Danger Down Under

Danger Down Under is a Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys Supermystery crossover novel, published in 1995.[1]

Plot summary

Mick Devlin, an Australian admirer of Nancy Drew's, asks her to help his Aboriginal friend Nellie Mabo, who is trying to locate a missing sacred artifact, a tjuringa board, to return it to her clan. She suspects the proprietors of an opal mine. The Hardy boys join Nancy in Australia, where they find the mystery complicated by a clash over land rights in the Outback and a blood-hungry poacher on the verge of creating a new endangered species.

gollark: He queued about 20 autobotrobot reminders pinging me.
gollark: I think Camto already posted it.
gollark: There really is a Nobody, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Nobody is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Nobody is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Nobody added, or GNU/Nobody. All the so-called "Nobody" distributions are really distributions of GNU/Nobody.
gollark: Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called "Nobody", and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project.
gollark: I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Nobody, is in fact, GNU/Nobody, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Nobody. Nobody is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.

References


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