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[67]Bootnotes

D'oh! Misplaced chair shuts down nuclear plant in Taiwan

Surprisingly a real-life scenario and not a plotline from The Simpsons

  [68]Laura Dobberstein Wed 28 Jul 2021 // 13:01 UTC
  [69]64 comment bubble on white
    __________________________________________________________________

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  A reactor at Guosheng Nuclear Power Plant in Taiwan malfunctioned on
  Tuesday morning, triggering an auto shutdown that resulted in the loss
  of 985 megawatts of power – all due to the misplacement of a chair.

  The plant owner, state-run Taipower, said the incident did not cause
  any grid power outages, although the power supply light turned yellow
  from green, indicating the system was running at 6-10 per cent of
  operating reserve ratio.

  Both the power company and the [77]Atomic Energy Commission, a
  government agency for atomic safety, confirmed there was no concern
  about radiation release.

  An investigation by the Association for Natural Energy pinpointed the
  cause: [78]misplaced furniture. Staff working in the control room moved
  the chair to clean and, in the process, knocked the acrylic protective
  cover of a main steam isolation valve switch causing it to tilt, shift,
  and close, setting off a chain reaction that tripped the main steam
  turbine and stopped the reactor.

  Taipower filed a report on the 6:30am oopsie and by 11:40pm the reactor
  was approved to restart.

  However, restarting a nuclear reactor of this type from scratch takes
  three days to reach maximum output, according to the [79]Taipei Times.

  Luckily for Taiwan and the power company, the incident took place early
  in the morning when demand was low and sufficient reserve capacity
  existed.

  The reactor in question is scheduled to pump out power until March
  2023, when its operating permit expires. ®
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  [87]64 Comments

Similar topics

    * MORE
    * [88]Taiwan

  [89]Corrections [90]Send us news
    __________________________________________________________________

Other stories you might like

    *

Container security without governance is neither secure nor governed
      Encryption in a Kubernetes environment
      [91]Timothy Prickett Morgan Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 17:00 UTC
      Sponsored In the first article of our four-part series on
      Kubernetes in the enterprise, we outlined the [92]data services
      that underpin a properly constructed Kubernetes container
      environment. Data security, data governance, data resilience, and
      data discovery are the pillars that support the evolution of
      Kubernetes from raw storage, either persistent or ephemeral, to
      true data services that are suitable for deployment in enterprises.
      In this and subsequent articles we will drill down to those
      specific data services. Here, we cover data security and data
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      same coin. You can think of security as a layer in data governance
      or data governance as a higher-level kind of security.
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      vital to secure data at the storage layer underneath Kubernetes and
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      [93]Continue reading
    *

Two months after Microsoft's fee slash, Google prepares to take a lower cut
from vendors on Cloud Platform
      It's dev-ine intervention
      [94]Paul Kunert Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 16:15 UTC [95]1 comment bubble
      on white
      Google Cloud Platform – the [96]perennially third-placed provider
      in the infrastructure-as-a-service sales race – will reportedly
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      According to [97]CNBC, GCP will take a 3 per cent cut of the
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      A spokesperson at the Chocolate Factory refused to confirm or deny
      the specific financials in the change but sent us a statement:
      [98]Continue reading
    *

Samsung is planning to reverse-engineer the human brain on to a chip
      'Here I am, 100 billion neurons and all you want me to do is
      calculate all the ways this could possibly go wrong?'
      [99]Matt Dupuy Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 15:16 UTC [100]32 comment bubble
      on white
      Industrial mega-conglomerate Samsung is working to "copy and paste"
      the structure of the human brain onto computer chips.
      The Korean megacorp has linked with Harvard University to replicate
      the make-up of the brain in a chip format in the hope that doing so
      will allow future chips to access the brain's "low power, facile
      learning, adaptation to environment, and even autonomy and
      cognition" capabilities.
      According to [101]Samsung: "The brain is made up of a large number
      of neurons, and their wiring map is responsible for the brain's
      functions. Thus the knowledge of the map is the key to reverse
      engineering the brain."
      [102]Continue reading
    *

UK's National Crime Agency WLTM Deputy Director of Digital Data & Technology
      Up to £118,000 and use of Cycle2work scheme for successful
      applicant
      [103]Paul Kunert Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 14:31 UTC [104]3 comment bubble
      on white
      Britain's National Crime Agency – charged with thwarting serious
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      figure to head up, among other things, the threat response,
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      as TRACER.
      The Deputy Director of Digital Data and Technology (DD&T) role at
      the law enforcement agency is being advertised with a wide-ranging
      salary of between £71,000 and a little under £118,000, presumably
      dependent on the levels of skills the chosen candidate can
      demonstrate.
      The winning candidate will also operate as the NCA's Chief Science
      and Innovation Officer.
      [105]Continue reading
    *

