Pictures from a Blacked Out India

No wonder why I can't get into Tech support.
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I have to call ******** on some of those pictures, you see lights on in the train or on signs at the train stations.

India's traffic always looks like that.......It is not like all those grids went down and stayed down at the same time.

The longest outage was what 4 hours, hospitals and Airports and large businesses have backup generators.

While this is pretty serious, don't get me wrong, initial reports were that there was absolutely no power and it was down and going to stay down, that was my first impression from reading the headlines.

By the way, it is a government run grid, maybe they should deregulate it and let the private sector run it!!
 
Just in case you don't know.

"Here is the nut of a story up today, “Blogger May Have a Past“:

A 30-year-old New Yorker who was barred from the securities industry last year may be behind an increasingly popular financial blog known as Zerohedge.com, which is catching flack for its obsession with anonymity.

Daniel Ivandjiiski, whose most recently listed address is on the Upper East Side, was barred last September by the financial industry’s self regulatory authority, FINRA, for insider trading….

Ivandjiiski didn’t return requests for comment, but he recently told industry publication Hedge Fund Alert that while he writes for Zerohedge, he’s not a founder.

“He denied that he was a founder. He said he was just a contributor,” Hedge Fund Alert Managing Editor Howard Kapiloff told The Post.

Ivandjiiski told Kapiloff that he’s one of several writers who contributes to the site under the pseudonym “Tyler Durden,” the charismatic, psychopathic alter-ego of the main character in the book and movie “Fight Club.”…

A manifesto on the Web site suggests Zerohedge contributors are seeking to avoid the backlash their comments could unleash, saying anonymity protects “unpopular individuals from retaliation — and their ideas from suppression — at the hand of an intolerant society.”

A man who answered the phone at Zerohedge declined to give his name or to comment. He offered vague statements like, “Zerohedge is not one person,” and, “For us, its not about the messenger, its about the message.”

A manifesto on the Web site suggests Zerohedge contributors are seeking to avoid the backlash their comments could unleash, saying anonymity protects “unpopular individuals from retaliation — and their ideas from suppression — at the hand of an intolerant society.”

It is quite clear just from the variety of writing styles associated with the name “Tyler Durden” that more than one writer is associated with that name, It is also clear that the folks at Zero Hedge are unusually well plugged in, independent of their sources. The operation appears to have had a Bloomberg terminal from its early days (no minor expense), suggesting the writer(s) at a minimum co-located with a trading operation. I had though initially ZH might be a former hedgie who was trading for his own account and posting, but the volume of posts (and effort required to produce them) now suggests that some writer/researchers there are close to full time.

Felix Salmon indicates he has known of the Ivandjiiski connection since March. Chris Whalen said he had lunch with Durden .(one of the Durdens, anyway) and the tone of the throwaway comment suggested he knew him fairly well. Andrew Cuomo also seems to be taking some of the Zero Hedge stories seriously, particularly the ones about high frequency trading.

And the timing of the release of this news story could suggest (in a watered down rerun of what happened to Eliot Spitzer, the public exposure of information damaging to someone who was stepping on too many influential toes) that this story is appearing now precisely because Durden is getting to close to some even more damaging stories than he has provided thus far.

I am hardly one to throw stones at psuedonymous bloggers, but it only takes a modicum of digging to figure out who I am (and I have appeared on TV and done a bit of radio). I am told by a reader that he appeared on Bloomberg radio yesterday, and a reader who heard the broadcast says he plans to reveal his identity soon

Zero Hedge is a costly operation (apparent access to data services, number of staffers working what appears to be close to if not full time) and that does raise questions about its ambitions. It may be seeking to become a new media type of platform, but the combination of missionary fervor and possibly commercial aspirations is a mix that (per comments I have gotten from readers) leaves some perplexed.

The mysteriousness has served Zero Hedge well thus far, but the messianic zeal and the sometimes strident tone serves to undercut their typically good content. It clearly boosts traffic (ZH has become popular in a very short period of time), but does it in the end serve his cause? In the long run, it raises question about credibility, and and I worry not just his/theirs, but of financial blogs generally.

Read more atThe Link
The Link
 
The article said that trains were stopped and the lights "ON" the train were illuminated.

I think the train pulls power from the tracks, which tells me that at the time of the picture there was power to the train.
 
Looking at the comments in that article, ZeroHedge seems to attract the most colorful of the conspiracy theorists. This could be great comedy fodder in the future.
 
There are a lot of whacky people that respond on Zerohedge, but most who comment direct their anger at all the ******** going on in the markets and the global financial and political realms.
 

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