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coining a term for the awful buyer’s experience on sites like car-hire or air-travel websites
(tags: hate-selling conversion marking upselling travel web consumer)
How Irish Navy’s expertise saved 367 from 30-second sinking in Mediterranean
War-game exercises saved the day:
As the Ribs made their assessment of the situation and began reassuring those on board that help was at hand, the hopelessly overloaded vessel suddenly listed and sank. The sinking took just over 30 seconds. In those 30 seconds, the Captain of the LE Niamh took a number of instant command decisions that saved hundreds of lives. Most of the refugees cannot swim. Their life expectancy in the water would be measured in seconds. The crew of the Ribs immediately began throwing orange lifejackets into the water – encouraging the now frenzied and milling survivors to cling to them. Individuals, then groups clung to the lifejackets – and one another – as the Ribs rallied around trying to keep the floating human mass from dispersal into wider waters and almost certain death. In the meantime, the commander of the LE Niamh managed to manoeuvre close in to the survivors where spare life-rafts were launched into the water. These 25-man inflatable life-rafts were specifically ordered and kept on board the LE Niamh following a “war-gaming” exercise, where the officers and crew envisaged such a nightmare scenario. Had this forward planning not taken place – there would have been no such extra inflatable lifeboats on board.
(tags: war-gaming planning navy ireland mediterranean sea boats refugees migration drowning liferafts)
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A well-maintained list with a potted description of each one (via HN)
(tags: postmortems ops uptime reliability)
Advantages of Monolithic Version Control
another Dan Luu post — good summary of the monorepo’s upside
(tags: monorepo git mercurial versioning source-control coding dependencies)
“A Review Of Criticality Accidents, 2000 Revision”
Authoritative report from LANL on accidents involving runaway nuclear reactions over the years from 1945 to 1999, around the world. Illuminating example of how incident post-mortems are handled in other industries, and (of course) fascinating in its own right
(tags: criticality nuclear safety atomic lanl post-mortems postmortems fission)