If you insist on staying at your computer while a hurricane’s on its way, Google still won’t say, "I’m sorry, Dave . . . . I’m afraid that’s something I cannot allow to happen." A yet-to-be-released tool may, however, try to let you know what’s coming.
Squatters Fly Kites In Hurricane Season
As the morning news shows led their programs regaling the audience about nothing happening in Florida (you have to get Michelle Kosinski on camera somehow), disaster domain scammers were probably quite busy taking advantage of ICANN’s five-day return policy.
WinXP Routing – Staying Online During Hurricane Wilma
WinXP Routing – My consulting services business is heavily dependent on Internet access. Without it, I am pretty much dead in the water.
Hurricane Katrina and the Dot Com Bubble
There has never been more information. And that’s exactly the problem. Too much information too quickly published is just as bad as too little.
Eyes On The Hurricane Scam Sites
By now you can see it coming, almost as soon as Hurricane Katrina made landfall, scam artists were setting up their online piggy banks to collect the pennies of the unwitting. Rita, not quite the shrew that Katrina was, will no doubt see Rita relief scams, and an international “call to arms,” has been launched to flog the offenders.
Online Content and Hurricane Katrina
The Internet is changing the way people view the world, both in terms what’s out there and what’s not out there. With the prolific disaster along the Gulf Coast, FEMA requested media new organizations not show the dead in their coverage of the aftermath. As we’re finding out, bloggers and photographers are providing stories and images that probably won’t make the nightly news.
Hurricane Katrina Drives Traffic to Blogs & News Search Engines
Hurricane Katrina made landfall at Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, at approximately 7:10 a.m. EDT on Aug. 29, 2005.
Napster Nails Hurricane Relief
I have an iPod, so I get my online music primarily from Apple’s iTunes store. My wife has a Samsung digital media player, so she uses Napster.
Citizens Use Google Maps To Help Hurricane Victims
Two software engineers from Texas put up a website on Wednesday for people affected by the damage of Hurricane Katrina. They use a map from Google to help people pin down areas that were affected.
Hurricane Katrina assistance: Blog for Relief today
Hurricane Katrina has devestated New Orleans and much of the Gulf Coast region with her fury. Bloggers can help and do our part.