So the big news is of course the blackout that we had.  I am sure I have little that would shed any light on the whole situation (no pun intended).  By sheer coincidence I was in a lecture where we were warned a week in advance of routine electrical work that would disrupt all our electrical systems at around 4PM on Thursday.  So I was not surprised when all the lights went out.  I was rather surprised when I discovered that they were out over the whole northeast.  
I ended up staying in Manhattan on Thursday night.  It was hot, but we made it.  New Yorkers have been learning to deal with the unexpected, and we did fine.  
I spent the weekend on Long Island (Cedarhurst) because I had planned this a week in advanvce.  I spent some time with some family.  They also had power before my part of Manhattan.  They were only down for a few hours.  
What frightens me is that it is only a matter of time before the internet goes down too.  While information is very distributed, as is the computing, there must be some routers that are centralized.  I frankly know little about the architecture of the net, and I do know that it was designed initially to resist just these kinds of things, I would love some reassurance that this can't happen to the net.  Does email still work on the original principles that the ARPANET people envisioned; ie, that in the event of a problem, email would get rerouted via some other nodes?  This was particularly unforseen - everything was out.  Shouldn't we have had some backup plan, especially for New York?
 
 
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