How The PopSci Staff Prepares For A Hurricane
Dan Nosowitz and Paul Adams
at 09:44 AM 30 Oct 2012
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<strong>Kindle Paperwhite Glows</strong>
Kindle Paperwhite Glows
IMAGE BY Dan Bracaglia
Gadgets // 

The PopSci Mothership is based in New York. And New York is in the process of being ground flat - or perhaps just gently dampened - by Hurricane Sandy. Here's how the team is (literally) weathering the storm...

Paul Adams, Senior Editor

In the course of everyday life at PopSci, I find myself pleasingly well equipped for disaster to strike. Here's the stuff I'm glad is lying around my apartment.

Weaponized Unbreakable Umbrella: I love this umbrella, which has a shaft of rigid steel. On my walk to the office today I, not it, was the weak link as rainy storm winds blasted through midtown. Really the umbrella's designed to be wielded in self-defense against an attacker on the street, but nobody seemed inclined to fight me this morning. New Yorkers really pull together in a crisis.

Hario Skerton: Wasn't there a Twilight Zone
episode in which a guy had pounds and pounds of fantastic shade-grown coffee beans and no electric grinder? I'm prepared - the Hario, which uses ceramic burrs for a perfect (and adjustable) grind, is hand-operated, so even in a grievous natural disaster I can have my morning coffee, after mere minutes of menial cranking.

Ready-to-eat potatoes: If the power goes out and stays out for days and I run out of all my fresh foods and canned foods and pickled foods, I can always fall back on these potatoes. They will never go bad. (They will also never taste very good.)

Dan Nosowitz, Associate Editor

I've been reviewing and spending too much time thinking about gadgets for years now, so all my concerns are gadget-related. Here's how I'm planning on making it through.

Kindle Paperwhite: In my regular life I actually prefer to use a Kindle with buttons - I am very pro-Kindle-button - but given the high possibility of a power outage, the Paperwhite is the one I made sure to charge. It's a Kindle, which means I have a few dozen books on it, waiting to be read, but the frontlight means I'll be able to read without having to worry about flashlights or candles. And given the crazy, month-long battery life, if the battery dies before my power comes back, I'll almost certainly have bigger problems than a dead ebook reader.

Jawbone Jambox: Battery-powered. Battery lasts for up to ten hours. Sounds awesome. Loud enough to fill a room, or drown out the crazy wind outside. Works with any gadget I have that plays audio, either via Bluetooth or with a standard 3.5mm (headphone) cable. Jambox rules.

External chargers: In case the power goes out, I want to have a way to charge up my stuff. I've got a few different options here. I have a small external battery pack with a USB port - mine's made by a company called Zagg. It's only got 3,100mAh, which'll charge a smartphone about two times. A better option might be something like this New Trent charger, which has an absurd 12,000 mAh, and will charge even a power-hungry iPad 3.

I've also got a Joos Orange, which holds 5,400 mAh but which I really like because it's solar powered, and, if I'd thought ahead, I'd have snagged our BioLite Campstove back from Elbert, who reviewed it a few weeks ago. Those both provide power with unlimited sources of energy; the BioLite only needs some wood and the Joos only needs some sunlight.

Lots of wine: In search of an alcohol that requires neither mixer nor refrigeration, my roommates and I landed on wine. This is important. Also we have bourbon.

Martha Harbison, Senior Editor

I don't give a damn about gadgets or other frippery - I stockpile classic gear that one might find in an Army-Navy surplus store. I just want things that work and materials that facilitate the most fun for the most people.

My friends - some of whom had to evacuate their own homes - and I will spend the evening drinking beer or cocktails, listening to Iron Maiden and Jawbreaker LPs on the hi-fi, and waiting for the inevitable apocalypse.

Anthony Fordham, Australian Editor

Uh... well, it's actually a nice day here in Sydney. Little bit of high cloud, more or less average temperatures for spring. Looks like it will be quite warm in the west but will stay spring-like here in town.

Of course they tell us we're in for a killer bushfire season though...

 
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