Coronavirus increasingly appears likely to be the worst natural disaster in decades. I don't think it is yet appreciated how much it directly and indirectly attacks infrastructure, distinct from most disasters.
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Air *itself* is a logistical challenge, in the present moment. We assume infinite amounts are free most of the time and that the exceptions have already been mathed out by some expert deep in the figurative bowels of an architectural firm. And now the HVAC details really matter.
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That's it with the sobering thoughts. The somewhat good news is that we're better equipped to quickly pivot infrastructure than we've ever been, thanks to changes in how it is constructed which happened mostly very recently in human terms.
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A precisely calibrated small pocket of air, at timeshttps://twitter.com/CassieY4/status/1246237480149381120 …
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What is an essential service in the medical supply chain? A guy who manufactures garden hoses with a sideline in high flow nasal oxygen tubes
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Some of us did.
#pulseshooting#orlandostrong any rapid unusual event overwhelms local resources. Easy to address in AWS with planning, but with out the right programming... Cross train ppl to give X emergency care, etc screeners etc. Temp workers and materials. Yeap & ppl forget -
Some events like the Boston Marathon bombings happen within 15 minutes of five of the best hospitals in the country. Other events like this one happen within 15 minutes (and 50, and 500) of *every* hospital system in the country
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it also depends on the integrity of office staff.
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