Thanks for your vote! There are a few links on the mountain page - I believe some of them show summer shots. You can also do a general google search. You can go to google.ru to search Russian sites as well.
I tried to program the page via HTML to read it as Cyrillic, but unsuccessfully. If you or anyone else knows the proper HTML encoding for Cyrillic, please let me know and I will add it to the page.
If you are not familiar with reading languages that use encodings other than standard Western European, you may not know how to adjust your browser setting.
The reason it comes up with all the "o"s and "e"s is because I haven't learned how to tell the internet browser to interpret that writing as Russian text. Explorer thinks the letters are regular Western European input, and so doesn't display them properly. To tell the computer how to read the Cyrillic:
Go to "View" in the toolbar, down to "Encoding", over to "More" and select "Cyrillic Windows". It may also come out correctly in "Cyrillic K018-R", though I tried to input it using Windows encoding. This will work on any computer with reasonably up-to-date software.
Now, unless you read Russian, it will _still_ be a bunch of gibberish (since Russian has a different alphabet), but for those of us who do, it is legible.
I will post a transcription according to American standard Cyrillic transcription (as I do not know the HTML codes for the proper European special characters with accent marks required by the European system of Cyrillic transcription.)
Great work on this page. Very complete, superb information. Thanks for posting.
SiberianSayan - Nov 10, 2005 11:39 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled Comment
Thanks for your vote! I tried hard -- in a place where maps are considered classified information (thus the 1:50,000 scale on the best map I've seen) -- and even deliberately falsified, it's not an easy job.
SiberianSayan - Nov 6, 2005 3:41 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentAnd again, thanks for your vote!
SiberianSayan - Nov 6, 2005 3:41 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote!
SiberianSayan - Nov 6, 2005 3:42 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote!
SiberianSayan - Nov 6, 2005 3:42 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote!
desainme - Nov 6, 2005 5:23 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentVery cool seeing an Othodox cross atop the Russian Mongolian border.
SiberianSayan - Nov 6, 2005 6:01 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks very much. I've made that my profile photo. Not many places in the world with that kind of summit marker.
Saintgrizzly - Nov 6, 2005 6:31 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentNice! Would love to see pictures of the area in summer--very well written!
SiberianSayan - Nov 8, 2005 10:22 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote! There are a few links on the mountain page - I believe some of them show summer shots. You can also do a general google search. You can go to google.ru to search Russian sites as well.
Johan Heersink - Nov 7, 2005 2:48 am - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentAnother nice page about an unknown, (to most), mountain!
Gangolf Haub - Nov 7, 2005 2:43 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentGood page! I can't read neither map nor book. On my screen it (the map) comes up as
Àëáóì òóðèñòè÷åñêèõ êàðò: «Òóíêèíñêàÿ äîëèíà» - èçäàíèå 1-å. 1998 ã. –60ñ.
I guess you need to include this in tags and chose the correct font (cyrillic?). If that doesn't work, could you put up a transcription?
SiberianSayan - Nov 8, 2005 10:46 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote!
I tried to program the page via HTML to read it as Cyrillic, but unsuccessfully. If you or anyone else knows the proper HTML encoding for Cyrillic, please let me know and I will add it to the page.
If you are not familiar with reading languages that use encodings other than standard Western European, you may not know how to adjust your browser setting.
The reason it comes up with all the "o"s and "e"s is because I haven't learned how to tell the internet browser to interpret that writing as Russian text. Explorer thinks the letters are regular Western European input, and so doesn't display them properly. To tell the computer how to read the Cyrillic:
Go to "View" in the toolbar, down to "Encoding", over to "More" and select "Cyrillic Windows". It may also come out correctly in "Cyrillic K018-R", though I tried to input it using Windows encoding. This will work on any computer with reasonably up-to-date software.
Now, unless you read Russian, it will _still_ be a bunch of gibberish (since Russian has a different alphabet), but for those of us who do, it is legible.
I will post a transcription according to American standard Cyrillic transcription (as I do not know the HTML codes for the proper European special characters with accent marks required by the European system of Cyrillic transcription.)
Hope that helps!
2skinners - Nov 7, 2005 11:26 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentA++
SiberianSayan - Nov 8, 2005 10:47 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote!
SiberianSayan - Nov 9, 2005 12:58 am - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for the vote!
michaelhaifa - Nov 9, 2005 9:14 am - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentThank you for this page, very well done!
SiberianSayan - Nov 10, 2005 11:37 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote and comment!
Nelson - Nov 10, 2005 11:27 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentGreat work on this page. Very complete, superb information. Thanks for posting.
SiberianSayan - Nov 10, 2005 11:39 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote! I tried hard -- in a place where maps are considered classified information (thus the 1:50,000 scale on the best map I've seen) -- and even deliberately falsified, it's not an easy job.
Carl Valter - Nov 13, 2005 5:36 pm - Voted 10/10
Untitled CommentVery good page! Much thank you.
SiberianSayan - Nov 13, 2005 7:28 pm - Hasn't voted
Untitled CommentThanks for your vote!