@puniko
Bitte wieviele Alarmsignalemittierdingsis habt ihr eigentlich?
@wakame soweit ich weiss gibts hier nur zwei unterschiedliche alarmsignale. eines für generelle dinge und das andere spezifisch für flutungen
@wakame (und ja, überflutungen sind auch mitten in den bergen eine reale gefahr)
In Deutschland ist das viel einfacher.
Z.B. in den Schulklassen wartet man am Probetag darauf, dass es 11 wird, dann sagt der Lehrer: "Achtung, Probealarm." und macht so ein Alarmgeräusch.
Und die Schüler antworten dann im Chor: "Der Probealarm funktioniert. Jetzt fühle ich mich richtig sicher. Danke, Friedrich Merz."
@wakame @cinnamon btw the alert swiss stuff is also provided as a website: https://www.alert.swiss/
@wakame@tech.lgbt @cinnamon @puniko@mk.absturztau.be is .ch not god enough anymore?
/Cinny
@puniko @wakame @cinnamon why is the first thought of politicians to get people to install an app nobody installs and requires internet racconnectivity to function, instead of using the emergency broadcasts functionality that has existed for decades and just requires any cell tower in range to broadcast the warning
@charlotte @wakame @cinnamon
its not like that isn’t planed or being worked on at all
/Cinny
@puniko @wakame @cinnamon
i find the priority wrong and likely causes people to miss emergency warnings
cell broadcasts are not some new fangled technology, it predates smart phones and has been widely deployed by mobile network providers since at least 2008. they place very little requirements on the device receiving them (it doesn’t require a ractive internet racconnection, or even have a sim raccard at all…) and infrastructure wise require a lot less than any phone app requiring push notifications will
it also, like, doesn’t require an app you first need to install and oops your phone is not supported for some reason. it’s part of the operating system on phones
which yeah the app is more versatile and all and likely useful regardless of that, but when an emergency hits the most likely alarms that’ll tell you will either be physical sirens or cell broadcasts
@charlotte @wakame @cinnamon you don’t have to argue with me about that, i do agree with you. switzerland should have implemented that channel way earlier than just now
Special case Germany:
We discovered this totally new concept "Cell Broadcast" around... 2 years ago?
Then decided to use longer channel numbers that are of course only supported by newer smartphones.
So if you dont't have Android 11 or iOS 16.1 or higher, you are not notified.
We also have an app. Which... works sometimes, I guess.
Personally, I never got notified about an emergency on my smartphones ever.
Neither through the app nor cell broadcast.
Q: Why hasn't Germany implemented proper cell broadcast?
A: Because the people who are deciding the technical details lack competence and rational thought. Likely drinking varnish all day, which is a favorite pastime in german politics.
That could have been one reason for doing emergency notifications.
The actual reason people died in Ahrtal 2021 was because the relevant politicians decided not to sound the alarm.
After warnings checks notes by the European Flood Awareness System that started four days before.
And the german weather service two days before...
Yeah, so... as I said: Incompetence.
@charlotte @puniko @wakame Phone network broadcast (ES-Alert) is what is used in Spain (allegedly, since I’ve never seen it working in my area, not even for tests). But then they screw things up by completely forgetting about RDS (on car radios) for traffic alerts, and instead deploy a completely new emergency beacon system based on cell networks
@wakame @charlotte @puniko …at least (I hope) your politicians aren’t in a leisure meal while the catastruphe is happening, and people in charge of coordinating it doesn’t “suddenly remember” that the cell phone notification system actually exists, like in Valencia (Spain)
No, they were too busy discussing potential political fallout and how to shift blame for the coming catastrophe.