Author Archives: Andrea

July 26 2000

Thanks for the compliments

Whooops, I missed this one yesterday: Duncan calculated that my three-“internet-months”-old weblog would be “three and a half years old in normal time”. He seems to be another one of those that confuse “when” and “if”, though…

Duncan also has an explanation about how the sand sculptures were made. (I mentioned them yesterday.) It’s really amazing that they only use some some binding agent in the outermost layer of sand.

Wie war das mit der neuen Rechtschreibung?

Nach einem Jahr kehrt die FAZ Anfang August zur alten Rechtschreibung zurück (Tagesschau-Meldung).

“Zuerst hat die “Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung” (FAZ) angekündigt, dass sie zur alten Rechtschreibung zurückkehrt. Dann hat auch die Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung sich in der Diskussion um die Rechtschreibreform dafür ausgesprochen, weitgehend zur alten Schreibweise zurückzukehren. Andere große Zeitungen und Zeitschriften wollen dem Vorbild der FAZ nicht folgen.

“Die in zahlreichen Publikationen zum Ausdruck kommende Unsinnigkeit, Widersprüchlichkeit und Unverständlichkeit vieler der neuen Regeln ist für den sensiblen Leser schwer erträglich”, heißt es in einer Erklärung der Darmstädter Sprachhüter. Die Ankündigung der FAZ zur alten Rechtschreibung zurückkehren zu wollen, sei ein positives Signal.”

Vielleicht könnte man sich einfach ein für alle mal entscheiden? Wie soll man denn da wissen, wie man nun schreiben soll?

Erdbeben

In Deutschland hat es heute nachmittag ein Erdbeben gegeben, habe ich gerade in den Nachrichten im Radio gehört. Es war im nördlichen Rheinland-Pfalz und hatte die Stärke 3,4 (Richter-Skala). Offenbar haben aber nur ein paar Gläser und Tassen in den Schränken gewackelt…

Das letzte Erdbeben in Deutschland war in der Nacht vom 19. auf den 20. Januar 2000, und das konnte man sogar hier in Bonn fühlen. Nur war es nachts um drei oder so, und ich habe es natürlich verschlafen.

Die Uni Köln betreibt die Erdbeben-Station Bensberg, die u.a. auch die aktuellen Erdbeben angibt und auf einer Karte einzeichnet.

clown: For David and other curious people: This is about a little earthquake that hit Germany (a little south of Koblenz) this afternoon. It was only 3.4 on the Richter scale, though.

Eskimos have a dozen words for “snow”

I dimly remember having discussed this with someone, but I can’t find it now (because the search engine does not search discussion group messages that are neither home pages nor stories). But anyway, on the same site as the Klammeraffe, there’s a little article about the problem, and the author has collected 44 (!) English terms for snow: A Snow Job.

Klammeraffe

Where did the “@” come from? This question might be interesting for for people whose native language is not English. The Natural History of the “@” Sign also tells what names were invented for the “@” sign in other languages. Here’s German:

“In German, @ is most often called either “Affenschwanz” [monkey’s tail] or “Klammeraffe” [hanging monkey]. This is also a term of zoological classification, for various South American monkeys, including the spider monkey.

Some people call it the “Ohr” [ear].”

Link via /usr/bin/girl.

Mansfield Park: Going to the movies

Tonight I went to see Mansfield Park at the cinema, a film based on a book by Jane Austen. I liked it, but I guess you either like or don’t like Jane Austen. If you do like her, you will also like movies made of her books (e.g. Sense and Sensibility, Emma). If you don’t, don’t go and watch them!

Ja, es war ein Frauenfilm.

July 25 2000

Sad news

In Paris, a Concorde crashed onto a hotel a few minutes after take-off. 113 people died. CNN has details. Die Tagesschau und n-tv berichten auch.

Sand Sculptures

Duncan has photos of some sand sculptures from Glasgow’s George Square. Impressive!

Anniversary

Um… anniversary does not seem the right word, since it comes from “annum”, which is latin and means year. At least that’s what I believe. (Yes, I did take Latin at school – for six years!) So maybe I should call it “mensiversary” instead.

