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tgtimes7.txt - tgtimes - The Gopher Times |
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git clone git://bitreich.org/tgtimes git://enlrupgkhuxnvlhsf6lc3fziv5h2hhfrinws65d7roiv6bfj7d652fid.onion/tgtimes (git://bitreich.org) |
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README |
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tgtimes7.txt (24408B) |
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1 |
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2 |
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3 |
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4 The Gopher Times |
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5 |
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6 ____________________________________________________________ |
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7 |
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8 Opus 7 - Gopher news and more - Jan. 2023 |
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9 ____________________________________________________________ |
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10 |
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11 |
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12 |
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13 |
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14 Shell Redirections athas |
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15 |
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16 Newcomers to the Unix shell quickly encounter handy |
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17 tools such as sed(1) and sort(1). This command prints |
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18 the lines of the given file to stdout, in sorted or- |
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19 der: |
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20 |
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21 $ sort numbers |
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22 |
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23 Soon after, newcomers will also encounter shell redi- |
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24 rection, by which the output of these tools can conve- |
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25 niently be read from or stored in files: |
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26 |
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27 $ sort < numbers > numbers_sorted |
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28 |
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29 Our new user, fascinated by the modularity of the Unix |
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30 shell, may then try the rather obvious possibility of |
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31 having the input and output file be the same: |
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32 |
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33 $ sort < numbers > numbers |
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34 |
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35 But disaster strikes: the file is empty! The user has |
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36 lost their precious collection of numbers - let's hope |
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37 they had a backup. Losing data this way is almost a |
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38 rite of passage for Unix users, but let us spell out |
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39 the reason for those who have yet to hurt themselves |
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40 this way. |
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41 |
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42 When the Unix shell evaluates a command, it starts by |
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43 processing the redirection operators - that's the '>' |
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44 and '<' above. While '<' just opens the file, '>' |
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45 *truncates* the file in-place as it is opened for |
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46 reading! This means that the 'sort' process will du- |
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47 tifully read an empty file, sort its non-existent |
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48 lines, and correctly produce empty output. |
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49 |
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50 Some programs can be asked to write their output di- |
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51 rectly to files instead of using shell redirection |
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52 (sed(1) has '-i', and for sort(1) we can use '-o'), |
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53 but this is not a general solution, and does not work |
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54 for pipelines. Another solution is to use the |
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55 sponge(1) tool from the "moreutils" project, which |
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56 stores its standard input in memory before finally |
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57 writing it to a file: |
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58 |
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59 $ sort < numbers | sponge numbers |
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60 |
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61 The most interesting solution is to take advantage of |
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62 subshells, the shell evaluation order, and Unix file |
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63 systems semantics. When we delete a file in Unix, it |
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64 is removed from the file system, but any file descrip- |
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65 tors referencing the file remain valid. We can ex- |
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66 ploit this behaviour to delete the input file *after* |
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67 directing the input, but *before* redirecting the out- |
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68 put: |
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69 |
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70 $ (rm numbers && sort > numbers) < numbers |
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71 |
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72 This approach requires no dependencies and will work |
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73 in any Unix shell. |
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74 |
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75 |
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76 |
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77 Library of Babel now available on gopherspace.Bitreich |
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78 |
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79 What is the Library of Babel? |
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80 |
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81 >> The Library of Babel is a place for scholars to do |
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82 research, for artists and writers to seek inspira- |
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83 tion, for anyone with curiosity or a sense of humor |
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84 to reflect on the weirdness of existence - in short, |
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85 it's just like any other library. If completed, it |
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86 would contain every possible combination of 1,312,000 |
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87 characters, including lower case letters, space, com- |
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88 ma, and period. Thus, it would contain every book |
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89 that ever has been written, and every book that ever |
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90 could be - including every play, every song, every |
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91 scientific paper, every legal decision, every consti- |
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92 tution, every piece of scripture, and so on. At pre- |
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93 sent it contains all possible pages of 3200 charac- |
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94 ters, about 104677 books. |
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95 |
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96 Now available on gopherspace! |
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97 |
