logo
Regime Change Could Make Iran Even More Confrontational

Regime Change Could Make Iran Even More Confrontational

Bloomberg22-06-2025

Welcome back to The Forecast from Bloomberg Weekend, where we help you think about the future — from next week to next decade.
We've tweaked our format just a tad! Let us know what you think by emailing: weekend@bloomberg.net.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Safeguarding Cities: The Evolution of Fire Suppression Systems in New York City and South Florida
Safeguarding Cities: The Evolution of Fire Suppression Systems in New York City and South Florida

Associated Press

time6 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Safeguarding Cities: The Evolution of Fire Suppression Systems in New York City and South Florida

From Manhattan to South Florida, every restaurant kitchen, museum gallery and server room has a fire suppression system designed to save lives . BROOKLYN, NY, UNITED STATES, June 30, 2025 / / -- The modern skyline may dazzle, but beneath the glass and steel, cutting-edge fire suppression systems stand guard. From New York's earliest fire tragedies to today's ultra-modern data centers, advances in suppression technology and strict regulations have saved lives and property. In the densely packed streets of Manhattan and the sprawling urban centers of South Florida, every restaurant kitchen, museum gallery and server room is linked to a network of pipes, nozzles, detectors and agents designed to snuff out flames instantly. These fire suppression companies and their certified technicians work quietly behind the scenes to give building owners and occupants peace of mind. As one veteran installer from Done Right Hood and Fire Safety puts it, 'When that kitchen goes up, you want the system to be spot-on – it's a lifesaver.' New York City's fire safety rules were born of hard experience. The 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire – 146 lives lost – galvanized reforms. By October 1911 the Sullivan–Hoey Fire Prevention Law was enacted, requiring factory owners to install sprinkler systems and establishing the NYC Fire Prevention Bureau. In the decades that followed, fatal fires in new high-rises (like the 1912 Equitable Building fire) spurred stricter codes: by the 1930s, even 'fireproof' skyscrapers were built with heavy steel cores and obligatory emergency systems. After dramatic fires in the 1960s and '70s (One New York Plaza, 919 Third Ave., etc.), NYC passed Local Law 5 (1970), forcing ultratall buildings to have sprinkler systems or smoke-pressurized stairways. As retired fire chief Vincent Dunn noted, in a high-rise 'water needs to get up there with them… the higher a building is, the more vulnerable it is to… the stack effect, in which the structure becomes a chimney, drawing… smoke up to the top floors'. In other words, urban density and soaring heights made automatic suppression – sprinklers, standpipes, gas systems – absolutely essential. South Florida's fire-safety story is similar in spirit if not exact details. Rapid growth in Miami, Fort Lauderdale and beyond brought a mix of wood-frame homes, high-rise condos and tourist hotels. Florida statutes and local fire codes soon mirrored national standards: a state Fire Prevention Code (based on NFPA standards) is adopted every three years, with county or city amendments. To work on suppression systems here, technicians must hold a state-issued 'Certified Fire Protection Contractor' license. For example, Florida law requires that any contractor installing or servicing fire protection systems pass NFPA-based exams and register with the State Fire Marshal. In practice, a local building permit often mandates that only state-certified fire contractors can bid on fire-suppression work. (In Miami–Dade, Broward and elsewhere, permits for sprinklers, standpipes or hood systems are issued only to licensed firms.) These regulations ensure that every system, from a simple extinguisher to a complex gaseous system, is properly designed and maintained by qualified pros. Today's fire suppression systems come in many flavors, matched to the hazard. The most familiar is the automatic sprinkler: water-filled pipes with heat-sensitive heads that unleash a deluge when a flame is detected. Variations include wet-pipe (pressurized with water), dry-pipe (air pressurized until a spray head opens), and deluge systems (all heads open at once for rapid floods). In chemical-hazard areas or special-occupancies, fixed foam systems inject foam concentrate into water streams to smother flammable-liquid fires. For grease fires in restaurant kitchens, wet-chemical systems (like Ansul's R-102) spray a caustic liquid that cools and chemically bonds with hot oils, creating a vapor barrier. Exhaust hoods over grills and fryers typically hide fusible links and nozzles: when a fire heats the hood, the system triggers automatically to blankett flames. In data centers, museums and other sensitive