by randomtoast
3 subcomments
- The font size is too small for emergencies on mobile devices. You need to consider that users might be in a panic, may not have both hands free to zoom in, and their vision could be impaired by smoke or other factors.
- It appears the site couldn't handle HN traffic or maybe the site owner took it down. Regardless, a project like this needs a lot of thought put into it to be something that people can rely on during times of crisis.
If it can't handle a surge in traffic from HN, it won't be able to handle a surge during natural disasters.
by _fat_santa
2 subcomments
- Others have mentioned this but looks like fires from close to ~20 years ago are still showing up as "active emergencies"[0]. Shows the Nash Ranch fire as an active emergency but it was declared in 2008.
[0]: https://safe-now.live/c/us/co/colorado-springs/
- The about page [0] links to a github repository [1], but it seems to not be uploaded or hidden.
[0]: https://safe-now.live/about
[1]: https://github.com/venkatag/SafeNow
by doterobcn
5 subcomments
- I would suggest increasing font-size, looks too small
- From an accessibility perspective, the HTML emoji might be an issue for screen readers.
You can still keep them as `h2#foo::before{content: "emoji ";}` CSS pseudo-elements instead, if memory serves.
(Used "emoji" as a placeholder to ensure it renders in the example.)
Great project; (way) more websites should look like this.
- Normally I would say this doesn't matter much, but I wonder if a shorter domain name (or just one without a dash in it) might be in order here. I don't think I would want to be typing or remebering "safe-now.live" in an emergency
by 1970-01-01
2 subcomments
- I'm seeing fires from 1999.
https://safe-now.live/c/us/al/
by LandenLove
1 subcomments
- I see that you mentioned no images, but I feel that images would make it easier for quickly locating information. You can probably use some basic svg files to keep the file size small. E.g. a simple design of a building shaking to represent an earthquake.
Right now, I am seeing a flood of text that I have to carefully read. I don't think emoji's would help, because they can be more subject to interpretation. And the quality of the design varies based on the device's emoji font.
But it is an interesting concept. Maybe add a small note about bookmarking the page?
by hobo_in_library
1 subcomments
- Seeing how it hasn't survived the HN hug of death... Not sure how you've built it but consider putting it behind a CDN or something and caching the responses, esp since you're trying to pull live data
- I like this! I noticed that the weather for some Bay Area counties seem to be getting zeroed out for temperature.
https://safe-now.live/c/us/ca/county/san-mateo/
https://safe-now.live/c/us/ca/county/santa-cruz/
(both say:
Weather Now
32°F / 0°C - Sunny
)
- I've been working on a similar idea for travelers, https://travelsafetydata.com/
It's pulling the travel advisories from US/CA/UK/IE/AU/NZ and aggregating the results/information to help you understand the risks of different countries. It also pulls from other sources for basic country info/risks (eg. women, lgbtq).
Yours is way lighter weight and focused, very cool!
by idiotsecant
2 subcomments
- When you drill down to active emergencies for a local area there's a ton of stuff there but it's all old. Why display it if the purpose of the site is current emergency info?
- Such a page has both dynamic and static information in it. If you don't have Internet access, that static info can still be helpful. A QR code can hold 2.9 MB of data. I'm imagining a QR code that contains the static information, and a small script that checks for connection and then redirects to the full page that also has the dynamic info. A QR code on an eink screen that gets remotely updated over LoRA could even include the dynamic info.
by shoelessone
1 subcomments
- I appreciate the idea, but as others have mentioned it seems like for something like this to be useful it really needs to be well thought out and tolerant to extreme spikes in traffic.
I might be wrong here but it looked like the responses from the server are chunked, which I _think_ precludes the use of a highly optimized cache response e.g. from a CDN. Assuming that's true (very open to correction of course!) I wonder why this would be.
by happyopossum
1 subcomments
- This is an interesting idea, but the very first page I looked at was wrong (current weather in Alameda county shows as 72* - it's almost 30* below that here, and the daily high in the warmest areas is projected to be 65).
Next I looked at San Francisco, and oddly it listed a bunch of minor earthquakes in San Ramon - none of which are listed in Alameda county, which is actually next to (and parts of which actually felt) those tremors.
by browningstreet
0 subcomment
- I love this kind of thing - I'm always building lists and reference things, but IME people generally don't gravitate towards things like this.
That said, I really want a backcountry version of this. I live in Tahoe and our relationship to incoming storms (lightning) is pretty different than those in the Rockies. Plus bears and other predators (how to behave). Etc.
I once wanted to do something similar w/r/t tap water and drinkability.
Fun/neat.
- What would be a good book to have in the house that could help me in as many emergencies as possible, but still be portable enough to actually bring when fleeing the house or something?
Alternatively, what would be a good bigger book for the same goal and/or be more about long term survival in case of being trapped in the house long?
by yearolinuxdsktp
1 subcomments
- Local news needs timestamps… I see stale last-week weather news. Had to click and see date from last week in the article.
- Great but icons fail to render on Mosaic, Netscape and other web 1.0 browsers. Apart from that: great
- My gut feeling is that I'd want it to use my IP address to get as much relevant data as possible. I don't want to click into my state, then city/county. As others pointed out the font is a bit small so clicking on states is pretty tricky.
by mghackerlady
0 subcomment
- This is really useful! I'm planning on making a list of websites that work well with Lynx and other text based browser, specifically because people should be able to access important information regardless of how powerful their computer is
- I really appreciate lightweight software, including websites. I don't need them, but I really, really like them. they have a certain feeling that I can't describe, but it's great.
by rumatoest
2 subcomments
- It must be able to cache it's all content in browser.
I guess to do it it properly you need to make it PWA.
- One of the most unique ideas I've seen. Good to see this is just a 4.4 KB HTML page and does exactly what it says.
- It would be good for the specific state/province/city pages to include the same info from the ancestor pages so you only have to link to and load one page for your area.
- Floods - remove "Don't drown" and add "Stay out of the attic". Plenty have died trying to seek shelter in an attic.
by qingcharles
1 subcomments
- Probably won't break anything but you're missing <head></head> and your <footer> is outside your </body> :)
- The UK emergency phone number is 999, not 112.
Ugh. Don't make a website like this without verifying the information is correct please!
- Seems to be bugged in places? I'm seeing fire alerts for new Hampshire when I pull up Minnesota.
- I think people would be more interested in the heavy emergencies, not just the ultra light ones
by imwillofficial
1 subcomments
- This is an excellent idea, ill pass it along to friends in emergency management
by jonathanstrange
2 subcomments
- Looks nice & useful. However, I'd make two versions: The one you have, and additionally a version with Javascript that is a Progressive Web App (PWA). I'm pretty sure some AI could convert the normal page into a PWA for you.
The PWA has the advantage that it will also load when the internet is down and there is no need to save the page manually.
by Lord_Zero
1 subcomments
- Where does the weather data come from?
by whynotmaybe
0 subcomment
- Nice touch to have it bilingual in Canada.
Maybe add Spanish?
by moralestapia
1 subcomments
- >Flood: Higher ground - Turn around, don't drown
It's hard to take a 14 year old serious ...
- great stuff!!
wish there was sth lk this this side of the pond
by mattlondon
0 subcomment
- You need an AI angle if you want investment and up-boats.
Suggest a LLM-based chat that consumes feeds and provides a terrification-score rating letting you know how to calibrate your panic-levels, based on real data. Allow for real-time questions on how to purify water, if it's better to carry gold or ammo etc
Good luck. I'll give you 80 mil based on a 40% stake with voting rights.
- ... for North America.