Monthly Archives: May 2001

May 12 2001

Summer

At 8:30 pm, I took my bike and went out onto fields…

120501field:

120501sunset:

Sad news

Douglas Adams died yesterday. He was only 49 years old.

Mach’s gut, und danke für den Fisch – So long, and thanks for all the fish.

Reisen

Passend zum warmen Wetter heute mal nach Indien: Passage nach Indien ist ein zweiundvierzigteiliger Reisebericht von Stefan Knecht, der Anfang letzten Jahres drei oder vier (?) Monate durch Indien reiste. Er empfiehlt bei der Lektüre Href Krishna im Hintergrund. Perfektes Reisefeeling, würde ich sagen!

Für eine längere gedankliche Reise nach Indien (und zurück nach 1975 bis 1984) empfehle ich Das Gleichgewicht der Welt von Rohinton Mistry. Eines der besten Bücher, die ich kenne. Der englische Originaltitel heißt A fine balance – siehe auch hier. (Ich hab’s auf englisch gelesen, über die deutsche Übersetzung kann ich also nichts sagen.)

May 11 2001

Birthday Cake: Birthday Boy!

Alles Gute zum achtundvierzigsten Geburtstag, Jörg! Genieße den Tag und das schöne Wetter!

Community

That’s the kind of weblog hiatus I like: Yesterday John Marden (aka The Curmudgeon) announces he’s going on hiatus, and today he flips the page again!

Surprise!

Heute habe ich einen Film von der Entwicklung abgeholt. Das Ergebnis war eine kleine Überraschung, denn der Film war schon so lange in der Kamera, daß ich gar nicht mehr wußte, was für Aufnahmen darauf waren. Und siehe da: Ich habe ein paar Fotos aus dem Regenwaldhaus sowie einige von meinem zweiten Expo-Besuch gefunden. Dann folgten einige Fotos vom Rückflug Plymouth – London (die gibt’s morgen!) und ein einsames Foto von der langen Museumsnacht. Sie zeigt das Arithmeum, in dem an dem Abend eine Ausstellung über Chiffriermaschinen eröffnet wurde.

Arithmeum Museumsnacht:

May 10 2001

Nice little tricks

A couple of days ago, I read on Cabinet that you can read New York Times articles without registration if you replace the ‘www’ part of the URL by ‘partners’, but when I tried it on Monday, it didn’t work. Today I read on MetaFilter that it works with ‘channel’ instead of ‘www’. Great!

So here is the link from Monday, this time without registration or cookies or whatever: A view from the trenches. “A new teacher recounts her year at a New York City failing school, where clocks never tick, the mantra is ‘cover yourself’ and students teeter on the ledge.”

And by the way, I also read on MeFi that http://robots.cnn.com/ is an ad-free version of http://www.cnn.com/. Neat!

Clouds

Wonderful cloud photos over at dangerousmeta!

When André and I rode our bikes this evening, the light of the low sun reminded me of the light you see in Garret’s photos, but here in Bonn, not a single cloud was in sight. I regretted that I didn’t take my camera… but maybe there’s another chance tomorrow? The weather is supposed to be as nice as today for another couple of days.

Going to the movies

Last night, a friend and I went to see Traffic (deutscher Titel: Traffic – Die Macht des Kartells). Altough (or because?) I sometimes had trouble to tell who belonged to the ‘good guys’ and who to the ‘bad guys’, I thought it was an excellent film. Recommended!

Let me stay for a day

Remember Ramon Stoppelenburg, the guy from the Netherlands who travels around the world, visiting people who invite him to stay for a day? He started his trip on May 1, and you can read the first few reports now.

Busy

Lots of work to do for the written exams that will start on August sixth. I take four exams: one in mathematics (algebra),two in physics (nuclear/particle phyics, atomic physics), and one in pedagogy/education. Today, I started working on algebra, and boy, do I have a lot to re-learn.

However, I think algebra will be the most difficult part of the exam, so I will hopefully survive.

Google and EditThisPage

Whoa – I didn’t expect so many reactions on my posting from yesterday and the day before. Even today, I kept getting emails concerning the problem – from people I don’t even know, but whatever. I didn’t have time to follow all the links and read all those postings that linked to the discussion.

Wilde Papageien

Ha, nicht nur in San Francisco gibt es wilde Papageien! Im vergangenen Jahr habe ich welche in Köln und Bonn gesehen, und heute gab es einen Artikel darüber im Bonner General-Anzeiger: Lebenskünstler mit Hang zum Herrschaftlichen. Da gibt’s auch ein Foto von einem der leuchtendgrünen Vögel – aber leider in schwarzweiß.

May 9 2001

Google does not index ETP sites

As I mentioned yesterday, my site is no longer indexed at Google, and neither are the other ETP sites (as Netdyslexia, Jörg (German), Susan and others have noticed as well).

Since my posting, several messages have been posted in my discussion group, explaining the situation. Thanks!

Further information can be found in this thread over at Serious Instructional Technology and on irights.

And in case you are not subscribed to the ManilaNewbies mailing list, I’ll quote from it:

“Subject: RE: What’s happening with Google?

From: Brent Simmons <brent@userland.com>

Date: Tue, 8 May 2001 22:58:01 -0700

Because our servers are hit so hard by crawlers, we often block them. At the moment Google is enabled (though other crawlers aren’t), so it’s probably only a matter of time before your sites show up in Google again.

-Brent”

That sounds contradictory to what Seth Dillingham posted in my DG, so I don’t know what’s really going on. I don’t know much about tech stuff like this.

What do you think of Jeremy Bower’s suggestion to petition Inktomy (the company who apparently started the whole problem)?

Feel free to post your thoughts in the discussion thread that started yesterday.

May 8 2001

Interna

My weblog has disappeared – at Google, that is. A search for andrea.editthispage.com yields – nothing.

Not only are other people not able to find Al’s fried rice recipe (one of the most popular search strings), I’m not able to search my site using Google any more. And the Manila search engine only indexes the messages that get posted to the home page.

If this doesn’t change, I’ll have to think about moving my weblog. The problem is: As much as I’d like to do that, I don’t have the money to pay for (Manila) webhosting – at least not until I have finished my degree and have a paid job.

sadface:

History

Indivisible – Stories of American Community “is an exploration of community life in America by some of this country’s most accomplished photographers, radio producers, and folklorists. Here are the stories of twelve communities where people are coming together to make their small piece of the world a better place to live.”

The project also includes an exhibition that is currently touring the USA.

By the way, have you ever seen a four-horned sheep?

Snakes

Visit the American International Rattlesnake Museum in Albuquerque, New Mexico. This animal conservation museum has “artifacts, memorabilia, and the largest collection of different species of live rattlesnakes in the world”. The best part of the site is the section about the different types of rattlesnakes.