Atomz Search Thanx to Glenn Dixon
Fear is the cheapest room in the house.
I would like to see you living
In better conditions,
For your mother and my mother
Were friends.
I know the Innkeeper
In this part of the universe.
Get some rest tonight,
Come to my verse again tomorrow.
We'll go speak to the Friend together.
I should not make any promises right now,
But I know if you
Pray
Somewhere in this world -
Something good will happen.
God wants to see
More love and playfulness in your eyes
For that is your greatest witness to Him.
Your soul and my soul
once sat together in the Beloved's womb
Playing footsie.
Your heart and my heart
Are very, very old
Friends.
(The Gift: Poems by Hafiz, translations by Daniel Ladinsky)
Here are a couple of pictures of the Pope taken as he passed by SoftServe, the Lviv, Ukraine company that does contract programming for us. Click on either for a larger version (119K upper, 169K lower). popeinlviv-929x913.jpg is a less cropped version of the upper picture that includes the apartment buildings in the background (240K).
Atomz Search, recommended by Glenn Dixon, author of The Daily Rant, is the winning search engine. It's a web-based service that crawls and indexes your site. 500 pages or less are free. Up to 1000 pages costs $600/year. End the War on Freedom has 663 pages accessible from the root, and $50/month is twice what I pay to have my site hosted, so I excluded Vin's articles from the indexing, which reduced the site to 432 pages. You can usually find Vin's stuff with Google. There's now a "Search" box under the calendar. Give it a try. I've set up my Atomz account to do indexing Sundays at midnight, so you won't see recent additions until the following Monday. To do: build a template for the Search page so it looks like a regular story page. Thank you, Glenn!
From The Federalist:
"The question is: What can the rest of us do to help our fellow countrypersons in California? The answer is that we can send them our spare electricity. Just imagine what would happen if all the households in this great and generous nation got out their extension cords and connected them together, forming a giant electrical 'chain of helping' across the fruited plain to the Golden State? Millions of people would be turned into generous smoking lumps of carbon, that's what. So maybe we should go with Plan B. This involves building a really, really, really big kite." -- Dave Barry
Walter J. Burien, Jr - Real Reason for SSN - this was in a cures-not-wars newletter. It claims to be part of a speech by Colin Powell on TV. [cures-not-wars]
"Finding the Russian scientists may be a problem being that Russia does not have a Social Security System, as here in America, that allows us to monitor, track down and capture an American citizen."
Libertarian Party Press Release - New York cell phone hysteria may infect your state next, Libertarians warn - It appears that New York is about to enact a state-wide ban on use of hand-held cell phones while driving. More deaths are caused each year by lightening. The LP tells us many other activities that are much more dangerous while driving. Hey guys, don't give these tyrants any ideas.
"It's already against the law in every state to drive recklessly, endanger other motorists, swerve all over the road, or crash into other cars for any reason. Reckless driving is reckless driving, whether the cause is a cell phone, putting on makeup, or a dropped CD. Why target cell phone use over other forms of driver distraction -- unless politicians are looking for an excuse to write another law?
Daniel McCarthy at LewRockwell.com - Are You a Neocon? - A new political quiz. 20 questions to which you answer "Yes", "No", or "Not Sure" along with a priority rating of "High", "Medium", or "Low". You then get a ranking of names of matching political ideologies with links to web sites representing each one. My results were Paleo-libertarian, Left-libertarian, Libertarian, Paleoconservative, Radical, Conservative, Centrist, Third Way, Neoconservative, Liberal. The ideologies are explained in the article and, slightly differently, here.
Our Java application works in the Suse 6.4 VM modulo a display glitch in the JTree component that makes the tree totally unusable. Fortunately, everything in the tree is also available via a menu. I doubt any of our customers will want to run the client in Linux, so I'll not spend any time figuring out why this doesn't work. Maybe this is the reason that the JDK requires a newer version of glibc than ships with Suse 6.4.