Mmmm,
In theory the any given data path should correspond with the lowest hop-count,
but this rarely applies in today's modern and private networks.
I used to note that my traffic to the US and Europe got routed through West
Australia and the Indo-Chinese/Japanese routers when I was with
YESTERDAY, the aerial search for floating debris from Malaysia Airlines Flight
370 was called off, and an underwater search based on possible locator beacon
signals was completed without success.
Although efforts to find the missing aircraft have not been abandoned, Angus
Houston, the man in
At 08:42 PM 29/04/2014, Stephen Loosley wrote:
When so much is connected to the Internet, why is the aerospace
industry using technology that predates fax machines to look for
flash drives in the sea?
Good question.
Answer: the same reason they didn't switch to long-life batteries
after the
On 29 April 2014 20:42, Stephen Loosley step...@melbpc.org.au wrote:
The more than 50-day operation, which the Australian prime minister, Tony
Abbott, calls “probably the most difficult search in human history...
Probably one of the more ridiculous bits of hyperbole to be emitted from
the
On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 09:48:10AM +1000, Jim Birch wrote:
John Franklin's search for the North West Passage when the entire ships
crew perished after two years despite resorting to cannibalism doesn't
rate? The search for the great south land? ...
The search for evidence of the fate of the
On 30 April 2014 12:47, Chris Maltby ch...@sw.oz.au wrote:
Lasseter's reef?
The Higgs boson? (Like 40 years and €7.5B)
___
Link mailing list
Link@mailman.anu.edu.au
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
On 30/04/2014 1:31 PM, Jim Birch wrote:
On 30 April 2014 12:47, Chris Maltby ch...@sw.oz.au wrote:
Lasseter's reef?
The Higgs boson? (Like 40 years and €7.5B)
Noah's ark? Of course it might not exist, in which case the search will
probably go on and on and on
--
Regards
brd
Bernard