sites, water is often a problem in itself. Here clean-agent and inert-gas systems dominate. For example, FM-200™ (HFC-227ea) or Novec 1230® are colorless gases stored in cylinders. On fire detection, they flood the space and disrupt combustion without water or residue. (One industry website notes that FM-200 'is a clean agent fire suppressant… safe in occupied spaces, and do[es] not leave a residue' after use.) Similarly, mixtures of nitrogen and argon (branded as Inergen®) displace enough oxygen to halt fire but remain breathable for people. Carbon dioxide systems are older tech, now mainly used in unoccupied rooms (server rooms or electrical vaults) because CO₂ can asphyxiate. Water mist is another innovation: ultrafine droplets sprayed at high velocity remove heat with far less water, minimizing damage in places like libraries or art galleries. 'I been installin' these systems for more years than I can count,' says Mike, a technician at Done Right Hood and Fire Safety. 'Listen, you walk into a restaurant kitchen in this town, one spark and it all goes up. Those Ansul hood systems – they kick in so fast it's like havin' 10 firefighters on the spot. Keep everybody safe, no mess. That's why we do it right.' No matter the agent, modern systems are controlled by sensitive detectors (smoke, flame, heat or gas detectors) and tied into building alarms. Microprocessors monitor pressure and valves constantly, and regular inspections (by licensed fire companies) make sure that a clogged nozzle or depleted cylinder never leaves a hazard unchecked. In short, fire suppression has evolved from buckets and pumps to intelligent, code-mandated networks – and the payoff is huge in densely populated a world run on data, even a small fire can spell disaster. Data centers – sprawling rooms of servers, climate control, and cabling – need 24/7 protection. Sprinklers can be used here, but more often clean agents are chosen. FM-200, Novec and inert gases extinguish flame without shorting electronics or leaving cleanup behind. These systems are 'fast and effective,' reaching extinguishing concentration in seconds, and they're safe for people and equipment. (As one manufacturer touts, after an FM-200 discharge 'no residue is left behind… safe for equipment, electronics, and machinery'.) When a smoke detector senses trouble, the fire suppression system floods the room and instantly cuts power to server racks. Urban data centers are built to code: NFPA 75 (or local fire code) typically requires pre-engineered suppression for computer rooms. In New York City, a master-pipe contractor license is still needed to install the piping, and the owner's rep must hold an FDNY Certificate of Fitness for special hazards. In Miami or West Palm Beach, installers need the Florida Certified Fire Protection Contractor certificate plus any county licenses. The bottom line is that only qualified fire suppression companies can touch data center safeguards – an important check in cities where data is as critical as electricity. Veteran techs understand the gravity. Joey from Done Right Hood and Fire Safety, who installs systems in high-tech facilities, explains with a grin: 'I tell ya, out in these server rooms we're like medics. A datacenter's worth millions and can't afford downtime. We put in FM-200 or Inergen, and the moment a firebreather sneaks in, boom – the room fills with gas and chokes it out. No water, no damage. Ya gotta get it right.' His accent is thick, but his meaning is clear: modern agents protect the kit and keep the business running. Artifacts and artworks are often irreplaceable. For museums, an errant sprinkler droplet can ruin centuries of history almost as surely as a flame can. Museums in NYC and Miami invest in special fire control: many use pre-action sprinkler systems (requiring two triggers before water flows) or switch to total-flooding gas or fine-water-mist systems. In fact, the National Park Service advises that 'sprinklers and/or fire hoses extinguish the fire, but may cause significant damage to collections… house objects in closed cabinets and raise cabinets 4–6 inches off the floor' to mitigate water harm. In practice, that often means clean agents (FM-200, Inergen, etc.) or water mist (such as HI-FOG®) that meet museum standards. Local regulations catch up, too. A century after a blaze destroyed the South Florida Museum in St. Augustine (1919) and the tragic loss of Brazil's National Museum spurred code changes worldwide, both states now require historic and high-occupancy cultural sites to have automatic fire systems per NFPA and state law. For instance, Florida's fire code amendment might demand early-detection smoke control or flame-suppression gas systems in archive vaults. In NYC, the Landmarks Preservation Commission often conditions permits on state-of-the-art fire protection. Leading suppression manufacturers cater to this niche: water-mist specialists and inert-gas makers tout installations at places like