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Warning for NZ Windows users

Warning for NZ Windows users

NZ Herald30-06-2025
Windows 10 support is ending – and nearly half of all PCs in New Zealand could be affected. From October 14, Microsoft will stop providing free security updates for Windows 10, leaving many devices more vulnerable to viruses and scams. But what does 'End of Service' actually mean? Will your computer still work? And what are your options if you're time-poor or not very tech-savvy? Jason Bell, Chief Operating Officer at Noel Leeming, joined Ryan Bridge on Herald NOW to explain the simple steps Kiwis can take to stay safe and up to date.
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Alternative Alert System ‘Mothballed' Despite Benefits
Alternative Alert System ‘Mothballed' Despite Benefits

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Alternative Alert System ‘Mothballed' Despite Benefits

Article – RNZ The founder of an alternative alert framework says officials never gave it a look-in when they were setting up the under-fire Emergency Mobile Alert system. The founder of an alternative emergency alert framework says officials never gave it a look-in when they were setting up the under-fire Emergency Mobile Alert system. And he reckons his was better, proving its worth during the aftermath of the Christchurch quakes. The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) is investigating glitches in the current system following the magnitude 8.8 earthquake off Russia on Wednesday. Some Kiwis say they received up to 50 alerts, while some did not receive any at all. Matthew Nolan founded an alternative system, Readynet, which was used during the Christchurch Earthquakes and to mobilise volunteers cleaning up the Rena oil spill. 'I think that the NEMA system – which costs them the best part of $20 million – has miscued for them, and it's certainly not the first time,' he told Morning Report on Friday. 'There is a record of it waking people up at night for messages that were text messages only, and as well as circumstances where people did not get the alert that they should have got.' NEMA spokesperson John Price told Checkpoint on Thursday there were many reasons for the differences. 'It could be different providers and different cell towers. There's a lot of possibilities, but this is something we're working through. We'll look into it, absolutely.' Nolan criticised the NEMA system as being 'one-way' only, and unable to tell if people had actually received the message as no information was sent back. 'Whereas other systems and a better system, and yes, our system was interactive, and we could see where the messages had been received. 'So for example, you send a message out into an area where there's a big river and cell towers have been wiped out. Our system would tell you that all the people in that river have not received the message – all the people in that river valley have not received the message. You can deduct from that, that in fact, the cell phone towers are out.' He claimed the Emergency Mobile Alert system 'can't target messages'. 'It's a modern equivalent of a World War 2 fire siren. It alerts people that something's happening and it gives them a brief message, but it can't target messages. 'So for example… people in Upper Hutt got no message. In Lower Hutt, lots of people got the message. So, you know, why is there a difference between one area and another?' According to the NEMA website, the current system can 'broadcast to all capable phones from targeted cell towers to areas affected by serious hazards'. 'You may not receive an alert if you are out of mobile coverage, mobile phone towers are damaged, or there is a power outage.' Price said the variation in coverage 'could be different providers and different cell towers, there's a lot of possibilities'. Nolan suggested the system was not working as well as it could because it was now owned by 'a banking conglomerate out of New York'. New Zealand's system was provided by Dutch company one2many, which is now a division of Everbridge Public Warning, an American software company that specialises in alert systems. 'Now, those sorts of companies are chasing the big markets, the multi-million markets, and I think New Zealand is a very small end of that market,' Nolan said. 'There is no office of that organisation in Wellington to work alongside emergency services in New Zealand… 'I think that a New Zealand-owned, developed, supported, helpdesked system is the best, and that's what we had built, and our system is now mothballed.' He said he asked officials to look at using Readynet for the national system, but 'they never ever fully examined what we had, even though it was used during Christchurch to communicate after the Christchurch earthquake, to communicate with all the residents and contractors left inside the cordons. 'And that was, information such as, well, 'The cordon will be open on the corner of such and such street at four o'clock this afternoon to allow people in and out for shopping there.' That's the sort of stuff you can't put on Facebook.' As of Friday morning, a tsunami advisory remained in place. Pacific nations emerged relatively unscathed.

