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On
the 16th of September at 2:30 in the afternoon,
the Extreme Expedition team of St. Petersburg
set a New World's record for altitude reached
by automobile. The team forced their way
up the tremendous peaks of the Tibetan mountains
using three Lada "Niva" cars, driving to
an unprecedented height of 5,726 meters
and surpassing the previous record by over
100 meters. The expedition through Tibet
was a long one, beginning in August and
finishing in mid-October; throughout the
trip, the St. Petersburg team relied on
the IBM ThinkPad® notebook
to help them on their journey.
In
many ways, this trip would have been impossible
without IBM's generous donation of the ThinkPad
computer. Throughout the course of their
journey, the team maintained an extensive
website that contained daily updates of
their progress.
Visitors to the Website could follow their
progress on a map and read what the intrepid
members of the expedition themselves had
to report. The ThinkPad allowed the team
to contact the outside world, even in the
remote and harsh conditions of the Tibetan
Mountain frontier.
The
team confronted harsh and icy conditions
throughout their journey up the mountain,
and their portable computer was exposed
to the same extremes that the team faced.
Of course, paved roads quickly disappeared
as the Lada automobiles scaled the mountain,
and both the team and the computer were
subjected to bumpy, jagged roads that might
easily have felled a lesser adversary. The
team faced extremes of temperature as well
along the path, with temperatures ranging
from -15 to 50 degrees Celsius.
Even
under such abominable conditions, the ThinkPad
performed flawlessly, faithfully sending
along the daily reports of the team, and
allowing the expedition to stay in contact
with the outside world. "We faced a very
real possibility of danger in this undertaking,
but we were able to confidently push forward
in the knowledge that IBM ThinkPad could
promptly and efficiently alert rescue authorities
of any danger incurred on the journey" -
said Georgy Kotov, director of the expedition.
This
new entry into the Guinness Book of World
Records stands as a towering success for
Lada and the expedition team. Additionally,
IBM profited handsomely from this trip.
In exchange for the ThinkPad, the team displayed
the IBM logo prominently on each of the
three automobiles on the journey. From start
to finish, the trip covered 20,000 kilometers
and passed through Russia, Kazakhstan, and
China en route to its destination and many
people witnessed the team's progress.
Additionally,
press coverage of this event was substantial.
Overall, at least 100 newspapers gave positive
coverage of this remarkable event, and several
television stations covered the event as
well. The expedition brought along a professional
cameraman from the United States who captured
the trip on film and will subsequently make
a movie about the event. All in all, the
expedition stands as a triumph, both for
the expedition team and for IBM computers.
This
may not be a typical user experience; individual
experiences may differ.
ThinkPad notebooks and the Hard Disk Drives
inside the ThinkPad notebooks are specified
to work up to altitudes of 10,000 feet (3,048
meters).
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