WHEN THE CROWDSTRUCK The consequences of the CrowdStrike anti-virus bug were interesting. Ususally Australia sleeps through these international tech disasters, but it seems CrowdStrike rolled out their self-sabotaging virus detection update during business hours here yesterday. Nevertheless my business tasks processing and sending orders were unaffected - post office, payment processing, banking, e-commerce platforms, and of course my own Linux-hosted website, worked without a hitch. It wasn't until I _finished_ doing things using a computer that I found out about the IT chaos that had apparantly begun while I was working away. In the car to drive to the post office I turned on the analogue FM radio tuned to ABC Classic (used to be Classic FM, but apparantly my method of listening is old-hat), expecting the weekday 4PM news bulletin to begin shortly. It didn't, without explanation, but the announcer did, between rather glitchy playback of classical music tracks, welcome listeners of "ABC RN", another station broadcast by the state-owned media service. Their sudden conversion to the pleasures of classical music in place of under-funded talk radio shows being blamed on an IT outage affecting the ABC as well as various other institutions that I thankfully didn't need to associate myself with. "But here on ABC Classic the music goes on..." she said, except a few times it didn't, but that's not abnormal (My favouite was the time they started a classical track playing then accidentally switched back to the studio mic during a private chat discussing the programme and then the broadcast went silent shortly after the announcer said "shit" in conversation). All fine at the post office, and for uploading parcel tracking numbers back home. Early in the evening though my tired-looking CFA pager, which I always wear to receive fire call-outs with the fire brigade, went off to advise that "An IT interruption is currently affecting many organisations across Australia, this includes some of the CFA partners but CFA emergency call taking and dispatch operations is not affected at this time. Updates will be provided as the situation develops". I guess the situation didn't "develop" since there were no more updates. Many members of the Country Fire Authority now use, often really poorly designed, smartphone apps that replace the CFA-issued pagers which are served by a dedicated radio network. I guess many may have been concerned that those apps could have failed due to the bug breaking their back-end servers, so nobody would turn out to fires (not that many were likely on that rainy day). That night as usual I switched on the TV, broadcast TV of course since I don't 'stream'. All was normal until I switched over for the 7PM ABC TV news, seeing as I hadn't got my daily fix of headlines about presidential politics in the USA (admittedly far from disinteresting lately) from the radio earlier. Trump and Biden had been banished from the first third of the news report, along with the usual TV news studio, the entire country's state-based ABC news programmes having been taken off-air by the software bug and replaced by a "national edition" talking mainly about this IT disaster (as usual somehow without really saying anything). No weather report at all either, which was rather disappointing. The weatherman who did the state and national weather reports retired recently and they seem to have been taking emphasis off it since, I suppose you're supposed to use the internet now. Anyway after that it was back to normal for an evening's ad-free screening of the CGI-heavy (realism somewhat lighter) movie Gravity (2013), where the nation got to watch a hot but fluster-prone astronaut experience her own frustrations with technology. With more explosions though. My take away from all this is how so much technology that's in principle nothing to do with the internet, and in the case of analogue radio not even computers, is still sensitive to these issues. With a few computers down an organisation like the ABC couldn't effectively work around the problem, even to record and distribute a radio programme to be broadcast. This even with a disruption so minor (the internet itself still worked fine) that I could do my own routine online tasks completely unaware that there was a problem. Inter-dependencies with computers have clearly become impenetrable in practice these days. - The Free Thinker