Slashdot Mirror


Earthquakes Shake Servers, Too

Michael Buhrley writes "I felt a pretty good earthquake this afternoon in Tokyo. I immediately went to the Japan Weather Association earthquake information page to see if it had registered the quake, which it had not (the ground was still shaking at this point.) 20 seconds later when I refreshed the page the server had slowed to a crawl. I had been looking at traffic graphs for one of my servers earlier and thought it would be neat to correlate the traffic data with the seismic data for the event. I wonder how quickly a noticeable traffic spike could be detected and what other information could be gleaned from the web behavior. Lots of traffic = big quake or quake in big city. The U.S.G.S. Pasadena Field Office has a page that compares this phenomenon to the Slashdot effect."

3 of 32 comments (clear)

  1. Quake by pcbob · · Score: 4, Funny

    Comparison to slashdot doesn't do us /.ers justice. Just wait till the next Quake(tm) comes out, and they'll see what a network crawl really is about...

  2. Let me get this straight by Samus · · Score: 4, Funny

    So let me get this straight. You were feeling an earthquake. While it was still going on you went to a web site to see if you were really feeling an earthquake instead of seeking some kind of shelter? Thats way more geek than me.

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    In Republican America phones tap you.
  3. 5-7-5 by rodentia · · Score: 4, Funny



    the earth is moving
    server room epicenter
    earthquake or slashdot?

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    illegitimii non ingravare