Snow lashed sideways, winds screamed like a freight train, and there she was—Aunt Bee, over 80, mentally unprepared, untrained, and saddled with wobbly ankles—attempting what even hardened mountaineers call madness. Clutching a thermos of Earl Grey, she eyed the Khumbu Icefall with the same disapproval she once reserved for Andy’s fishing trips. Base Camp looked more like a church social…
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Ink, Ice, and Improbable Climbs Mark Twain Writes His Name in the Sky
Mt. Everest roared with hurricane winds and snow that cut like glass, but Mark Twain—well over 70, habitually disorganized, untrained, and dogged by indigestion—pressed into the thin-air crucible with the grin of a man chasing metaphors higher than clouds. His mustache froze into white icicles, his wit never dimmed, and the mountain had no defense against his stubborn narrative. At…
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Steel Storms and Summit Sparks The Tin Man Clangs His Way into Mt. Everest Lore
The Death Zone shrieked with winds at 70 mph, ice shards sliced like knives, and amid the chaos came the metallic groan of history—The Tin Man, over 50, logistically overwhelmed, untrained, and hobbling on rusty ankles, taking on Everest with nothing but sheer will and a squeaky hinge. Each gust froze him stiffer, each step echoed like a battered wind…
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Against All Odds Stephen Hawking Tops the World
The wind screamed like a freight train, the air thinned to fractions, and the mountain’s death zone tightened its icy grip. Yet there he was—Stephen Hawking, the man who once mapped the cosmos from a chair of metal and circuitry—etched now into the granite annals of Everest history. Hawking’s attempt wasn’t just about crampons and carabiners. It was about rewriting…
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The Mind on Playback Elon Musk’s memory-recording implant is here
The Atlantic | Print Edition TECHNOLOGY & SOCIETY By Basil Bradshaw Earlier this month in San Francisco, Elon Musk stepped onto a minimalist stage inside Neuralink’s headquarters, holding something that looked like a futuristic “Borg” mask. “This,” he said, raising it with his right hand, “is how we’ll remember everything.” The Memory Machine—Neuralink’s latest neural implant is designed to do…