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  2. Walking Distance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking_Distance

    "Walking Distance" is episode five of the American television series The Twilight Zone. It originally aired on October 30, 1959. It originally aired on October 30, 1959. The episode was listed as the ninth best episode in the history of The Twilight Zone by Time magazine.

  3. Bing Maps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bing_Maps

    Bing Maps (previously Live Search Maps, Windows Live Maps, Windows Live Local, and MSN Virtual Earth) is a web mapping service provided as a part of Microsoft's Bing suite of search engines and powered by the Bing Maps Platform framework which also support Bing Maps for Enterprise APIs and Azure Maps APIs.

  4. Random walk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_walk

    Five eight-step random walks from a central point. Some paths appear shorter than eight steps where the route has doubled back on itself. (animated version)In mathematics, a random walk, sometimes known as a drunkard's walk, is a stochastic process that describes a path that consists of a succession of random steps on some mathematical space.

  5. Walking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking

    Beach walking is a sport that is based on a walk on the sand of the beach. Beach walking can be developed on compact sand or non-compact sand. There are beach walking competitions on non-compact sand, and there are world records of beach walking on non-compact sand in Multiday distances. Beach walking has a specific technique of walk.

  6. The Walking Drum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Walking_Drum

    The Walking Drum is a novel by the American author Louis L'Amour. Unlike most of his other novels, The Walking Drum is not set in the frontier era of the American West , but rather is an historical novel set in the Middle Ages —12th-century Europe and the Middle East .

  7. Long Walk of the Navajo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Walk_of_the_Navajo

    Manuelito, studio portrait, c. 1897 Barboncito, c. 1865. Friction between invading American settlers and Navajo groups was widespread between 1846 and 1863. Manuelito and Barboncito reminded the Navajo that the US Army was sending troops to wage war, that it had flogged a Navajo messenger, and that it opened fire on tribal headsman “Agua Chiquito”, during talks for peace.