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After the initial shock of the incident, people will be very chaotic, and also since California and the West Coast contains most of the tech places, wouldn't that take out alot of our communication lines and web servers? Yes, we have web servers all across the country, but how closely coupled are they? How much do they depend on each other?
The internet was designed to be self-rerouting, but is that still true in the present?
Questions:
1) If alot of the DNS servers go down, how would you connect to various websites? Would it actually be worth it to record the static IP addresses of the sites? How can you find out the static IP addresses?
2) If the above scenario was to occur, how would you best prepare if you lived in Texas or someplace physically sheltered from the damage, but effected digitally?
3) If the main internet web hosts go down, how would you stay connected to the rest of the country or world? Would you use the old newsgroup systems, #irc channels, specific TOR destinations, or what? How would you go about preparing now, to stay connected then?
4) If Microsoft's (and Apple's) authentication servers go down, will Windows Vista and Windows 7 copies act as unauthenticated, and lock itself down thinking it's pirated, because it continually can't reach the authentication servers for months on end? Will everyone be forced to move to Ubuntu?
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5) If cell phone network magically goes down, due to whatever, how will you reach your loved ones and stay in contact?
[size="1"]PS: I'm holding off from launching the nukes until I get satisfactory answers. =P