If you want to go to this particular resort and spa, then you are going to have to tough it out on this ridiculously narrow and literally on the edge of a cliff road. The resort is at Pangi Valley in India, and it must be some sort of special place in order for people to take this road to get there.
As you will see this is as bare bones as it gets. No rails and winding for 100 miles! At one point someone has to get out and actually check the height as it doesn’t look like the roof rack is going to clear. And this vehicle hits the overhanging cliff, this thing will get knocked down, easily.
At one point the narrator informs us that there is a waterfall that actually comes down on the road up ahead. And then the vehicle goes through it!
Absolutely crazy how this is even possible to navigate through, let alone make it through unscathed. Can’t imagine if a break down occurred on this road!
The Internet was developed as a network between
government research laboratories and participating departments of universities.
By the late 1980s, a process was set in place towards public, commercial use of
the Internet. The remaining restrictions were removed by 1995, 4 years after
the introduction of the World Wide Web.[1]
In 1989, the first ISPs were established in
Australia[2] and the United States. In Brookline, Massachusetts, The World
became the first commercial ISP in the US. Its first customer was served in
November 1989.[3]
On 23
April 2014, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) was reported to be
considering a new rule that will permit ISPs to offer content providers a
faster track to send content, thus reversing their earlier net neutrality
position.[4][5][6] A possible solution to net neutrality concerns may be
municipal broadband, according to Professor Susan Crawford, a legal and
technology expert at Harvard Law School.[7] On 15 May 2014, the FCC decided to
consider two options regarding Internet services: first, permit fast and slow
broadband lanes, thereby compromising net neutrality; and second, reclassify
broadband as a telecommunication service, thereby preserving net
neutrality.[8][9] On 10 November 2014, President Barack Obama recommended that
the FCC reclassify broadband Internet service as a telecommunications service
in order to preserve net neutrality.[10][11][12] On 16 January 2015,
Republicans presented legislation, in the form of a U.S. Congress H.R.
discussion draft bill, that makes concessions to net neutrality but prohibits
the FCC from accomplishing the goal or enacting any further regulation
affecting Internet service providers.[13][14] On 31 January 2015, AP News
reported that the FCC will present the notion of applying ("with some
caveats") Title II (common carrier) of the Communications Act of 1934 to
the internet in a vote expected on 26 February
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