayed, the staff calmly led people from the top 5 floors down to the first floor, and under the ridiculously strong wooden tables that hold up the display computers.
7 hours and 118 aftershocks later, the store was still open. Why? Because with the phone and train lines down, taxis stopped, and millions of people stuck in the Tokyo shopping district scared, with no access to television, hundreds of people were swarming into Apple stores to watch the news on USTREAM and contact their families via Twitter, Facebook, and email. The young did it on their mobile devices, while the old clustered around the macs. There were even some Android users there. (There are almost no free wifi spots in Japan besides Apple stores, so even Android users often come to the stores.)
You know how in disaster movies, people on the street gather around electronic shops that have TVs in the display windows so they can stay informed with what is going on? In this digital age, that's what the Tokyo Apple stores became. Staff brought out surge protectors and extension cords with 10s of iOS device adapters so people could charge their phones & pads and contact their loved ones. Even after we finally had to close 10pm, crowds of people huddled in front of our stores to use the wifi into the night, as it was still the only way to get access to the outside world.
Anyway, I mention this not because I work at Apple now, or because I'm an admitted fanboy, but because I'm genuinely proud of the Apple Japan staff and their willingness to stay open to help people that day. And I'm also impressed with the way Apple's products (and yes, Google's, Twitter's, and Facebook's) helped them that day. Even after we had to close, many of the staff stayed outside the store to fixing iphones and teaching people how to contact family or stay informed via wifi.
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On March 16 2011 03:48 dump wrote: Not sure about Germany, but the people here really should be buying earthquake kits. We're on the ring of fire and we're totally unprepared. I think you're prepared for that kind of an earthquake, i just don't think you were prepared for a tsunami, could be wrong though.
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On March 16 2011 03:56 FLu wrote:Show nested quote +On March 16 2011 03:48 dump wrote: Not sure about Germany, but the people here really should be buying earthquake kits. We're on the ring of fire and we're totally unprepared. I think you're prepared for that kind of an earthquake, i just don't think you were prepared for a tsunami, could be wrong though.
There's one city called Richmond which is expected both to liquefy as well as sink underwater in the event of an earthquake. Vancouver also has few if any building codes for earthquake preparedness, the workmanship is generally quite shoddy, and the only awareness people have is one or two short earthquake drills per year at school.
I don't think Vancouver would stand a chance in an M9.
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I wanted to add a little substance to my claims that there might be a small silver lining to the crisis. Krugman believes that given Japan's financial situation, the necessary government spending could serve as a massive stimulus to the Japanese economy. Adam Posen wrote a nice policy paper that became a book on Japan's lost decade of 90-2000 which is worth a peak if any one is curious about issues of liquity trap and the Japanese banking.
Great news to hear that the refinery fire is under control.
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On March 16 2011 04:11 Sabu113 wrote:I wanted to add a little substance to my claims that there might be a small silver lining to the crisis. Krugman believes that given Japan's financial situation, the necessary government spending could serve as a massive stimulus to the Japanese economy. Adam Posen wrote a nice policy paper that became a book on Japan's lost decade of 90-2000 which is worth a peak if any one is curious about issues of liquity trap and the Japanese banking. Great news to hear that the refinery fire is under control.
really awesome economic system we have, it benefits from lots of shit getting destroyed so it can rebuild it
doesnt something about this strike you as inherently wrong?
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