 | reply to pnh102
Re: Huh? said by pnh102:said by ISurfTooMuch: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 |
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 TACSPEEDPremium join:2001-04-14 Tacoma, WA | 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. |
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 patcat88 join:2002-04-05 Jamaica, NY kudos:1 | said by TACSPEED:So the emergency broadcast system needs to include the Internet now. »ISPs Injecting Their Content Into Websites
You mean something like this? |
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 | 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 |
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 en102Canadian, 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 |
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 | reply to fAcEtIOUs 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. |
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 | reply to fAcEtIOUs said by fAcEtIOUs: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. |
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 AVDRespice, Adspice, ProspicePremium join:2003-02-06 Onion, 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) |
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