RSS feed source: USGS Earthquake Hazards Program
Time2025-08-27 13:10:59 UTC2025-08-27 13:10:59 UTC at epicenterLocation24.827°N 121.913°EDepth116.04 km (72.10 mi)
Click this link to continue reading the article on the source website.
RSS feed source: USGS Earthquake Hazards Program
Time2025-08-27 13:10:59 UTC2025-08-27 13:10:59 UTC at epicenterLocation24.827°N 121.913°EDepth116.04 km (72.10 mi)
Click this link to continue reading the article on the source website.
RSS feed source: USGS Earthquake Hazards Program
Wed, 27 Aug 2025, 14:20 | BY: EARTHQUAKEMONITOR
Worldwide earthquakes above magnitude 3 during the past 24 hours on 27 Aug 2025
Summary: 1 quake 6.0+, 10 quakes 5.0+, 43 quakes 4.0+, 142 quakes 3.0+, 318 quakes 2.0+ (514 total)
In the past 24 hours, seismic activity worldwide has remained moderately active. A magnitude 6.0 earthquake on the Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia occurred approximately 98 km east of Severo-Kuril’sk. The tremor was felt by an estimated 6,000 people, causing light shaking but no damage. The region continues to experienced heightened seismicity due to frequent aftershocks following the M8.8 earthquake on July 29, 2025.
Meanwhile, the Caspian Sea region in Russia experienced a magnitude 5.4 earthquake near the coast of Dagestan. Reports on damage or casualties are currently limited, but the event has been carefully logged by our monitoring system.
In Taiwan, a potential seismic event was reported near Neihu on August 27, 2025. This is currently unverified, and authorities are awaiting further information.
Seismic activity in the United States has been minor. In South Carolina, two small earthquakes were recorded near Coronaca, measuring 2.1 and 1.7 in magnitude, with no reported damage or injuries (volcanodiscovery.com, wpde.com). Additionally, a magnitude 3.5 tremor was recorded near Potosí, Bolivia, without causing harm.
According to our monitoring system, today’s global seismicity has been dominated by moderate quakes, with the Kamchatka Peninsula event being
Click this link to continue reading the article on the source website.
RSS feed source: USGS Earthquake Hazards Program
Across industries, enterprises are increasingly adopting an on-demand approach to compute, storage, and applications. They are favoring digital services that are faster to deploy, easier to scale, and better integrated with partner ecosystems. Yet, one critical pillar has lagged: the network. While software-defined networking has made inroads, many organizations still operate rigid, pre-provisioned networks. As applications become increasingly distributed and dynamic—including hybrid cloud and edge deployments—a programmable, on-demand network infrastructure can enhance and enable this new era.
From CapEx to OpEx: The new connectivity mindset
Another, practical concern is also driving this shift: the need for IT models that align cost with usage. Rising uncertainty about inflation, consumer spending, business investment, and global supply chains are just a few of the economic factors weighing on company decision-making. And chief information officers (CIOs) are scrutinizing capital-expenditure-heavy infrastructure more closely and increasingly adopting operating-expenses-based
Click this link to continue reading the article on the source website.
RSS feed source: USGS Earthquake Hazards Program
Time2025-08-27 13:27:10 UTC2025-08-27 13:27:10 UTC at epicenterLocation36.443°N 71.272°EDepth128.26 km (79.70 mi)
Click this link to continue reading the article on the source website.