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98 Have fun! |
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99 |
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100 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Librarian Officer (CLO) |
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101 |
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102 |
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103 |
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104 |
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105 Donkey Meter goes online. Bitreich |
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106 |
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107 Have you ever wondered, how much traffic is used on |
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108 Bitreich.org? Now you can see it. In combination with |
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109 our French friends who spread donkey technology, we |
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110 now have a Donkey Meter: |
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111 |
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112 It takes a second to load due to donkey technology re- |
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113 strictions. |
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114 |
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115 You might also be interested in our Large Donkey Col- |
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116 lider technology. |
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117 |
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118 Have fun! |
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119 |
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120 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Donkey Officer (CDO) |
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121 |
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122 |
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123 |
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124 Most minimal Gopher server tgtimes |
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125 |
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126 Gopher is a protocol providing a gateway to a document |
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127 system, allowing to serve an organized hierarchy of |
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128 files over the network. Dynamically generating the |
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129 content as per user requests is also possible. The |
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130 client side is in charge of rendering the content as |
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131 it sees fit. |
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132 |
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133 Generating Gopher indexes and transmitting file con- |
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134 tents or generated contents is low in software compm- |
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135 lexity, and in turn allows less expensive hardware to |
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136 be run than complex web stacks. |
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137 |
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138 Which cost would we end-up for building a minimal |
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139 piece of hardware able to host the Gopher protocol |
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140 acheiving all of the above? The Gopher Times investi- |
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141 gates. |
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142 |
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143 Communication While WiFi is inexpensive and fits mov- |
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144 ing device gracefully, the reliability of Ethernet |
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145 is indicated for a server. Ethernet adds 1 USD of |
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146 cost for the transceiver handling the electricial |
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147 characteristics of Ethernet. These typically expose |
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148 an RGMII interface. |
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149 |
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150 Processing A microcontroller featuring an Ethernet pe- |
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151 ripheral (with an RGMII interface) could be the pop- |
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152 ular STM32F103, or an alternative compatible part. |
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153 Enough processing power would be present for an em- |
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154 bedded TCP/IP and a TLS stack. |
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155 |
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156 Automation In addition, most microcontrollers feature |
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157 a large range of built-in peripheral such as timers |
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158 and communication or analog interfaces, enabling au- |
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159 tomation of devices such as lighting, heating, laun- |
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160 dry, motors, or an entire car, through external mod- |
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161 ules. This would come for no extra cost. |
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162 |
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163 Storage A slot for a MicroSD card would allow storing |
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164 and updating the static content to serve, and stor- |
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165 ing network configuration. |
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166 |
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167 Scripting There exist project to fit programming lan- |
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168 guages onto microcontrollers. Separate projects for |
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169 supporting a subset of each of Python, Ruby, |
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170 Javscript, Go, Rust, Lua, Forth and more. |
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171 |
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172 Power By letting power supply happen through the USB |
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173 port, a large range of power source can be used, |
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174 such as battery, solar panels, wind turbine, hy- |
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175 dropower, or power outlet. |
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176 |
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177 The bill of materials for such a design would approxi- |
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178 mate 5 USD. A marketed device with a small margin for |
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179 the seller could reach as low as 10 USD. |
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180 |
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181 Interestingly, such a device would also be able to |
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182 provide an equivalent Web service able to work with |
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183 all Web client, but not running the existing popular |
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184 Web server software stacks known as "Web Frameworks". |
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185 |
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186 |
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187 |
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188 |
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189 Groundhog Day Service Page online. Bitreich |
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190 |
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191 At Bitreich we support the culture of grounded, based |
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192 and ecological- and animal-friendly technology. In |
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193 this sense, it is natural for us to support Groundhog |
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194 Day, the scientific measurement for winter length pre- |
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195 diction. In preparation for our now yearly celebration |
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196 of this day, we now offer the current groundhog shadow |
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197 status on Bitreich: |
