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Updated Feb 10, 2021 | 20:09 IST | Sandeep Kumar
Cloud Computing has cleared many clouds of hindrance from the sky of technological advancements. IIT Roorkee Professor Sandeep Kumar, Department of Computer Science and Engineering explains how. How has Cloud Computing evolved over the years?  |  Photo Credit: Representative Image
Cloud computing has cleared many clouds of hindrance from the sky of technological advancements. It allows users to access computing resources and services such as storage, computing power, software, platforms, etc., on demand as per their requirements without buying their own infrastructures and by just paying for what they actually use.
In this way, this technology has proved to be a boon for the development of small business enterprises that cannot invest heavily for buying and maintaining the infrastructure, along with facilitating other benefits availed by the large and established enterpris
Ideas, Inventions And Innovations
60 Year Old Mystery of Ten Dead Russian Hikers: Tragic Dyatlov Pass Incident Explored
Researchers from EPFL and ETH Zurich have conducted an original scientific study that puts forth a plausible explanation for the mysterious 1959 death of nine hikers in the Ural Mountains in the former Soviet Union. The tragic Dyatlov Pass Incident, as it came to be called, has spawned a number of theories, from murderous Yeti to secret military experiments.
In early October 2019, when an unknown caller rang EPFL professor Johan Gaume’s cell phone, he could hardly have imagined that he was about to confront one of the greatest mysteries in Soviet history. At the other end of the line, a journalist from New York asked for his expert insight into a tragedy that had occurred 60 years earlier in Russia’s northern Ural Mountains – one that has since come to be known as the Dyatlov Pass Incident. Gaume, head of EPFL’s Snow and Avalanche Simulation Laborato
EPFL and ETH Zurich researchers use science to explore a 60-year-old Russian mystery
Researchers from EPFL and ETH Zurich have conducted an original scientific study that puts forth a plausible explanation for the mysterious 1959 death of nine hikers in the Ural Mountains in the former Soviet Union. The tragic Dyatlov Pass Incident, as it came to be called, has spawned a number of theories, from murderous Yeti to secret military experiments.
In early October 2019, when an unknown caller rang EPFL professor Johan Gaume’s cell phone, he could hardly have imagined that he was about to confront one of the greatest mysteries in Soviet history. At the other end of the line, a journalist from New York asked for his expert insight into a tragedy that had occurred 60 years earlier in Russia’s northern Ural Mountains – one that has since come to be known as the Dyatlov Pass Incident. Gaume, head of EPFL’s Snow and Avalanche Simulation Laboratory (SLAB) and visiting fellow at th