Aar Glaciers
Adelboden
Adriatic Sea
Ago di Sciora
Aiguille d'Argentière
Albula Range
Aletsch Glacier
AlpTransit
Alpine Pass Route
Alpine meadow
Alpine tundra
Alpinist
Alps
Alpstein
Andermatt
Appenzell Alps
Appenzell Ausserrhoden
Appenzell Innerrhoden
Arosa
Aroser Weisshorn
Arve
Atlantic
Austria
Austroalpine nappes
Bürkelkopf
Bachalpsee
Baltoro Glacier
Banking in Switzerland
Bern-Lötschberg-Simplon railway
Berne eXchange
Bernese Alps
Bernese Oberland
Bernina Express
Bernina Range
Bettmeralp
Black Sea
Braunwald
Bregaglia Range
Briançonnais microcontinent
California
Canton St. Gallen
Canton of Bern
Canton of Berne
Canton of Fribourg
Canton of Glarus
Canton of Lucerne
Canton of Schwyz
Canton of St. Gallen
Canton of Uri
Cantons of Switzerland
Cartography of Switzerland
Central Eastern Alps
Chablais Alps
Champéry
Cima di Castello
Cima di Gana Bianca
Cinema of Switzerland
Climate of the Alps
Coat of arms of Switzerland
Col Ferret
Colorado
Conifer
Conscription in Switzerland
Corn da Tinizong
Corne de Sorebois
Crêt du Midi
Crans Montana
Culture of Switzerland
Dammastock
Davos
Deciduous
Demographics of Switzerland
Dent Blanche
Dents du Midi
Dom (Mischabel)
Dom (mountain)
Early Modern Switzerland
Early history of Switzerland
Eastern Alps
Economy of Switzerland
Education in Switzerland
Eiger
Elections in Switzerland
Energy in Switzerland
Engadin
Engadin Airport
Engelberg
English language
Entlebuch Biosphere
European Watershed
Exploration of the High Alps
Extreme points of Switzerland
Fiescher Glacier
Fil de Cassons
Finsteraarhorn
Flag of Switzerland
Flims
Flims Rockslide
Foreign relations of Switzerland
France
Adelboden
Adriatic Sea
Ago di Sciora
Aiguille d'Argentière
Albula Range
Aletsch Glacier
AlpTransit
Alpine Pass Route
Alpine meadow
Alpine tundra
Alpinist
Alps
Alpstein
Andermatt
Appenzell Alps
Appenzell Ausserrhoden
Appenzell Innerrhoden
Arosa
Aroser Weisshorn
Arve
Atlantic
Austria
Austroalpine nappes
Bürkelkopf
Bachalpsee
Baltoro Glacier
Banking in Switzerland
Bern-Lötschberg-Simplon railway
Berne eXchange
Bernese Alps
Bernese Oberland
Bernina Express
Bernina Range
Bettmeralp
Black Sea
Braunwald
Bregaglia Range
Briançonnais microcontinent
California
Canton St. Gallen
Canton of Bern
Canton of Berne
Canton of Fribourg
Canton of Glarus
Canton of Lucerne
Canton of Schwyz
Canton of St. Gallen
Canton of Uri
Cantons of Switzerland
Cartography of Switzerland
Central Eastern Alps
Chablais Alps
Champéry
Cima di Castello
Cima di Gana Bianca
Cinema of Switzerland
Climate of the Alps
Coat of arms of Switzerland
Col Ferret
Colorado
Conifer
Conscription in Switzerland
Corn da Tinizong
Corne de Sorebois
Crêt du Midi
Crans Montana
Culture of Switzerland
Dammastock
Davos
Deciduous
Demographics of Switzerland
Dent Blanche
Dents du Midi
Dom (Mischabel)
Dom (mountain)
Early Modern Switzerland
Early history of Switzerland
Eastern Alps
Economy of Switzerland
Education in Switzerland
Eiger
Elections in Switzerland
Energy in Switzerland
Engadin
Engadin Airport
Engelberg
English language
Entlebuch Biosphere
European Watershed
Exploration of the High Alps
Extreme points of Switzerland
Fiescher Glacier
Fil de Cassons
Finsteraarhorn
Flag of Switzerland
Flims
Flims Rockslide
Foreign relations of Switzerland
France
Satellite image of Switzerland in October 2002. On the north side of the Alps, the regions located above 2000 m are covered by snow. The canton of Ticino (on the south side) is almost snow-free in early autumn.
