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Notre Dame Official Says 'Computer Glitch' Could Be Fire Culprit (cbsnews.com) 173

A "computer glitch" may have been behind the fast-spreading fire that ravaged Notre Dame, Associated Press reported Friday, citing the cathedral's rector. From the report: Speaking during a meeting of local business owners, rector Patrick Chauvet did not elaborate on the exact nature of the glitch, adding that "we may find out what happened in two or three months." On Thursday, Paris police investigators said they think an electrical short-circuit most likely caused the fire. French newspaper Le Parisien has reported that a fire alarm went off at Notre Dame shortly after 6 p.m. Monday but a computer bug showed the fire's location in the wrong place. The paper reported the flames may have started at the bottom of the cathedral's giant spire and may have been caused by an electrical problem in an elevator. Chauvet said there were fire alarms throughout the building, which he described as "well protected."
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Notre Dame Official Says 'Computer Glitch' Could Be Fire Culprit

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  • by Camel Pilot ( 78781 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @02:07PM (#58460568) Homepage Journal

    It wasn't a "computer bug" but a human bug and evidently the result of inadequate testing of the system.

    Nice try at scapegoating.

    • by tattood ( 855883 )
      Good call. Get on the computers' good side, so you will not be destroyed when the computers take over the world.
      • by elrous0 ( 869638 )

        Hey man, don't blame the messenger. The fire wasn't the fire alarm's fault.

      • LOL a couple of weeks of ago I was listening to the Lord of The Cello in Palm Springs and between songs, he said just that... Don't kick the robots because robots remember well.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by uncqual ( 836337 )

      And, investigation may show that it wasn't "computer" issue - i.e. hardware or software (including configuration files) - at all but the result of an electrician mislabeling and/or mis-routing wiring.

      Yep, during testing after install and modifications of alarm systems, every sensor should be triggered and it should be confirmed that the input registers at the right place and as the correct sensor on the alarm panels/computer displays.

      • don't they have address dips for each unit on each ring bus?

        • by bobby ( 109046 )

          Yes, typically in the baseplate (so someone can replace the detector and you don't have to worry about someone messing with switches. Hopefully they'll leave them alone, and hopefully they're hidden under a cover.)

      • by aix tom ( 902140 )

        every sensor should be triggered

        Reminds me of the time when I and a few colleagues "Inherited" an un-labeled electrical installation back in the 1980s. We spent a few weeks walking around the building and crating short-circuits on purpose, to see which fuse got triggered.

  • Uhhh, no. (Score:5, Informative)

    by jelwell ( 2152 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @02:07PM (#58460574)

    Computers are listed as why the fire might not have been found quickly. Even the summary shown here states that the fire was likely caused by the elevator wiring.
    Joseph Elwell.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 19, 2019 @02:21PM (#58460680)

      Computers are listed as why the fire might not have been found quickly. Even the summary shown here states that the fire was likely caused by the elevator wiring.
      Joseph Elwell.

      Well, to be fair, electrical wiring of elevators was probably well beyond the ability of the typical laborer in medieval France.
      It's amazing it lasted this long.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        What a stupid post, of course they didn't have elevators when it was built. Those weren't installed until the 19th century, when they removed the giant escalator.

    • Computers are listed as why the fire might not have been found quickly. Even the summary shown here states that the fire was likely caused by the elevator wiring. Joseph Elwell.

      Technically, from a certain perspective the summary is correct. It's just leaving out a whole lot of necessary information, but the summary as written could mean that the computer bug, which showed the fire in the wrong place, made it worse, not that it caused the fire. I wouldn't write it that way, but the submitter could mean "culprit" in a way that we don't, meaning not the root cause but a contributing factor. Remember, we live in an age where in English people just put a ? at the end of every sen

    • Yeah, this is bad clickbait wording. The fire maybe would not have gotten so out of control because of this, but it already existed by the time the comptuer glitch got involved.

  • Bad title (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 19, 2019 @02:08PM (#58460588)

    Should have been "Computer glitch may have delayed firefighters' response to Notre Dame fire"

  • And caused it to spontaneously combust. Or perhaps the computers were intentionally set on fire to hide the evidence of porn.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      This is Notre Dame, not British Parliament or a red state daycare.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Someone used a GOTO.

