30 Second Earthquake Warnings
Bill Kendrick writes "A new network of seismic stations may help give as much as a 30 second warning before a major earthquake, giving time to shut down gas lines, stop public transit, etc. Yahoo! News has the story." There are lots of qualifiers in here ("as much as," "some earthquakes") but any warning is probably better than none.
Potential Employer: Well, we've reviewed your resume and references and, if we may be frank, you're entirely unqualified for this position.
*sound of beeper going off*
Me: Did I mention I can destroy you all with the power of my mind?
Potential Employer: Okay, that's just about enough of that. Securit--
*cue 7.1 earthquake*
Me: $400k sound good to start?
First, "near 100 percent accuracy" isn't 100% accuracy. There's no information here about false positives, but my guess is that, like many testing and alarm problems, tuning out one way, opens up the other side disproportionately. So you'll always have issues where the gas mains don't cut off in time, but people'll understand. But when the gas cuts out from too many false positives, people'll call for the whole thing to be turned off.
The other side of this is: I hope it's not supposed to be wired to the Internet. How's that for a script kiddie prank. "1 4m 2 733t 4 j00! 1 0wn3d CA! h4h4h4h4h!" Punks. Still, even with a large private network, being able to fake an earthquake isn't a small thing.
IP is just rude.
Is there any torture so subl