It's been a long time for us to get to this point in time, but this has not been for no reason at all. As you might know, CaSeimograph HQ is run by a very small group of seismo enthusiasts and as of a year and a half ago, we had to make the decision to focus on the next most important step for our CaSeismographs live channel. To have that step to be determined we had to look at many different aspects of our channel and the overall number of requests of our viewers. One of the strongest requests made multiple times by our viewers has been the placing of a seismograph in their Home Town, City, State, and even in different countries all around the world. Many have even requested us to build them a Seismograph like ours so they may purchase it. Since two years ago shortly after starting up our live channel, this came on our radar and never subsided, even today's day we still get frequent requests from people if they could buy one of our seismographs.
This put us to work on one of the most daunting adventures of the past year and a half. We decided to put all our creative efforts in inventing a new generation drum one that would have the functionality and the live site look of the physical ink and paper drum, with a real stylus-3D camera view. But this new drum had to be without the inherit cumbersome maintenance of the old-style seismograph.
But, these were not the only improvements we were going to be shooting for.
This new model would have to be plug and play and we were determined for if to be a tenth of the size and weight of the old drum so it would fit on someone's desk and thus it would have to be fully mobile.
After two years of designing testing and redesigning we have succeeded in making just that. It has been tested and retested and our first working model has been given the name the
"e-Graph".
For the first time, we are proud to announce to you the revealing of our new "e-Graph" on October 2nd!
This is the day of our anniversary of CaSeismograph's first sizable earthquake capture of the 5.3 Channel Island Quake two and a half years ago.