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22:42hr Southern California Quake internet to some US sites slowed down

uncleyap

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There is a 4.4 quake hit in Southern California this moment.

My access to Yahoo news is screwed up like hell. Hard to connect to this forum as well. Put ping to www.yahoo.com is good still. Access to mail.yahoo.com is still reasonable. It is not a bad situation across the board, but some are affected.

I suspect one optical fiber to California is broken by quake.


Any one have other problems with US sites?

:(:mad: I could login to Yahoo's mail but can not logout now! :(


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100316/ap_on_re_us/us_southern_california_quake_10
 

uncleyap

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Magnitude-4.4 earthquake shakes Southern Calif.

<script type="text/javascript"> if(!YAHOO){var YAHOO = {};} YAHOO.BuzzWidgetTries = 0; (function(){ if(YAHOO && YAHOO.util && YAHOO.util.Event && YAHOO.Media && YAHOO.Media.Buzz){ (function(){ var buzz = new YAHOO.Media.Buzz("buzz-top",{"sync":"buzz-bottom","countPosition":"after","fetchCount":false,"loc_strings":{"buzz_up":"Buzz up!","buzzed":"Buzzed!","one_vote":"{0} vote","n_votes":"{0} votes"}});buzz.onSuccess.subscribe(function(){ if(YAHOO.Updates){ YAHOO.Updates.Disclosure.showDialog({"container":"yup-container","source":"buzz","type":"buzzUp","lang":"en-US"}); } }); })();(function(){ var buzz = new YAHOO.Media.Buzz("buzz-bottom",{"sync":"buzz-top","countPosition":"after","fetchCount":true,"loc_strings":{"buzz_up":"Buzz up!","buzzed":"Buzzed!","one_vote":"{0} vote","n_votes":"{0} votes"}});buzz.onSuccess.subscribe(function(){ if(YAHOO.Updates){ YAHOO.Updates.Disclosure.showDialog({"container":"yup-container","source":"buzz","type":"buzzUp","lang":"en-US"}); } }); })(); } else if(YAHOO.BuzzWidgetTries < 10000) { YAHOO.BuzzWidgetTries += 500; setTimeout(arguments.callee, 500); } })(); </script>
  • <form method="post" action="http://buzz.yahoo.com/vote/" class="buzz" id="buzz-top"> <input name="publisherurn" value="y_news" type="hidden"> <input name="guid" value="ap/20100316/us_southern_california_quake" type="hidden"> <input name=".done" value="/article/y_news/ap/20100316/us_southern_california_quake" type="hidden"> <input name="assettype" value="article" type="hidden"> <input name="votetype" value="1" type="hidden"> <input name="from" value="orion" type="hidden"> <input name="redirect" value="1" type="hidden"> <input name="key" value="12c8f" type="hidden"> <input name=".crumb" value="CqzKEULT5xk" type="hidden"> <input name="logged" value="1" type="hidden"> <input name="language" value="en-US" type="hidden"> <input name="market" value="us" type="hidden">
    </form>
<!-- end: .tools -->
<!-- end: .hd --> <cite class="caption"> AFP/File – A quake reading on a seismograph. Los Angeles and surrounding areas were rattled early Tuesday by a 4.4 … </cite>

<!-- end .primary-media -->
<!-- end .related-media --> <cite class="vcard"> By ALICIA CHANG and JOHN ANTCZAK, Associated Press Writers Alicia Chang And John Antczak, Associated Press Writers </cite> – <abbr title="2010-03-16T07:25:10-0700" class="recenttimedate">16 mins ago</abbr>
<!-- end .byline --> LOS ANGELES – An earthquake east of downtown Los Angeles rippled across Southern California before dawn Tuesday, jolting millions of people awake and putting first-responders on alert.
There are no reports of damage, injuries or power outages linked to the temblor.
"All is calm in the city of Los Angeles," Los Angeles Fire Department Capt. Steve Ruda said.
Nearly an hour after the quake, the California Highway Patrol got reports of a buckled 10-foot stretch of concrete in a center lane of southbound Interstate 5 south of downtown in the Downey area.
CHP Officer Daniel Asleson said later the quake probably didn't cause the buckling. Damage was reported a day earlier in the lane, which is heavily used by big-rigs.
California Department of Transportation crews temporarily patched the area again early Tuesday and the lane reopened an hour later. Work on a permanent fix begins Tuesday night.
"The earthquake probably did contribute to it, a little bit, but ... it's normal wear and tear," Asleson said.
The magnitude-4.4 quake, centered about 10 miles east of downtown Los Angeles, struck shortly after 4 a.m., according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
"It was a shake, but not bad. Our inmates slept through it and we had a few calls, but not as many as you would think," Pico Rivera sheriff's station Sgt. Jacqueline Sanchez said.
Deputies were immediately dispatched to make "critical facility checks — bridges and dams, stuff like that," the sergeant said.
Though the quake was considered small in size, it was felt over a large swath of Southern California.
People from San Bernardino County to the east and Santa Monica to the west reported feeling the quake.
"The building started shaking. That's it. I'm used to it," downtown security guard Ruben Solis, 25, said from his booth in the high-rise district. Solis said he checked his monitors and no alarms were triggered. "I got up and went on patrol."
But fellow security guard Nonie Bailey, 55, was on the fourth floor and headed quickly for the ground level.
"It shook real hard. I thought the building was coming down. I was on the fourth floor and I got down to the ground," Bailey said.
Los Angeles County Fire Department supervising dispatcher Andre Gougis said there are no reports of damage or injury and the department is at normal operations.
"All our battalions reported a Level 1, meaning they felt it but there was no damage," Gougis said. He said the quake was felt at his east Los Angeles headquarters.
"There was an initial jolt, then mild shaking after that," he said.
The quake hit not far from the 1987 Whittier Narrows earthquake, a magnitude 5.9 quake that killed eight people and caused more than $350 million in damage.
The latest jolt is too small to inflict the same damage.
"I'm sure people would have felt it, but this is not an earthquake that will be damaging," said USGS geophysicist Amy Vaughan.
Tuesday's early morning jolt was probably not related to the Whittier Narrows quake because too much time has elapsed, said California Institute of Technology seismologist Kate Hutton.
Scientists have not yet determined which fault was responsible for the latest quake.
Hutton said there's a small chance that Tuesday's temblor is a precursor to a larger event, but the likelihood diminishes over time.
 

zuoom

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Loyal
hmm, shouldn't the nature of the internet be more resilient to a break in one communication line/node?
 

uncleyap

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Loyal
hmm, shouldn't the nature of the internet be more resilient to a break in one communication line/node?

Will not bring whole Internet down, but does not mean there is no problem when a submarine cable is broken. There will be speed affected after capacity losses. And until the routers had been re-programmed in response to the damages, those users who were still depending on the broken pipe will still lost some access. Once rerouted their connections will resume, but mostly still be at some speed losses due to sharing with additional users.:( At this time, my connections are OK already, I am not downloading any huge things now, so I can not know if my speed is slower than before. I have no time to test.:o
 
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