Sharing of two pc in window xp
1: need cross cable
2: need two pc
3: enable Lan card
4: make a workgroup
5: make a share folder of them
6: access shared folder from other computer
Wednesday, 2 December 2015
Bermuda Triangle
BERMUDA TRIANGLE
(REAL TRUTH)
Bermuda Triangle is mythical section of Atlantic Ocean
roughly bounded by Miami, Bermuda & Puerto Rico where dozens of
ships and airplanes have disappeared. Unexplained circumstances
surround some of these accidents. including one in which the pilot
of a squadron of U.S. bombers became disoriented while flying
over the area.the planes were never found. Other boats and planes
have seemingly vanished from the area in good weather without even
radioing distress messages. But although myriad fanciful theories
have been proposed regarding the Bermuda Triangle, none of them
prove that mysterious disappearances occur more frequently there than
in other well-traveled sections of the ocean. In fact, people
navigate the area every day without incident.The term "Bermuda Triangle"
was first used in an article written by Vincent H.
Gaddis for Argosy magazine in 1964
Bermuda Triangle ometimes also referred to as the Devil's Triangle)
is a stretch of the Atlantic Ocean
LEGEND OF BERMUDA
area referred to the Bermuda Triangle, covers
about 500,000+- square miles of ocean off the southeastern tip of Florida.
When Christopher Columbus sailed through the area on his first voyage to
the New World, he reported that a great flame of fire (probably a meteor)
crashed into the sea one night and that a strange light appeared in the
distance a few weeks later. He also wrote about erratic compass readings,
perhaps because at that time a sliver of the Bermuda Triangle was one of
the few places on Earth where true north and magnetic north lined up.
You Know?
After gaining widespread fame as the first person to sail solo around the
globe, Joshua Slocum disappeared on a 1909 voyage from Martha’s Vineyard
to South America. Though it’s unclear exactly what happened, many sources
later attributed his death to the Bermuda Triangle.
William Shakespeare’s play “The Tempest,” which some scholars claim was
based on a real-life Bermuda shipwreck, may have enhanced the area’s aura
of mystery. Nonetheless, reports of unexplained disappearances did not
really capture the public’s attention until the 20th century.
An especially infamous tragedy occurred in March 1918 when the USS Cyclops,
a 542-foot-long Navy cargo ship with over 300 men and 10,000 tons of manganese
ore onboard, sank somewhere between Barbados and the Chesapeake Bay. The Cyclops
never sent out an SOS distress call despite being equipped to do so,
and an extensive search found no wreckage. “Only God and the sea know
what happened to the great ship,” U.S. President Woodrow Wilson later
said. In 1941 two of the
Cyclops’ sister ships similarly vanished without a trace along nearly
the same route.
A pattern allegedly began forming in which vessels traversing the Bermuda
Triangle would either disappear or be found abandoned. Then, in December 1945.
Navy bombers carrying 14 men took off from a Fort Lauderdale. Florida, airfield
in order to conduct practice bombing run over some nearby shoals. But with
his compasses apparently malfunctioning, the leader of the mission, known as
Flight 19, got severely lost. All five planes flew aimlessly until they ran
low on fuel and were forced to ditch at sea. That same day, a rescue plane and
its 13-man crew also disappeared. After a massive weeks-long search failed to
turn up any evidence, the official Navy report declared that it was “as if they
had flown to Mars.
BERMUDA THEORIES& COUNTER-THEORIES
By the time author Vincent Gaddis coined the phrase “Bermuda
Triangle” in a 1964 magazine article, additional mysterious accidents had
occurred in the area, including three passenger planes that went down despite
having just sent “all’s well” messages. Charles Berlitz, whose grandfather founded
the Berlitz language school. stoked the legend even further in 1974 with a sensational
bestseller about the legend, Since then, scores of fellow paranormal writers
have blamed the triangle’s supposed lethalness on everything from aliens,
Atlantis and sea monsters to time warps and reverse gravity fields, whereas
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