Well, suggest you read following article where you will find: “Energetic particles can arrive at Earth very quickly, within several minutes to a few hours, with these events lasting for days. Currently, we can only provide forecasts of these events as they are taking place, as it is highly challenging to predict these events before they occur. ... These particles are highly charged and, if they reach Earth’s atmosphere, can potentially disrupt satellites and electronic infrastructure, as well as pose a radiation risk to astronauts and people in airplanes. In 1859, during what’s known as the Carrington Event, a large solar storm caused telegraphic systems across Europe and America to fail. With the modern world so reliant on electronic infrastructure, the potential for harm is much greater.
The solar flare theory is bankrupt because the Maff (science) is off.
Solar flares are full of magnetically charged particles that take eight days to traverse the distance to Earth. So, when there are reports of flares, then expect effects a week or so later, not the same day.
Furthermore, the sunspot has to face Earth, not spew to one side.
I'm honestly skeptical that this outage happened at all. I'm only hearing about it on some news sources, some anon channels, and some people here claiming there was this huge widespread outage that somehow had zero effect on myself, friends, family, and coworkers. I was in multiple Teams meetings with no issues, saw hardly any mention of issues on GAW that day, and didn't have any interruptions on my own phone either. It's feeling like a psyop.
According to the outage maps I saw it was widespread nationally but large areas seemed unaffected. One thing I am certain of, it was not caused by solar flares.
The AT&T explanation of an update causing it is the most feasible but I learned decades ago not to believe anything AT&T said.
Not buying it. If the solar flares were the cause it would have been across the board. Space weather does not play favorites.
Starting at 3:48 the video seems to confirm this. The graphics at 4:27 reinforce it. HF signals took a major hit in these areas.
CME's are a whole other ball game. Fortunately these flares were not powerful enough to be followed by them. See "Carrington Event" for context.
Well, suggest you read following article where you will find: “Energetic particles can arrive at Earth very quickly, within several minutes to a few hours, with these events lasting for days. Currently, we can only provide forecasts of these events as they are taking place, as it is highly challenging to predict these events before they occur. ... These particles are highly charged and, if they reach Earth’s atmosphere, can potentially disrupt satellites and electronic infrastructure, as well as pose a radiation risk to astronauts and people in airplanes. In 1859, during what’s known as the Carrington Event, a large solar storm caused telegraphic systems across Europe and America to fail. With the modern world so reliant on electronic infrastructure, the potential for harm is much greater.
source: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2021/mar/source-hazardous-high-energy-particles-located-sun
The solar flare theory is bankrupt because the Maff (science) is off.
Solar flares are full of magnetically charged particles that take eight days to traverse the distance to Earth. So, when there are reports of flares, then expect effects a week or so later, not the same day.
Furthermore, the sunspot has to face Earth, not spew to one side.
The flares hit approximately on the other side of the Earth from us. It was very interesting that it started at 4am. White Hats?
Or black.
50/50
It was the 4am timing that tipped the balance for me.
I'm honestly skeptical that this outage happened at all. I'm only hearing about it on some news sources, some anon channels, and some people here claiming there was this huge widespread outage that somehow had zero effect on myself, friends, family, and coworkers. I was in multiple Teams meetings with no issues, saw hardly any mention of issues on GAW that day, and didn't have any interruptions on my own phone either. It's feeling like a psyop.
According to the outage maps I saw it was widespread nationally but large areas seemed unaffected. One thing I am certain of, it was not caused by solar flares.
The AT&T explanation of an update causing it is the most feasible but I learned decades ago not to believe anything AT&T said.