The Swiss Alps (German: Schweizer Alpen, French: Alpes suisses, Italian: Alpi svizzere, Romansh: Alps svizras) are the portion of the Alps mountain range that lies within Switzerland. Because of their central position within the entire Alpine range, they are also known as the Central Alps. The highest summit in the Swiss Alps is Monte Rosa (4,634 metres (15,202 ft)) near the Swiss-Italian border. The highest mountain which lies entirely on Swiss territory is the Dom (4,545 meters (14,911 ft)). Other main summits can be found in the list of mountains in Switzerland.
Since the Middle Ages, transit across the Alps played an important role in history. The region north of the St. Gotthard Pass became the birthplace of the Old Swiss Confederacy in 1291.
Contents
1 Geography
1.1 Ranges
1.2 Hydrography
1.2.1 Rivers
1.2.2 Lakes
1.3 Land elevation
2 Geology
3 Environment and climate
3.1 Climate zones
4 Travel and tourism
4.1 Summer tourism
4.2 Winter tourism
4.3 Transportation
5 Toponymy
6 Gallery
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
Geography
See also: Geography of Switzerland
Swiss Alps seen from the Swiss Jura
The Alps cover 65% of Switzerland's surface area (41,285 km²), making it one of the most alpine countries. Despite the fact that Switzerland covers only 14% of the Alps total area (192,753 km²)12, many alpine four-thousanders (48 of 82) are located in the Swiss Alps and the remaining few are within 20 km of the country's border.
The glaciers of the Swiss Alps cover an area of 1230 km² (3% of the Swiss territory), representing 44% of the total glaciated area in the Alps (2800 km²).
The Swiss Alps are situated south of the Swiss plateau and north of the national border. The limit between the Alps and the plateau runs from Vevey on the shores of Lake Geneva to Rorschach on the shores of Lake Constance, passing close to the cities of Thun and Lucerne.3
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The countries with which Switzerland shares mountain ranges of the Alps are (from west to east): France, Italy, Austria and Liechtenstein.
Ranges
The Alps are usually divided into two main parts, the Western Alps and Eastern Alps, whose division is along the Rhine from Lake Constance to the Splügen Pass. The western ranges occupy the greatest part of Switzerland while the more numerous eastern ranges are much smaller and are all situated in the canton of Graubünden. The latter are part of the Central Eastern Alps, except the Ortler Alps which belong to the Southern Limestone Alps. The Pennine, Bernese and Bernina Range are they highest ranges of the country, they contain respectively 38, 9 and 1 summit over 4000 metres. The lowest range is the Appenzell Alps culminating at 2,500 metres.
(*) situated out of the main chain
Western Alps
Map of the western Swiss Alps
Location
Range
Cantons
Notable peaks
East limit
From west to east, north of Rhone and Rhine
Bernese Alps*
Vaud, Fribourg, Valais, Berne
Finsteraarhorn, Jungfrau, Eiger
Grimsel Pass
Urner Alps*
Uri, Bern, Valais, Lucerne, Obwalden, Nidwalden
Dammastock, Titlis
Reuss river
Glarus Alps*
Uri, Glarus, Graubünden
Tödi, Glärnisch
Seeztal
Appenzell Alps*
Appenzell Innerrhoden, Appenzell Ausserrhoden, St. Gallen
Säntis
Rhine
From west to east, south of Rhone and Rhine
Chablais Alps
Valais
Dents du Midi
Arve
Mont Blanc Massif
Valais
Aiguille d'Argentière
Col Ferret
Pennine Alps
Valais
Monte Rosa, Weisshorn, Matterhorn
Simplon Pass
Lepontine Alps
Valais, Ticino, Uri Graubünden,
Monte Leone, Rheinwaldhorn
Splügen Pass
Eastern Alps
Map of the eastern Swiss Alps
Location
Range
Notable peaks
From west to east, north of Mera and Inn river
Oberhalbstein
Piz Platta
Plessur*
Aroser Weisshorn
Albula
Piz Kesch, Piz Lunghin
Rätikon*
Schesaplana
Silvretta*
Piz Linard, Piz Buin
Samnaun Alps*