Baby, I swear it's déjà vu: iFixit prises open the iPhone 13 Pro
      Battery still swappable – rest fiddly
      [106]Richard Speed Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 13:44 UTC [107]7 comment
      bubble on white
      It wasn't only eager fanbois awaiting their Apple deliveries last
      week - teardown terror iFixit also [108]got its hands on the iPhone
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      The team took on the 128GB version of Apple's A15-powered iPhone 13
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      [109]Continue reading
    *

Fake 'BT' caller fleeces elderly victim of £30k in APP app scam
      That's authorised push payment – where they get the mark to make
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      [110]Tim Richardson Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 12:58 UTC [111]31 comment
      bubble on white
      Police have issued an urgent warning after an elderly man was
      scammed out of £30,000 by phone fraudsters pretending to be from
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      The incident happened last Thursday (23 September), prompting West
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      [112]Continue reading
    *

Want to feel old? Aussie cyclist draws Nirvana baby in Strava on streets of
Adelaide because Nevermind is 30
      Meanwhile, Nirvana baby unchuffed about being Nirvana baby
      [113]Richard Currie Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 12:13 UTC [114]22 comment
      bubble on white
      Poor Spencer Elden. Not only does the chap have to live with his
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      [116]Continue reading
    *

Yet another Big Tech exec heads to central government: This time IBMer Dan
Bailey in 6-month stint
      Big Blue UK and Ireland cloud man hired as 'interim' CTO, tasked
      with creating fellowship of the cloud
      [117]Paul Kunert Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 11:28 UTC [118]5 comment bubble
      on white
      IBM UK and Ireland exec Dan Bailey has been seconded to the Cabinet
      Office for a six-month contract as interim chief technology
      officer. His tasks are to include the creation of a pan-government
      CTO council for the cloud, raising questions of a conflict of
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      At the time of publication, Bailey still stated on his
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      within the Cabinet Office in February.
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    *

Metrobank techies placed at risk of redundancy, severance terms criticised
      Now sing with us: Agile, agile, agile...
      [121]Paul Kunert Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 10:27 UTC [122]27 comment
      bubble on white
      Exclusive Metro Bank has put "less than 90" IT employees at risk of
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      [123]Continue reading
    *

Calculating the big picture: Future HPC efforts will soon see off its von
Neumann past
      Dear John, I'm leaving you for a robot
      [124]Rupert Goodwins Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 09:28 UTC [125]7 comment
      bubble on white
      Feature High-performance computing (HPC) has a very different
      dynamic to the mainstream. It enables classes of computation of
      strategic importance to nation states and their agencies, and so it
      attracts investment and innovation that is to some extent decoupled
      from market forces.
      Sometimes it leads the mass market, sometimes it builds on it, and
      with the advent of massive cloud infrastructure, something like a
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      measured by standard benchmarks. Everyone's in the race.
      [126]Continue reading
    *

If your head's not in the cloud, you're not in the right place
      'Where are the k8s kids?' ask corporates as they can't pay, won't
      pay
      [127]Rupert Goodwins Mon 27 Sep 2021 // 08:28 UTC [128]12 comment
      bubble on white
      Opinion The tiniest hint of butthurt tinged the Linux Foundation
      and edX's latest annual [129]Open Source Jobs Report. For the first
      time, pure Linux skillz were not number one, slipping to second
      place behind Kubernetes. Container herding is up by 455 per cent,
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      whatever you do in open source" – calm down, penguinistas, you've
      already won this war – the real meat of the survey comes from the
      corporate attitude to recruitment and talent. There has never been
      an oversupply of good systems and developer bods, in any
      significant sector of IT, but when you have something growing
      rapidly and dependent on new technology, the industry seems
      particularly bad at helping itself.
      The lack of Kubernetes on the industry's collective CV is only part
      of it. Talk to companies who want to play clever in clouds, and the
      lack of knowledge is pandemic. If you know how to wire together AWS
      services or fly in the wild blue Azure skies, you will have no
      shortage of suitors. This isn't going to change any time soon; yes,
      as advertised, you still need to have those basic chops. You need
      to build and fix. But the cloud needs you. How do you get those
      skills?
      [130]Continue reading

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