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Cell phone preference »
« And we wonder  
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ISurfTooMuch

join:2007-04-23
Tuscaloosa, AL

reply to Karl Bode
Re: Huh?

Not to mention the fact that the increase in cell-only households presents other issues in disease control. Suppose you have a serious outbreak that requires immediate notification of all residents in an area. When everyone had landlines, you could call all numbers in a given group of exchanges and be pretty sure you'd reached everyone. With cells, people often move and keep their old number, which may be from an area across the country. How much of an issue is that, and how do you deal with it? That's something the CDC needs to find out.


pnh102
Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty
Premium
join:2002-05-02
Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast

said by ISurfTooMuch See Profile :

Suppose you have a serious outbreak that requires immediate notification of all residents in an area. When everyone had landlines, you could call all numbers in a given group of exchanges and be pretty sure you'd reached everyone. With cells, people often move and keep their old number, which may be from an area across the country.
I am sure the government, if it needed to send out such a message, could make use of emergency texting. The only problem of course is how do you make sure it is really from the government and not someone trying to cause a panic?

Come to think of it how do you prevent that if the government just tried calling everyone instead? I know that if anyone calls me saying they are from the government, I am quite skeptical.
--
Blagojevich / Madoff 2012!


TKJunkMail
Enjoy the sun
Premium
join:2002-03-03
Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast

said by pnh102 See Profile :

said by ISurfTooMuch See Profile :

Suppose you have a serious outbreak that requires immediate notification of all residents in an area. When everyone had landlines, you could call all numbers in a given group of exchanges and be pretty sure you'd reached everyone. With cells, people often move and keep their old number, which may be from an area across the country.
I am sure the government, if it needed to send out such a message, could make use of emergency texting. The only problem of course is how do you make sure it is really from the government and not someone trying to cause a panic?

Come to think of it how do you prevent that if the government just tried calling everyone instead? I know that if anyone calls me saying they are from the government, I am quite skeptical.
Isn't that why they have radio and TV and the "Emergency Broadcast System" ??? You don't call everyone in a city on the phone. You put out a broadcast on TV.
--
My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page

TACSPEED
Premium
join:2001-04-14
Tacoma, WA
·Advanced Stream

I rarely listen to the radio and watch very little TV. I also have text messaging disabled on the my prepaid cell phone.

However if they posted the information on the Internet, I would probably see it.

So the emergency broadcast system needs to include the Internet now.
--
Fiber Optics is the future of high-speed internet access. Stop by the BBR Fiber Optic Forum.

patcat88

join:2002-04-05
Jamaica, NY

said by TACSPEED See Profile :

So the emergency broadcast system needs to include the Internet now.
»ISPs Injecting Their Content Into Websites

You mean something like this?


S_engineer

join:2007-05-16
Chicago, IL
·Comcast

reply to TACSPEED
But you wouldn't see an emergency messege because the pop up would probably be blocked

I still have my landline....I could see the Census Bureau keeping tabs as well as the DOD
--
"When I was in junior high school, the teachers voted me the student most likely to end up in the electric chair."---Sylvestor Stallone


en102
Canadian, eh?

join:2001-01-26
Valencia, CA
reply to TACSPEED
I have text messaging disabled on my cell phone, however, carriers can override it. Eg. I will still get a message or 2 from AT&T.
--
Canada = Hollywood North

tbone2006

join:2006-07-22
Abilene, TX
reply to TKJunkMail
Our city just implemented a reverse 911 system. It is supposed to call everybody in the affected area including the whole town ~100,000. That is as long as you still have landline.


Eat Me

join:2002-09-25
Sussex, NJ
·PenTeleData
·Future Nine Corpor..
·VOIPo
·Vonage

reply to TKJunkMail
said by TKJunkMail See Profile :

Isn't that why they have radio and TV and the "Emergency Broadcast System" ??? You don't call everyone in a city on the phone. You put out a broadcast on TV.
The EAS (Emergency Alert System) is a joke. They didn't even use it during 9/11.


avd706
insert annoying animated gif here
Premium
join:2003-02-06
Union, NJ
they didnt have to. Every station was broadcasting info. They were qafraid a EAB would preempt local coverage. (ps: as i type this im in a path train stuck at the wtc train station)


tmh

@qwest.net

reply to ISurfTooMuch
said by ISurfTooMuch See Profile :

Not to mention the fact that the increase in cell-only households presents other issues in disease control. Suppose you have a serious outbreak that requires immediate notification of all residents in an area. When everyone had landlines, you could call all numbers in a given group of exchanges and be pretty sure you'd reached everyone. With cells, people often move and keep their old number, which may be from an area across the country. How much of an issue is that, and how do you deal with it? That's something the CDC needs to find out.
With cellphones, that's even easier. Just broadcast a text message to everyone within range of cell towers in the affected area. That way, even folks who are just visiting will get the message. GSM phones already have the capability to receive localized broadcast messages, I can't imagine CDMA doesn't have a comparable capability.

tmh


jacksonator1

join:2007-12-21
canada
reply to ISurfTooMuch
Great point!
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