Posted on 05/28/2003 9:19:16 AM PDT by Sparta
"Finally made it, Ma! Top o' the world!" literally
Climbers can now email friends and family from 17,400 feet thanks to the highest cybercafé in the world at the Mount Everest base camp.
The Everest internet café has been launched to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the first ascent of Everest on 29 May 1953 by Sir Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing.
Not only will it allow the 50,000 hardy trekkers who tackle the peak every year keep in touch with loved ones but internet access at base camp will make it easier to call for emergency assistance and check the latest weather conditions.
The cybercafé will also provide a link to the outside world for local villagers in the Everest region, who have no telecommunications access.
A temporary structure will house the internet café because the base camp sits on a glacier and moves by several inches per year. A base station further down provides a satellite link for web access. The station will be operational during the main spring and autumn climbing seasons.
The project was started by Sherpa Tsering Gyalzen, the grandson of one of Hillary's party in 1953, and is being sponsored by Yahoo! Mail.
Gyalzen said in a statement: "Not only will the cafe benefit climbers, many of whom use Yahoo! Mail to keep in touch with friends and family, it will make an enormous difference to the lives of the local community who due to a lack of telephone access are almost completely cut off from the outside world."
Proceeds from the venture will go towards cleaning up the pollution and waste left behind at the camp by climbers.
Wasn't that Tenzing Norgay, a Sherpa?
Not well thought out.
The hard drive in the computer has heads that "fly" just a few millionths of an inch off the disk on a cushion of air. If air density is reduced (as it is at altitude), the head will fly lower, vastly increasing the risk of a head crash and consequent destruction of the drive and all data. Because of this, I know of no commercially available hard drives that are rated to perform at over 10,000 feet in altitude. At 17,400 feet spoken of in this article, density is approximately 50% of that found at sea level.
--Boot Hill
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