At 2:20 p.m. ET / 1:20 CT / 11:20 PT on shoe eroticismOct. 4, cellular devices, televisions, and radio systems across the U.S. will sound off as part of a national emergency alert testdesigned to ensure that the country's mass communication services are in working order. The alert will sound similar to that of an Amber Alert.
At 2:20 p.m. ET / 1:20 CT / 11:20 PT on Oct. 4, cell towers will broadcast the test for approximately 30 minutes. During those 30 minutes, all Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA)-compatible wireless phones that are switched on, within range of an active cell tower, and in a geographic area where the wireless provider participates in WEA, should be capable of receiving the test message.
The alert tone is generally only played when the alert is initially received by the phone and will not repeat.
For consumers, the message that appears on their phones will read: “THIS IS A TEST of the National Wireless Emergency Alert System. No action is needed.”
Phones with the main menu set to Spanish will display: “ESTA ES UNA PRUEBA del Sistema Nacional de Alerta de Emergencia. No se necesita acción.”
All consumer cell phones, radios, and TVs within range of an active cell tower, and in a geographic area where the wireless provider participates in Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA).
Carrier participation in WEA is voluntary, but widespread across the U.S. Per the FCC, wireless service customers should check with their wireless service provider to find out if their cell phone is WEA-capable. Not all wireless service providers offer WEA, and some participating wireless service providers may offer WEA on some, but not all, of their mobile devices, and in some, but not all, of their service areas.
Nothing. Assuming you receive the alert, rest easy knowing that the country's national alert system is working as intended.
This alert is intended to catch your attention and also be heard by those nearby.
If for any reason, including for your own personal safety, you need to disable the alert so that the sound does not tip off others to the existence of your device, we have created a guide for you at this link. This is especially important information for people in unsafe domestic situations who use a hidden device.
For the upcoming test, FEMA said in a post that "If a phone is off before the test alert is sent and not turned back on until after the [Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA)] Test expires (approximately 30 minutes), the phone should not get the test message," which would mean it would not make the corresponding sound. Smart devices and pay-as-you-go phones should be turned off completely before the broadcast time, which may involve removing its battery.
Topics Government
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Grim video of a starving polar bear could show the species' future
What America's epic electric vehicle charging system may look like
Taika Waititi dedicates Oscar to Indigenous kids in powerful acceptance speech
Huawei sues Verizon for allegedly using patents without permission
UGREEN Nexode 25000mAh 200W power bank drops to $79.99 at Amazon
Man kicked out of city council meeting for trying to recreate Kendall Jenner's Pepsi ad
This mother's face after delivering an 11
Mobile World Congress will be a ghost town this year
Insane wildfire photo perfectly sums up America in 2017
Motorola addresses Razr durability concerns in a video and explanation
EV sales up 30 percent this year despite Tesla woes
'Birds of Prey' retitled 'Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey' in theaters
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。