Technology trying to save a life

This is really something that touches me: A guy is missing after he went alone on a boat trip, and some of his friends and family use the net to enable people to help searching him. This is not one of the usual “please help to find xyz” chain letters – this is something where everybody can help.

Well, it’s not just a guy – it’s Jim Gray, a computer scientist who played an important role in the development of technologies like databases and transaction processing. People were able to convince the NASA to include the area where he could have drifted to to be included in a satellite photo scan, and also being photographed by ER-2 aircraft. Werner Vogels has some technical details about what is being done.

Now the great thing actually is that you can help, too, and here is how it works: You log on to Amazon’s Mechanical Turk service using you Amazon account, and you will be presented with one of the pictures of the area where Jim and his boat might have drifted to. You inspect the picture and see if it contains something that might look like a sail boat. Examples of what it would look like are given, so the average internet user should be able to spot the difference between plain water and an artficial object being on the surface.

Usually computer scientists are not seen as people that are involved with saving lives. But I sincerely hope that the internet community can play an important role in finding Jim. We are using technology he helped to invent, and now there is a chance that technology helps to save his live.

Update (2007-07-29): There is still no sign of Jim or his boat. Wired has a great article with much more background.

Moving to a new host

After the recent arrival of WordPress 2.1 I decided it’s time to move my tiny web presence to a real host (as opposed to self-hosting on my home DSL line which I did ever since 2001).

Installing WordPress went fine (as usual). But I could find a way to migrate my content over from the old box. The new WordPress version has a new database schema, so I couldn’t just import the raw SQL.

As usual, the answer is just as far away as a quick Google search, and again I am amazed by the timeliness of the solutions the open-source world creates. I found Aaron Brazell‘s “WordPress-to-WordPress Import” plugin. For me, the most important aspect was the export part – I installed the plugin on the old box and exported the content to a WXR file (WordPress eXtended RSS). This is the format the new 2.1 version of WordPress uses, and I was able to upload that file to my new installation and get it imported.

Discovered openBC

Last week I was invited by a collegue to join openBC, a website that tries to find and encourage networks of people. I had been asked before but I always thought that it was only useful for freelancers. But it was a weekend, by wife and son both stayed in bed with a light virus infection, and so I had plenty of time to explore the site and try to find people.

I should have done this moths ago! I am very bad in networking and keeping in touch with people, but within two days more than 20 friends, collegues and other people I know confirmed me as a contact. And there are lots of others I can think of that are not there yet.

I don’t think I will used it to make new contacts, but the ability for people to keep their contact information up to date themselves is a great reason for me to stay there for a while. This might not be the platform’s inteded usage, but it is enough for me to try it.

If you are looking for someone you lost contact with, give it a try!