Muttler
From west to east, south of Mera and Inn river
Bregaglia
Cima di Castello, Piz Badile
Bernina
Piz Bernina, Piz Roseg
Albula
Piz Kesch, Piz Lunghin
Livigno
Piz Paradisin
Ortler Alps*
Piz Murtaröl
Sesvenna
Piz Sesvenna
Hydrography
See also: Valleys of the Alps
Rivers
See also: List of rivers in Switzerland
Rhine Gorge in Graubünden
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The north side of the Swiss Alps is drained by the Rhone, Rhine and Inn river (which is part of the Danube basin) while the south side is mainly drained by the Ticino river (Po basin). The rivers on the north empty into the Mediterranean, North and Black Sea, on the south the Po empty in the Adriatic Sea. The major triple watersheds in the Alps are located within the country, they are: Piz Lunghin, Witenwasserenstock and Monte Forcola. Between the Witenwasserenstock and Piz Lunghin runs the European Watershed separating the basin of the Atlantic (North Sea) and the Mediterranean Sea (Adriatic and Black Sea). The European watershed lies in fact only partially on the main chain. Switzerland possesses 6% of Europe's fresh water, and is sometimes referred to as the "water tower of Europe".
Lakes
See also: List of lakes in Switzerland
The Lac des Dix in Valais
Since the highest dams are located in Alpine regions, many large mountain lakes are artificial and are used as hydroelectric reservoirs. Some large artificial lakes can be found above 2,300 m, but natural lakes larger than 1 km² are generally below 1,000 m (with the exceptions of lakes in the Engadin such as Lake Sils, and Oeschinen in the Bernese Oberland). The melting of low-altitude glaciers can generate new lakes, such as the 0.25 km² large Triftsee which formed between 2002–2003.
Land elevation
See also: Swiss cantons by elevation
The following table4 gives the surface area above 2000 m and 3000 m and the respective percentage on the total area of each canton whose high point is above 2000 metres.
Canton
Land above 2000m in km²
Land above 2000m in %
Land above 3000m in km²
Land above 3000m in %
Appenzell Ausserrhoden
1
0.4
0
0
Appenzell Innerrhoden
4
2.3
0
0
Berne
887
15
100
1.7
Fribourg
14
0.8
0
0
Glarus
213
31
4
0.6
Graubünden
4296
60
111
1.6
Lucerne
4
0.3
0
0
Nidwalden
20
7
0
0
Obwalden
66
13
1
0.2
Schwyz
69
8
0
0
St. Gallen
184
9
1
0.05
Ticino
781
28
2
0.07
Uri
562
52
19
1.8
Valais
2595
50
697
13
Vaud
92
3
1
0.03
Switzerland
9788
24
936
2.3
Geology
Main article: Geology of the Alps
See also: List of glaciers in Switzerland
Lauterbrunnental Valley in the Bernese Alps, a U-shaped valley that resulted from the erosion of glaciers
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The composition of the great tectonic units reflects the history of the formation of the Alps. The rocks from the Helvetic zone on the north and the Austroalpine nappes - Southern Alps on the south come originally from the European and African continent respectively. The rocks of the Penninic nappes belong to the former area of the Briançonnais microcontinent and the Tethys Ocean. The closure of the latter by subduction under the African plate (Piemont Ocean first and Valais Ocean later) preceded the collision between the two plates and the so-called alpine orogeny. The major thrust fault of the Tectonic Arena Sardona in the eastern Glarus Alps gives a visible illustration of mountain-building processes and was therefore declared a UNESCO World Heritage. Another fine example gives the Alpstein area with several visible upfolds of Helvetic zone material.
With some exceptions, the Alps north of Rhone and Rhine river are part of the Helvetic Zone and those on the south side are part of the Penninic nappes. The Austroalpine zone concerns almost only the Eastern Alps, with the notable exception of the Matterhorn.
