Actually, when the sun becomes a red giant, it will engulf the earth, and
the earth as a concept will cease to exist. So all that depleted uranium
you may or may not be worried about will just become part of the remaining
plasma of the sun.

--
bp
part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com


On Thu, Feb 28, 2019 at 8:58 AM <[email protected]> wrote:

> And in 5 billion years the sun will be a red giant and all life on earth
> will be long gone.
>
> But the good news is, that half the depleted uranium that we will be
> storing out in the west desert will still be there in its pristine
> condition and the other half will have decayed into non radioactive lead.
>
> Nothing but good news here today.
>
> *From:* Jeremy
> *Sent:* Thursday, February 28, 2019 9:19 AM
> *To:* AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group
> *Subject:* Re: [AFMUG] Earthquake Fiber vs Microwave
>
> Well, here in Utah we have all this lakebed sediment on the benches.
> Liquefaction will likely end up putting your fiber 100' below the surface.
> All of the towers will be on the ground as well....everyone will be
> dead....nobody will care about the Internets.
>
> On Mon, Feb 25, 2019 at 9:48 PM <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Loma Prieta earthquake of 1989...I was working for Kaiser Hospitals in
>> their NOC on the 9th floor of a 21 story building in downtown Oakland when
>> the earthquake hit...watched the Cypress freeway collapse outside the
>> office window (horrible image)...at the time, Kaiser had their own private
>> microwave network linking all their hospitals and medical office buildings
>> in Northern California and we managed the network from the NOC in Oakland.
>> https://kaiserpermanentehistory.org/tag/telecommunications/
>>
>> Happy to say that none of the microwave systems went down during/after
>> the earthquake. All we lost were T1s coming in from PacBell (AT&T) (two
>> blocks over from their Oakland CO) that were used for external timing. So
>> we had a few clock slips, but the network was 100% operational. Had to make
>> it up to Grizzly Peak at 3am to start the generator as the power went off
>> and that site was on batter power, but the microwave links were not
>> affected.
>>
>> You can't guarantee that an earthquake or hurricane won't take out links,
>> but you can mitigate much of that with implementing good designs with
>> contingencies and maintaining your systems.
>> >>> Lewis Bergman <[email protected]> 2/25/2019 2:20 PM >>>
>> I don't have earthquake knowledge but I do know that when the US bombed
>> the crap or of Iraq a huge amount O of fiber was destroyed by the
>> percussion of the explosions. As a result all US bases that I know of were
>> rebuilt using heavy rigid conduit. Cost the fortunes.
>>
>> I doubt there is any direct correlation and I don't know if extremely
>> rigid conduit would survive a quake better than anything else. I saw a
>> documentary on it years back.
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 25, 2019, 3:25 PM Seth Mattinen <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> UNR has an earthquake lab. No idea how much it costs to get time on the
>>> equipment though outside of a research project (industry user). Probably
>>> not cheap.
>>>
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