Alternative Alert System 'Mothballed' Despite Benefits
Alternative Alert System 'Mothballed' Despite Benefits

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Alternative Alert System 'Mothballed' Despite Benefits

The founder of an alternative emergency alert framework says officials never gave it a look-in when they were setting up the under-fire Emergency Mobile Alert system. And he reckons his was better, proving its worth during the aftermath of the Christchurch quakes. The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) is investigating glitches in the current system following the magnitude 8.8 earthquake off Russia on Wednesday. Some Kiwis say they received up to 50 alerts, while some did not receive any at all. Matthew Nolan founded an alternative system, Readynet, which was used during the Christchurch Earthquakes and to mobilise volunteers cleaning up the Rena oil spill. "I think that the NEMA system - which costs them the best part of $20 million - has miscued for them, and it's certainly not the first time," he told Morning Report on Friday. "There is a record of it waking people up at night for messages that were text messages only, and as well as circumstances where people did not get the alert that they should have got." NEMA spokesperson John Price told Checkpoint on Thursday there were many reasons for the differences. "It could be different providers and different cell towers. There's a lot of possibilities, but this is something we're working through. We'll look into it, absolutely." Nolan criticised the NEMA system as being "one-way" only, and unable to tell if people had actually received the message as no information was sent back. "Whereas other systems and a better system, and yes, our system was interactive, and we could see where the messages had been received. "So for example, you send a message out into an area where there's a big river and cell towers have been wiped out. Our system would tell you that all the people in that river have not received the message - all the people in that river valley have not received the message. You can deduct from that, that in fact, the cell phone towers are out." He claimed the Emergency Mobile Alert system "can't target messages". "It's a modern equivalent of a World War 2 fire siren. It alerts people that something's happening and it gives them a brief message, but it can't target messages. "So for example… people in Upper Hutt got no message. In Lower Hutt, lots of people got the message. So, you know, why is there a difference between one area and another?" According to the NEMA website, the current system can "broadcast to all capable phones from targeted cell towers to areas affected by serious hazards". "You may not receive an alert if you are out of mobile coverage, mobile phone towers are damaged, or there is a power outage." Price said the variation in coverage "could be different providers and different cell towers, there's a lot of possibilities". Nolan suggested the system was not working as well as it could because it was now owned by "a banking conglomerate out of New York". New Zealand's system was provided by Dutch company one2many, which is now a division of Everbridge Public Warning, an American software company that specialises in alert systems. "Now, those sorts of companies are chasing the big markets, the multi-million markets, and I think New Zealand is a very small end of that market," Nolan said. "There is no office of that organisation in Wellington to work alongside emergency services in New Zealand… "I think that a New Zealand-owned, developed, supported, helpdesked system is the best, and that's what we had built, and our system is now mothballed." He said he asked officials to look at using Readynet for the national system, but "they never ever fully examined what we had, even though it was used during Christchurch to communicate after the Christchurch earthquake, to communicate with all the residents and contractors left inside the cordons. "And that was, information such as, well, 'The cordon will be open on the corner of such and such street at four o'clock this afternoon to allow people in and out for shopping there.' That's the sort of stuff you can't put on Facebook." As of Friday morning, a tsunami advisory remained in place. Pacific nations emerged relatively unscathed.

Tech firms say deals for power give new life to nuclear plants at risk of going offline
Tech firms say deals for power give new life to nuclear plants at risk of going offline

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Tech firms say deals for power give new life to nuclear plants at risk of going offline