The last glaciations greatly transformed Switzerland’s landscape. Many valleys of the Swiss Alps are U-shaped due to glacial erosion. During the maximum extension of the Würm glaciation (18,000 years ago) the glaciers completely covered the Swiss Plateau, before retreating and leaving remnants only in high mountain areas. In modern times the Aletsch Glacier in the western Bernese Alps is the largest and longest in the Alps, reaching a maximum depth of 900 metres (2953 ft) at Konkordia. Along with the Fiescher and Aar Glaciers the region became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2001. An effect of the retreat of the Rhine Glacier some 10'000 years ago was the Flims Rockslide, the biggest still visible landslide apparently worldwide.
Environment and climate
To protect endengered species some sites have been brought under protection. The Swiss National Park in Graubünden was established in 1914 as the first alpine national park. The Entlebuch area was designated a biosphere reserve in 2001. The largest protected area in the country is the Parc Ela, opened in 2006, which covers an area of 600 square kilometres.5 The Jungfrau-Aletsch Protected Area is the first World Heritage Site in the Alps.
Climate zones
See also: Climate of the Alps
With the D: Swiss Alps
Michael Johnson of Bloomfield Township was in Switzerland on business and stayed an extra day to visit Piz Gloria, a revolving restaurant at the top of Schilthorn mountain in the Swiss Alps. In the 1969 James Bond film "On Her Majesty's Secret Service," Piz Gloria stood in for the headquarters of villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld.
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As the temperature decreases with altitude (0,56°C per 100 metres on yearly average), three different altitudinal zones, each having distinct climate, are found in the Swiss Alps:
Subalpine zone
Tree line in the National park
Lyskamm (4,527 m), above the Grenz Glacier
The Subalpine zone is the region which lies below the tree line. It is the most important region as it is the larger of the three and contains almost all human settlements as well as the productive areas. The forests are mainly composed by conifers above 1,200-1,400 metres, the deciduous tree forest being confined to lower elevations. The upper limit of the Subalpine zone is located at about 1,800 metres on the north side of the Alps and at about 2,000 metres on the south side. It can however differ in some regions such as the Appenzell Alps (1,600 metres) or the Engadin valley (2,300 metres).
Alpine zone
The Alpine zone is situated above the tree line and is clear of trees because of low average temperatures. It contains mostly grass and small plants along with mountain flowers. Below the permafrost limit (at about 2,600 metres), the alpine meadows are often used as pastures. Some villages can still be found on the lowest altitudes such as Riederalp (1,940 m) or Juf (2,130 m). The extend of Alpine zone is limited by the first permanent snow, its altitude greatly vary depending on the location (and orientation), it is comprised between 2,800 and 3,200 metres.
Glacial zone
The glacial zone is the area of permanent snow and ice. When the steepness of the slope is not too high it results in an accumulation and compaction of snow, which transforms into ice. The glacier formed then flows down the valley and can reach as far down as 1,500 metres (the Upper Grindelwald Glacier). Where the slopes are too steep, the snow accumulates to form overhanging seracs, which periodically fall off due to the downwards movement of the glacier and cause ice avalanches. The Bernese Alps, Pennine Alps and Mont Blanc Massif contain most of the glaciated areas in the Alps. Except research stations such as the Sphinx Observatory no settlements are to be found in those regions.
Travel and tourism
Glacier 3000
Travel advice: train ride to Italy via the Alps
Mark Smith, 'the man in seat 61', responds to a query on train travel to Italy via the Swiss Alps.
I am going to Switzerland on vacation at the end of the month with my wife for our anniversary When I traveled in Europe as a student I could not afford a cellphone so this is my first time
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Tourism in the Swiss Alps began with the first ascents of the main peaks of the Alps (Jungfrau in 1811, Piz Bernina in 1850, Monte Rosa in 1855, Matterhorn in 1856, Dom in 1858, Weisshorn in 1861) mostly by British mountain climbers accompanied by the local guides. The construction of facilities for tourists started in the mid nineteenth century with the building of hotels and mountain huts (creation of the Swiss Alpine Club in 1863) and the opening of mountain train lines (Mount Rigi in 1873, Mount Pilatus in 1889, Gornergrat in 1898). The Jungfraubahn opened in 1912; it leads to the highest train station in Europe, the Jungfraujoch.