Six months ago today, I started this weblog!

And it’s been a lot of fun since then. When I started, I wouldn’t have believed that I would keep updating so often. Well, there have been days when I was not in the mood to post anything, or too busy (the latter happened very seldom ;-), but it was fun most of the time.

I think a weblog is a good way to keep all kinds of things: interesting links and thoughts, nice pictures or quotes, discussions with other people about all kinds of things, and even a journal. The big advantage of a weblog, compared to a scrapbook made out of paper, is that it is searchable. How else would I be able to find anything ever again?

Thanks to UserLand for hosting my Manila site.

And to all my “webpals”: Nice to have met you! It’s been great fun!

Wow! I did not think that this was such a special event. Thanks for your congratulations, Garret, Sheila, Susan, Hal, Jörg (whose Schockwellereiter is three months old today!), Craig, Martin, Al, John and Jeff.

Susan likes the word ‘web pal’. I like it too. Craig invented it. Or at least he was the first I have heard/read use it. A Google search yields many pages, and even an organization named Web Pal that matches email pen pals from around the world.

Garret: “andrea’s celebrating six months. i wonder if, when she gets famous, she’ll stop weblogging … i hope not.”

The question is not when I get famous, but if I ever get famous. And I’m not even sure I want to be. Maybe I should think about a new tag line?!

Thanks for the nice compliment, Craig. Makes me blush!

Al, you might be interested to hear that I’m about to release my first CD album. My first book will be available in time for christmas. In case you want a signed copy, send me email! clown:

July 24 2000

New Layout

Scott now uses the Aqua Theme:

“I was bored with my layout, so I went aqua. It’s was easy to do using the themes feature of Manila. […] By the way, I’m also bored with my content. I’m still haven’t found the feature to quickly fix that.”

Scott, don’t worry, I’m not bored with your contents! By the way, I never went to the Dom in Hamburg although I used to live only 80 km or so away from Hamburg.

As for the calendar, why don’t you put it in the navigation bar on the left, like Susan did in her Macster Weblog?!

July 23 2000

Mouses

The Schockwellenreiter has some links to stories about the computer mouse. His site is in German, but he included a link to the English version: Fire-Control and Human-Computer Interaction: Towards a History of the Computer Mouse (1940-1965). He said he included the link especially for me so I could link to it: “Dieser Hinweis auf die englische Fassung steht hier nur, damit Andrea wieder auf mich verlinken kann.

Okay, Jörg, was bleibt mir anderes übrig?! clown: Du solltest vielleicht mal Deine Site beim LinkBack Programm submitten – das haben sich bisher offensichtlich nur Leute mit englischsprachigem Weblog getraut.

Da ich ja auch Leser habe, die es vielleicht vorziehen, den Artikel auf Deutsch zu lesen: Hier ist er, erschienen bei Telepolis: Die Geschichte der Computermaus.

Books

Hal talks about books, and how most of ‘us ETPers’ talk about them, or at least about bookshelves. He says he prefers bookshelves worked into the structure of a house so he doesn’t have to ‘waste’ extra space for them. But he “just do[es]n’t want to hear about ‘perhaps you could sell some’. Heretic!“.

I agree!

Quote of the Day

By all means marry.

If you get a good wife, you’ll be happy.

If you get a bad one, you’ll become a philosopher.

Socrates

Found on today’s A Word A Day



Craig links to the color quiz. He said he found the results disturbingly accurate. I think some of my results were accurate, while I’m not sure about others. Maybe I don’t know myself?!

New Jovian mood identified

New outer satellite of Jupiter discovered.

Link via Hal.

July 22 2000

Bookshelves

After the closet, John built a bookshelf. And it has adjustable shelves, too! How neat.

That reminds me that André and I don’t have much space left on our bookshelves…

Faster than the Speed of Light

The last day lasted less than five hours. That is, if you define a day as the time between two page flips. clown:

Inspired by arfco 3000 (one of the NetDyslectics) today’s subject is light that is faster than itself!

There was a young lady named Bright,

Whose speed was far faster than light,

She set out one day,

In a relative way,

And returned home the previous night.

Arthur Buller

Articles about the phenomenon: