Mildly interesting
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Not to me it isn’t. You’re just so vulnerable. The slightest contact can be fatal, especially if you fall toward the road
@jon-nyc said in Mildly interesting:
Not to me it isn’t. You’re just so vulnerable. The slightest contact can be fatal, especially if you fall toward the road
I assume the numbers are US specific. I wonder what they are in countries with good bike infrastructure, like The Netherlands.
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In the late 1960s, a simple toy whistle from a cereal box unlocked a world of free long-distance calls, leading to a revolution in telecommunications.
This story begins with a man named John Draper, who would later become famous in tech circles as “Captain Crunch.” He was a key figure in a community of early hackers known as “phone phreaks.”
While Draper didn't make the initial discovery, he popularized it. A friend told him that a toy whistle given away in boxes of Cap'n Crunch cereal could produce a perfect 2600-hertz tone.
This specific tone was a security key for the AT&T phone network. When played into a phone receiver, it tricked the system into thinking a long-distance call had ended, opening up the line for new routing commands.
This allowed a user with the right knowledge to make free calls anywhere in the world, essentially seizing control of the trunk lines that connected cities and countries.
Draper took the concept further. He created a device known as a “blue box,” an electronic gadget that could generate a wide range of tones to manipulate the phone network in even more complex ways.
This community of phreaks, including future tech giants like Apple’s founders Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, explored the vast, unseen infrastructure of the global phone system. 🥣
Their actions, while illegal, exposed major security flaws and forced telecommunication companies to build more secure digital networks, ushering in a new era of technology.
Sources: Wikipedia, IFL Science, Chaintech Network#PhonePhreaking #TelecomRevolution #HackerHistory
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In 1952, London witnessed one of the most daring and extraordinary stunts in its history. Albert Gunter, a bus driver for the London Transport system, pulled off an unbelievable feat that would leave the city in awe. On a seemingly ordinary day, Gunter drove his double-decker bus straight toward Tower Bridge, but instead of stopping, he jumped the bus over the open bascule with 20 passengers on board.
The incident occurred when the drawbridge, designed to allow ships to pass along the Thames, was raised for a vessel. Rather than waiting or taking another route, Gunter made a split-second decision that defied all logic and safety. Remarkably, everyone on board survived the leap unscathed. The bus landed safely on the other side, and passengers were reported to be stunned but unharmed.
This audacious act became an instant legend, illustrating not only human courage but also the spirit of quick thinking and bold action in moments of crisis. While authorities investigated and safety measures were reinforced after the stunt, the event captured the imagination of Londoners and newspapers alike. Stories of Gunter’s bravery, or recklessness, depending on perspective, were recounted for decades as a symbol of daring adventure amidst the everyday routines of city life.
The bus jump over Tower Bridge remains one of the most astonishing public transport incidents in history, blending elements of risk, skill, and sheer nerve. It’s a reminder that sometimes extraordinary stories can happen in the most ordinary settings, turning a routine commute into a historic event that people would talk about for generations.
Fun Fact: Tower Bridge, completed in 1894, is one of London’s most iconic landmarks and was designed with a bascule system specifically to allow tall ships to pass along the Thames, making Gunter’s leap all the more incredible given the bridge’s engineering.
#HistoricalFacts #HistoryFacts #UKHistory #TimeTravel #DidYouKnow #TowerBridge #LondonHistory #DaringActs #BusDriverStunts #ExtraordinaryEvents
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Same old argument, not all jobs are meant to be careers or primary income for adults.
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The Ice-Cutters of the Great Lakes
Before the era of refrigeration, the harvesting of ice from the frozen Great Lakes was a massive, brutal industry. Each winter, crews of ice-cutters would venture onto the thick ice of lakes like Michigan and Erie. Using horse-drawn plows and massive saws, they would score the surface into a grid and cut huge, crystal-clear blocks. Men like "Big Jim" O'Malley, a foreman from Chicago, led teams that worked in sub-zero temperatures and blinding snow squalls, their beards frozen solid with ice. The blocks were then transported to massive, insulated ice houses lining the shores, where they were packed in sawdust to last through the summer. This ice would be shipped on specially designed ice barges to cities across the Midwest, preserving food and cooling drinks. It was dangerous work; men could easily slip into the freezing water or be crushed by shifting ice. O'Malley's saying was: "We're not just cutting ice; we're harvesting winter to make summer bearable." The industry vanished with modern refrigeration, but for a century, it was a vital part of the national economy.