Web/Tech

Japan Telecom Recovery - Help Iwate by drinking sake! via YouTube

This is a bit of off-track from "telecom recovery" issue, but these YouTube videos are going viral in Japan now. Hana-Sake Nippon (word play for "Bloom" and "Flower and sake"), appearantely the coalition of sake-brewers in Iwate prefecture, one of the hardest-hit area in Tohoku by the quake, is putting up these PR videos, asking people to "go admire cherry blossoms to help Iwate's economy."

Early April is the season for cherry blossoms in most areas in Japan, and traditionally, people would go out and picnic under cherry trees in parks, as a great excuse for drinking lots of sake.  However, due to power shortage and other logistical difficulties, as well as due to the public mood to "refrain from wild parties", sake sales in general has plummeted to the bottom.

Tohoku area sake brewers, as a consequence, is facing the threat of "economic secondary disaster".  They have decided to turn to the power of viral (and doing it cheap and quick).  There are 3 videos in this series as of now.

Please, people in the world, drink Sake from Tohoku area (Iwate, Miyagi, Fukushima etc.) to help them overcome this difficulties!  (=good excuse to drink sake under cherry trees!)

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Power shortage a big headache for tech industry, 3/22

This morning, my Twitter time line was filled with a rumor that Google Japan is fleeing Tokyo and moving to Osaka.  It turned out to be a false rumor, but they say it is true that some employees are temporarily moved to the Western part of Japan. That is credible, as I am hearing similar reports from my friends in Japanese tech industry, and it is NOT because of the fear of radiation, but is because of power shortage.

According to Nikkei Newspaper 3/19, TEPCO, the power utility in Tokyo and its vicinity, is trying very hard to recover its generator capacity but the output is still expected to remain much lower than demand.

Here's the math.

Capacity:

TEPCO's capacity before the quake:  63 mil. kw

-> Current capacity after the quake:  34 mil. kw

-> Expected capacity as of End April:  42 mil. kw

Damaged plants

  • Fukushima Nuke Plant capacity:  9 mil. kw -> no hope to recover
  • Higashi-Ogishima power plant (Kawasaki, Kanagawa):  2 mil. kw -> expected to recover by end April
  • Kashima power plant (Kashima, Igaragi):  4 mil. kw -> expected to recover by end April
  • Hirono power plant (Hirono, Fukushima) and Hitachinaka (Tokai, Ibaragi) -> will take longer to recover

(TEPCO is planning to increase the operation in other working power plants as well.)

Demand:

Normal demand in winter:  50 mil. kw

Normal demand in summer:  60 mil. kw

This is why rolling blackout is in place right now.  23 wards in Tokyo, the city center, are not currently included in rolling blackout plan, but majority of people are commuting from suburbs.  Trains do not run as scheduled, no elevators run in high-rise, and even in unaffected area, businesses are restraining by turning off neon signs, dimming lights and shortening factory operations.

I am hearing that data centers in Eastern Japan are largely unaffected and are running perfectly fine.  Howerver, due to this power shortage situation, employees are having hard time to come to work and their productivity is low.

Some people are also saying that it is for the "national cause" to diversify the industry locations to avoid power crisis in Tokyo.  Unlike physical factories, IT workers are relatively flexible in terms of work locations. Local governments in Western Japan are gearing up to accommodate such demand.  Not just Osaka, the second largest city in Japan, but also Kyoto has a nice cluster of tech companies, as well as Fukuoka.  It may be actually a good chance to crack the problem of too much concentration in Tokyo, IMHO.

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - "Hack for Japan" being held, 3/19-21

To gather the idea and knowledge of Japanese Web people to come up with better solutions for Japan's current crisis, several major Japanese Web/Net players got together and organized "Hack for Japan" event.  It is currently under way, 3/19-21. Participating companies provide hosting/cloud service, technical help and other resources, and participants can use any open software, including various Web APIs, Android/iPhone, Windows/Mac and so on.  It is open to any developers for free.

