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Dalla vetta della Cima di Valpianella
Al centro il Rifugio Benigni.
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo...
Der Bannwaldsee ist ein 2,28 km² großer See im Landkreis Ostallgäu, Bayerisch-Schwaben, Bayern. Er liegt 4,5 Kilometer nordöstlich von Füssen, einen knappen Kilometer östlich des Forggensees, in den er über die Mühlberger Ach entwässert. Große Teile des Ufers bestehen aus natürlichen Verlandungszonen. Der See liegt in dem 5,60 km² großen Naturschutzgebiet Bannwaldsee. Im Südosten befinden sich ein Campingplatz und Badezonen.
Der Bannwaldsee gehört mit seiner gesamten Fläche zur Gemeinde Schwangau; sein Ostufer grenzt an die Gemeinde Halblech.
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bannwaldsee
Hier die Berge im Hintergrund:
Here the mountains in the background:
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo...
Al centro il Gruppo delle Sciore (Dafora, Pioda, Ago, Dadent); di profilo, sulla destra i Gemelli e il Cengalo.
Soglio (Valbregaglia - GR - CH)
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo...
The Gables left, and the Scafells right. On the left horizon Harrison Stickle and Pike O'Stickle are prominent.
Ingleborough, 40 miles away in the Yorkshire Dales, is just visible to the left of Pike O'Stickle.
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo... is a panoramic explanation of the view, although for some reason Pike O'Stickle doesn't show up
First sight of Loch a' Bhaid-Luachraich behind Aultbea with the Torridon hills in the background.
You can see Beinn Lair, Beinn Airigh Charr, Liathach, Beinn Dearg, Ben an Eoin, Beinn Alligin and Baosbheinn among others. See here for a panoramic list of the hills in this view.
Bitte vergrößern...
Am linken Bildrand der Füssener Hausberg, der Säuling. In der Mitte die Ortschaft Zell. Am rechten Bildrand einige Ortsteile von Pfronten.
Das Foto ist aufgenommen von der Schlossbergalm, nahe der Burgruine Eisenberg.
Eine Notiz im Bild zeigt die Burgruine Falkenstein - ein weiteres Projekt von König Ludwig II von Bayern:
www.pfronten.de/Attraktion/burgruine-falkenstein/
Alpenpanorama mit den Namen und Daten der abgebildeten Berge: 77 Gipfel erscheinen bei Klick auf den folgenden link...
PLEINE TAILLE ICI(FULL SIZE HERE):
www.flickr.com/photos/76574511@N02/17434946425/sizes/o/
Nom des SOMMETS ICI:
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo...
Depuis le point culminant de la montagne Sainte-Victoire le pic des Mouches(1011m) les Alpes du sud nettement visibles ce 6 Janvier 2015,avec de gauche à droite l'Olan(3564m),la Meije(3987m),la Barre des Ecrins(4102m),l'Ailefroide(3953m),le Pelvoux(3946m),puis à droite le Mourre Froid(la pyramide blanche) à 2990m la Tête de Vautisse(3156m) et les Monges(2115m).Point le plus éloigné la Meije à 171,3km.
Per vedere i nomi delle cime con l'utilissimo sito:
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/makepanoramas_it.htm
cliccare sul link:
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo...
liste des sommets visibles, altitude et distance ici:
www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo...
En scrutant l'horizon nord-est avant le lever du Soleil du 26 aout, je ne pouvais qu'être fasciné par ces discrètes pyramides qui bosselaient l'horizon, loin, si ln au-delà du Lac de l'Astarac. J'avais bien mon idée sur ce dont il s'agissait, mais il convenait de le vérifier scrupuleusement.
Et maintenant je peux vous présenter ce portrait des monts du Cantal vus depuis le Pic du Midi. Un peu plus de trois cents kilomètres de portée visuelle, ce n'est pas si mal ...
Données obtenues avec le site www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoram…/makepanoramas.htm. Pour le cliché : Pentax K-5, Sigma 70-200 et doubleur, soit 400 mm de focale, image recadrée et contraste accentué.
