The Mediterranean cable break

I can still clearly remember the days when calling Australia from the UK meant avoiding peak times to try to get a free line, and then the delay in the conversation because the copper wires only relayed the speech at a particular speed. You had to wait for the reply from the other end, much like talking on a CB radio.

With the increase in the number of phone calls being sent by satellite, the number of lines increased and the delay disappeared. These days I even use Skype to call far-flung parts of the World.

But wait a moment, Skype is internet-based- does that go by satellite too?

Probably not. The internet communications around the World are relayed from one country to another, with undersea cables playing an important part.

So having an undersea cable go wrong can be a disaster (see this article). It’s amazing to think that so much is still relies on these cables – or in this case how much relies on a single one. The technology has advanced so much in recent years – the cables may now carry fibre-optics and not copper and they are better protected against the salt water, but at the end of the day they are still being laid in the same way around the globe and are still susceptible to the same problems.

I wonder how much disused cable is down there?

Rosenmontag

Rosenmontag is the last Monday before Lent. In the main areas where Karneval or Fasching is celebrated, there are parades on this day and many companies give their employees the day off.

There are different stories as to how the unusual name came about. One says that it developed from Rasenden Montag, because everything is so mad on that day. Another says that it is the day after Rosensonntag, the day on which the Pope used to give someone a golden rose.

Traditionally people eat Berliner on this day – a jam-filled doughnut.

To hear a simple explanation and a short discussion in German, listen to the podcast:

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Britische Helden – Wahrheit oder Erfunden?

Heute auf der Tagesschau Homepage entdeckte ich ein interessantes Quiz: Britische Helden.

Wie es scheint, können viele Einheimischen nicht mehr unterscheiden zwischen Figuren die es tatsächlich gab, und die, die nur in Bücher und Filme vorkommen.

Nun kann man sein eigenes Wissen testen – gar nicht so einfach wenn man die Englische Schulbildung nicht genossen hat.

Ich selbst habe 8 von 10 Punkten bekommen – dabei würde ich die Erklärungen zu den 2 Falschen durchaus abstreiten, denn ich habe ja nicht einfach geraten, sondern meine Antworten auf gelernte Fakten basiert.

Aber gut, probieren Sie es selbst aus.  Wie viele haben Sie richtig gewusst?

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