As Tokyo/Tohoku area logistics is too hard to maneuver, the event is basicaly held online on Google Wave and Google Moderator, but there are several physical venues in Western Japan.

Participating Companies:

Google Japan, Rakuten, Yahoo! JAPAN, Microsoft Japan, Twitter, Amazon Web Services, Salesforce Japan, OpenStreetMap、Hatena、Mixi、Evernote Corporation, Cloudant Inc., Sakura Internet, Tonchi Dot

Venues:

Kyoto Research Park (capacity: 100), Fukuoka AiP Cafe (20), Okayama Libra Hall (30), Tokukshima Tsukimigaoka Beach Park (capacity unknown)

For further information, please visit the following offical Webpage.

Hack for Japan Website

Twitter Hashtag: #hack4jp

Source:  Hack For Japan announcement page

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Web sites for rescue, 3/16

Many web/net service players are working hard to support the recovery effort, by providing critical information for affected people.  I already have reported about the emergency bulletin board service by telecom carriers, so here are some other useful ones. "Google Person Finder":  Simple service to upload and search whereabout of people.  Available in Japanese, English, Korean, Chinese (mainland/Taiwan), Portuguese and Spanish.

"Google Crisis Response":  Total portal site for related information, including government announcement, medical info, emergency bulletin board access, rolling blackout map search service, Red Cross donations and many more.  Available in Japanese, English, Chinese (mainland) and Korean.

"Google/Honda/Pioneer Road Map":  This is pretty amazing.  The map shows the blue mark on roads where actual automobile traffic happened on the previous day, grey shows roads with no traffic, informing which roads are open for automobiles.  It utilizes the GPS data uploaded from Honda Internavi Premium users' navigation devices, service operated jointly by Honda and Pioneer.

"Google Person Finder BB Photo Album":  Photos of person finder bulletin boards are shared.

"OLIVE":  Non-profit wiki site to share useful ideas for everyday life under the crisis, such as how to keep you warm with newspaper and stylofoam, how to cope with toilet situation, map of food distribution locations, etc.  Available in Japanese, English, Korean and Chinese (mainland).

"Yahoo! power info page":  Shows detailed info about rolling blackout, and provide tips to save energy.

"Anti rumor info":  Blog "Ogigami-Shiki" and "Dema Chain Mail" list the typical false rumor on the net regarding the quake, and show the facts against them.  There are some serious false rumors about relief operations, environmental polution etc., and some donation scams have started to pop up on the Net.

My friends over at AMN have gathered and auto-ranked the sites (utilizing data of social book marks, Facebook/Twitter mentions etc.).  Some corporate sites, such as TEPCO and Tokyo Metro (subway), are included on this ranking as well.

Source:  AMN Tohoku Earthquake Info Ranking

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Electronic parts shortage, 3/15

Japan has a significant global market share in many kinds of electronic parts and material, such as DRAM, flash memory, and silicon wafer, and a lot of factories are located in the affected area.  Those items are expected to be short supply and will give impact to the global consumer electronics prices. Bloomberg:  Memory Chip Prices Gain on Concern of Material Supply Shortage After Quake

Wall Street Journal:  Quake Sparks Tech Supply Shortage Concerns

Source:  WirelessWire News 3/15

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Undersea Cable Status, 3/14

Despite the early reports, it looks like many undersea cables reaching to Japan have been damaged. GigaOM 3/14

Wall Street Journal 3/15

Wall Street Journal 3/14

But Japan has lots of cable connected to the U.S., China and other destinations and the re-routing seems to be working fine.  I personally have not had any problem accessing Japanese websites from the U.S.

Telegeography map

Source:  WirelessWire News 3/15

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Skype opens WiFi for free, 3/14

Skype Japan has opened its "Skype Access" WiFi access service for free in Japan for some time in the future. For the following WiFi spots, you have to enter the followingWEP/WAP key.

