Blogging even at the top of the Everest. Sure you can!
With your MacBook Pro and iPod along with other basic supplies, you may now visually trace back your track even at the peak of Mount Everest while taking the most difficult challenge in its proud peak.
This can be proven by the team who took the Everest challenge, The First Ascent team. 
Gerry Moffat, head of production for the team, films daily dispatches and uses his MacBook Pro to transfer and edit the data. All of the footage is shot on a solid state cards on the mountain.
“It’s then put into the trusty MacBook Pro,” Moffat said in a video on the Web site. “These have been functioning superbly all the way up—we’re at about 21,000 feet.”
After the footage has been backed up, the card goes to one of the sherpas who takes it to the base camp for editing. The video editor, Tom, then makes another backup of the data and begins editing the footage for public viewing.
The relevant clips are imported into Final Cut Pro, Apple’s professional video application. Music is added, the video is edited and the dispatch is ready to be encoded for the Internet. The files are uploaded via satellite connection to an FTP server in the U.S. and posted to the Internet.
Documenting the journey is not the only reason to carry Apple gear on Everest. Each climber has an entertainment pack that they carry for rest periods. Many of them chose to bring their iPods.
During a rest day, some of the climbers give us a glimpse of what they take with them to pass the time.
“This is what’s turning out to be the best entertainment on this trip—my iPod touch,” one of the climbers said.
“Of course, I’ve always got my trusty [iPod] shuffle,” said another climber when he was going over his entertainment kit.
One of the other climbers brought her iPod nano on the trip to sit back and rest with.
The team is scheduled to make the ascent to the peak of Mount Everest today. You can view all of the video dispatches on the First Ascent Web site.
Even at the coldest and proudest peak of the Everest, home is just a few clicks away.
Source: Macworld

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