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Rory Cellan-Jones

A hi-tech snow event

  • Rory Cellan-Jones
  • 2 Feb 09, 15:29 GMT

The heaviest snowfall in south east England since the early 1990s has brought out the best in the most technically-aware sections of the population - or the worst, if, like many in other parts of the country, you think this is just an excuse for soft Southerners to stay at home putting their feet up.

From late on Sunday, social networks - particularly Twitter - were alive with excited speculation about the arrival of the snow. Then on Monday morning, there was a new rush of information and photos, with useful detail about transport problems, school closures, and local snow conditions. I set off for school with a child this morning - and when we arrived. Rapidly, more information came my way advising me on how I might get to work. The web was working in a useful collaborative way.

But Ben Marsh went one step further. He's a web developer who was hanging around on Twitter on Sunday afternoon. "I was looking at snow-related posts. Someone had suggested putting a postcode and a rating of how much snow they were getting next to the #uksnow tag on Twitter. Someone else said it would be really nice to see that on a map, so I thought let's give it a whirl."

By Sunday evening he'd finished it, and as soon as he put a link to advertise it, began to take off. Now it's receiving reports from across Britain - and Northern France - giving details of snow conditions, plus the occasional picture.

Technology hasn't just made it easier to communicate about the effects of a weather emergency; it has probably lessened its economic impact. Plenty of people appear to have decided it is better to work from home rather than risk taking to the roads or public transport - just stick "working from home" into the Twitter search box to find out.

Some may be skiving, but others insist that the arrival of broadband has meant they are as effective at home on the laptop - or even more so - than they would be at their desk in the office. While I have manfully struggled my way into the office today (okay, I only live five miles away), I've found myself speaking to plenty of people on the phone who are working from home, without any apparent impact on their ability to do business.

Among them is Ben Marsh, who besides knocking up that map, has been working away for his web development firm from home. "I've got remote access, I'm straight in - and I've got everything here," he told me. And before you ask, Ben is not a soft Southerner - he lives in Derbyshire and getting to his office in Derby just hasn't been possible.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    I'm usually more productive when I work from home. Less interruptions, my choice of background noise (i.e. music), no wasted time commuting, and if I'm on a roll come 5pm I keep going. Of course, interaction with others is often easier in person, so I don't think telecommuting is the answer for everyone - I'd want to spend the occasional day in the office to catch up on the latest news and bounce ideas off others real-time.

  • Comment number 2.

    I'd have been disappointed if the Great South East of England Arctic Tundra crisis of February 2009 had of gone ahead without you giving Twitter a wee name-check.

    I can breathe easy now.

    Thanks Rory.

  • Comment number 3.

    RE: "...others insist that the arrival of broadband has meant they are as effective at home on the laptop - or even more so - than they would be at their desk in the office."

    I have saved about a fiver today on petrol not having to commute, thus have helped the environment (and my own finances during a time of recession), got more work done, not had to waste time driving, and have still been able to contact my customers, and they me. Their orders will be delayed a day or two (I am a bookseller), but they probably would be anyway with disruptions to the postal service.

    But if only all my customers bought through our website, then life would be even easier.

    The government goes on about increasing social mobility, and business leaders bewail the loss of revenue when bad weather strikes, but with a bit more intelligence and imagination these meteorological events can be turned to a business's advantage, or at least would hardly cause a ripple of a problem.

    A lot more thought needs to be put into helping people work from home with the aid of technology.

    It can be done.

    Have we got the nous to make it happen?

  • Comment number 4.

    Not being in London anymore but watching the UK wake up white I thought this link was great. I presume it works as no one declamed it during the day too.

    Another advance in technology and twitter!

  • Comment number 5.

    A shame Boris didn't put technology to good use. If he'd pointed his browser at the London Jam Cams, he'd have seen that the roads were clear and the buses could have run after all!

    I recall London in 1963 - that was something to get excited about - real snow rather than a few paltry centimetres...

 

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