I'm on hour 16 without power thanks to a wind storm that blew through Oregon last night. I'm speaking to you live from my laptop, connected to my cell phone via bluetooth, using a Cingular data connection. I love living on the edge of a small town—the positives outweigh the negatives. But one of the drawbacks is that power seems to take a little longer to come back for us once it goes out, and the power even occasionally blinks on and off for no apparent reason. So I've had to do some contingency planning for situations just like these.
A couple weeks ago I talked about
planning for hard drive failure, so I thought I'd talk about planning for power failure now that I'm in the middle of dealing with it.
One of the best investments I've made is an APC battery back-up (aka
Uninterruptible Power Supply) for the main computers and monitors in the house. (I picked up two
APC ES 650s,
available at Amazon.) Basically a UPS will give you about 15 minutes to save everything you're working on and shut down the computer once the power goes out. But I've really found it useful for those power blips where it just goes out for a minute or so. The UPS keeps your computer humming along, and you won't lose any work.
I also picked up a
smaller UPS for my less-power-hungy cable modem and router. Typically if the power goes out, the cable connection will still work as long as my modem and router have power. So in those 15 minutes of power I have for my computer, I can still access the Internet and power blips won't force a modem/router reboot.
And finally that bluetooth modem connection has been a lifesaver. Not only can I still check email and surf the web during a blackout, but I can use the connection whenever I travel. I pay Cingular $20/month for unlimited data transfer, but it also means I don't pay access fees at airports, hotels, or greedy coffee shops (I'm looking at you Starbucks). Granted, the connection is painfully slow, but at least I can check websites, send emails, and post long-winded messages to my blog.
Unfortunately I can't turn on my main computer now, so I can't get much done. But at least I didn't have to worry about
losing data. I guess the next level of redundancy is some sort of
portable generator. Luckily these long power outages are few and far between, so I'm not sure it's worth it.
My laptop is at 46% power so I better sign off. No telling when the lights will come back on.