the New York Public Library or Miami's art museums, giving curators confidence. No place burns faster than a busy commercial kitchen. Here, fire suppression companies rely on proven wet-chemical hood systems. Above every grill and fryer, a network of stainless-steel pipes and nozzles is waiting. When a grease fire flares, heat melts a fusible link and the Ansul (or similar) system dumps a foamy liquid that saponifies hot oil – essentially turning it into safe soap and water. Dry chemical 'K-class' cylinders are also used for deep-fryers. Meanwhile, overhead ductwork carries fire straight to the sprinklers in the ceiling, giving firefighters time to arrive. Service and maintenance are strictly regulated. In NYC, the owner or principal of every kitchen suppression service company must hold FDNY Certificate of Fitness S-71 (for wet-chemical systems). The business itself must have a Dept. of Buildings Master Fire Suppression Contractor license (Type C or A) to legally install or modify the systems. In Florida, the technician must be a state-certified sprinkler contractor (if altering hood pipes) or have a kitchen-suppression endorsement. These requirements ensure that everyone from the local deli to a five-star restaurant uses fully inspected systems. As Mike at Done Right Hood notes with a chuckle, 'You wouldn't cook your steak on a hotplate without supervision, right? Same goes for fire. When I'm on a job in Manhattan or Miami, I double-check every nozzle. I tell ya, these chefs make magic with oil – but one spark, and our systems better be on point to save the day.' His pride in that work shows why kitchen fires kill far fewer people now than they did decades ago. In both New York City and Florida, legal compliance is a gatekeeper for safety. In NYC, as noted, the combination of FDNY Certificates of Fitness and DOB Master Licenses creates a high bar. For example, any firm doing fire-piping work must be a licensed Master Fire Suppression Piping Contractor under NYC Building Code §28-401.3, and key personnel must carry COFs. Local Code also requires periodic inspections – FDNY inspectors or licensed inspectors (per NFPA 25) verify every sprinkler and system annually. Florida's oversight is statewide: Chapter 633 of the Florida Statutes spells out credentials. An aspiring Fire Protection Contractor must apply for a certificate, proving experience or education, and pass an NFPA-based exam. Once certified, the contractor can install and service systems (sprinklers, extinguishers, alarms) up to certain classes. Individual technicians must often have local licenses (e.g. Miami-Dade certification for underground fire mains). When a Florida county or city issues a fire-protection permit, it typically checks that the applicant is on the state certified list. This layered system – national standards (NFPA), state statutes and local enforcement – helps maintain uniform quality. Behind every sprinkler head or suppression cylinder is often a major manufacturer whose brand is trusted in the ecosystem. Ansul (now part of Tyco SimplexGrinnell) is a century-old name in fire suppression: it began in 1915 making specialty chemicals and grew into 'one of the largest fire protection companies in the world,' producing kitchen systems and special hazard agents Kidde (founded 1917) is famous for household and industrial detectors and extinguishers; it pioneered the first integrated smoke-detection/CO₂-suppression system, and today is North America's #1 home fire safety brand. Amerex (since 1971) boasts that it has become 'the world's leading… manufacturer of hand portable and wheeled fire extinguishers', and it also offers vehicle and industrial suppression gear. In short, Ansul, Kidde, Amerex and others supply the tried-and-true hardware – from cylinders to nozzles – that certified installers then assemble. The manufacturers also train and support fire suppression companies, ensuring that down-to-earth techs like Joey and Mike have reliable parts and agent formulations. The synergy is clear: engineers design the suppression laws and systems, big companies build the equipment, city and state agencies enforce the rules, and trained crews put it all together. The result is a tightly woven safety net. In South Florida condos or Manhattan lofts, in data towers or back-of-house kitchens, this network of regulations, technology and expertise means fire hazards are addressed well before an ember can grow. As one Miami museum conservator summarized it, 'We invest in these systems not because we expect disaster, but because we refuse to lose irreplaceable treasures or lives. When everyone does their part – from the guy in the back room maintaining the cylinders to the system designer calculating flows – we sleep easier at night.' Gabriel Jean Done Right Hood & Fire Safety +1 212-660-3232 email us here Visit us on social media: LinkedIn Instagram Facebook YouTube Legal Disclaimer: EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