Alp peaks as seen from Weissenstein atop of Solothurn (Jurasüdfluss), the view bridging 70km distance. I labelled the peaks based on www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/makepanoramas.htm
This tool is awesome for identifying peak names. I even managed to spot the Jungfraujoch near Grindelwald (see photo on center-right), that we visited the day before for skiing. If you look closely, you can even spot the outline of the Top of Europe railway building, the highest train station in Europe at 3,454m!
Es war eine gute Fernsicht auf der Zugspitze.
Hier müsste es sich um den Hintertuxer Gletscher mit dem pyramidenförmigen Olperer (3476 m) handeln.
Ich bin mir aber nicht sicher, da ich Flachlandberliner bin.
Kann das jemand bestätigen?
Nachtrag:
Hier gibt es Hilfe für Berglaien:
1899-1900: British Signallers with Heliograph on Talana Hill
( I produced this image by rescanning this small portion of the right frame of the stereograph at flic.kr/p/2rHEUGy , then contrast-enhancing it).
This stereograph from 1900 depicts British signallers with heliograph[0], telescopes and Begbie Lamp atop Talana Hill, Dundee, Natal, the site of the first major battle of the Boer War in Oct. 1899. The Union Jack is visible at left, and a 5" Mance Mark II heliograph is on the tripod on lower right. Based on the shape of the horizon, this was indeed taken from Talana Hill, looking southwest by west, and the buildings and trees in the background are Dundee.
The Battle of Talana Hill[1-3], Friday, Oct. 20, 1899, was the first major battle of the Second Ango-Boer War, nine days after the start of the war. The invading Boers had occupied the hill overlooking the British troops in the town of Dundee, and commenced artillery fire on the British at 5:25 AM. The British launched an assault on the hill and had recaptured it by 1:30 PM. Talana Hill is NE of Dundee, 500 feet above the intervening terrain, and its high point is at 28.1475ºS, 30.2619ºN[4]. Today the Talana Museum is situated 1.2 km south by west of the peak of Talana Hill[5,6].
The Talana Museum account of the battle mentions (unsuccessful) use of a Boer heliograph atop Talana Hill: "On top of Talana, Meyer continually tried to heliograph Erasmus, without response."[3] The Talana Museum has a heliograph on display[8], though it appears to be a post-Boer War 5" Mance Mark V heliograph, and its tripod, at least, looks to be from World War II.
The British 5" Mance Mark II heliograph was the mainstay heliograph for both British and Boer forces for the first phase of the 2nd Anglo-Boer War. The Mark II was accepted by the British Army in 1885 (date of order 19 Oct. 1885, published Mar. 1866 in List of Changes §4941) and succeeded in early 1900 by the Mark III (date of order 20 Feb 1900, published Oct 1900 in List of Changes §10309).
The Mark II and Mark III have a hinged sight arm with a spring latch beneath it, visible in this photo. The rear near-vertical steel rod protruded farther above the mirror frame in the Mark II (as seen here) than in later Marks.
The heliograph is set up here in the "simplex" single-mirror mode, used when the sun is in front of the signaller, as it is here per the shadows. The front jointed sighting rod should have a vane tip - the tip looks a bit odd here, and on both sides of the stereograph, so it isn't simple physical damage to the photo. The leather heliograph case is slung over the legs of the heliograph by the leather shoulder sling, as is proper. The leather case also seems to be holding a number of sheets of paper (which is odd) and the duplex mirror seems to be lying on the ground directly below the tripod, which is very odd - it should be in the case. Perhaps it was removed so that the duplex mirror storage chamber could be used to hold the papers? The short leather strap used to bundle the tripod legs for transport is visible near the bottom of the right tripod leg, and there's another piece of paper on the ground below that.
Note that the note-taker's right arm is blurred, as it would be if he were actually working. Above his head you can see the front lens of a Begbie signal lamp, largely hidden by his head and the tripod of the telescope behind him.
