one of the biggest logistical problems in a conventional climb is to haul enough oxygen tanks up there, for a huge team composed of western climbers and Sherpa guides, then the prolonged time it takes to do that also implies hauling enough food and drink, etcetera... Messner was freed from those constraints. His support team consisted of a woman named Nena Olguin... and that was it. All he had to do was haul enough supplies for a few days
I'm not sure that makes sense, although I know nothing of climbing.:) If you have two climbers, you need supplies for two, and you have two people to carry the supplies. If you have ten climbers, you need supplies for ten, but have ten people to carry them. The workforce scales precisely with the load. How does increasing the number of people make it any more difficult? Can you explain further please? I'm interested.
Useful features of goosh that you might not have noticed: - as you do searches, the previous search results stay on your screen and you can scroll up to see them - excellent for performing several similar searches - use the up and down arrow keys to navigate through your command history (previous searches, page open commands, etc) - great for fixing typos or when realising that previous keywords were the best ones - use the digits next to each link to open that link: "o 1 ENTER" to go to the first result (you've probably all worked that out already, but just in case...)
a mouse is still going to be required when you browse to one of the sites returned in the search, so this interface is only useful while you're actually searching. Not so; often Google shows me a page that contains all the information I need, so all I have to do on that page is page-down as I read it - no mouse movements required at all. I'm finding Goosh's full keyboard navigation quite useful - "g 2 ENTER" to quickly jump to an interesting page.
I'm not sure that makes sense, although I know nothing of climbing. :) If you have two climbers, you need supplies for two, and you have two people to carry the supplies. If you have ten climbers, you need supplies for ten, but have ten people to carry them. The workforce scales precisely with the load. How does increasing the number of people make it any more difficult? Can you explain further please? I'm interested.
Useful features of goosh that you might not have noticed:
- as you do searches, the previous search results stay on your screen and you can scroll up to see them - excellent for performing several similar searches
- use the up and down arrow keys to navigate through your command history (previous searches, page open commands, etc) - great for fixing typos or when realising that previous keywords were the best ones
- use the digits next to each link to open that link: "o 1 ENTER" to go to the first result (you've probably all worked that out already, but just in case...)