LF/HF
Le 20/03/2020 à 13:48, Ryland Kremeier a écrit :
This really depends on particulate size. A mask may only save you from
touching your face. You are much better off just washing your hands
constantly and keeping your distance as much as possible from others.
Remove, wash your clothes, and shower immediately when you get home.
Use hand sanitizers throughout the day and don’t touch your face.
When wearing gloves, you DO NOT change them after you touch something.
The objective is not to keep the gloves clean, but your hands;
excessive changing of gloves will only lead to more particulate
transfer onto your skin.
In France I must show a paper (not smartphone) printed permit, each
sortie one different paper. The receiver of it (police) takes it in
his/her gloved hands then s/he passes it back to me. I do not have
gloves. I wished the receiver did not use the same gloves for each
pereson who passes by and delivers that paper to him.
TRansmission should be analyzed.
Alex
-- Ryland
*From:* NANOG <nanog-bounces+rkremeier=barryelectric....@nanog.org>
*On Behalf Of *Heart Rate Var LF/HF==
*Sent:* Friday, March 20, 2020 7:09 AM
*To:* nanog@nanog.org
*Subject:* Re: CISA: Guidance on the Essential Critical Infrastructure
Workforce
I hope they give them masks, and ideally total body coverage, one time
use, like One Time Passwords.
I really hope it.
Lots of key workers here without masks.
I dont know whether you know the joke about going to war without
weapons. We did kid about Russians doing that in WWII, and about
others in WW1.
If you do not have masks, please make mask yourself, do it yourself,
tissue, elastics, its easy; cut a rear pocket from the jeans.
Constalty wear it, but also when distanced from others remove it. One
can see to a longer distance than one can breath the virus spread.
But stay away and dont breath if mask down. It's also good to wear
eye glasses, like 'shades', to avoid virus intake by the eyes.
When one shows face to others its good, somebody can tell have seen
that person.
If you do wear gloves then make sure you change them after each time
you touched something. Changing gloves involves a particular
technique: whhen ungloving avoid touching the external side of glove
with your skin.
Do not put your gloved hands in your elbow angle while waiting
patiently and showing force (some security people wear gloves, then
cough in elbow, and then display force by putting palms in elbow angle
- 'croiser les bras', french).
Alex
Le 20/03/2020 à 07:27, colin johnston a écrit :
UK gov notification of key worker status inc
Telecommunication/Data Centre workers
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-covid-19-maintaining-educational-provision/guidance-for-schools-colleges-and-local-authorities-on-maintaining-educational-provision
Col
On 19 Mar 2020, at 21:36, Sean Donelan <s...@donelan.com
<mailto:s...@donelan.com>> wrote:
The U.S. Cyber and Infrastructure Security Agency (part of
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security) has issued new
Guidance on the Essential Critical Infrastructure Workforce.
The memorandum is advisory, not presecriptive. DHS is
only one of several agencies assigned some National
Essential Functions so it is not exhaustive list. It
looks like someone found the three-ring emergency plan
binders. Sad its needed, but appreciative of the experts
which helped write those planning documents over the years.
https://www.cisa.gov/publication/guidance-essential-critical-infrastructure
-workforce
[...]
The attached list identifies workers who conduct a range
of operations and services that are essential to continued
critical infrastructure viability, including staffing
operations centers, maintaining and repairing critical
infrastructure, operating call centers, working
construction, and performing management functions, among
others. The industries they support represent, but are not
necessarily limited to, medical and healthcare,
telecommunications, information technology systems,
defense, food and agriculture, transportation and
logistics, energy, water and wastewater, law enforcement,
and public works.
We recognize that State, local, tribal, and territorial
governments are ultimately in charge of implementing and
executing response activities in communities under their
jurisdiction, while the Federal Government is in a
supporting role. As State and local communities consider
COVID-19-related restrictions, CISA is offering this list
to assist prioritizing activities related to continuity of
operations and incident response, including the
appropriate movement of critical infrastructure workers
within and between jurisdictions.
Accordingly, this list is advisory in nature. It is not,
nor should it be considered to be, a federal directive or
standard in and of itself.
[...]