| |
Need to
prepare
for
winter
driving?
There's
an app
for that
By James
Bryant/Tell
Us USA
News
Network
FARGO,
N.D. -
When a
powerful
blizzard
ripped
through
North
Dakota
last
winter,
hundreds
of
drivers
were
stranded
as
white-out
conditions
shuttered
interstates
spanning
the
state.
Snow
whipped
up by
wind
marred
the
lines
between
pavement
and
grassy
drop-offs,
leaving
some
scared
motorists
unsure
what to
do.
Two
local
software
developers
had a
thought:
There
should
be an
app for
that.
Bob
Bertsch,
an
employee
with the
North
Dakota
State
University
Extension
Service,
and Jake
Joraanstad,
an NDSU
computer
engineering
major,
had just
finished
developing
an app
to help
residents
during
floods
when the
blizzard
hit in
March,
convincing
them to
shift
their
attention
to
winter
disasters.
Winter
Survival
Kit was
born.
The free
program,
available
for
iPhones
and
Android
smartphones,
is both
a primer
to help
motorists
prepare
for
winter
driving
and a
beacon
when
things
go
badly.
It can
pinpoint
a
motorist's
location,
call
911,
notify
friends
and
family,
and
monitor
how long
the gas
will
hold
out. The
app also
gives
potentially
life-saving
alerts
when
users
tap a
big red
button
on its
simple
home
screen
that
reads,
"I'm
Stranded!"
Among
the
advice:
stay
with
your
vehicle
and keep
the
tailpipe
clear of
snow,
since a
backup
can
cause
carbon
monoxide
poisoning.
"It's
our
sincere
hope
that no
one ever
has to
use it,"
said
Bertsch,
an NDSU
Extension
Service
web
technology
specialist
who led
the team
that
developed
the app.
"But if
one
person
does
have to
use it
and it
keeps
them in
their
car or
keeps
them
from
succumbing
to
carbon
monoxide
poisoning,
then it
is
definitely
worth
the time
and
effort
that was
spent on
the
app."
The app
also
helps
drivers
prepare
for bad
weather
by
inputting
phone
and
policy
numbers
for
insurance
and
roadside
assistance,
and
designated
emergency
contacts.
And it
gives
guidance
on
putting
together
a
physical
survival
kit to
keep in
vehicles
in case
of
emergencies.
"Any
tools
developed
which
arm
people
with
information
that
will
help
keep
them
safe is
of
value,"
North
Dakota
Emergency
Services
spokeswoman
Cecily
Fong
said.
The app
does
have
limitations.
Joraanstand
said
some
especially
rural
areas of
the
country
-
particularly
in the
Great
Plains -
have
shoddy
cellphone
coverage
that
could
impede
some
features
such as
GPS. At
that
point
the app
would
tell
users
that
their
location
couldn't
be
pinpointed
and
instruct
them to
call
911.
Still,
the app
has
emergency
numbers
handy,
allowing
users to
send
text
messages
for
help.
Text
messages
often
can be
sent by
weaker
signals
than are
needed
for
clear
phone
calls.
And the
app
would
give
emergency
advice
on
braving
the
elements
- even
telling
users
how to
use
parts of
a
vehicle
to keep
warm.
The
Midwest
hasn't
seen
much
heavy
snowfall
in the
last few
months,
so the
app's
developers
haven't
heard of
any
success
- or
horror -
stories
yet. But
they're
convinced
that
when the
time
comes,
their
app will
help.
"This
app can
literally
save
someone's
life. We
take
great
pride in
that,"
said
Joraanstad,
the
22-year-old
chief
operating
officer
for
Myriad
Devices,
a
startup
company
in
NDSU's
research
and
technology
park
that
produced
the app.
Bertsch,
Joraanstand
and two
colleagues
who
teach at
NDSU
have
become
experts
in
disaster
apps.
Last
year
they
developed
a
program
to help
residents
deal
with
flooding
that has
overwhelmed
North
Dakota
in the
last few
years.
The H2O
app
provides
news
feeds,
river
levels,
road
closure
maps and
other
information.
Winter
Survival
Kit,
which
works in
the U.S.
and
Canada,
joins
several
apps
from
other
developers
that
were
designed
to help
smartphone
users in
a bind,
such as
Help I
Crashed
My Car,
Emergency
Radio,
iMapWeather
Radio,
iTriage,
Close
Call and
pMonitor.
As of
this
week,
there
didn't
appear
to be
other
winter
survival-specific
apps in
either
iTunes'
or
Android's
app
stores.
"I think
we hit a
particular
niche,"
Bertsch
said.
About
12,000
people
downloaded
the app
in the
first
week it
was
released,
and
Joraanstad
said
that at
last
check,
there
were
another
3,000
downloads.
The
early
returns
have
been
mostly
favorable.
Out of
16 user
reviews
on the
Android
website,
13 gave
5-star
ratings.
"Practical
... yet
simple,"
reads
one
review.
It had a
4-plus
average
rating
among
Apple
iPhone
users.
People
posting
lower
ratings
reported
trouble
with the
app
crashing.
Joraanstad
said
those
glitches
are
being
addressed
as they
arise
with
updates.
The app
is being
promoted
by
Texas,
where it
can be
downloaded
directly
from the
Texas
Extension
Disaster
Education
Network
website.
In an
unusual
climate
swap,
Texas
saw snow
this
winter
before
much of
the rest
of the
country.
"With
the
amount
of snow
and ice
during
winter
in the
Panhandle
and
North
Texas,
plus the
possibility
of
unusual
cold
weather
occurrences
elsewhere
in the
state,
we felt
it would
be
helpful
to many
Texans
to make
this app
accessible,"
said
Joyce
Cavanagh,
Texas
extension
service
spokeswoman.
"People
here
aren't
used to
driving
in that
kind of
weather.
It gives
some
peace of
mind
while
traveling,"
she
said.
Cavanagh
also
said she
felt
more at
ease
knowing
that
many
students
traveling
for the
holidays
had
downloaded
the app
before
hitting
the
roads.
College
student
Jessica
Rush
said she
could
have
used
such an
app in
March.
The
21-year-old
and a
friend
were
traveling
in
separate
cars in
North
Dakota
when the
fast-moving
storm
left her
so
blinded
that she
was on
the
highway's
left
shoulder
when she
thought
she was
driving
over the
warning
bumps on
the
right.
She
figured
she was
about a
half-mile
from her
friend's
car.
"I
called
my dad
and told
him I
was
going to
get out
and walk
to her
car and
he said,
`Do not
leave
your
car. You
don't
know
where
she
is,'"
recalled
Rush,
who had
cellphone
coverage
where
she was
stuck.
Rush
stayed
in her
2000
Oldsmobile
Alero
for four
nerve-wracking
hours
until
she was
rescued
by a
truck
driver,
and she
came
away
with a
new
appreciation
for the
dangers
of
winter
driving.
"When
your
parents
tell you
not to
go
somewhere
you
should
probably
listen,"
Rush
said. "I
guess
this app
is the
next
best
thing." |