Monday, November 9, 2009

iPhone saved the day time and again

 

During the three days my friend Ed Lenert and I drove to various battle sites in northern Europe at the start of our monthlong adventure, we often relied on Ed's GPS-enabled Apple iPhone for navigation -- and to show us where we were when we got lost. With gasoline being as pricy as it was -- we'd paid $75 for the fuel every time we filled the tank of our Ford Fiesta -- we were eager to minimize the amount of time we spent driving the wrong way. In the photo above, I'm holding the phone as Ed drives.
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Battle of Verdun of WWI claimed 306,000 lives

 
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The Battle of Verdun was the most critical battle of WWI and resulted in 306,000 men killed in action. It was fought between the German and French armies, from Feb. 21 to Dec. 18, 1916, on hilly terrain north of the city of Verdun-sur-Meuse in NE France. The battle ended in a French victory, because the German High Command failed to achieve its two strategic objectives: to capture the city and to inflict a much higher casualty count on its adversary. But the victory came at a high price, with 378,000 French casualties, of whom 163,000 died. Germany suffered 330,000 casualties, of whom 143,000 died. Verdun was the longest battle of WWI and one of the most devastating in history. It was also the first battle to see large-scale use of industrial weapons; more than 60 million artillery shells were exchanged by both sides during the battle. In France and Germany, the Battle of Verdun has come to represent the horrors of war.

60M shells fell forest, cratered terrain at Verdun

 
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Machine-gun nest on artillery-cratered Verdun

 
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