Summer tourism
Switzerland enjoys a 62,000-km network of well-maintained trails, of which 23,000 are located in mountainous areas. Many mountains attract a large number of alpinists from around the world, especially the 4000-metre summits and the great north faces. The large winter resorts are also popular destinations in summer, as most of aerial tramways operate through the year, enabling hikers and mountaineers to reach high altitudes without much effort. The Klein Matterhorn is the highest summit of the European continent to be served by cable car.
Winter tourism
Main article: List of ski areas and resorts in Switzerland
Highest ski area in Europe above Zermatt
The major destinations for skiing and other winter sports are located in Valais, Bernese Oberland and Graubünden. Some villages are car-free and can be accessed only with public transports such as Riederalp and Bettmeralp6. Zermatt and Saas-Fee have both summer ski areas. The most visited places are:7
Thanks to a car-free policy, Zermatt retains much of its original character
Davos - Klosters
Zermatt (car-free village)
St. Moritz
Grindelwald - Mürren - Wengen (car-free villages)
Adelboden - Lenk
Verbier - Nendaz
Gstaad
Flims - Laax
Lenzerheide - Arosa
Crans Montana
Other important destinations on the regional level are Engelberg and Andermatt (Central Switzerland), Leysin (Vaud), Champéry (western Valais) and Samnaun (eastern Graubünden).
Transportation
See also: List of mountain passes in Switzerland
The Glacier Express on the Landwasser Viaduct, Albula Range
Lötschberg line
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The Swiss Alps and Switzerland enjoy an extensive transportation network. Every mountain village can be reached by public transport, the main companies are:
Federal Railway
Rhaetian Railway
Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn
Golden Pass
PostBus
Most of mountain regions are within 3 hours travel of Switzerland’s main cities and their respective airport. The Engadin Valley in Graubünden is between 4 to 6 hours away from the large cities; the train journey itself, with the panoramic Glacier Express or Bernina Express, is popular with tourists.
The Engadin Airport near St. Moritz at an altitude of 1,707 metres (5,600 ft) is the highest in Europe.
The crossing of the Alps is a key issue at national and international levels, as the European continent is at places divided by the range. Since the beginnings of industrialization Switzerland has improved its transalpine network; it began in 1882, by building the Gotthard Rail Tunnel, followed in 1906 by the Simplon Tunnel and more recently, in 2007, by the Lötschberg Base Tunnel. The 57-km long Gotthard Base Tunnel is slated to be open in 2016, and it will finally provide a direct flat rail link through the Alps.
Toponymy
The different names of the mountains and other landforms are named in the four national languages. The table below gives the most recurrent names.
English
German
French
Italian
Romansh
Examples
Mount
Berg, Stock
Mont
Monte
Munt
Gamsberg, Dammastock, Mont Vélan, Monte Generoso, Munt Pers
Summit
Gipfel
Cime
Cima
Tschima
Grenzgipfel, Cima di Gana Bianca, Tschima da Flix
Peak
Spitze
Pointe, Pic
Pizzo
Piz
Lenzspitze, Pointe de Zinal, Pizzo Campo Tencia, Piz Roseg
Needle
Nadel
Aiguille
Ago
Ago
Nadelhorn, Aiguille d'Argentière, Ago di Sciora
Horn
Horn
Corne
Corno
Corn
Wetterhorn, Corne de Sorebois, Corn da Tinizong
Tower
Turm
Tour
Torre
not used
Tour Sallière, Torrone Alto
Head
Kopf
Tête
Testa
not used
Bürkelkopf, Tête Blanche
Ridge
Grat
Crêt
Cresta
Fil
Gornergrat, Crêt du Midi, Fil de Cassons
Glacier
Gletscher, Firn
Glacier
Ghiacciaio
Vadret
Unteraargletscher, Hüfifirn, Glacier de Corbassière, Ghiacciaio del Basodino, Vadret da Morteratsch
Valley
Tal
Val
Valle, Val
Val
Mattertal, Val d'Hérens, Valle Maggia
Pass
Pass, Joch
Col, Pas
Passo
Pass
Jungfraujoch, Panix Pass, Pas de Cheville, Passo del San Gottardo
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Also a large number of peaks outside the Alps were named or nicknamed after Swiss mountains, such as the Wetterhorn Peak in Colorado or the Matterhorn Peak in California (see the Matterhorn article for a list of Matterhorns in the world).
