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Nepal’s cliff honey hunters risk their lives

Nepal’s cliff honey hunters risk their lives

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DOLAKHA: Nepal, High up in Nepal’s mountains, groups of guys risk their lives to harvest much sought-after wild honey from hives on cliffs.
Travelling hours through the high mountains, one group led by skilled honey hunter Devi Bahadur Napali carried food, bamboo ropes, sharp bamboo sticks and other tools needed to collect the honey.
A minor slip might indicate falling hundreds of feet (dozens of meters) and sure death for the hunters, who carefully browsed the steep and narrow openings on the mountain.
Before starting to climb a steep cliff high above the Tama Koshi River, Nepali reminded the group to ensure they had enough food, water and local alcohol.
They accumulated turf and logs at the bottom of the cliff and lit a fire to smoke the bees out of their hives.
Nepali climbed a ladder made from bamboo rope with a sharp bamboo stick in one hand and a basket in another – the adhere to break off the hives and the basket to gather them.
Dangling in the air, he trimmed pieces of hives and caught them with the basket, then gave a signal to a teammate to use a rope connected to the basket, loaded with leaking hives, to reduce it to the ground. Two other employee prepared to clean up off all the bees and squeeze the hives to draw out the honey.
Thousands of bees hovered over the males’s faces, which were protected by face webs.
Nepali’s hands were inflamed severely. He was stung on his hands, feet and in other places on his body. He drinks the alcohol, he said, to make the pain manageable.
On this day, the group had the ability to harvest around 34 liters (9 gallons) of honey from the cliff colony. They will have the ability to sell it at a market for $25 a liter.

Released at Wed, 08 Dec 2021 05:17:51 -0600

Major failure at Amazon interrupts organizations throughout the US

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< img src="https://timesnewsnow.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/NUVNYe.jpg"class ="ff-og-image-inserted"> A major interruption in Amazon’s cloud computing network Tuesday badly interfered with services at a wide range of United States companies for more than 5 hours, the most recent sign of simply how focused business of keeping the web running has become.
The event at Amazon Web Services mainly impacted the eastern US, however still affected whatever from airline company bookings and automobile dealerships to payment apps and video streaming services to Amazon’s own enormous e-commerce operation. That included The Associated Press, whose publishing system was inoperable for much of the day, significantly limiting its capability to release its report.
Amazon has actually still stated nothing about what, precisely, went incorrect. In truth, the company restricted its communications Tuesday to terse technical descriptions on an AWS dashboard and a short statement delivered by means of spokesperson Richard Rocha that acknowledged the interruption had impacted Amazon’s own warehouse and delivery operation however stated the company was “working to fix the problem as rapidly as possible.”
Approximately 5 hours after many companies and other organizations began reporting concerns, the company said in a post on the AWS status page that it had “reduced” the underlying issue accountable for the failure, which it did not describe. It took some affected business hours more to thoroughly inspect their systems and restart their own services.
Amazon Web Solutions was formerly run by Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, who was successful creator Jeff Bezos in July. The cloud-service operation is a huge earnings center for Amazon. It holds roughly a third of the $152 billion market for cloud services, according to a report by Synergy Research study – a larger share than its closest rivals, Microsoft and Google, combined.
To technologist and public data access activist Carl Malamud, the AWS interruption highlights how much Big Tech has warped the internet, which was initially designed as a distributed and decentralized network planned to survive mass disasters such as nuclear attack.
“When we put whatever in one place, be it Amazon’s cloud or Facebook’s monolith, we’re breaking that fundamental concept,” said Malamud, who developed the internet’s first radio station and later on put a crucial United States Securities and Exchange Commission database online. “We saw that when Facebook ended up being the instrument of a massive disinformation campaign, we simply saw that today with the Amazon failure.”
Prevalent and often prolonged outages arising from single-point failures appear increasingly common. In June, the behind-the-scenes content distributor Fastly suffered a failure that briefly took down dozens of major web websites including CNN, The New York Times and Britain’s federal government web page.
Then in October, Facebook – now known as Meta Platforms – blamed a “faulty configuration change” for an hours-long worldwide interruption that removed Instagram and WhatsApp in addition to its titular platform.
This time, problems started midmorning on the US East Coast, stated Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at Kentik Inc, a network intelligence company. Netflix was among the more popular names affected; Kentik saw a 26% drop in traffic to the streaming service.
Customers trying to book or modification trips with Delta Air Lines had trouble connecting to the airline company. “Delta is working quickly to bring back performance to our AWS-supported phone lines,” said representative Morgan Durrant. The airline apologized and encouraged consumers to use its website or mobile app instead.
Dallas-based Southwest Airlines said it switched to West Coast servers after some airport-based systems were impacted by the failure. Consumers were still reporting outages to DownDetector, a popular clearinghouse for user interruption reports, more than three hours after they started. Southwest spokesperson Brian Parrish stated there were no significant disturbances to flights.
Toyota spokesman Scott Vazin stated the business’s US East Area for dealership services went down. The company has apps that access stock information, monthly payment calculators, service bulletins and other items. More than 20 apps were affected.
Also according to DownDetector, people trying to use Instacart, Venmo, Kindle, Roku, and Disney+ reported problems. The McDonald’s app was also down. But the airline companies American, United, Alaska and JetBlue were untouched.
Madory stated he saw no reason to think wicked activity. He said the recent cluster of significant blackouts reflects how complicated the networking industry has actually become. “Increasingly more these interruptions end up being the item of automation and centralization of administration,” he stated. “This ends up causing outages that are hard to totally prevent due to functional intricacy however are extremely impactful when they happen.”
It was unclear how, or whether, the outage was affecting the federal government. The United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Firm stated in an email reaction to concerns that it was dealing with Amazon “to comprehend any possible effects this outage may have for federal firms or other partners.”

Published at Wed, 08 Dec 2021 04:35:17 -0600