  • by Max_W ( 812974 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @02:29PM (#58460728)
    I do not get it, - a massive dry wood construction, which s called a "forest" and no fire suppression system.

    And now billion euros, millions of work hours, thousands of tons of materials, etc. would be spent to repair the damage. Would not it be cheaper to istall the fire suppression system?
    • Notre Dame had a fire suppression system. Vaulted ceilings and walls of stone to help prevent a roof fire from burning down the whole cathedral. It seemed to work. A *lot* of wood and flammables under those ceilings did not burn. Its a little reminiscent of ship compartmentalization used to control fire and flooding.

      I'm not sure about Notre Dame but some medieval vaulted ceilings are built with drainage for roof leaks and roof fire fighting (via bucket brigades).
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Fire protection systems are generally not designed to protect the building. They are designed to protect human life, sacrificing the building to let people get out safely. Mostly they work by compartmentalizing the fire and extracting the smoke.

      Fire suppression would have been difficult to retrofit and probably caused more damage than it would have prevented. If you have a building full of valuable artefacts you probably don't want to be flooding it with water, for example. Especially if you have many of th

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Not true at all, there are a huge number of methods and systems to protect the most tricky and at risk structures, no matter how complex, it can most definitely be protected. The failure was either gross negligence or criminal conspiracy. Blaming it on a computer which could have been altered post attack, very disturbing and it seems very much like they are jumping from excuse to excuse. Choose and perish, gross negligence or criminal conspiracy, Macron burned down the Note Dame, do not let Macron burn down

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          You say there are a huge number of methods... Don't care to mention a single one, presumable because you know that if you do I'll tear it down, and then go off on a rant about Macron and Yellow Vests.

    • I do not get it, - a massive dry wood construction, which s called a "forest" and no fire suppression system

      Maybe people want Notre-Dame to be as authentic as possible, without further modern construction/installatiopns?

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @07:35PM (#58462100)

      I do not get it, - a massive dry wood construction, which s called a "forest" and no fire suppression system.

      No you don't get it. There was a suppression system. There was also an alert system. The the later (as the subject of this story says) was configured incorrectly. The former never works how you may imagine in an old building. These suppression systems are designed for normal buildings with normal room heights and normal construction and are almost impossible to retrofit in any way that maintains the performance one would expect in a new building. In addition fire control is a fundamental part of design which often works in tandem with suppression systems to increase their effectiveness. It's not like you can put a firedoor down the middle of a cathedral.

      In addition to that you're making a lot of assumptions. The Notre Dame was going through major renovations. It is typical that fire systems are disabled, modified, or even rendered ineffective (there was a forest of scaffolding inside the building) during major renovations.

      Fire suppression is not simply gluing a round smoke detector to your ceiling and calling it a day.

    • About the only thing that would have allowed protection without an insane cost and significant risk of water damage would be a water misting system (HiFog). That has only been viable in the past 10-20 years, and is not a common approach for this type of construction. I don’t know how effective it could be in the spire though, due to its intricacy and exposed external surfaces.

  • if there is a God, why would He let his biggest house of worship burn during Holy Week?

    • if there is a God, why would He let his biggest house of worship burn during Holy Week?

      Because He places less importance on the size of "houses of worship" than we do? That would be my guess, if I had to hazard one....

      • if there is a God, why would He let his biggest house of worship burn during Holy Week?

        Because He places less importance on the size of "houses of worship" than we do? That would be my guess, if I had to hazard one....

        Clearly he's pissed at Trump.

    • by Max_W ( 812974 )
      The answer is obvious, we do not repent enough.
    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
      This didn't happen during Holy week but if I were religious, I would take this as a sign.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_of_Kings_(statue) [wikipedia.org]

      Of course they rebuilt it. This church is simply a tax shelter for rich people..
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

        If I were religious, I might think god was providing a gentle reminder that he thinks the first or second (depending on who you are) commandment is a wee bit more important than the general recommendations and best practices in Leviticus.

    • if there is a God, why would He let his biggest house of worship burn during Holy Week?

      Why would he let Joseph be sold into slavery by his brothers, then later put in prison for a crime he was falsely accused of?

