Inspired by the very similar thread about school incidents.

  • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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    28 days ago

    Note: if you’re planning a crime in that town, you only have to cut one wire to disable all police communication.

    That’s some lacking infrastructure

        • fubo@lemmy.world
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          27 days ago

          What does a network engineer bring on a hiking trip in the woods? Water, snacks, extra sunscreen, a first aid kit, bug repellent, bear spray … and a folding shovel and a piece of fiber-optic cable.

          (What’s the fiber for?)

          Well, if you get lost in the woods or need to be rescued, you take the shovel, dig a trench, put the fiber in it, bury it … and within an hour, someone with a backhoe will show up to tear it up. Then you can just follow the backhoe tracks back to civilization.

      • invertedspear@lemm.ee
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        28 days ago

        And this is how a micro quake severed our T1 line from LA to Phoenix and shut the network down in our office for a week.

        • artemisRiverborne@lemmy.world
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          28 days ago

          Honestly never thought of that, sounds like there would need to be some sort of protective channeling, with space to allow some shifting

    • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      28 days ago

      You’d be surprised, how fragile critical infrastructure often is. There was an incident in Europe a few years ago, where a single miscalculation in a planned power line shutdown almost caused the entire European grid to split.

      • Boomkop3@reddthat.com
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        28 days ago

        It slowed down a bit, and then we quickly learned that maintaining the perfect 50hz wasn’t actually necessary anymore. Few people still have clocks that depend on it

        • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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          28 days ago

          I’m not talking about the incident in Romania, but in Germany.

          A shipyard needed some wires over a river deactivated and that caused an overload cascade, because the river was the border between two providers who had different assumptions about the capacity of the power lines connecting them.