Looking for #Details on the Latest @BingWallpapers? Find Them at @GifPosterCom | @bingwq @bingdailyimages @bingwalpaper @bing_wallpaper @OneDrive

I have The Bing Wallpaper App on my desktop-computer. It takes Microsoft Bing's daily 'wallpaper' (the background-image for their search-engine & Bing Rewards & various pages) and puts it up as your own desktop's background (for that day).

I was interested in finding out what today's image was showing—I mean, I know it's 'three skyscrapers jutting out above the clouds'; but What skyscrapers Where?

I tried "left-clicking," but the "left-click menu" implied that it thought I was looking for details on my desktop-files in Microsoft's OneDrive (or something).

A few searches on Bing led me to some details on the image (and -on all the other images Bing has used for wallpaper recently). 'That word' (below-hyperlinked to that 'Wallpaper-gallery') is built on an even-deeper source ... something crucial that firms the foundation upon which our lexicon stands ...

The word “Details” is built on ancient words that mean "to Cut |Entirely into |Pieces" (see De-, Tailor ... Divide or |Set |Off (especially for Military Duties given in the |General's Daily Orders), Individual Parts, |Particulars).
#Detail #Detailed #Detailing

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in case the picture isn't hyperlinked to its details:
Tall, taller, tallest © Jackal Pan/Getty Images
Piercing the clouds above Shanghai as we celebrate National Skyscraper Day, each of these three supertall spires could be seen as a freeze-frame of China"s swift economic growth in the past couple of decades. Jin Mao Tower (right, 1,380 feet) was China"s tallest building from 1999 until the Shanghai World Financial Center (left, 1,614 feet) opened in 2007 and took the title. Shanghai Tower (center, 2,139 feet) topped out in 2013, besting the SWFC and becoming the second-tallest skyscraper in the world (behind Dubai"s Burj Khalifa, 2,722 feet).

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