Blackout summary IV

Today the power supply has failed again, suposedly due to an storm.

Here goes the updated list of blackouts I have been able to compile, with comments if any:

  1. 2005-Dec-13
  2. 2005-Dec-21
  3. 2006-May-26 (The card-based automated access to the Faculty broke down)
  4. 2006-Jun-04
  5. 2006-Jun-08
  6. 2006-Jun-13
  7. 2006-Jun-16
  8. 2006-Jul-04 (Orpheus didn’t fall)
  9. 2006-Sep-14 (Orpheus fell, the DNSs fell, the DHCP servers fell)

Summary: 9 blackouts in 274 days, or 30.4 dpb (days per blackout). 72 days since last blackout. Average dpb went up by 4.9. However, these data might be lacking, for I haven’t recorded the blackouts in August (I was on holiday for three weeks).

First post in the series: here

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Blackout summary III

Today the power supply has failed again twice: first for some 15min; 10min later, for some other 5min.

Here goes the updated list of blackouts I have been able to compile, with comments if any:

  1. 2005-Dec-13
  2. 2005-Dec-21
  3. 2006-May-26 (The card-based automated access to the Faculty broke down)
  4. 2006-Jun-04
  5. 2006-Jun-08
  6. 2006-Jun-13
  7. 2006-Jun-16
  8. 2006-Jul-04 (Orpheus didn’t fall)

Summary: 8 blackouts in 204 days, or 25.5 dpb (days per blackout). 19 days since last blackout. Average dpb went down by 0.8.

First post in the series: here

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Blackout summary II

Today the power supply has failed again, so here goes the updated list of blackouts I have been able to compile, with comments if any:

  1. 2005-Dec-13
  2. 2005-Dec-21
  3. 2006-May-26 (The card-based automated access to the Faculty broke down)
  4. 2006-Jun-04
  5. 2006-Jun-08
  6. 2006-Jun-13
  7. 2006-Jun-16

Summary: 7 blackouts in 184 days, or 26.3 dpb (days per blackout).

First post in the series: here

Comments

Blackout summary

Today the power supply failed twice within a couple of minutes, and it just fed me up. I don’t know if our supplying company (Iberdrola) was the culprit or not. Most likely it was, as it has definitely been in the past.

I am presently a member of Prof. J.M. Ugalde‘s research group, in the Chemistry Faculty of the Donostia Campus of the UPV-EHU (University of the Basque Country), and thus the reader must realize that the blackouts I’ll enumerate have affected several Faculties in the University Campus, as well as the Donostia Internatinal Physics Center (DIPC), a first-class research center located nearby. The latter has suffered plenty computer problems (hard disks, power supplies and motherboards breaking down) due to the numerous blackouts. Needless to say, so has our Computational Chemistry group.

I would like to highlight the facts that:

  • The blackouts are innacceptably frequent. We live, allegedly, in the first world.
  • Each blackout, each interrupted computer activity, each fried down computer… represents a kick in the groin for the research activities. The irresponsible ways of Iberdrola are effectively handicapping the progress in the Basque Country. Yes, as simple as that.

Without further ado, here goes the list of blackouts I have been able to compile, with comments if any:

  1. 2005-Dec-13
  2. 2005-Dec-21
  3. 2006-May-26 (The card-based automated access to the Faculty broke down)
  4. 2006-Jun-04
  5. 2006-Jun-08
  6. 2006-Jun-13

Summary: 6 blackouts in 181 days, or 30.2 dpb (days per blackout). How much is acceptable? 100 dpb, maybe? 365 dpb (one a year)? Certainly one a month is not.

Comments (1)

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