-
46 votes
-
Well, today was scary (blackout in Portugal and Spain)
I'm writing this as a way to, I guess, journal my thoughts but also share my experience, here's hoping it makes an interesting read. Sorry in advance if this feels disjointed or disorganized, I'm...
I'm writing this as a way to, I guess, journal my thoughts but also share my experience, here's hoping it makes an interesting read. Sorry in advance if this feels disjointed or disorganized, I'm writing as I go.
So for those of you that don't know, today there was a massive blackout in Iberia and some regions of France, and it was a total blackout. Over 60 million people were affected.
The causes are still unclear, but it appears that it was due to a rare meteorological event that took out a high voltage line. This line distabilized all of the grid and took out the power. As far as we know, there was no cyber attack or anything of the sort.
Anyway, here's how things went down for me.
Today I woke up at 8:00 in the morning, went to work as usual. In my office, we had a completely normal morning as usual. But then, around 11:30, power goes out. Our monitors stopped working, lights shut down, ventilation system turned off, the whole shebang.
I thought, "just another blackout, should come back any moment". But then, my colleague sitting on my side, was on a call with someone in Porto - we were in another city - and that the power there was also out. (our wifi had UPS, so we had internet for a while).
While very rare, it actually wasn't the first time that this happened. Last year we had an outage that took out several regions in Portugal. So I thought, "again? Weird."
People started talking to each other, calling friends and family to ask them if they also had the outage. And sure enough, all of them did. Soon enough we started to find out that even Lisbon and Algarve were missing power, so it was a national outage.
Cellular data still worked, I started refreshing all the news websites that I knew of and checking r/portugal on reddit. These moments were... Not unnerving per se, but worrisome. Never in my life I experienced something like this.
Some news started coming in, but none of them mentioned anything that we already didn't know. Just that there was a outage and that there wasn't a lot of information about it.
Comments on reddit started saying that this outage was also international, that regions in Spain were affected. Soon after, also France. Then some also said that it happened in Germany, Switzerland, Belgium and Italy.
Soon after, it dropped, and I paraphrase the title of the news: "Outage in Europe. Military personnel summoned".
My dudes, the brainstorm and red flags that went in my head at this moment...... I kept my cool and tried to stay calm, but internally I was going at 300 km/h. The only logical conclusion at this time was "Russia is f*cking invading us".
Didn't help that, at this time, there still wasn't any confirmations if it was a cyber attack or not, so all the possibilities were on the table as far as I was concerned.
I kept refreshing, waiting for the page to update with more information, while hanging out with my colleagues. After a short while, around 12:30 - I think - there were confirmations that it wasn't a cyber attack, but instead a technical incident. The comments and reports were all over the place, some said it was a fire in France, then an airplane that crashed, then it was something in Spain, etc etc. So I decided to tune everything out and only use that page as SSOT.
Glad I did that because, we all decided to go for lunch, and people were all talking about what happened. And some, started saying that russian submarines were spotted along the coast, that they saw it on Facebook. Misinformation on social today must have been on an all time high.
Our company decided to let us go home, so I got into my car and went home. While traveling, I turned on the radio to "Antena 1", a national radio station that kept giving us information about what was happening.
So for starters, yes, the military was summoned but it was to help with all the problems that we were facing. People got stuck in metro stations and elevators. Traffic lights weren't working so there were accidents. People panicked and started buying anything and everything on the supermarkets and stores. Some gas stations closed.
Some supermarkets and stores were closed due to them not being able to process the purchases. The only one that remained open were the ones with generators.
Pharmacies were also facing issues since they couldn't connect to their centralized databases (from what I understood), but there were also worries if their generators would last long enough to keep the medications in low temperatures.
As I was driving, it was also confirmed that general power would return between 6 to 10 hours, but at most it could take 72. General power should be stabilized in a week.
Once I got home, I found my old radio, that has at least 20 years, put some batteries in it and synced to Antena 1, and listened to it throughout the whole day. We're talking about an analogue radio, the kind that you have to rotate the wheel to set the frequency.
One thing that I started to appreciate, is how my iphone 12 pro max, a technological marvel, became basically unusable. While this simple piece of plastic that my parents bought for maybe 5 euros just worked. The cellular towers started to fail throughout the country, as they themselves started to run out of power (I assume they had generators). Meanwhile, this radio, it just worked.
I spent the whole day listening to it, and took the chance to watch Chainsaw man, that I had downloaded on my phone.
It was.... I don't really know how to describe it, but the fact that I could keep up with what was happening was good. The idea of just waiting without knowing what was happening is stressful. This tiny radio was my only source of information, at this point I had no internet, no TV, no calls, no text messages, no nothing, just the radio.
I know that right now it feels like I'm praising the hell out of that radio, but that's because it really did feel like the only connection I had to the outside the world, not counting my neighbours of course.
As for food and water, thankfully I was fine. But there were people that didn't have much at hand and - understandably - were scared that they wouldn't have enough for the next days.
Thankfully though, the guys over at the power plants did an excelent job and power started returning in several regions, one at a time, now at night. I got power a while back.
So... Other than the existencial dread that I got in the morning, it was fine for me personally. Although I can't imagine those that got stuck in metros and elevators and trains.
