唐:Danny搏斗的消息,是空姐Betty Ong与Amy Sweeney通知AA地勤人员:劫机后2位空姐被杀,坐在9B的乘客(Danny)被割断喉咙。之后FBI告诉Danny的父母:他看见空姐被刺后尝试阻止Atta和Omari进入驾驶舱才被杀!//@miss_anna921:好奇搏斗的细节怎么来滴//@Cheer-FLY:这消息是怎么传出来?//@吴连华:向英雄致敬!
@嵇汉杰: Brilliant brilliant guy, a ture fighter and our hero. Wish he could be able to see what Akamai has accomplished. Thoughts and prayers!
@Nick_Xin:网络提速Akamai原来是他 //@小格格的阿玛: @Nick_Xin 原来我们用的akamai是他创建的。[蜡烛]
@Matthew_Wang18:像纯真的人致敬[蜡烛] //@小格格的阿玛:创业者从来就是不谙世事,希望用自己努力改变这世界的人,他们勇敢,无畏,不接受别人安排的命运,哪怕用生命去正名!而我们现今享受的一切,绝大部分是他的创造。[蜡烛]
http://pandodaily.com/2013/09/11 ... s-first-casualties/
Of course, we don’t know everything that happened on that plane that fateful day. But we do know that American Airlines flight attendants Betty Ong and Amy Sweeney contacted American Airlines ground staff while the plane was being hijacked. They reported that two other flight attendants had been killed, and the passenger in seat 9B – that’s where Danny was sitting — had had his throat slashed. Afterward, the FBI told Danny’s parents that Danny was killed while trying to block Atta and Omari from getting into the cockpit after they had stabbed a flight attendant.
http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/history/2013/09/danny_lewin_the_first_victim_on_9_11_and_an_architect_of_the_internet.html
It was at MIT that Lewin came up with an idea for his master’s thesis that he believed had the potential to change the way the burgeoning Internet worked. In the mid-‘90s, a time when the greatest impediment to the growth of the Internet was congestion, Lewin wrote a set of algorithms he called “consistent hashing.” The idea that his thesis work could speed up the delivery of content on the massive, tangled channels that formed the Internet was audacious, but with the encouragement of his mentor—MIT professor Tom Leighton—he pursued it. By 1998, the two mathematicians had taken a complex set of algorithms, patented them, and created Akamai, a company that still today uses its intelligent software to deliver content quickly and efficiently on the Internet. By 1999, the company had grown from just a few engineers in an office near MIT to a hot tech company boasting a worldwide network of servers and big name customers including Yahoo, Apple, and CNN. Its October 1999 IPO made Lewin and Leighton overnight billionaires, but Lewin had almost no time to enjoy his early, explosive success. First came the bursting of the dot-com bubble, and with it an around-the-clock struggle to keep Akamai afloat. Then came 9/11.
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