Meta signed a 20-year agreement for the power flowing from a large legacy reactor in Illinois. Microsoft struck a deal to restart a reactor next to the one at Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island plant that was closed in 1979 by a partial meltdown. And Amazon last month in the same state locked up power from a 42-year-old nuclear plant down the Susquehanna River. Tech companies are scouring the nation for other geriatric nuclear plants to power their AI dreams, according to interviews with nuclear industry officials and company earnings calls. Their interest is focused on the roughly two dozen operating plants in unregulated markets, which are in many cases free to sell power to the highest bidder. They make up about half of the 54 plants still operating in the US. The tech firms say the deals give new life to plants at risk of going offline or that have already been shut down. Contracts that lock in rates for decades are attractive to plant operators, and the electricity flows without directly generating new carbon emissions. Critics say Silicon Valley's nuclear spree will make it more likely that consumers will face electricity rate hikes or shortages in coming years as the US faces soaring demand for power - driven in part by new data centres. By locking up ageing nuclear plants instead of building new power generation, tech firms could leave communities to fall back on fossil fuels, extending the life of polluting coal and gas plants. A few years ago, nuclear energy struggled to compete with cheaper renewables and natural gas, but all power sources are now in greater demand. Contracts with tech firms can offer nuclear plant operators as much as double the market rate for electricity. Jackson Morris, a director with the environmental advocacy group Natural Resources Defence Council, said tapping nuclear energy allows companies to keep pledges to use carbon-free power, but 'doesn't do anything to solve for the impact they're having on consumers'. 'They're insulating themselves from their own impact,' he said. Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft declined to answer questions about which additional nuclear plants they may be seeking to buy power from, as well as the potential impacts of such purchases on other ratepayers and the environment. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns the Washington Post. All of the companies say they mitigate the impact of their energy use on other customers, by working with utilities to shield customers from funding infrastructure that serves only data centres and investing in bringing new clean technologies to the power grid. Tech firms say their data centres will eventually be powered by a new generation of cheaper but more sophisticated nuclear reactors, to be designed with help from AI. However, the technology has been stymied by engineering issues, supply chain challenges and regulatory hurdles. Google and Microsoft are also investing in fusion energy, which is even less proven. Controls, monitors and indicator lights fill the main control room at Three Mile Island last year. Photo / Wesley Lapointe, The Washington Post 'It turns out it is hard to go from all of that fancy new technology on a spreadsheet to an actual piece of infrastructure that isn't run with analogue controls,' said Ted Nordhaus, co-founder of the Breakthrough Institute, a California-based energy think-tank. 'Right now there is not much else to do other than try to squeeze every electron you can out of the existing nuclear fleet.' Chain reaction Energy companies that own nuclear plants are thrilled by the tech industry's recent interest, calling it a springboard for nuclear power's resurgence. New Jersey power company PSEG told investors in February that it is in talks with tech firms about selling large amounts of power directly from its nuclear reactors on what is known as the Artificial Island complex in Delaware Bay. Company chief executive Ralph LaRossa said in April that requests for new power from the utility by data centres has exploded over the past year, jumping 16-fold to 6.4 gigawatts, an amount of electricity that could power several million homes. In Texas, energy company Vistra says it is in talks with tech firms interested in buying energy from the Comanche Peak nuclear plant, near Fort Worth, and possibly others it owns in Ohio and Pennsylvania. 'I think we will see more large deals,' said Dan Eggers, executive vice-president at Constellation Energy, which owns or partially owns 13 nuclear energy complexes across the country. Constellation has already rezoned land next to the Byron Clean Energy Centre, a nuclear plant in Illinois, so tech companies can build data centres there. It is seeking similar changes at the campus of the Calvert Cliffs nuclear plant in Maryland on Chesapeake Bay. The company says it is also contemplating new deals with tech companies for long-term nuclear power contracts in Pennsylvania and New York. Lawmakers and regulators in some communities are concerned data centre nuclear deals could increase costs for other ratepayers and weaken the power grid. Some Maryland lawmakers want to ban Constellation from inviting data centre construction alongside Calvert Cliffs, which produces nearly 40% of the state's electricity. A report from the state's Public Service Commission warns that siphoning energy from the plant away from the power grid for data centres could destabilise the system. The Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant in Lusby, Maryland, is seen in 2011. Photo / Jonathan Newton, The Washington Post 'In addition to being costly to replace a large nuclear plant, the quality of the generation … would be difficult to replace,' the report says. Unlike solar or wind facilities, nuclear power provides round-the-clock electricity when the plants are operating, in any weather. In many cases, nuclear power that gets redirected to tech companies would be backfilled on the power grid with gas or coal generation. Nuclear industry officials say the solution is not restricting deals, but building more plants. 