The confluence of the Baltoro Glacier and the Godwin-Austen Glacier south of K2 in the Karakoram range was named after the Konkordiaplatz by European explorers.
Gallery
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Eiger, Mönch and Jungfrau, Bernese Alps
The Weissmies from Hohsaas, Pennine Alps
The Matterhorn, Pennine Alps
The Aiguille d'Argentière above the Saleina Glacier, Mont Blanc Massif
Oberaar Glacier, Bernese Alps
Aletsch Glacier, Bernese Alps
Morteratsch Glacier and Piz Bernina
Jungfraujoch, Bernese Alps
Piz Badile, Bregaglia Range
Bachalpsee, Bernese Alps
Finsteraarhorn, Bernese Alps
The Grand Combin, Pennine Alps
Stein Glacier from Susten Pass, Urner Alps
Piz Roseg and Val Roseg, Bernina Range
The Dent Blanche, Pennine Alps
Summits around the Mattertal, Pennine Alps
See also
Find more about Swiss Alps on Wikipedia's sister projects:
Definitions from Wiktionary
Images and media from Commons
Learning resources from Wikiversity
News stories from Wikinews
Quotations from Wikiquote
Source texts from Wikisource
Textbooks from Wikibooks
Switzerland portal
Tourism
Swiss Alpine Club
Swiss Alpine Museum
Haute Route
Tour du Mont Blanc
Monte Rosa tour
Alpine Pass Route
Trans-Swiss Trail
Sport
Patrouille des Glaciers
Lauberhorn Ski Race
Trophée des Gastlosen
Jungfrau Marathon
Other
The Alps (film)
History of the Alps
Transhumance in the Alps
AlpTransit
Exploration of the High Alps
References
^ Werner Bätzing, Henri Rougier, Les Alpes: Un foyer de civilisation au coeur de l'Europe, page 21, ISBN 2606002946
^ Area defined by the Alpine Convention (website: alpconv.org)
^ According to the limit defined by the Alpine Convention
^ Die Kantone nach ihren höchsten Punkten (German) Various highest and lowest elevation values by canton (village center, road or rail network, etc.)
^ Nature parks swissworld.org
^ There are in total 9 car-free villages members of the GAST (Gemeinschaft Autofreier Tourismusorte): Bettmeralp, Braunwald, Riederalp, Rigi, Saas-Fee, Stoos, Wengen, Mürren and Zermatt.
^ Davos, la station la plus fréquentée de Suisse bilan.ch
Federal Department of Foreign Affairs informations
Glaciers of the Alps, USGS
Encyclopedia Britannica, Alps
Swiss hiking federation (german, french)
External links
Tourism
General timetable of all public transport
MySwitzerland.com
SuisseMobile.com
Scenic PostBus lines in the Swiss Alps
MySwissAlps.com
WalkingSwitzerland.com
Maps
Map of Switzerland with points of interest
Topographic maps of Switzerland
Other
General informations about the Alps
The Jungfrau-Aletsch-Bietschhorn UNESCO World Heritage site
Photos and paintings of Swiss Alps
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Coordinates: 46°33′33″N 8°33′41″E / 46.55917°N 8.56139°E / 46.55917; 8.56139
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Swiss crash victims were French: police
Swiss police say all five people who died in the crash of a private plane on Friday were French citizens. Police in the southern Swiss canton (state) of Valais say the victims were a 58-year-old Switzerland-based pilot and a family he was taking on a sightseeing flight over the Alps.
Swiss Alps Flights and Travel Guide
Headed to Swiss Alps? Our Swiss Alps travel guide is packed full of Swiss Alps flights, travel tips, insider info, when to fly and more.
Coordinates: 46°33′33″N 8°33′41″E / 46.55917°N 8.56139°E / 46.55917; 8.56139
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MWC 2011: SwissQual’s Diversity Ranger is the Backpack of the Future
Looking to do some network benchmarking in the Swiss Alps? Want to test which wireless network gets the best signal in isolated volcano islands? Probably not. But it’s nice to know the option exists. After a few hours of playing with tablets and playing with more tablets , I decided to drop by SwissQual’s booth to see just how tough their new Diversity Ranger network benchmarking pack was ...















