I've been wanting to post a javascript alert (a pop up window w/ a message) to simply say "Thanks! You've been added!". Once a user has entered in the details in the form and clicks the submit button.
@StephanieP, you would see them in the Automation workflow that you initially set up to trigger the alerts. Also, if you cc yourself - you'll be copied on the emails that go out from SS. I'm not sure if there's another way eg running a report or viewing history somewhere.
I can see that this only for actually turning the dialogs back on. But if you are a web dev and you would like to see a way to possibly have some form of notification when these are off...in the case that you are using native alerts/confirms for validation or whatever. Check this solution to detect and notify the user
FEMA, in coordination with the FCC, will conduct a nationwide test of both Wireless Emergency Alerts and the Emergency Alert System at approximately 2:20 p.m. on Wednesday, October 4, 2023. The WEA test alert will be sent to mobile phones nationwide. Additional details are available here.
Authorized public safety officials send WEA alerts through FEMA's Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS) to participating wireless carriers, which then push the alerts to compatible mobile devices in the affected area.
The alerts are broadcast to the geographic area affected by an emergency. This means that if an alert is sent to a zone in New York, WEA-capable mobile devices in that zone can receive the alert, even if they are roaming or visiting from another state. In other words, a customer visiting from Chicago would be able to receive alerts in New York so long as the person has a WEA-enabled mobile device in the alert zone.
Consumers do not need to sign up for this service. WEA allows government officials to send emergency alerts to all subscribers with WEA-capable devices if their wireless carrier participates in the program.
A WEA alert appears on the screen of the recipient's handset as a text-like message. The alert is accompanied by a unique attention signal and vibration, which is particularly helpful to people with hearing or vision-related disabilities.
Yes. Consumers with prepaid phones can receive WEAs as long as their provider has decided to participate in WEA and the customer has a WEA-enabled device. These consumers receive the alerts just as customers with postpaid, monthly service do.
Partially. Participating wireless carriers may offer subscribers with WEA-capable handsets the ability to block alerts involving imminent threats to safety of life and/or AMBER Alerts. Consumers cannot block National Alerts.
WEA geographic precision is continuously improving. When the WEA program launched, participating wireless providers were generally required to send the alerts to a geographic area no larger than the county or counties affected by the emergency. Next, beginning in 2017, participating wireless providers were required to transmit alerts to a geographic area that best approximated the area affected by the emergency, even if it was smaller than a county. Now, as of December 2019, participating wireless providers must geographically target alerts to technologically compatible phones even more: they must deliver the alerts to the area specified by the alert originator with no more than a 1/10 of a mile overshoot.
This "enhanced geotargeting" relies on new smartphone technology and will be increasingly available as consumers upgrade their devices. CTIA, a U.S. wireless association, estimates that about 83 percent of consumers' smartphones support this enhancement in 2023, an increase from about 60 percent in 2022, 34 percent in 2021, and 18 percent in 2020. WEA-compatible phones that do not support enhanced geotargeting will still receive alerts based on the 2017 geographic area requirements.
No, the FCC does not send alerts. WEA alert originators include other federal agencies (such as the National Weather Service) and state and local government authorities. Alerts from authenticated public safety officials are sent through FEMA's IPAWS system to participating wireless carriers.
I have a requirement to "raise an ALERT" within a Workflow. Users are forgetting to filling in a critical field. Paul Murphy showed us now to do a loopback based on the empty field. BUT, the user only sees that the task did not close. Only if they look at the workflow do they get a clue as to why the task did not close.
How can I raise an ALERT to inform the user immediately as to why the task is not closing? I attempted to code an ALERT within a "Run Script", but the ALERT did not display.
Any ideas as to how to inform the user that they forgot to fill in a field when they attempt to close the task?
New Activity/Enhancement???
Public Safety Alerts contain information about a threat that may not be imminent or after an imminent threat has occurred. Public safety alerts are less severe than imminent threat alerts.
America's Missing: Broadcast Emergency Response (AMBER) Alerts are urgent bulletins issued in child-abduction cases. Rapid and effective public alerts often play a crucial role in returning a missing child safely. An AMBER Alert instantly enables the entire community to assist in the search for and safe recovery of the child.
Follow the action advised by the alert. The message will show the type and time of the alert, any action you should take, and the agency issuing the alert. The message will be no more than 360 characters. You can get more details from your local authorities, local news or trusted social media sources.
Wireless providers are selling devices with WEA capability included. To find out if your phone can receive WEA alerts, contact your wireless provider. All the major providers participate in WEA on a voluntary basis.
During the update period, IPAWS will accommodate all versions of WEAs to ensure that the public will receive alerts for which their providers and mobile phones are compatible. If you have any questions, please contact us at IP...@fema.dhs.gov.
Newer Devices
Alerting authorities may send a 360-character version to communicate additional information to the public about emergencies to phones and networks that are ready to support 360-characters. Contact your alert origination software provider to find out whether your software allows you to send 360-character WEAs
Older Devices
Alerting authorities must include 90-character versions of their alerts to ensure the alert is received by older WEA-capable mobile phones.. When you include a 90- and a 360-character message in the same alert, wireless providers that participate in WEA will send the 90-character version to older phones and the 360-character version to newer phones.
When sending a Spanish-language alert, an English-language version is also required. Alerting authorities are responsible for translating their WEA messages into Spanish. Note: The alert language displayed on a phone is dependent on the phone type and settings, so you cannot target a segment of the population to receive just Spanish-language WEAs.
An embedded reference is data, like a hyperlinked URL or phone number, that an alert recipient can click to perform an action related to the alert. The availability of embedded content empowers emergency managers to offer the public alerts that can direct them to more comprehensive emergency response resources, including multimedia such as pictures or maps, which can lead to swifter community response on fast developing events.
Our dedicated NCJTC staff will contact you within 2 business days of receipt of this request to discuss your needs and how we can help. We appreciate your interest in our training programs and look forward to serving you.
I created a nice graph in the SQL runner showing the number of customers added per day at my company. I tweaked it slightly which required me to do this in SQL runner rather than the explore tab. I would like to create an automatic alert when a certain number of customers is reached / day but the alert functionality only seems possible in the explore tab. Do you have any advice how I can create alerts in SQL runner.
On the Select a resource pane, set the scope for your alert rule. You can filter by subscription, resource type, or resource location.
If you select more than one dimension value, each time series that results from the combination triggers its own alert and is charged separately. For example, the transactions metric of a storage account can have an API name dimension that contains the name of the API called by each transaction (for example, GetBlob, DeleteBlob, and PutPage). You can choose to have an alert fired when there's a high number of transactions in a specific API (the aggregated data). Or you can use dimensions to alert only when the number of transactions is high for specific APIs.
(Optional) In the Advanced options section, you can specify how many failures within a specific time period trigger an alert. For example, you can specify that you only want to trigger an alert if there were three failures in the last hour. Your application business policy should determine this setting.
To use one of the predefined alert rule queries, expand the Schema and filter pane on the left of the Logs pane. Then select the Queries tab, and select one of the queries.
Dimensions are columns from your query results that contain additional data. When you use dimensions, the alert rule groups the query results by the dimension values and evaluates the results of each group separately. If the condition is met, the rule fires an alert for that group. The alert payload includes the combination that triggered the alert.
You can apply up to six dimensions per alert rule. Dimensions can only be string or numeric columns. If you want to use a column that isn't a number or string type as a dimension, you must convert it to a string or numeric value in your query. If you select more than one dimension value, each time series that results from the combination triggers its own alert and is charged separately.
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