Posted on 07/07/2018 10:21:46 PM PDT by EinNYC
Its every parents worst nightmare their children stuck underground as rescuers work around-the-clock to save them.
For some 12 boys and their soccer coach who have been trapped for nearly two weeks in a flooded Thai cave Israeli technology may be part of the answer.
Its every parents worst nightmare their children stuck underground as rescuers work around-the-clock to save them.
For some 12 boys and their soccer coach who have been trapped for nearly two weeks in a flooded Thai cave Israeli technology may be part of the answer.
Donating the communication systems which function like handheld radios costs upwards of $100,000. But the resulting publicity from helping save the Thai children could easily compensate the firm many times over.
The lack of reliable communication tools hampered earlier rescue attempts. Maxtech doesnt require a cell phone tower and its being used as a lifeline for the boys to get data and video-chat with loved ones.
Because of the distance and depth MaxTechs devices communicate wirelessly between one another one link at a time. Its akin to beacons being lit one hilltop after another, gradually sending a message in a type of relay league.
A group of British divers, alongside Thai naval special forces, were the ones to first find the boys nine days after they were reported missing.
Rescuers are racing against the weather, as monsoon season threatens to raise water levels flooding the section of the cave where the boys are stranded. Officials are pumping out water around-the-clock.
The boys would have to be guided around murky passageways in deep water and many of them do not know how to swim or dive. They are around 4 km. from the mouth of the cave.
It is unclear when it will be safe for them to dive out, as Thailands rainy season lasts through October and the boys lack specialized training.
The children are mostly in stable condition although some worry for their physical and mental health if their predicament continues indefinitely. They are being supplied with high-protein liquid food, along with painkillers and antibiotics.
The group of mostly teenagers were playing soccer when they took first refuge in the cave from a torrential downpour.
Another Maxtech employee, Yuval Zalmanov, was reported in Hebrew media to have hopped on a flight to Thailand, equipped with emergency Maxtech devices.
I said the Israelis were there and probably leading the international team. Some ten or more countries sent help.
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