Tag Archives: Mount Everest

Mysterious Phenomenon or Giant UFO In Earths Atmosphere…July 2013.

By ScottCWaring

Date of sighting: Above photo 1989
Location of sighting: University of Minnesota, USA

Now I wonder…do we trust science at this moment or do we chose our own path from our experience at knowing that science has made many mistakes…as well as reversals in the last year alone. Maybe…just maybe this is something big, something special…a UFO, but thats what I chose to believe. The person who posted it choses to take a more safe and comfortable road that the government has brainwashed them to believe. SCW

Eyewitness states:
In the blink of an eye, an enormous bright red light flashes above a thundercloud, spreading energetic branches that extend five times taller than Mount Everest and look like jellyfish tendrils and angel’s wings.


These mysterious phenomena are known as Transient Luminous Events (TLEs), and are usually invisible to the naked eye because they happen on millisecond timescales, too fast to be seen. They occur between 50 to 100 kilometers above the ground, a long-ignored area of the atmosphere that is too high for aircraft but too low for satellites to investigate. There, the thin air interacts with strong electrical fields to ionize molecules and create arcing plasmas. More at source.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at UFO Sightings Daily

How to Easily Access Your Camera from the Lock Screen on Your Samsung Galaxy Note 2

The transition from an iPhone to a Samsung Galaxy Note 2 or other Android device can be a tough one. A vastly different operating system and the ability to customize anything and everything might be too much for some people. Taking in all that new, while having to let go of the old, can be as daunting as climbing Mount Everest.

Many iOS users approach switching over to Android with a lot of hesitance, especially when they don’t want to lose features they’ve grown to love on their iPhones. One such feature is the lock screen camera.

Android vs. iOS Lock Screen Camera Access

With the iPhone… more

…read more

Source: Wonder How To

Octogenarians race to be oldest Everest climber

An 80-year-old Japanese extreme skier who just missed becoming the oldest man to reach the summit of Mount Everest five years ago is back on the mountain to make another attempt at the title.

Unfortunately for him, the slightly older man who nabbed the record a day before he could in 2008 is fast on his heels.

On Wednesday, Yuichiro Miura was already in the oxygen-deficient “death zone” and hoped to reach the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) summit Thursday. His 81-year-old Nepalese rival Min Bahadur Sherchan was at the base camp preparing for his own attempt on the summit later this week.

On his expedition’s website, Miura says he hopes a successful climb will raise the bar for what is possible.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Nepal investigating reports of a fight between foreign climbers and sherpas on Mount Everest

Nepalese mountaineering officials say they are investigating reports of a fight between three foreign climbers and local Sherpa guides on Mount Everest.

Dipendra Poudel of the Mountaineering Department said the three climbers — from Italy, Switzerland and Britain — were involved in arguments with some Sherpa guides on Sunday.

Poudel says both sides accuse each other of starting the fight, adding mountaineering officials based at the Everest base camp were investigating the incident.

Sherpa guides hired by the hundreds of Western climbers attempting to climb the world’s highest mountain are the first ones to fix the ropes on the routes so their clients can climb to the peak.

The Sherpas are accusing the foreign climbers of starting the fight.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

RadioShack's Turnaround Plan Has a Glimmer of Hope

By Blake Bos, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

RadioShack‘s  most recent earnings report could be likened to a stay in base camp before an ascent of Mount Everest. Many details emerged of the company’s near-term plans for its journey upward toward profitability. That journey will be a treacherous one, but I believe one item from the many it discussed in its earnings release gives RadioShack and its shareholders a glimmer of hope for the future.

The plan
On this quarter’s conference call, Joseph Magnacca gave investors the rundown on what the company plans to focus on over the coming months, and it boiled down to three areas: senior management, in-store experience, and brand awareness. The new CEO spoke with poise on the call and appears to be quite comfortable at the helm. In my opinion, he’s well aware of what challenges RadioShack faces. 

Source: RadioShack Press Center.

Management
The company brought in two more outsiders to the senior leadership team over the quarter, with Jennifer Warren as chief marketing officer position and Michael Defazio as SVP of store concepts. These two hires appear to be great additons: Warren comes from renowned ad agencies Razorfish and GSD&M, and Defazio brings with him 36 years of retail experience and has also worked with Magnacca at Walgreen. The search is still on for a chief merchandising officer, and then the management team will be complete. It appears Magnacca has been diligent about bringing in executives with turnaround experience, but only time will tell whether his new roster will score big.

Brand awareness
Do you get warm fuzzy feelings when I say, “Let’s go to RadioShack”? Probably not. The Shack brand of my youth has long since passed, and the company has struggled to find its identity as of late. To tackle this problem, the company is going to focus on a campaign called “Let’s Play,” whose purpose is to change the company’s perception from that of a current nondescript brand to a place where consumers go to have fun with technology. Investors will want to keep an eye on this rollout to see how the public reacts. While the company doesn’t need to be immediately successful with raising a tremendous amount of awareness, it will be important to gain some traction in the short term. 