I got humbled today. We take the internet, TV, power, calls and messages for granted, but today I didn't have access to any of them, and for a while not having them for a few days was a real possibility.
In terms of food and water, I was fine, but I think I'm really going to get one of those survival kits after all, just in case. Hopefully I'll never need it but better prepared than sorry.
73 votes -
The “loneliness epidemic” myth
29 votes -
Swedish far-right extremists pull in boys online and use bodybuilding and fight clubs to further their white supremacist agenda
20 votes -
Z-Library helps students to overcome academic poverty, study finds
38 votes -
We only learnt of our son’s secret online life after he died at 20
42 votes -
What GoFundMe conceals: The campaigns that fail
17 votes -
You’ve read your last free article, such is the nature of mortality
41 votes -
Weighing in on "Man or Bear" - from a woman that left society to the Alaskan wilderness
59 votes -
Kabosu, the beloved Shiba-Inu behind the Doge meme, passes away at 18
36 votes -
Scammers are targeting teenage boys on social media—and driving some to suicide
27 votes -
Inside an OnlyFans empire: Sex, influence and the new American Dream
32 votes -
Not all porn is created equal - is there such a thing as a healthy pornography?
83 votes -
Stop talking to each other and start buying things: Three decades of survival in the desert of social media
17 votes -
The personal brand is dead
6 votes -
Good review sites for everything?
Where do you go for decent reviews? Context-i was looking for a site to find good popcorn, and all the results on google for as far as i cared to scroll were fluff (pun intended). Here’s what i...
Where do you go for decent reviews? Context-i was looking for a site to find good popcorn, and all the results on google for as far as i cared to scroll were fluff (pun intended).
Here’s what i use:
Rtings for stereo.
Wirecutter for appliances.
Reddit for everything else.
And my results are quite mixed, and involve a lot of scrolling.
Where do yall go?
8 votes -
'There's no such thing as a lone wolf.' The online movement that spawned the Buffalo shooting
9 votes -
Inside the online movement to end work
12 votes -
The great offline - The concept of “offline” is built on the earlier concept of “wilderness,” inheriting its flaws and hazards
8 votes -
Birds aren't real, or are they? Inside a Gen Z conspiracy movement
17 votes -
Modern Luddism and the battle for your soul
11 votes -
How to make friends over the internet
5 votes -
How did you find niche stuff before the Internet?
Over in the topic on the perceptions of teenage boys, it was asked, “How did you find niche stuff before the internet?” I thought this was an interesting question and wanted to open it up to hear...
Over in the topic on the perceptions of teenage boys, it was asked, “How did you find niche stuff before the internet?” I thought this was an interesting question and wanted to open it up to hear others’ memories about this.
Edit: Somewhat related, I saw this post today: The most unbelievable things about life before smartphones
21 votes -
Nearly a decade after becoming an advice animal, "10 guy" Connor Sinclair reveals his identity and gives full account of his image
10 votes -
What Internet memes get wrong about Breezewood, Pennsylvania
6 votes -
The things we do and do not say - Notes on the impossibility of talking online and rise of disinterpretation
19 votes -
Nineteen weird things you can watch drop online if you stay home for New Year’s
7 votes -
Online, no one gets to be young
17 votes -
Beware of Facts Man
11 votes -
Thirteen virtual festivals and events this summer
5 votes -
The coronavirus is making us all camgirls: For millions of newly remote workers, doing your job now involves looking the part, figuring out your angles, and performing for the camera
7 votes -
What does it mean to be a ‘Karen’? Karens explain: As the meme has become more prominent online, its meaning has become confused – with real-life Karens caught in the crosshairs
13 votes -
Virtual sex parties offer escape from isolation — if organizers can find a home
6 votes -
Internet 'is not working for women and girls', says Tim Berners-Lee
17 votes -
When we give in to manufactured internet wars
7 votes -
Alienated, alone and angry: What the digital revolution really did to us
15 votes -
Those people we tried to cancel? They’re all hanging out together
17 votes -
In Norilsk, Russia's most isolated major city, the arrival of high-speed internet gave residents a new window onto the world
9 votes -
Is it possible to stop a mass shooting before it happens?: Somewhere in America, an investigator known as the Savant is infiltrating online hate groups to take down the most violent men in the country
16 votes -
How Finland is coping with an ageing population – online lunch clubs are the start of a remote care revolution
9 votes -
The internet has spent three years taking care of this guy’s plants: The subreddit r/takecareofmyplant has 11,300 members, all dedicated to, well, taking care of a plant
17 votes -
'If not I, then who?’: Armed with the internet, Russia’s young people want to remake their world
10 votes -
The boring intimacy of the all-day group chat
8 votes -
The loneliness epidemic
15 votes -
Blind people can struggle to understand memes, so they made their own
11 votes -
Mountain of tongues: Can a nationalist movement from the internet save the world's most scattered people?
5 votes -
Meet Gavin, the eight-year-old with a face shared more than 1bn times
9 votes -
I was a cable guy. I saw the worst of America
42 votes -
Alienation is the most powerful online brand
10 votes -
Living with Slenderman
7 votes