Saturday, January 22. 2005
Your Dominant Intelligence is Linguistic Intelligence
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You are excellent with words and language. You explain yourself well.
An elegant speaker, you can converse well with anyone on the fly.
You are also good at remembering information and convicing someone of your point of view.
A master of creative phrasing and unique words, you enjoy expanding your vocabulary.
You would make a fantastic poet, journalist, writer, teacher, lawyer, politician, or translator.
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After the quite long love letter that I wrote to my girlfriend (3 pages with 1.5 line spacing, written using LaTeX; yes, I write love letters using LaTeX), and the fact that I'm very much interested in languages (even while I only speak one foreign language and currently learn another one), both natural and formal, make the result look quite accurate.
(via MP)
Thursday, January 20. 2005
Yesterday, I played a bit with the latest development build of the upcoming OpenOffice.org 2.0. A new part of OpenOffice.org 2.0 will be "OpenOffice.org Base", an MS-Access-like database application that comes with hsqldb as database backend, and also provides connectivity to all other variants of databases via JDBC.
Generally, OpenOffice.org Base is really good as a simple alternative to MS Access: you can create new simple db tables via a wizard or via manual editing, you can set relationships, you can create forms and queries that operate on the tables, and so on. One thing that I didn't like was that the table editing dialog wasn't very flexible: once you click "save", you cannot edit existing table fields anymore, you can only delete them and create new ones. I still have to get more into the form creation stuff, how flexible it really is and how difficult it is to create database applications that one used to create using MS Access (well, I never created any MS-Access-based applications). But what I know already is that OpenOffice.org Base is definitely easier to grasp than MS Access when you have basic knowledge about relational databases.
Wednesday, January 19. 2005
Tuesday, January 18. 2005
(via Jochen)
Monday, January 17. 2005
Today, the latest Tocotronic album, "Pure Vernunft darf niemals siegen", was published, and I immediately bought it. After listening to it once, it is definitely better than the white, self-titled album, but still, the unique style of the older albums is completely missing. To me, the lyrics are just too abstract, but the other aspects of the songs are pretty good, actually.
As you can read here, EU tries to forbid the swastika after Prince Harry's scandal. All I can say is that (a) forbidding symbols won't hinder national socialism to keep on existing and (b) the swastika isn't always related to national socialism. In fact, the swastika is a religious symbol in Buddhism. Or would you call the [[Dalai Lama]] a Nazi? So, forbidding swastikas per se makes absolutely no sense.
Saturday, January 15. 2005
I just found wonderful Pearl Jam bootleg mp3s here. They've got lots of wonderful stuff, mostly songs that are cover versions. Pretty cool, although the download is quite slow for me.
Wednesday, January 12. 2005
Yesterday I had my first Spanish lesson at Wifi Linz. It was quite interesting, and from the didactic point of view, it looked much better than the last language lessons that I had before (i.e. English and Latin at school): we started by learning a few phrases, and then we had to walk around and use it in dialogues with the other people in class. So the lessons get a lot more interactive, and you immediately train what you learn. What I also like very much is that the teacher is not Spain-centric, as she's been to South America for quite some time, and so we learn about the differences of Spanish in Spain and South America.
Monday, January 10. 2005
This is something that definitely should not be:
Liwest owns 81.10.128.0/17, and the above IP address is part of it. And my colleague was able to gather such an IP address by simply activating WLAN on his notebook.
Sunday, January 9. 2005
One thing that I always regretted about mutt that hardly any new features were added. A few years ago, I wanted to have a certain feature included in mutt, but when I posted this on the mutt mailing list, the only answer I got was that the authors don't want to add any new features anymore. I forgot about this again, well, until a few days ago.
And that was when Sven Guckes was ranting about the mutt development process in at.linux, closing with the sentence "mutt is dead" (he got famous in Austria's Linux scene for his legendary demo session at Linuxdays 2001 in St. Pölten, with quotes like "elm is dead"). At around the same time, another annoyance of mutt hit me that I wanted to have fixed once and for all.
So I started searching around and found lots and lots of mutt patches that added very interesting and useful features or fixed that little annoyance that always itched but that was not annoying enough to have it fixed. So, I thought, why not use the creative potential of all these people out there, take the mutt source, and enhance it with a number of patches out there. And so I (finally) had the idea of forking mutt, making it a more feature-rich email client than mutt ever was. Because open source is about feature competition after all, isn't it? Another advanced email client would definitely heat up the email client "market" (if you can say so) in the open source scene. And so I forked, added a number of interesting patches (and I still keep adding), fixed a few bugs by myself, and put it online under the name "mutt next generation", or short, mutt-ng. Of course, development will be very active in the next few weeks/months, depending on how much I need to do to get a really nice email client.
I think a fork was clearly necessary, as mutt development got totally stuck after the last release, and forks at the right time in the past did either produce very viable alternatives or helped the original project. Emacs/XEmacs and gcc/egcs come to my mind. So, my hope is that the word gets spread, that people use and test mutt-ng, and don't hesitate to submit their own patches, because unlike the mutt developers, I'm very happy to integrate feature patches and bugfixes.
Saturday, January 8. 2005
In the last few days I read two other books written by Wladimir Kaminer, the author of Russendisko. They're similar in style, and absolutely hilarious: as with Russendisko, I am fascinated by the easy way of telling stories like Wladimir Kaminer does: simple, straight, funny, but in no way primitive. The two books are "Militärmusik", where he writes about all the experiences he made during his 2 year service in the Soviet Union's Red Army, and "Reise nach Trulala", containing stories about all the journeys to other countries that he did or at least planned to do. Wladimir Kaminer can really show that, sometimes, plain reality is way more interesting and funny than fiction.
Oh, BTW, he will present his new book at Amadeus Linz on 28th of January, and I reserved a seat already (although it's free)!
Friday, January 7. 2005
I was just thinking about "The Simpsons", and about the Flanders family, and something came to my mind: Ned Flanders called his boys "Rod" and "Todd", both names which rhyme to "God". Now, when you take the first letters of each of the names (with God first of course), you get "GRT" - "great" (without vowels). Is that some kind of subliminal message?
BTW, if you're interested in other subliminal messages in music, check out this page. It's awesome (except for the Pink Floyd one, that's boring)!
Update: even more interesting stuff can be found here.
Wednesday, January 5. 2005
You fucking US-American trackback spammer asshole, I'm gonna cut off your balls if I ever meet you IRL! Your IP address is being blocked, and trackbacking is disabled.
Update: deactivation of trackbacking was broken. exit(0) on the top of the file helps. Thank you, you fucking spammers, for destroying useful communication infrastructure!!
Tuesday, January 4. 2005
I was just introduced to the Xen virtual machine monitor, a system to run several Linux virtual machines on top of a (modified) Linux kernel. Of course, such systems already exist, but Xen seems to be special: it is easy to install, virtual machines are easy to configure and everything runs just smooth. As root filesystem, you can use physical partitions or disk images. At work, we use it to separate the different test systems from each other: currently, we have one domain (that's a VM instance in Xen speak) running Oracle 9i, one domain for web development, and one domain that is planned to be used for automated test compilation. Anyway, it looks really recommendable, and I will probably also use it at home.
Monday, January 3. 2005
Here a photo that I took on 1st of January in Vienna's 2nd district at around 11am. It shows some dog poo with an exploded fire cracker sticking in it.
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