In-store experience
If you had to use one word to sum up the experience at most electronics retailers today, it would invariably be “bad.” This is the one area of the plan I was most interested in, and the most telling in my opinion. It was music to investors’ ears when management said the company was going to give employees incentives to sell across the whole store instead of just mobile. This could be a huge win from a customer satisfaction and margin perspective.The company changed these incentives in April, and investors should keep an eye on the next quarter’s results to see whether the non-mobile sales have started to pick up

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Sherpa guide killed fixing route on Mount Everest

A mountaineering official in Nepal says a Sherpa guide has been killed while fixing the climbing route on Mount Everest. It is the first death reported during the popular spring mountaineering season.

Mountaineering Department official Nishan Shrestha says the Nepalese Sherpa guide identified as Mingma fell into a crevasse just above Camp One on Everest on Sunday. It took several hours to retrieve his body.

Shrestha says a helicopter was sent to the mountain on Monday to bring back Mingma’s body.

Local Sherpa guides hired by foreign climbers are the first people to scale the world’s highest peak each climbing season as they dig a path through snow and ice to the summit.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

80th anniversary of first Everest flight marked

The grandson of one of the first men to fly over Mount Everest says he marked the 80th anniversary of the pioneering flight by flying to the world’s highest mountain.

Charles Douglas Hamilton said he flew as a passenger in a modern plane to the Everest region on Wednesday. His grandfather, Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, and three other men flew over Everest on April 3, 1933, in two open-cockpit planes, wearing heated suits and battling harsh weather conditions as they crossed over the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) peak.

Charles Douglas Hamilton, who is not a pilot, said he did not fly over Everest like his grandfather, but he was able to see the mountain from the plane, which got about 13 kilometers (8 miles) from Everest, flying at around 7,163 meters (23,500 feet).

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Everest mountaineer George Lowe dies at 89

George Lowe, the last surviving climber from the team that made the first successful ascent of Mount Everest, has died. He was 89.

Lowe’s widow, Mary, said he died Wednesday at a nursing home in Ripley, central England, after an illness.

One of two New Zealanders on the 1953 British expedition, Lowe helped establish the final camp 1,000 feet below the mountain’s summit on May 28, 1953. The next day, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay reached the peak.

As Hillary descended the next day, he told Lowe: “Well, George, we knocked the bastard off.”

Lowe directed a film of the expedition, “The Conquest of Everest,” and also made “The Crossing of Antarctica,” a movie about a trans-Antarctic expedition later in the 1950s.

He is survived by Mary and three sons.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Things Can Actually Live at the Ocean's Deepest Point

By Matt Cantor The Pacific Ocean’s Mariana Trench contains the deepest point in all the world’s oceans. But despite its nearly eight-mile depth (Mount Everest, by comparison, doesn’t hit six miles), Challenger Deep is also home to life, a study finds. Researchers sent a robot into Challenger Deep in 2010 to measure the… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Nepal's women climbers break highest glass ceiling

It’s the world’s highest glass ceiling. Of the 3,755 climbers who have scaled Mount Everest, more than half are Nepalese but only 21 of those locals are women.

Aiming to change the all-male image of mountaineering in this country, a group of Nepalese women have embarked on a mission to shatter that barrier by climbing the tallest mountain on each of the seven continents.

The women, aged between 21 and 32, have already climbed Everest in Asia, Kosciuszko in Australia and Elbrus in Europe. They are preparing to climb Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa to mark International Women’s Day this week.

“The main goal of our mission is to encourage women in education, empowerment and environment,” Shailee Basnet, the 29-year-old team leader, said before leaving for Africa.

Women in this Himalayan nation rarely got the chance to climb because they were confined to their homes while their husbands led expeditions or carried equipment for Western climbers, Basnet said.

It was only in 1993 that a Nepalese woman — Pasang Lhamu — first reached the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) summit of Everest. She died on the way down.

According to Ang Tshering of the Nepal Mountaineering Association, Nepalese women had traditionally expressed little attraction to mountaineering.

“It is only recently that women have shown interest,” Tshering said.

Since they climbed Everest in 2008, the women have spoken in more than 100 schools across Nepal to tell students about their mission.

“We are hoping to attract more women to mountaineering, both as a profession and as a hobby,” said Pema Dikki, 25, another member of the team.

Basnet said the response to the Everest climb encouraged them to push ahead.

“After Everest, we felt that we needed to go beyond the borders, so we decided to travel to all seven continents to climb the highest mountains there,” Basnet said.

Basnet said the team members have spent their savings, taken out loans and sought sponsorships to finance their expensive gear, climbing permits and plane tickets.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Guinness recognizes Nepali woman Everest climber

A Nepalese woman mountaineer has been recognized by Guinness World Records for climbing Mount Everest twice in the same climbing season.

Nepal’s Tourism Minister Posta Bahadur Bogati handed over the certificate issued by Guinness World Records to 29-year-old Chhurim who scaled the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) summit on May 12, 2012, and again a week later on May 19.

Chhurim, who like most Nepalese Sherpas use only one name, said she plans to climb other high peaks in the future.

Everest has been climbed by nearly 4,000 climbers but women climbers make only a small portion of that number, according to the Nepal Mountaineering Association.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News