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    These two maps tell a story of rapid transformation. In 2010, the world's top 10 phone makers were spread across North America, Europe, and Asia, with major players like Nokia (Finland), BlackBerry (Canada), Motorola (USA), and Sony Ericsson (Sweden) dominating the market. It was a time when hardware innovation, physical keyboards, and legacy tech brands still defined mobile communication. Fast forward to today, and the landscape has changed dramatically. Many of those once-dominant brands have disappeared, merged, or fallen behind, while China and South Korea have emerged as the clear powerhouses. Companies like Samsung, Apple, Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo, and Vivo now control the global market-reflecting a shift not just in geography, but in design, innovation, and global supply chains. These maps offer more than a snapshot-they capture the rise and fall of tech empires and the center of gravity shifting eastward. A reminder that in tech, even giants can fall-and new players can rise fast.
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  • Tracee Ellis Ross is an #actress Born in #LosAngeles #California.
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    Tracee Ellis Ross is an #actress Born in #LosAngeles #California. #Celebrity #fyp #photograph
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    The Aftermath of Impact: 10 Must-See Craters on Earth: 1. Chicxulub Crater (Mexico) Fun Fact: This 180 km-wide crater is linked to the extinction of the dinosaurs 66 million years ago. Cool Detail: It's buried beneath the Yucatán Peninsula, with only part visible in satellite imagery. 2. Vredefort Crater (South Africa) Fun Fact: At 2 billion years old and about 300 km in diameter, it's the largest and oldest confirmed impact crater on Earth. Cool Detail: The central uplift (Vredefort Dome) is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. 3. Sudbury Basin (Canada) Fun Fact: Formed 1.8 billion years ago, it’s the second-largest confirmed impact crater on Earth. Cool Detail: Rich in nickel and other metals, it helped fuel Canada’s mining industry. 4. Manicouagan Crater (Canada) Fun Fact: Known as the “Eye of Quebec,” this 100 km-wide crater has a distinctive ring lake. Cool Detail: It’s easily visible from space and often mistaken for a volcanic caldera. 5. Barringer Crater (USA) Fun Fact: Also called Meteor Crater, it's only about 50,000 years old and one of the best-preserved impact sites. Cool Detail: The crater is just 1.2 km wide but was caused by a meteorite only 50 meters across. 6. Lonar Crater (India) Fun Fact: This rare crater was formed in basaltic rock, making it geologically unique. Cool Detail: It's filled with both saline and alkaline, supporting a rare dual ecosystem. 7. Gosses Bluff (Australia) Fun Fact: Known as Tnorala to the Western Arrernte people, Aboriginal legend says it was formed by a baby falling from the Milky Way. Cool Detail: The current visible ring is about 5 km across, but the original crater was closer to 22 km. 8. Wolfe Creek Crater (Australia) Fun Fact: Featured in the horror movie Wolf Creek, it's one of the world’s best-preserved small impact craters. Cool Detail: Aboriginal Dreamtime stories also describe the crater's formation in cosmic terms. 9. Kara Crater (Russia) Fun Fact: It’s partly destroyed due to erosion and tectonic activity, but originally may have been up to 120 km wide. Cool Detail: Located in the Russian Arctic, it's one of the most remote craters on the list. 10. Popigai Crater (Russia) Fun Fact: This 100 km-wide crater is one of the largest diamond deposits in the world—caused by shock transformation of graphite. Cool Detail: The diamonds are industrial-grade and not gem-quality, but incredibly abundant. (Note:-Some craters are real, while others are AI-generated images .Some impact craters are hidden due to erosion, vegetation, urban development, or being underwater and their real picture are vanished. In example :Vredefort (South Africa),Sudbury Crater...not real image)
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