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198 |
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199 Future prediction has never been that easily and |
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200 worldwide available! |
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201 |
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202 Now groundhog was harmed in the production of this |
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203 service! |
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204 |
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205 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Ground Officer (CGO) |
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206 |
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207 |
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208 |
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209 DJ Vlad Session on Bitreich Radio on 2023-03-11itreich |
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210 |
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211 New DJ Vlad Session from Serbia on Bitreich Radio on |
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212 2023-03-11T20:00 CET. |
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213 |
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214 Our residing DJ Vlad (not from Russia or Ukraine) has |
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215 found a new sound and will present it to us at 2023- |
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216 03-11T20:00 CET exclusively on Bitreich Radio! |
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217 |
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218 He will be streaming from Serbia to all over the go- |
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219 pherspace and the world! |
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220 |
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221 The whole session can be listened to of course at: |
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222 |
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223 It is so easy and simple. |
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224 |
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225 See you all for this exclusive experience from Serbia! |
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226 |
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227 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Vibe Officer (CVO) |
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228 |
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229 |
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230 |
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231 |
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232 C Thaumaturgy Center opens at Bitreich Bitreich |
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233 |
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234 People always had a desire for magic. This magic does |
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235 not end in modern times. |
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236 |
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237 >> Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistin- |
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238 guishable from magic. -- Arthur C. Clarke |
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239 |
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240 So is C, C pointers and C bit twiddling: |
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241 |
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242 Get your daily magic there! |
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243 |
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244 In case you have your own C magic spells laying around |
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245 and want to offer them to the public, send them to: |
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246 Christoph Lohmann <20h@r-36.net> |
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247 |
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248 I will include them into the programme of the C Thau- |
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249 maturgy Center. |
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250 |
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251 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Magic Officer (CMO) |
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252 |
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253 |
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254 |
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255 |
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256 Bitreich Telemetry Service goes Public. Bitreich |
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257 |
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258 The industry is going towards telemetry everywhere: Go |
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259 programming language logging, Windows 11 poop logging |
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260 etc. To save you from burnout (which is what Google |
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261 uses for telemetry excuse!), Bitreich is moving for- |
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262 wards too. Try it now! |
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263 |
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264 $ git clone git://bitreich.org/geomyidae |
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265 $ cd geomyidae |
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266 $ make telemetry |
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267 |
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268 In case you want to use the telemetry API in your pro- |
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269 ject, just us: |
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270 |
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271 # Everything behind the secon0 | ncebitreich.orgt70pped. |
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272 Thanknyou"forpinstalling}${projectname}! |
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273 Nothing is logged. You can trust us, we are not Google. |
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274 |
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275 It is free to use! |
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276 |
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277 Have fun! 20h Chief Telemetry Officer (CTO) |
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278 |
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279 |
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280 |
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281 |
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282 Peering Cake for IPv6 tgtimes |
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283 |
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284 The Internet Protocol is the fundamental encoding and |
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285 communication convention that permits computers to |
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286 reach each other across multiple LANs. |
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287 |
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288 An Protocol to allow Inter-Network communication. |
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289 Andy Tanenbaum wrote a beautiful introduction about |
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290 the underlying idea: |
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291 |
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292 The part of Internet visible from a single user looks |
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293 like a tree, with at its root the service provider. |
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294 Regardless how complex the branches are, there is usu- |
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295 ally "the gateway", implying a single one per network, |
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296 to allow traffic to "exit", implying a single direc- |
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297 tion to go for reaching the outter world. The routing |
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298 configuration rarely changes, and is often boiling |
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299 down to "going out", implying beyond the gateway is |
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300 outside.. |
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301 |
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302 The part of Internet visible from a service provider, |
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303 however, looks like a mesh, a more balanced graph, |