In the background, we see the trees and buildings of Dundee below. Thanks to modern digital elevation models and software, we can use the horizon contours in old photos to better determine the direction in which the photo was taken. Using www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/makepanoramas_en.htm with a 48 km visibility limit, I match the visible horizon in the stereograph quite well if I assume the photo was taken from the peak of Talana Hill (-28.1475, 30.261944) at a true bearing of about 237º. Based on the synthetic view, the notch in the center of the horizon is at true bearing 237.4º. Using Peakfinder.com[7], the south side of that notch is the descending slope of a hill 7.8 miles, and teh north side the descending slope of a hill 11 miles away.
You can learn more about the stereograph card company and the copyright holder here:
pressphotoman.com/2023/01/25/excelsior-stereoscopic-tours/
I scanned this section of the stereograph at 3200 dpi from an original in my collection. The image on this web page is a low resolution preview - to view or download this at higher resolutions, go to:
www.flickr.com/photos/signalmirror/54949180511/sizes/o/
I believe this image is in the public domain in the United States (and most other places) as an image first published before 1930. Any rights I may have inadvertently acquired by scanning it and processing it, I donate to the public domain under a CC0 license.
However, copyright and other intellectual property rights are copyright and vary worldwide and with time - it is your responsibility to determine what your local laws allow you to do with it.
[0] From Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliograph "A heliograph (from Ancient Greek ἥλιος (hḗlios) 'sun' and γράφειν (gráphein) 'to write') is a solar telegraph system that signals by flashes of sunlight (generally using Morse code from the 1840s) reflected by a mirror. The flashes are produced by momentarily pivoting the mirror, or by interrupting the beam with a shutter." Henry Mance invented the British Mance pivoting-mirror heliograph in 1869. Mance heliographs were used by British forces in combat from at least the 1877 Jowaki Afridi expedition in Afghanistan through the June 6, 1944 D-Day Normandy landings in WW2.
[1] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Talana_Hill
[2] Battle of Talana, 1899
www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofBritain/Battle-of-...
[3] Battle of Talana Hill - Talana Museum:
www.talana.co.za/battle-of-talana/
[4] [SA] Talana Hill NE of Dundee
latitude 28.1475 S longitude 30.261944 E
elevation 4481 ft above sea level (6 ft above ground)
www.heywhatsthat.com/?view=AI44HXUJ
[5] Talana Museum Website:
[6] Talana Museum in the German Wikipedia: de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talana_Museum
(Google English Translation at: de-wikipedia-org.translate.goog/wiki/Talana_Museum?_x_tr_...)
[7] Modern computer-generated view from Talana Hill that matches the horizon in the stereograph
www.peakfinder.com/?lat=-28.14750&lng=30.26194&az...
[8] Heliograph on display at Talana Museum
1899-1900: British Signallers with Heliograph on Talana Hill
This stereograph from 1900 depicts British signallers with heliograph[0], telescopes and Begbie Lamp atop Talana Hill, Dundee, Natal, the site of the first major battle of the Boer War in Oct. 1899. The Union Jack is visible at left, and a 5" Mance Mark II heliograph is on the tripod on lower right. Based on the shape of the horizon, this was indeed taken from Talana Hill, looking southwest by west, and the buildings and trees in the background are Dundee.
The Battle of Talana Hill[1-3], Friday, Oct. 20, 1899, was the first major battle of the Second Ango-Boer War, nine days after the start of the war. The invading Boers had occupied the hill overlooking the British troops in the town of Dundee, and commenced artillery fire on the British at 5:25 AM. The British launched an assault on the hill and had recaptured it by 1:30 PM. Talana Hill is NE of Dundee, 500 feet above the intervening terrain, and its high point is at 28.1475ºS, 30.2619ºN[4]. Today the Talana Museum is situated 1.2 km south by west of the peak of Talana Hill[5,6].
The Talana Museum account of the battle mentions (unsuccessful) use of a Boer heliograph atop Talana Hill: "On top of Talana, Meyer continually tried to heliograph Erasmus, without response."[3] The Talana Museum has a heliograph on display[8], though it appears to be a post-Boer War 5" Mance Mark V heliograph, and its tripod, at least, looks to be from World War II.
