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United States News Title: Revealed: Hawaii’s emergency missile alert interface is unspeakably terrible Honolulu Civil Beat (@CivilBeat) January 16, 2018 Everyone scoffed when the governor claimed that someone had triggered Saturdays false alarm by hitting the wrong button but its not so hard to believe now, is it? (The false alarm option at the top of the photo was added only in the last few days, presumably to avoid 38-minute delays in calming people down the next time this happens.) If you use a computer regularly, you know at a glance why the design is egregious: It does nothing to visually segregate the drill option from the real attack (PACOM) option. At the barest minimum, youd expect all test/drill options to be grouped together and all real-alert options to be grouped together rather than all jumbled up, so that a technician who wants to run a drill stays away from the real-alert options altogether. Ideally drills and real alerts would be on completely different parts of the screen as a visual cue as to which options are safe and which arent. Youd also expect PACOM to be in a red font and/or blinking to warn of the gravity of selecting it. (Ive seen at least one liberal on social media grumbie this morning that the poor interface here is a byproduct of underfunding state agencies. How much extra would it cost the states IT guy to red-font the real attack option?) And if you do select it, youd certainly expect a dialog box to pop up announcing in 200-point font, YOURE ABOUT TO SEND A REAL ALERT OF A MISSILE LAUNCH. ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT TO DO THIS? Or better yet, as Jason Kottke notes, instead of offering the technician a simple yes/no option on whether to send the alert, you could have him type a specific word to initiate it. Thats happened to me before in using mundane productivity apps; if you want to delete something thats potentially important, the app will require you to type delete rather than have you click anything since youre more likely to make an absentminded mistake by clicking. Hawaii technicians could be forced to type launch to trigger the real alert and drill to trigger the drill alert when theyre testing the system. Even the placement of the new false alarm option is stupid. The last thing you want if there really is a missile launch is to have something sitting right there on the main screen that could be accidentally clicked and lead to Hawaiians not taking cover when they really need to. The obvious solution is to have the drill options and the real attack/false alarm options on completely different pages so that technicians would stay entirely away from the latter except in case of a genuine emergency. At least now we understand why the person who initiated the alert on Saturday isnt being fired. Even with his training, its all too easy to see how this mistake might have been made innocently. In other nuclear-jitters news this morning, today a Japanese broadcaster issued its own false alarm about an inbound North Korean missile. Coincidence, or is someone playing a dangerous game by hacking alert systems? Poster Comment: Most state/local early warning systems also require that specific messages that can be issued are pre-recorded in advance and formatted into one of several specialized file formats and uploaded to the emergency warning control system in advance. This does explain why they were unable to get a cancellation message issued. They would have had to fire up a computer with the proprietary software, generate the proper message, then upload to the system, then add it to the system menu shown above in order to be able to send out an All Clear message to the public. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tooconservative (#0)
This is the shit we expect to see from people with no skills, no self-respect and who could only get government 'jobs'. If they were good programmers, they'd have real jobs.
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