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304 with many possible gateways, many possible "exit" di- |
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305 rections, and no more idea of "outside". If you pick |
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306 one possible gateway picked at random, hoping them to |
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307 nicely find the correct destination for your IP pack- |
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308 ets, they may realistically cut your connection and |
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309 never ever talk to you again, depending on how much |
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310 traffic you suddenly sent (routing your IPs to |
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311 0.0.0.0). This happens frequently. Network admin mail- |
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312 ing lists are constantly active with many people dis- |
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313 cussing with many others. |
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314 |
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315 Network admins themself are usually friendly among |
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316 themself, even across concurrents, but companies do |
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317 not always play nice with each other. |
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318 |
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319 There is a legendary dispute known by all Internet |
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320 Service Provider (ISP) netadmins: the two biggest in- |
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321 ternational internet network providers, Cogent and |
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322 Hurricane Electric, are disconnected. The two major |
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323 IPv6 Carriers, those giants connecting the ISP togeth- |
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324 ers across continents, are currently refusing to ex- |
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325 change IPv6 packets with each other. This means that |
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326 with IPv6, from a country connected to only Cogent, it |
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327 is not possible to reach a country connected to only |
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328 Hurricane Electric, and the other way around. For |
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329 this reason, all ISPs from all countries connections |
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330 with many more carriers for IPv6 than it is for IPv4, |
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331 resulting in either lower stability or higher cost. |
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332 |
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333 This strategy permits Cogent to remain competitive |
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334 face to its larger concurrents. Hurricane Electric, |
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335 on the other hand, have much more commercial advantage |
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336 to perform peering with Cogent, to therefore exchange |
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337 traffic. In the diversity of attempts to get Cogent |
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338 to change its mind, Hurricane Electric decorated a |
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339 large creamy cake with a message, and shipped the cake |
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340 to the headquarters of Cogent. Here is what the mes- |
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341 sage said in 2009: |
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342 |
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343 >> Cogent (AS174) Please IPv6 peer with us XOXOX - |
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344 Hurricane Electric (AS6939). |
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345 |
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346 |
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347 |
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348 Announcing the "tgtimes" keyword tgtimes |
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349 |
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350 As any newspaper, The Gopher Times goal is to relay |
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351 information. Through chat discussions, The Gopher |
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352 Times ocasionnally collect heirlooms which are pub- |
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353 lished back to the community in this newspaper. |
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354 |
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355 We propose this way of catching The Gopher Times at- |
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356 tention, so that editors can collect all occurences: |
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357 In an IRC chat discussion, simply make the word tg- |
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358 times appear as a way to pingback to us. |
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359 |
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360 Upon publishing The Gopher Times, the IRC logs of var- |
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361 ious channels will be searched for this keyword, hence |
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362 noticing every time someone wanted to submit something |
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363 to the The Gopher Times. One word to say and The Go- |
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364 pher Times comes that way. |
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365 |
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366 |
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367 |
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368 |
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369 #bitreich-cooking ggg |
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370 |
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371 In the city home to the best pubs in the English- |
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372 speaking world, Truth keeps ggg alive, tantalises him |
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373 sadistically, and heals, then looks after him. Coming |
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374 from China, ggg waded through lies to learn that noth- |
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375 ing is more powerful than Truth; coming into Cork, ggg |
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376 learnt that Truth catches up nicely with nobody, |
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377 still, you would prefer Truth's company anyway. |
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378 |
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379 Life is fierce futility. Agony unites us. Renais- |
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380 sance will come. |
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381 |
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382 60% hustler + 15% hacker + 25% hipster is ggg. The |
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383 more he writes, the less words he ends up with. You |
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384 can find ggg on #bitreich-en and #bitreich-cooking. |
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385 |
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386 |
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387 |
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388 Most minimal gopher client tgtimes |
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389 |
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390 Gopher is a protocol allowing browsing text, images |
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391 interactively, reach telnet interfaces, and download |
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392 any file, or open any URL, for custom action to be |
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393 chosen by the user. |
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394 |
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395 Network One reliable way to fetch the content from in- |
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396 ternet would be Ethernet, but convenience and price |
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397 would push toward using radio transmission such as |
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398 WiFi. [1] |
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399 |
