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Showing posts from August, 2018

Microsoft making major build of Windows 10 in the next month.

We are approaching September 2018 and Microsoft is also making all the efforts to bring the latest major build of Windows 10 in the next month. Microsoft has released the first Windows 10 Insider Preview Build for Redstone 6, even though Build 18204 with the internal name "19H1" is not. At the same time, Build 17723 is also one step ahead for Redstone 5. In the current release, the releases are not different from each other. Redstone 6 will arrive in the first half of 2019 Redstone 6 is the Windows 10 update expected for spring 2019, while Redstone 5 is due for release this fall. However, Microsoft itself does not yet call the new build 18204 Redstone 6, but uses the designation 19H1, In fact, bug fixes make up with the majority of the changelog, but a few interesting things can be found which points to the planned release during the first half of 2019. In the watermark on the Windows desktop, Redstone 6 announces itself as "RS_PRERELEASE", while Redstone 5 bea

THE LONDON EUSTON THE STORY IS VERY INTERESTING!

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Garden Festival in 1990 stone bench The Gateshead Garden Festival was the fourth of the United Kingdom’s five National Garden Festivals. Held between May and October 1990, They were then moved to outside Euston Station in 1993 Dartmoor granite Merrivale (approx. 280 million years old) Cumbria sandstone (approx. 250 million years old) Lake District slate green (approx. 450 million years old) Portland limestone in which fossils of living creatures visible early (approx. 150 million years old) The demolition of the Arch The Doric Arch can be found outside Euston station On 12 July 1961, in a written answer to a Parliamentary question, the Minister of Transport, confirmed that he had given approval to the early reconstruction of Euston station which, in his view, was urgent not only because of the electrification programme but also because three 50-year-old Underground lifts had almost reached the end of their useful lives. The replacement of the lifts would cost £700,000. As he recou

Amazon rain forest can reduce the forest’s carbon dioxide

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Amazon Drought Leaves Long Legacy of Damage in September 2010 Geoscience Laser Altimeter System Laboratory in Pasadena, California map tree damage and mortality caused by a severe drought in September 2010 This image, taken during a September 2010 drought, shows a line of dead and damaged trees after a surface fire in the Amazon rainforest The Amazon River Basin is home to the largest rainforest on Earth. The basin -- roughly the size of the forty-eight contiguous United States -- covers some 40 percent of the South American continent and includes parts of eight South American countries: Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, and Suriname, as well as French Guiana, a department of France. TOP CRIPPLE Peugeot upset to Volkswagen search engines roundup of money in Brazil Football FIFA SCANDAL NASA corruption Wall Street crash to big to fail as god in person Real Estate sell where it wont it is to rich