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9 mo. ago

  • @mattblaze@federate.social we came so close during Able Archer in 83 (I think!) and were only saved by a very brave Soviet man who refused to believe that the traces he was seeing were real.

    I know you know this, but by crikey we were literal seconds from nuclear Armageddon and one man's intransigence pretty much saved the entire world as we knew it.

    Like I said, what a mad time that was!

  • @mattblaze@federate.social Yowzer. I've read about that before but it's usually just facts & figures about the distances, blast radius, expected casualties etc. Your piece adds the humanity that was present at the time, and that's pretty hair raising (not that I have much!).

    I lived through the last 20 years of the Cold War. What a mad thing it was - total distrust of the "other side", it's a wonder we didn't end up in a nuclear winter.

    (See also BBC's "Threads", utterly terrifying yet compelling viewing).

  • @mattblaze@federate.social that is a truly glorious looking building.

    If it housed the transmission gear, the walls may have been that thick to prevent explosions getting out rather than in!

  • @mattblaze@federate.social Apparently so.

    It's a difficult building to get rid of, because the foundation for the tower itself are intertwined with the former telephone exchange beneath it - which is now an incredibly important fibre interchange point.

    I was lucky enough to go up there in 2004 (or 2005) for a presentation lunch from Cisco. It's fascinating inside.

  • @mattblaze@federate.social Before BT (in the UK) went to fibre, they had a wide variety of towers for MW backbone/trunk data/voice comms. Many were utilitarian extended metal tetrahedra or trihedra, but some were quite unique - perhaps the most obvious being the former Post Office Tower in London.

    Many of them are now shadow of their former selves, with very few antennae attached.

  • @mattblaze@federate.social have a look for the history of the Capenhurst tower in the UK, if you're not familiar with that already.

    Kinda related, but slightly in reverse.