Grandparents Are Sharing Their Brutally Honest Opinions About Modern Parenting, And It's Very Insightful
Grandparents Are Sharing Their Brutally Honest Opinions About Modern Parenting, And It's Very Insightful

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Grandparents Are Sharing Their Brutally Honest Opinions About Modern Parenting, And It's Very Insightful

The practices and norms around raising kids shift over time, with each generation of parents redefining an age-old role. Sometimes these shifts are based on new research, technologies or cultural trends; other times they're a response to how the previous generation did things. Millennials and younger Gen Xers with kids today are generally parenting in a more conscious way than their own parents did. For better or worse, they have a lot more information, advice and opinions at their fingertips than the parents who came before them. Because each generation has their own perspective on the tough job of raising kids, we asked today's grandparents in our Facebook community to share their thoughts on current parenting practices. Here's what they had to say. Responses have been lightly edited for clarity and length. I love the more gentle parenting philosophy that's popular today. 'My kids are so invested in their children it's beautiful! They use gentle parenting techniques, even with challenging personalities; provide them with healthy outlets and nurture their friends as well. They're 100% better than I was — but I had to do it alone with five children. I'd choose my kid's parenting over mine, every time!' — Anne W. However, I worry some parents today are too permissive with their kids. 'People who want to do gentle parenting should really educate themselves on how it works if they are trying to achieve the goals of gentle parenting. Frequently people confuse it with permissive parenting.' — Marny H. It's great to see dads stepping up more at home. 'Likes: My daughter is a hard working, gentle and wonderful mother, and my son-in-law is an amazing hands-on dad that successfully carries half the load. Our collective grandkids would be fortunate if they ALL have this kind of parenting. Dislikes: Sad Beige Parenting.' — Angela A. I'm envious of the conveniences of modern parenting. 'Just wish Amazon was a thing back then. Delivery of diapers alone would have made me continually grateful.' — Susan S. It's surprising to me how many kids can't behave in a restaurant. 'Really liking most of the trends and hope I live long enough to see how these littles fare in adulthood. I do notice the majority of today's children aren't emotionally regulated enough to use passable manners in restaurants, and I don't understand what that's about.' — Ream J. I think parents should just let their kids be kids. 'The race to nowhere has made kids anxious. I think in general, we need to lay off the elite athletics, private coaches, tutors, college prep classes etc. in adolescence. Let kids go back to enjoying being young and stop focusing on their 'future' from the moment they come out the womb.' — Dawn J. Excessive screen time concerns me. 'Too much time spent on the friggin' phone!' — Susan F. I believe some parents could benefit from taking on a more authoritative role. 'Too many of today's parents are their children's 'friends,' so no one is in control!' — Marilyn C. I feel like parents could do more to encourage basic manners. 'Respect and manners are a big deal for me. Saying thank you is almost non-existent. It's also very impolite to not return messages. Another pet peeve is being habitually late. Remember, children learn what they live. Quality time spent with children is also extremely important. Spending time outside rather than inside playing video games is great quality time.' — Karen C. I'm disheartened by declining vaccination rates among kids. 'Kids need minimum vaccinations unless there is a valid medical reason. Unvaccinated kids are a public health nuisance and a person lacking medical training shouldn't be making decisions that affect the global population.' — Dawn J. A number of grandparents remarked on how impressed they are by their adult children's parenting. I love that my grandkids are encouraged to play outside and read. 'My kids are doing great, their children play as children should. They are outside, playing in dirt, riding a bike, learning. Inside they play with toys, puzzles games and read, and no technology and little TV.' — Maria L. I think more could be done to foster empathy, patience and common sense. 'In a world soon to be dominated by artificial intelligence, where wants are met instantly, we need to step back to be able to teach patience and understanding that survival isn't just about getting everything you want when you want it. That taking care of your needs and the needs of others is as important. There was a comical post that asked if you were concerned about the increase in artificial intelligence? The reply was I am more concerned in the decrease of real intelligence! We can't lose creativity, empathy, basic life skills as parents and teachers. There will come time when a child is forced into a situation where common sense is required and you don't have an app or device.' — Eric R. My kids are doing a better job than I did as a parent. 'My kids are much better parents than I was. They are doing an amazing job.' — Alan A. 'My daughter and son-in-law have two teenagers. They've parented an A+.' — Rose post originally appeared on HuffPost.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store