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  1. Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    2,027
    #11
    The cause perhaps?

    A strong earthquake has struck central Japan, including Tokyo, just days after another tremor killed one and hurt 120 in the country.

    Google map of magnitude 6.7 quake epicentre, off Hachijo island, Japan

    A map showing the epicentre of the earthquake

    The magnitude 6.7 quake struck in the Pacific Ocean, some 202 miles southeast of the capital, at 7.49am local time (23.49pm BST on Wednesday), according to the US Geological Survey.

    http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/Wor...00908215359911

    There was also another one in the Indian Ocean

    http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/vid...logical_Survey


    magkasunod.....

    [SIZE="1"](why am I half-expecting another anti-gma post here? )[/SIZE]
    Last edited by Negus; August 13th, 2009 at 02:32 PM.

  2. Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Posts
    86
    #12
    ah kaya pala!!!hindi tuloy ako makapaglaro ng maayos sa facebook...nakakainis miss ko na maglaro ng mafia wars....

  3. Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Posts
    657
    #13
    kaya pala mabagal pc ko, kala ko may spyware hhehe

  4. Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    14,181
    #14
    Yung tsikot parang yung days na it still had the SB and Tcash sa bagal.

  5. Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Posts
    850
    #15
    The real cause in Japan.......


  6. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    29,354
    #16
    http://www.philstar.com/Article.aspx...bCategoryId=66

    [SIZE="4"]Local telcos face problems due to 'multiple cable cuts'[/SIZE]
    (The Philippine Star) Updated August 14, 2009 12:00 AM

    MANILA, Philippines - The two international cable systems which carry international broadband and telecommunications connectivity for the country’s two leading telco providers — Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT) and Globe Telecom — have suffered from “multiple cable cuts,” the cause of which is still unknown.

    Subscribers, in turn, have been experiencing slow or intermittent Internet connection or finding it difficult to send and receive international voice calls or text messages as a result of the cable cuts.

    The submarine fiber optic cables of the Asia-Pacific Cable Network (APCN) and Southeast Asia-Middle East-Western Europe 3 (SMW3) which service PLDT and Globe, may have been damaged by adverse weather conditions, reports revealed.

    PLDT said its Internet services have been adversely affected by multiple cable faults in two international cable systems APCN2 and SMW3.

    These faults, PLDT said, have been detected between Singapore and Malaysia and between China and Taiwan. The exact cause of these faults is still unknown, it added.

    As a result, the PLDT Group is now rerouting Internet traffic to other cable systems and coordinating with partners in affected international cable systems to restore full capacity as soon as possible.

    The double cable cuts are within the APCN 2, a submarine telecommunications cable linking several countries in the Asia-Pacific region. It has landing points in Chongming, Shanghai, China; Shantou, Guangdong Province, China; Lantau Island, Islands District, Hong Kong; Chikura, Chiba Prefecture, Japan; Kitaibaraki, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan; Pusan, South Korea; Kuantan, Pahang State, Malaysia; Batangas Bay in the Philippines; Katong, Singapore; and Tanshui, Taipei County, Taiwan.

    PLDT subsidiary Smart Communications, for its part, said its international and broadband services are adversely affected by the double cable break that occurred Wednesday morning between China and Taiwan; and Malaysia and Singapore.

    Affected services include international voice and SMS or text messaging, as well as Internet services under Smart Bro and Smart Bro Plug-It.

    Smart said subscribers of these service may experience difficulty in initiating or receiving overseas calls, and sending or receiving text messages abroad. Smart Bro subscribers, on the other hand, may encounter slow or intermittent Internet connection, and difficulty in accessing websites hosted overseas.

    “We are still awaiting word on the cause of the fiber cuts. In the meantime, Smart would like to assure the general public that close coordination is ongoing with our network counterparts abroad to aid in restoring normal services as soon as possible,” company officials said.

    Meanwhile, Globe Telecom, in a statement, said international undersea cable systems, specifically the APCN2, APCN1 and SMW3 have been down since the morning of Aug. 12 reportedly due to harsh weather.

    Globe maintains bandwidth on APCN2 which is now inaccessible from the Philippines, resulting in the partial disruption of its Internet service and some business international circuits.

    The company said it has been progressively migrating traffic from APCN2 to its other cable systems, namely C2C and TGN-IA, which are unaffected and provide the necessary redundancy for such eventualities.

    Full restoration of Globe’s Internet service was expected as of yesterday, and its affected business circuits are already being rerouted, it added.

    “Effectively, customer impact of this eventuality has been mitigated by the alternate routes provided by C2C and TGN-IA. This further validates Globe’s recent investments in diverse cable systems; the TGN-IA system began carrying Globe traffic earlier this year,” Globe officials pointed out.

    It will be recalled that in the earlier part of 2007, telco providers and their subscribers also suffered from a fiber break in the APCN cable system due to a strong earthquake off Taiwan. The earthquake damaged six undersea cables.

    At that time, PLDT said 66 percent of its circuits were affected by the damage incurred by the APCN2; 77 percent from SMW3; and 48 percent from APCN. The overall impact on PLDT’s services indicated that 30.69 percent of voice traffic was affected; 51.05 percent of its data service; and 41.38 percent of its Internet-related services.

    This has resulted in PLDT and other local carriers searching for alternative submarine cable systems that are not located in fault lines and less vulnerable to adverse weather conditions, and investing in redundant systems.
    Last edited by ghosthunter; August 14th, 2009 at 05:23 PM.

  7. Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Posts
    817
    #17
    My PLDT is back up and running after two of days of experiencing dial-up all over again....

  8. Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Posts
    994
    #18
    for more than a day, from 700+ kbps ay napunta ang internet speed ko sa 70 kbps . . . ganun pala ang feeling pag nag ala-dial up uli. Para akong mamamatay. Hu hu hu . . .

    International link problem daw sabi ng PLDT.

  9. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    21,422
    #19
    Mukhang back to normal na as of this moment.

  10. Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    3,938
    #20
    Quote Originally Posted by boybi View Post
    Mukhang back to normal na as of this moment.
    Mukha nga. Salamat naman.

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If you are wondering why your (PLDT-DSL/Smart-Bro) internet speed suddenly dropped...