      Sometimes we don't know the reasons until much later, if ever.

    • there isnt a god, none, zilch, no allah, no jehovah, no jesus, no yhwh.

      "The income of the priest class is totally dependent on their continued ability to sell invisible goods to suckers, they praise and glorify faith to the skies, complimenting people on how much of it they have. If it weren't for faith, they'd be out of business, and they know it."
  • In modern fire systems, even in the early 1990's, the panel will tell you the ID or zone of the sensor that is causing the alarm. When you get the wrong initial location, it is because the zone was not setup properly, then any subsequent computerization was then programmed with wrong information. (Source: I managed data centers and fire control systems, including a problematic and "ancient" fire panel from 1994).

  • No it wasn't (Score:4, Insightful)

    by sjames ( 1099 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @02:55PM (#58460910) Homepage Journal

    As others have pointed out, they're looking at elevator wiring as the actual cause of the fire. The wrong location given for the alarm would be a contributing factor to delays in fighting the fire.

    Even there, I doubt it was a 'computer glitch'. It's more likely an installer glitch, as in connecting the wrong signal wires to the wrong terminal or configuring the computer with the wrong location information for the terminals. Followed by not manually testing each alarm and making sure the correct location was displayed.

    • they're looking at elevator wiring as the actual cause of the fire

      Which technically true the "glitch" was not the root cause, since it's what enabled the fire to actually become uncontainable, I would say designating the glitch as the cause of the fire in the main is not unreasonable.

      I also can't believe they didn't test the system often t catch wrong locations of alarms!

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Even without the alarm screw-up, there would still have been a fire. They might or might not have been able to limit the damage significantly had the alarm indicated the correct location.

  • that is all.

  • by 3seas ( 184403 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @03:01PM (#58460964) Homepage Journal

    The church had become a money pit for over 20 years where the repairs and repair funding was not keeping up with the deterioration.
    This way demolition was quick, shell is relatively intact, 12 apostles removed from roof 4 days prior and 1B euro raised in 24 hrs. during pre-easter weekend and added benefit of yellow vest protest nature change. Rebuild will be better and with advanced anti-fire systems. And just maybe they can figure out how to keep the shell outer stonework from falling off.

  • Notre-Dame officials could have easily prevented this computer glitch from happening by switching from a cathedral to a bazaar.
  • A software fix properly applied would have correctly identified the location of the fire, but it might not have helped put it out in time. A church of that importance with a wood-beamed roof should have had fire suppression equipment in place (not "sprinklers" but more like a Halon system, to avoid damage to the antiquities below) and cameras feeding to a continuously monitored onsite security room where a human could make decisions about what systems to trigger.

    • You couldn’t use a clean agent system for a space that large— you would need compartmentalization for it to be effective. Water mist might have been possible, but still very expensive.

  • by melted ( 227442 ) on Friday April 19, 2019 @05:29PM (#58461652) Homepage

    Or it could be that someone just set it on fire. I don't know why everyone is discounting this possibility. Too horrible to contemplate? Even Snopes (which exists mostly to support fake news), concedes: "February 2019 saw a series of acts of vandalism in French churches that prompted widespread concern and that one website said constituted the worst month for anti-Christian acts since 2015." Why is it such a stretch that someone just went in there, poured some gasoline and threw a match? Afraid of what you'll find, eh, Macron?

    • by neoRUR ( 674398 )

      I assume they will be looking a video footage of people going in and out of the church and around it to account for the possibility of arson.

    • Or it could be that someone just set it on fire

      There was Nobody where the fire started.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by DerekLyons ( 302214 )

      I don't know why everyone is discounting this possibility.

      It only seems people are discounting this possibility - because unlike clueless right wing bigots like yourself (who've already decided on the cause), we're looking at evidence and weighing the facts.

    • the security in major churches like these is unreal. You'd get caught long before the container you snuck the gas in with was open let alone before the match was lit.
  • A fire started at a location.
    That was not a computer.
    Its legal investigation as to why the fire started. Who, why, when, where, what with.
    Computers don't always start fires.
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  • According to this NY Times article https://www.nytimes.com/2019/0... [nytimes.com] when no fire was discovered after the first alarm, they gave the all-clear without determining the cause of the "false" alarm.

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