The stone period of Queen Elizabeth II, modeled on the lines of many Britons, was an occasion to make her first video calls at the age of ninety-four, as announced by Buckingham Palace yesterday.

Because of the emerging Corona virus, the Queen of Britain made use of a video calling service from Windsor Palace to listen to and congratulate four Aides of the Carriers Trust.

Princess Anne, the daughter of the Queen, organized this virtual meeting on June 4.

The Princess is the founder of this association supporting people who care for their relatives who are seriously ill or disabled.

The queen appeared in this contact with a dress decorated with flowers among the group of participants with this hypothetical communication via video in a communicative format recording a significant increase in usage rates since the imposition of home quarantine measures in the world to surround the Covid-19 epidemic.

With the help of her personal aide on technical matters, the Queen was the last to join this hypothetical meeting and the first departures in keeping with the royal origins that Buckingham Palace had carefully followed.

Society Director Gareth Howells explained that "the princess arrived at the beginning and was followed by Her Majesty after about ten minutes" and participated in the meeting for about twenty minutes.

The Queen's voice is heard during the call saying, "Hearing your stories is very interesting. I am happy to be able to speak with you today."

The Queen had sent her first emails in 1976 via a military network from a British base and wrote her first tweet in 2014.

She reached out to Nadia Taylor, a forty-four-year-old British woman, who looked after her blind mother, her father, who was pursuing chemotherapy because of a blood disease, her husband who had renal impairment, and her 16-year-old daughter, who had a jaw disease.

Nadia Taylor said that the queen was "highly formal" in her way of speaking, but she showed a lot of "interest".

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