The British 5" Mance Mark II heliograph was the mainstay heliograph for both British and Boer forces for the first phase of the 2nd Anglo-Boer War. The Mark II was accepted by the British Army in 1885 (date of order 19 Oct. 1885, published Mar. 1866 in List of Changes §4941) and succeeded in early 1900 by the Mark III (date of order 20 Feb 1900, published Oct 1900 in List of Changes §10309).
The Mark II and Mark III have a hinged sight arm with a spring latch beneath it, visible in this photo. The rear near-vertical steel rod protruded farther above the mirror frame in the Mark II (as seen here) than in later Marks.
The heliograph is set up here in the "simplex" single-mirror mode, used when the sun is in front of the signaller, as it is here per the shadows. The front jointed sighting rod should have a vane tip - the tip looks a bit odd here, and on both sides of the stereograph, so it isn't simple physical damage to the photo. The leather heliograph case is slung over the legs of the heliograph by the leather shoulder sling, as is proper. The leather case also seems to be holding a number of sheets of paper (which is odd) and the duplex mirror seems to be lying on the ground directly below the tripod, which is very odd - it should be in the case. Perhaps it was removed so that the duplex mirror storage chamber could be used to hold the papers? The short leather strap used to bundle the tripod legs for transport is visible near the bottom of the right tripod leg, and there's another piece of paper on the ground below that.
Note that the note-taker's right arm is blurred, as it would be if he were actually working. Above his head you can see the front lens of a Begbie signal lamp, largely hidden by his head and the tripod of the telescope behind him.
In the background, we see the trees and buildings of Dundee below. Thanks to modern digital elevation models and software, we can use the horizon contours in old photos to better determine the direction in which the photo was taken. Using www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/makepanoramas_en.htm with a 48 km visibility limit, I match the visible horizon in the stereograph quite well if I assume the photo was taken from the peak of Talana Hill (-28.1475, 30.261944) at a true bearing of about 237º. Based on the synthetic view, the notch in the center of the horizon is at true bearing 237.4º. Using Peakfinder.com[7], the south side of that notch is the descending slope of a hill 7.8 miles, and teh north side the descending slope of a hill 11 miles away.
landings in WW2.
You can learn more about the stereograph card company and the copyright holder here:
pressphotoman.com/2023/01/25/excelsior-stereoscopic-tours/
I scanned this stereograph at 1600 dpi from an original in my collection. The image on this web page is a low resolution preview - to view or download this at higher resolutions, go to:
www.flickr.com/photos/signalmirror/54949179616/sizes/o/
I believe this image is in the public domain in the United States (and most other places) as an image first published before 1930. Any rights I may have inadvertently acquired by scanning it and processing it, I donate to the public domain under a CC0 license.
However, copyright and other intellectual property rights are copyright and vary worldwide and with time - it is your responsibility to determine what your local laws allow you to do with it.
[0] From Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliograph "A heliograph (from Ancient Greek ἥλιος (hḗlios) 'sun' and γράφειν (gráphein) 'to write') is a solar telegraph system that signals by flashes of sunlight (generally using Morse code from the 1840s) reflected by a mirror. The flashes are produced by momentarily pivoting the mirror, or by interrupting the beam with a shutter." Henry Mance invented the British Mance pivoting-mirror heliograph in 1869. Mance heliographs were used by British forces in combat from at least the 1877 Jowaki Afridi expedition in Afghanistan through the June 6, 1944 D-Day Normandy
[1] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Talana_Hill
[2] Battle of Talana, 1899
www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofBritain/Battle-of-...
[3] Battle of Talana Hill - Talana Museum:
www.talana.co.za/battle-of-talana/
[4] [SA] Talana Hill NE of Dundee
latitude 28.1475 S longitude 30.261944 E
elevation 4481 ft above sea level (6 ft above ground)
www.heywhatsthat.com/?view=AI44HXUJ
[5] Talana Museum Website:
[6] Talana Museum in the German Wikipedia: de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talana_Museum
(Google English Translation at: de-wikipedia-org.translate.goog/wiki/Talana_Museum?_x_tr_...)
