Thanks, Tomba, nice link. There are other means: J-dampers, gyroscopic dampers, liquid slosh dampers.
Nowadays most tall buildings use one, not only for earthquakes but for the wind, as Saribro explains. You HAVE to use them: buildings up to 40 stories can rely only on shear wall and steelbraced core systems, which are very effective in resisting the forces and deformations due to shear racking. However,
the resistance of these systems to the overturning component of drift decreases approximately with the cube of height. Unless you want to spend a fortune in bracing, you have to use dampers, not only in buildings but also in bridges.
I swear you can see the bathroom water at CN tower and Empire State to slosh around the basin on a windy day. At the Jhon Hancock building they were installed after people got sick.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hanco ... ating_sway