Right.
The blackout was in 1965. Cellphones were invented in 1973, 8 years later.
Tell us another fable.
Wilbo might be talking about the New York blackout of 1977 or even more likely, the one in 2003.
P.S. I was a toddler in 1965 - when the lights went out after I was messing with the TV, my parents first thought I was responsible.
Even if a tower can be powered indefinitely, if the power is out then eventually your cellphone is going to go dead.
Maybe you were you asleep in August of 2003 after reading your bedtime story?
Personally, if I’m going to attach a city to that one, I would call it the Cleveland blackout, since that’s where the problem started (and very quickly spread).
Tangentially related: A few years ago, when a 5.6 earthquake struck Los Angeles, there was hardly any damage and only a few areas were affected by blackouts. However, the entire cell phone network crashed and stayed down for hours – triggered by 12.5 million L.A. residents immediately calling/texting their friends to say, “Did you feel it?”
Presumably, the cell phone companies started working on a backup system for when the next REALLY BIG quake eventually strikes…
In the US, every SLAM I’ve seen has a diesel generator right next to it. There is a “Rule of Five Nines” here. Your land line should be available 99.999% of the time.
My house phone doesn’t work when there is a black out, my mobile does, aslong as it is charged.
Could this be because you have a cordless phone that depends on a mains-powered base unit? This is one disadvantage to cordless phones. It’s always best have a spare corded phone to plug into the phone socket when the mains fails.
Nope, not Vonage. The Vonage box is independent of my Comcast modem and has no backup battery. In fact, my Comcast modem has no battery, either. So no power also means no internet period for me.
You might check with Vonage to see if there is a different model available. When Charter first installed my modem, they weren’t going to use one with battery backup until I insisted it was a no-cost option. Then they refused to supply a battery, so I had to get that from another source.
I’m not aware of an Internet modem that has a battery, but some phone modems do. Of course, if you are really concerned, get a PC-type UPS as big as you can afford.
When I read the title I got the image of a middle-aged guy wearing a white Brodie helmet with ‘CD’ on it, shouting ‘Turn out that light!’
Nope, Vonage doesn’t have a different box. But I’m not that concerned. Just noting that your mileage may vary. In case of a power outage, I do have a cell phone.