Drfv Video shows woman climb into monkey enclosure; now zoo pressing charges for stupid act
It was 30 years ago this week in April 1993 that the World Wide Web came into the public domain, making it easier for millions of people to browse online. And although it wasn t nearly as worldly as the internet is today, it was a huge breakthrough.The first browser, originally called Mesh, was simplistic, but it was built on years of technological work done by computer scientists. Working with the government, they had cracked the code for computer communications, creating the first and most basic form of the internet, known back then as the ARPANET. The government communication system became the backbone of the digital world seen today.TheARPANETwas created in the late 1960s after the U.S. Defense Department s Advanced Research Projects Agency
stanley taza Network 鈥?which the system was named after 鈥?funded a project by computer scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles. Their
stanley polska original vision was simple: They wanted to be able to connect any two computers in a way that would allow them to easily share resources and information from one agency to another.They managed to do that after two nodes 鈥攖he hardware that helped connect computers with
stanley france in a communication network 鈥?were successfully installed. One was placed at UCLA itself and the other at Stanford University, about 350 miles away. These nodes were connected by a high-speed line. That high speed line was the first piece of the internet backbone, and it was running at the blazing speed of 50,000 bits per second, saidLeon Rtfo Bridge at Yellowstone River collapses, sending train into waters below
University of Texas star baseball shortstop David Hamilton hit a pothole riding an electric scooter, tearing his Achilles tendo
stanley cup becher n and requiring surgery. He ll miss the season. Cristal Glangchai, the CEO for a nonprofit, hit a rock riding her scooter, landing her on the pavement just blocks from home. I lost control and ended up getting a concussion and a broken rib, said Glangchai, a 41-year-old mother of four.And Austin s first scooter-related death occurred in January. Police ide
stanley hrnek ntified the scooter rider as Mark Sands, a 21-year-old UT student from Ireland, who died just one day after suffering critical injuries when the electric scooter he was riding collided with a car.As many as 14,000 dockless electric scooters are on the streets of Austin, whose 326 square miles are home to almost 1 million people . That likely makes Austin one of the cities with the highest scooter-to-citizen ratio in the nation -- though the electric vehicles are also rapidly multiplying on the streets and sidewalks of Atlanta, San Diego, Nashville and Wa
stanley spain shington. At least 1,200 more are poised to appear in Austin whenever already-licensed operators deploy them. Ten companies have licenses to operate now.Austin city leaders, worried about injuries for both users and pedestrians, asked the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to investigate scooter-related crashes and injuries. The first-ever C