November 30 is the official end of hurricane season in North America. Puerto Rico's Internet routing announcements are 95% of pre-Maria levels. US Virgin Islands Internet routing announcements are 80% of pre-Maria levels. The #(provider name)sucks tweets on twitter in South Florida and South Texas have essentially stopped. I assume this means that providers have repaired almost all Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Irma damage.
Any idea what their pre and post traffic levels are? John John Souvestre - New Orleans LA -----Original Message----- From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Sean Donelan Sent: 2017 November 30, Thu 21:35 To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: End of 2017 hurricane season November 30 is the official end of hurricane season in North America. Puerto Rico's Internet routing announcements are 95% of pre-Maria levels. US Virgin Islands Internet routing announcements are 80% of pre-Maria levels. The #(provider name)sucks tweets on twitter in South Florida and South Texas have essentially stopped. I assume this means that providers have repaired almost all Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Irma damage.
On 2017-12-01 01:15, John Souvestre wrote:
The #(provider name)sucks tweets on twitter in South Florida and South Texas have essentially stopped. I assume this means that providers have repaired almost all Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Irma damage.
In an area touched by freezing rain, homes are not damaged and people expect services back within hours and issue "#provider sucks" tweets if they don't. But in an area where homes are rendered uninhabitable, it takes a while before residents can return to their address (either new or repaired home) and then ask for services to be restored. The advantage of this is this is more of a staggered restauration process so less load on utilities who have more time to repair the shared infrastructure before dealing with individual homes.
On 2017-11-30 22:34, Sean Donelan wrote:
The #(provider name)sucks tweets on twitter in South Florida and South Texas have essentially stopped. I assume this means that providers have repaired almost all Hurricane Harvey and Hurricane Irma damage.
Sorry for delay in this old topic. In early december, I bicycled the florida keys. Some of the old railway bridges have been rehabilitated and turned into bike paths. One of these, Toms Harbor Cut Bridge, between Duck Key and Conch key (between Marathon and Isla Morada) (24.7833 -80.9057) There was an AT&T fibre optic cable clearly temporarily hung from the concrete railing through the bike bridge, and then hung in free air for some distance before going underground. This was in an area with much damage. picture: http://www.vaxination.ca/temp/virb0095.jpg (and yes, bike was leaning against the cable :-( So just because service has been restored from the point of view of remote network managers does not mean that the reconstruction is complete. You may find much temporary setups. When one side of the road has been partly washed out by the ocean, chances are that underground cables were damaged if they were on that side. To put things in perspective: In an area that is evacuated, such as the Keys, it takes time before a resident that had been assumed evacuated never returns and is then switched to "missing" (at which point his/her/their home has already been bulldozed and debris moved to side of road for pickup). This means specialized workers to comb through debris to look for human remains. This is long after the media has left. (and yes, I saw that in the Keys). Initial reports of loss of life are totally meaningless. Meanwhile Key West was mostly spared and most of the sunken boats had already been removed. So the average tourist wouldn't really see what Irma did there. It was business as usual with cruise ships etc. The major damage was in the middle keys where media never put much attention.
participants (3)
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Jean-Francois Mezei
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John Souvestre
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Sean Donelan