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July 29, 2008 3:03 PM PDT

Los Angeles earthquake chokes phone calls, not Twitter

by Dawn Kawamoto
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A 5.4 earthquake hit Tuesday while Verdell Wilson was having an exam in her gynecologist's Los Angeles office.

Given it was her first earthquake experience, Wilson did what comes naturally--she twittered it.

"As soon as I got dressed, I twittered my experience from my cell phone," Wilson said. "I usually twitter to 80 friends, but I now have 274 messages from people commenting on it."

Twittering and texting may be the way to go in an emergency, given landline and cellular phone networks were heavily congested as callers jammed the lines, creating frustration for some users who had difficulty getting calls through.

earthquake

"If you're on a wireless network and you can't get a call through, often the texting network won't be as congested," said John Britton, an AT&T spokesman.

He also advised users to forgo making non-emergency calls when natural disasters strike, in order to free up network resources for emergency calls.

The earthquake not only created network congestion for AT&T callers, but for Verizon customers, too.

"There were no outages, but what we did see was a big spike in calls. It was about 40 percent higher than our projections of what we might experience in a natural disaster," said Ken Muche, a Verizon spokesman.

Other tech companies, however, were more fortunate.

Security software giant Symantec, for example, was able to escape any damage to its nearby research lab in Culver City, Calif., said a company spokesman.

Despite a "good long shake," nothing fell in the facility and cell and phone services were not interrupted.

Originally posted at Wireless
Dawn Kawamoto covers enterprise security and financial news relating to technology for CNET News. E-mail Dawn.
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by JustOneJule July 29, 2008 5:16 PM PDT
The Queen of Twitter TMI
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by vidanuevatx July 30, 2008 7:14 AM PDT
My experience suggests that in a disaster, it may be easier to phone a thousand miles away than to phone next door. If all circuits in your area are over-loaded, it may be easier for you to get an outbound connection than both an outbound and an inbound connection at the same time. For that reason, it's probably a good idea to have an emergency contact in another state.
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by chejian July 30, 2008 9:05 AM PDT
http://iknowfuture.blogspot.com/

www.512-china.org

earthquake prediction, stock prediction, life prediction and so on
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by mikey_k April 1, 2009 2:22 PM PDT
This is why I prefer VOIP congestion does not affect VOIP as long as you have a solid connection. However if you are using a cable modem or WiFi Voip is most likely your worst enemy.

Mikey K
<a href ="http://www.voipreview.org/Business_Telephone_Systems/Phone_Services.aspx" target="_blank">Business Voip</a>
<a href ="http://www.myvoipprovider.com/Residential_VoIP_Comparison" target="_blank">Residential Voip</a>
Reply to this comment
by mikey_k April 1, 2009 2:24 PM PDT
This is why I prefer VOIP congestion does not affect VOIP as long as you have a solid connection. However if you are using a cable modem or WiFi Voip is most likely your worst enemy.

Mikey K
[url=http://www.voipreview.org/Business_Telephone_Systems/Phone_Services.aspx]Business Voip[/url]
[url=http://www.myvoipprovider.com/Residential_VoIP_Comparison]Residential Voip[/url]
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