...more recent posts
Here's a good one for your lunar and astronomical needs.
Here's a great resource from the helpful folks at the Central Intelligence Agency. Everything you could want to know about every country in the world. (Nice maps too.) Where else could you find out that the highest point on Europa Island is an unnamed peak 24m above sealevel? Good stuff.
Yes, we were down for about an hour today (just past noon.) All services were down (http, mail, telnet) but they got things restored fairly promptly. I won't care if the outages happen at the rate we've experienced (1 hour every few months.) Also, unrelated (honest!), my page is coming back. Not quite done yet with all the internals, but I've started blogging anyway. Check in on the pre-release if you want at www.digitalmediatree.com/jim/newjim.php3. And, oh yeah: GO STEVE!
THE BATTLE IS DNA TRYING TO FIGURE IT'S ELF OUT
Actual photographs of
sprites and elves. Not bad quality either considering what tricky subjects they are.
For you history and social science buffs, here is
Prof. Dan Graff's home page
Nothing but links to all catagories. Lots of good stuff there.
We made it back from disinfo.con. Incredibly long day. Lots of amazing moments surrounded by just plain lots of moments. Highlights for me were the time machine diagrams/alchemical drawings of Paul Lafolley. I had never heard of this guy before, and he blew me away. I'll try to dig up some links. Also notable was Genesis P. Orridge who I had never heard speak before. He was trying to convince us we are all in a battle with DNA. I hadn't ever thought of it that way, but he might be right. Very impressive speaker. Bob Wilson capped the evening with his usual illuminated remarks. Unfortunately we missed RU Sirius, so I can't report on my favorite Presidential candidiate. Oh well. Maybe two hundred people during the day, maybe four (five?) hundred at the end (?) Very glad to have gone, and very glad it's over. Anyone else?
thanks DRW and you might have seen that they have "proff" that the Romans were in mexico--which we knew all along due to the ships found of Brazil (that the goverment {happy to be Portugese} destroyed)--ref the mad hatter
How about this picture. Pretty incredible assuming it's not photoshoped. Here is the whole BBC article. Apparently this picture won first prize in the Science and Technology Singles category of the World Press Photo 2000 contest. It shows an F/18 hornet at the moment of breaking the sound barrier.
Holy shit, did any one else catch the database going down? I almost had a heart attack. It was only down for about 2 minutes (that I saw at least, but I think that's right) but it sure puts a crimp in your dynamic site to not be able to get the data out of the base. Lucky for us, this hosting company seems to be ON THE BALL. Everything is back, and everything appears fine. Guess I better learn some more about that back-up function!
Nice day for dratfink (and it's not even 11:30.) I checked out that trailervision link (couldn't resist the upgraded rating it got) but alas my poor machine is a little too slow. I waited for about 20% of ModeMan to download, so I got to see that much at least. Very funny. I've thought before that movie trailers are really the heart of movie making. Aren't most movies way too long? It's a sort of Borgesian take on making art ("Why would I take 400 pages to say what I can say in 3?") I usually hate trailers because they give away the whole story, but if you turn that around and only give me the trailer - well, we might have something there. (Plus, if I was going to watch a movie on the net, say, at work, I certainly wouldn't want it to be 3 hours long. A minute and a half seems about right.) Thanks Dave.
anybody thinking about going to disinfo.con? its coming up fast and tickets are mooving. could be fun to do some coverage for blogdom. but it could be tres shwag for the 99 clams entrance fee. damn, i thought we had some pull in this burg. wheres the damn plus one waiting at the door.
harrumph is a cute little blog. check there to find out what kind of tree you are. as for me, im a fig(ures).
yummy
tried two new soy cheese's
one was not so good, cheddar.
linda said it was more like american(t).
the mozzerella is nice (making pizz-soy now).
the smoked gouda is still the best.
sort of planing our hopeful May vacation somewhere
(looks like mexico as we can use FFM's).
I opted out of doubleclick's global internet ad tracking experience. Maybe you want to too.
Hey alex, what's up with this:World's smelliest flower blooms. I can't believe NYC doesn't have a smellier flower.
I put the possibility of scroll bars back on the left hand side of these pages. Ideally I'd like to have them not appear, but now there are some screens that have too much info, so in some cases they are needed. If I open my screen to the maximum I can (on this 15 inch monitor at 832x624 in Navigator) then I don't get them. How about in IE? On a laptop?
90% done with the proof of concept for building free standing html pages. Very messy, but it's mostly working. I'll put it up tomorrow (I'm sure you're all dying to see it.)
some new functions went up today. Regular contributers can now add different projects (like the main beta page.) This should make it possible to create both public and private discussion areas. I just finished, and I'm kind of tired, so there are probably bugs (the code is getting rather labyrinthine at this point) but I'm sure I'll find them tomorrow. Perhaps it's a little hard to understand / navigate at this point, but more instructions plus better design is hopefully on the way. If you keep using it, it will get better. Thanks.
this one is for our park loving friend.
You mean somebody is reading my page? Thanks Alex. Are those really her lips?
Jim, the TBTF internal link from 1/27 gives me a 404. The direct link from a few days earlier works ok. There I see a pair of familiar lips which I used to be involved with, a story for another time and place, but let me say that I have been initiated into the very deepest mysteries of capitalism (the consumer side, that is) and so I am now a free man.
It appears to be true: the New York Times is no longer requiring a registration to read their web site! I know it was always free, but I just didn't like having to fill in forms of personal info (even though you could just fill in whatever you wanted.) Usually at sites that require a sign in, the name 'cypherpunk' with the password 'cypherpunk' (sometimes the plural) will work, but this never really hooked me up at the times. Now I don't have to worry about it - unless it's just some glitch in their system. I guess we'll know soon.