[7] Modern computer-generated view from Talana Hill that matches the horizon in the stereograph
www.peakfinder.com/?lat=-28.14750&lng=30.26194&az...
[8] Heliograph on display at Talana Museum
1899-1900: British Signallers with Heliograph on Talana Hill
(This is a contrast-enhanced version of the right half of the stereograph image at flic.kr/p/2rHEUGy)
This stereograph from 1900 depicts British signallers with heliograph[0], telescopes and Begbie Lamp atop Talana Hill, Dundee, Natal, the site of the first major battle of the Boer War in Oct. 1899. The Union Jack is visible at left, and a 5" Mance Mark II heliograph is on the tripod on lower right. Based on the shape of the horizon, this was indeed taken from Talana Hill, looking southwest by west, and the buildings and trees in the background are Dundee.
The Battle of Talana Hill[1-3], Friday, Oct. 20, 1899, was the first major battle of the Second Ango-Boer War, nine days after the start of the war. The invading Boers had occupied the hill overlooking the British troops in the town of Dundee, and commenced artillery fire on the British at 5:25 AM. The British launched an assault on the hill and had recaptured it by 1:30 PM. Talana Hill is NE of Dundee, 500 feet above the intervening terrain, and its high point is at 28.1475ºS, 30.2619ºN[4]. Today the Talana Museum is situated 1.2 km south by west of the peak of Talana Hill[5,6].
The Talana Museum account of the battle mentions (unsuccessful) use of a Boer heliograph atop Talana Hill: "On top of Talana, Meyer continually tried to heliograph Erasmus, without response."[3] The Talana Museum has a heliograph on display[8], though it appears to be a post-Boer War 5" Mance Mark V heliograph, and its tripod, at least, looks to be from World War II.
The British 5" Mance Mark II heliograph was the mainstay heliograph for both British and Boer forces for the first phase of the 2nd Anglo-Boer War. The Mark II was accepted by the British Army in 1885 (date of order 19 Oct. 1885, published Mar. 1866 in List of Changes §4941) and succeeded in early 1900 by the Mark III (date of order 20 Feb 1900, published Oct 1900 in List of Changes §10309).
The Mark II and Mark III have a hinged sight arm with a spring latch beneath it, visible in this photo. The rear near-vertical steel rod protruded farther above the mirror frame in the Mark II (as seen here) than in later Marks.
The heliograph is set up here in the "simplex" single-mirror mode, used when the sun is in front of the signaller, as it is here per the shadows. The front jointed sighting rod should have a vane tip - the tip looks a bit odd here, and on both sides of the stereograph, so it isn't simple physical damage to the photo. The leather heliograph case is slung over the legs of the heliograph by the leather shoulder sling, as is proper. The leather case also seems to be holding a number of sheets of paper (which is odd) and the duplex mirror seems to be lying on the ground directly below the tripod, which is very odd - it should be in the case. Perhaps it was removed so that the duplex mirror storage chamber could be used to hold the papers? The short leather strap used to bundle the tripod legs for transport is visible near the bottom of the right tripod leg, and there's another piece of paper on the ground below that.
Note that the note-taker's right arm is blurred, as it would be if he were actually working. Above his head you can see the front lens of a Begbie signal lamp, largely hidden by his head and the tripod of the telescope behind him.
In the background, we see the trees and buildings of Dundee below. Thanks to modern digital elevation models and software, we can use the horizon contours in old photos to better determine the direction in which the photo was taken. Using www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/makepanoramas_en.htm with a 48 km visibility limit, I match the visible horizon in the stereograph quite well if I assume the photo was taken from the peak of Talana Hill (-28.1475, 30.261944) at a true bearing of about 237º. Based on the synthetic view, the notch in the center of the horizon is at true bearing 237.4º. Using Peakfinder.com[7], the south side of that notch is the descending slope of a hill 7.8 miles, and teh north side the descending slope of a hill 11 miles away.