'It is short sighted to say we will just ignore all this demand over the next few years and tell these companies to get their power somewhere else, when this could set us up for a lot of growth in the industry,' said Benton Arnett, senior director of markets and policy at the Nuclear Energy Institute, an industry group. But even nuclear executives working with tech firms acknowledge that pulling zero emissions nuclear energy away from other customers will have an impact on the climate and can be out of sync with ambitious commitments tech firms have made to reduce their carbon footprint. 'A growing list of people are realising they can't have everything they want,' said Robert Coward, principal officer at MPR Associates, one of the nuclear industry's leading technical services firms. Critical mass The scramble by tech firms to secure more nuclear energy quickly has led Silicon Valley companies to some unexpected places. They include a dormant construction site in South Carolina, where plans to build a Three Mile Island-size nuclear plant were abandoned in 2017, after the developer burned through US$9 billion on a project that struggled with cost overruns and engineering setbacks. Local ratepayers were saddled with the bill. Federal prosecutors in 2020 secured prison sentences for executives involved with the project for lying to investors and ratepayers about its viability. Now, several big tech companies are among those that have expressed interest in bringing the VC Summer nuclear project back to life, according to testimony from officials at utility Santee Cooper, after it invited proposals for restarting the project. A utility spokesperson would not say if there are tech companies among the three or four proposals she said are finalists for a potential deal. Tech firms are also eyeing a revival of Duane Arnold Energy Centre in Iowa, a 1970s vintage nuclear plant majority-owned by NextEra that was mothballed in 2020 after a fierce storm damaged its cooling towers, according to company earnings calls. The repairs were initially deemed too costly, but data centres have shifted the economics of nuclear energy, and NextEra is mulling a reboot to serve the facilities. 'If we continue to see the kind of prices Microsoft is willing to pay for nuclear power from Three Mile Island, these type of deals become a solid economic proposition,' said Carly Davenport, a utilities analyst at Goldman Sachs. She said estimates show the tech company is paying as much as twice the going rate on the open market, and locking in for a 20-year contract. Duane Arnold is one of the last retired plants intact enough to restart. Many of the retired plants in the US have already been dismantled. But tech companies are finding ways to squeeze more juice out of active reactors in the ageing national fleet, pursuing reactor 'uprates' from federal regulators that allow increased output. Nuclear power companies aim to increase the power output of the existing US nuclear fleet by the equivalent of three large new reactors using that tactic. As more deals involving ageing reactors emerge, consumer advocates and environmental groups are growing concerned about the impact on everyday ratepayers and the planet. Amazon reconfigured its deal in Pennsylvania after it was rejected by federal regulators that expressed concern about the effects on consumer electricity bills. The company had proposed routing power from the plant directly to nearby data centres, allowing it to avoid paying usage fees for the electric grid. A caution sign warns of radioactive exposure on the turbine deck at Three Mile Island, which is being renamed Crane Clean Energy Centre. Photo / Wesley Lapointe, The Washington Post The online retailer last month announced a deal with plant owner Talen in which it agreed to pay grid fees, a contract that will effectively lock up a large chunk of existing power generation at a time the Mid-Atlantic power grid desperately needs more energy. The deal is notable because it puts an existing nuclear plant on sound economic footing for another decade of emissions-free power generation, said former federal energy commissioner Allison Clements. However, Amazon is also removing supply from the grid just as demand from AI and other uses such as electric cars and air conditioners is spiking. 'There isn't enough power on the grid,' Clements said, and the increased load forecast by analysts, utilities and grid operators cannot be met by existing power sources. 'There's not enough room on the system.'

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