  • livedoor Wireless (SSID: livedoor-web) 656C626A3633706F327077396A
  • BB Mobile Point (SSID: mobilepoint) 696177616B
  • HotSpot (SSID: 0033) A52DE42CB6

They also provide 80 yen credit to all Japanese Skype users, which corresponds to 30 minutes call to Japanese fixed phone.

Source:  Skype Japan

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Rolling Blackout Effect for Fixed, 3/14

Japan is one of the most sophisticated optical broadband country, but unfortunately, the optics cannot be used in case of power outages.  So the fixed line are affected by blackout pretty seriously. Source:  WirelessWire News, 3/14

Services expected to be unavailable in case of blackout

KDDI

(For consumers)

Telephone:  au Hikari, telephone, KDDI-IP Telephone/050 service, Cable Plus Telephone, Metal Plus Telephone (if a user use his/her own power), ADSL one Telephone Service (if a user use his/her own power), MyLine, MyLine Plus (if a user use his/her own power)

  • ISP:  au Hikari Net Service, ADSL one, Metal Plus Telephone, Dial Up, au one net
  • Other:  au Hikari TV servic

(Enterprise)

  • Telephone:  KDDI Hikari Direct, HDDI Hikari Direct over Powered Ethernet, KDDI Metal Plus (wholesale), KDDI-IP Phone
  • ISP:  KDDI Internet Gateway, Ether Share etc.
  • Intra Net Service: KDDI Wide Area Virtual Switch, KDDI Powered Ethernet, KDDI Ether-VPN etc.

NTT East (local service)

  • Telephone:  Hikari Telephone, ISDN, analog telephone (if a user use his/her own power)
  • ISP:  Flet's Hikari, Flet's ADSL, Flet's ISDN
  • Business Service:  Business Ether, Flet's VPN, PBX, Key-Telephone

NTT Communications (long distance)

  • Telephone:  OCN Dot Phone, Hikari Line (Arcstar Direct etc.)
  • ISP:  OCS
  • Enterprise data service:  IP-VPN, e-VLAN, dedicated line etc.

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Internet radio and TV, 3/13

As of 3/13, 5pm, radiko (Internet radio) eliminated its area restrictions and anyone can hear its streaming from anywhere in Japan. You can listen to the below stations at radiko.jp or radiko smartphone apps, but due to the high traffic, stations are requesting that non-emergency listeners refrain from accessing the site, and give priority to Tohoku area residents.

Source:  WirelessWire News, 3/13

Available stations:

Kanto Area:  TBS Radio, Bunka Hoso, Nippon Hoso, Radio Nikkei, InterFM, FM TOKYO, J-WAVE

Kansai Area:  ABC Radio, MBS Radio, OBC Radio Osaka, FM COCOLO, FM802, FM OSAKA

NHK TV is re-streamed on uStream, NicoNico Douga, Yahoo.  NHK Daiichi Radio is streamed online simultaneously.

Michi

Japan Telecom Recovery - Emergency bulletin board, 3/11

All the mobile carriers started "Emergency Mobile Bulletin Board" right after the quake on 3/11. Source:  WirelessWire News, 3/11

NTT DoCoMo:  iMenu top menu, only available to upload from Aomori, Iwate, Miyagi, Akita, Yamagata, Fukushima, Ibaragi, Tochigi, Gunma, Saitama, Chiba, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Niigata, Yamanashi, Nagano prefectures.  For smartphones, Emergency Bulletin app is available from DoCoMo Market.

au (KDDI):  EZ Web top menu, or auone top menu

Softbank Mobile:  Yahoo! Keitai or My Softbank, and iPhone Emergency App

E-mobile:  Bookmark -> EMnet service

Wilcom:  http://dengon.clubh.ne.jp

For access from PC, see the following:

NTT East (Fixed Local) is providing Emergency Bulletin Board Dial 117 and Broadband Bulletin Web117.

Michi