I am looking at Google earth down loaded from USGS but I can not find a webicorder of the Redlands area.
This covers most of california and if you look near the top there is a link for long valley as well.
http://quake.usgs.gov/waveforms/helicorder/22221212_thumb.html
Just click the webicorder you want to view. A station map is also up top.
Looking at the events of this morning and yesterday.
I would think the next vulnerable area is the Cascadia Subduction zone or the the Juan De Fuca Plate.
It would make sense in regards to the energy transfer and the building pressure on the Cocos Plate. The Cocos trench could slip but I would think since the Caribbean has been slipping and of course the Nazca plate today, that would preclude the San Andreas area and impact further north.
6.5 t0 7.5 within the next month(I would say two weeks but I want to monitor the Long Valley activity that occurred yesterday).
I am really keying in on the Cascadia subduction. One thing that bothers me is that, the Juan De Fuca plate is just so fragile compared to the two opposing forces. With the evident increase in continental shift, this area is extremely vulnerable right now, given that the the Atlantic ridge has released it pressure and is continuing to do so the same way with the Euarasian plate.
The pin in the middle is Cocos plate and that is not going to budge much, so mexico I think is fine, for it's getting pressure from all sides.
So that leaves now just the interaction between the north american plate and the pacific plate. In alaska though they receive quite a few quakes per day has been above average all the way down to Valdez.
California is expending much energy from San Fran South.
So that leaves the Pacific Northwest including Canada that is my hotspot.
In all seriousness, I saw that 8.0 coming and I am even more positive about cascadia. Perhaps a 5 percent chance for the Cocos plate and I would think about 55percent chance for the Juan de Fuca plate.