nanog mailing list archives
Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail
From: Sean Donelan <sean () donelan com>
Date: Wed, 30 Dec 2020 13:43:16 -0500 (EST)
Its impressive for nearly all (not all) service was restored in central Tennessee, southern Kentucky, and northern Alabama within a few days.
It took months to repair Puerto Rico telecommunications after Hurricanes Irma and Maria. Puerto Rico lost over 95% of telecommunication services, although there were some minimum essential facilties which stayed in operation.
Ultimately how much critical resliliancy exists is a policy debate, not an engineering problem, to solve.
Toute nation a le gouvernement qu'elle mérite.
Current thread:
- Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Sean Donelan (Dec 29)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Matt Erculiani (Dec 29)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Eric Kuhnke (Dec 29)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Sean Donelan (Dec 30)
- <Possible follow-ups>
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Peter E . Fry (Dec 29)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Sean Donelan (Dec 30)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Nathan Stratton (Dec 30)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Blake Dunlap (Dec 30)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Sean Donelan (Dec 30)
- Re: Where do your 911 fees go and why does 911 fail Matt Erculiani (Dec 29)