You can learn more about the stereograph card company and the copyright holder here:
pressphotoman.com/2023/01/25/excelsior-stereoscopic-tours/
I scanned this stereograph at 1600 dpi from an original in my collection. The image on this web page is a low resolution preview - to view or download this at higher resolutions, go to:
www.flickr.com/photos/signalmirror/54949437799/sizes/o/
I believe this image is in the public domain in the United States (and most other places) as an image first published before 1930. Any rights I may have inadvertently acquired by scanning it and processing it, I donate to the public domain under a CC0 license.
However, copyright and other intellectual property rights are copyright and vary worldwide and with time - it is your responsibility to determine what your local laws allow you to do with it.
[0] From Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliograph "A heliograph (from Ancient Greek ἥλιος (hḗlios) 'sun' and γράφειν (gráphein) 'to write') is a solar telegraph system that signals by flashes of sunlight (generally using Morse code from the 1840s) reflected by a mirror. The flashes are produced by momentarily pivoting the mirror, or by interrupting the beam with a shutter." Henry Mance invented the British Mance pivoting-mirror heliograph in 1869. Mance heliographs were used by British forces in combat from at least the 1877 Jowaki Afridi expedition in Afghanistan through the June 6, 1944 D-Day Normandy landings in WW2.
[1] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Talana_Hill
[2] Battle of Talana, 1899
www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofBritain/Battle-of-...
[3] Battle of Talana Hill - Talana Museum:
www.talana.co.za/battle-of-talana/
[4] [SA] Talana Hill NE of Dundee
latitude 28.1475 S longitude 30.261944 E
elevation 4481 ft above sea level (6 ft above ground)
www.heywhatsthat.com/?view=AI44HXUJ
[5] Talana Museum Website:
[6] Talana Museum in the German Wikipedia: de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talana_Museum
(Google English Translation at: de-wikipedia-org.translate.goog/wiki/Talana_Museum?_x_tr_...)
[7] Modern computer-generated view from Talana Hill that matches the horizon in the stereograph
www.peakfinder.com/?lat=-28.14750&lng=30.26194&az...
[8] Heliograph on display at Talana Museum
Striped Mountain, Mount Stanford, Mount Ericsson, Marion Peak, State Peak, Munger Peak, Comb Spur, Kennedy Mountain, and Mount Harrington (and many more!) from Thunderbolt Pass.
From: www.heywhatsthat.com/?view=AB6OG9TS
Here's another viewer: www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/panqueryfull.aspx?mo...
Pen Llithryg yr Wrach, Pen yr Helgi Du, Carnedd Llewelyn, Carnedd Dafydd, Snowdon, Elidir Fawr (identifications thanks to www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/makepanoramas.htm) 275
Pen Llithrig yr Wrach, Pen yr Helgi Du, Carnedd Llewelyn, Carnedd Dafydd, Penyrolewen, Yr Wyddfa (identifications thanks to www.udeuschle.selfhost.pro/panoramas/makepanoramas.htm) 274
In dieser Folge rede ich ganz offen darüber, warum ich den großen Social-Media-Plattformen wie Facebook, Instagram und X (Twitter) den Rücken gekehrt habe. Es geht um Frust, um verlorene Diskussionskultur, um toxische Algorithmen – aber auch um Hoffnung. Denn ich habe Alternativen gefunden: Das Fediverse.
#ActivityPub #AntiAlgorithmus #Datenschutz #deutsch #Dezentral #DieAbschweifung #DigitaleFreiheit #DigitalerWiderstand #DigitalKultur #DigitalSouveränität #FediTips #Fediverse #FOSS(FreeandOpenSourceSoftware) #Hubzilla #IndiePodcast #lautfunk #Lemmy #LinuxCommunity #Mastodon #Medienkritik #Misskey #Netzpolitik #OpenSource #OpenWeb #PeerTube #Pixelfed #Podcast #PodcastDeutsch #podcastdeutschland #podcasters #podcasting #PodcastLiebe #podcastmakers #podcastshow #Selfhosting #SozialeNetzwerke #TechEthik #WegVonBigTech
lautfunk.uber.space/podcast/die-abschweifung-54-abschweif...