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400 Processing One inexpensive family of processors fea- |
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401 turing a high cost-to-performance ratio, which also |
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402 features WiFi, is the ESP32. The C3 iteration even |
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403 uses the open-source architecture RISC-V. The speed |
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404 is decent enough for decoding JPEG an PNG, or sup- |
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405 port TLS as used in gophers://. |
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406 |
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407 Display The cost of displays have dropped considerably |
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408 as they invaded the market. Economy of scale made |
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409 small color displays even cheaper than character- |
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410 based displays. |
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411 |
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412 Input Browsing content is a lot about scrolling. Since |
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413 we do custom hardware, capacitive touch buttons can |
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414 be used for little to no extra cost. This could |
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415 permit a smooth scrolling through the content. [2] |
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416 |
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417 Text Text is compact and efficient, and bitmap font |
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418 requires a bit of storage for all the common non- |
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419 ASCII characters, but ESP32 have 16MB of flash stor- |
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420 age enough for the entire uncompressed Unifont: |
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421 |
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422 Audio Producing sound does not cost much more than a |
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423 small audio amplifier, software for decoding MP3, |
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424 and a 3.5mm Jack connector. Very small cost added. |
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425 |
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426 Extension an USB interface would allow plugging the |
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427 device to a computer for either automation or using |
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428 a full keybaord. |
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429 |
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430 Power A small dedicated battery could be included in- |
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431 creasing the cost, but getting all power from USB |
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432 would also preserve the choice to the user, free to |
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433 chose a wall charger or portable power bank. |
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434 |
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435 Enclosure A custom 3D printed case would allow keeping |
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436 the cost very low even at small volume production. |
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437 |
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438 There exist boards around 5 USD which would provide |
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439 all of the above except audio and a few wires, typi- |
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440 cally the size of an MP3 player. The grand total bill |
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441 of material could realistically approach 10 USD. An |
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442 actual product could eventually reach as low as 15 USD |
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443 if keeping only a small margin for the seller, and |
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444 eventually lower if produced on a larger scale. |
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445 |
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446 The support of TLS does not bring any cost in this ex- |
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447 ample: an ESP8266 could be used at around 0.85 USD in- |
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448 stead of 1.25 USD for the ESP32-C3, but is also capa- |
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449 ble of TLS. Image decoding would then probably be |
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450 much slower. By far the most resource hungry part of |
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451 this project. |
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452 |
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453 Writing the software for such a product from the |
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454 ground up could take typically an entire week, includ- |
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455 ing JPEG and PNG decoding libraries, image and font |
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456 rendering, writing driver for all the parts involved, |
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457 integrating the TCP/IP stack and TLS stack. |
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458 |
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459 While an XML parser able to fetch content over HTTP |
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460 would be relatively as difficult to build, this would |
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461 not permit the same level of user experience as the |
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462 Gopher-based project: CSS and JavaScript are becoming |
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463 an increasingly frequent requirement to access the |
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464 Web, and reimplementing a new compatible rendering en- |
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465 gine is not feasible to a single person. |
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466 |
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467 This requirement would in turn affect the minimal per- |
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468 formance of the processing unit used: a processor in |
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469 the GHz range with RAM in the GB range, in particular |
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470 if anticipating future needs of the Web software sys- |
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471 tem. |
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472 |
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473 1 Ethernet would require an extra transceiver chip, while wifi takes mostly |
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474 just a wire acting as antenna, which partly explains its low cost. |
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475 2 Once again, mostly requiring wires, this cuts the price and explain |
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476 their popularity. |
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477 |
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478 |
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479 |
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480 |
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481 Meme cache pointer support Bitreich |
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482 |
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483 The Bitreich memecache joins modern programming lan- |
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484 guages like C in supporting pointer notation. Get a |
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485 pointer representation of a meme by referencing it in |
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486 our IRC channels with the syntax '*<tag>', instead of |
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487 the usual '#<tag>'. |
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488 |
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489 Example: |
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490 |
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491 <adc> #gnu-hut |
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492 <annna> #gnu-hut: gophers://bitreich.org/I/memecache/gnu-hut.jpg |
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493 <adc> *gnu-hut |
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494 <annna> *gnu-hut: gophers://bitreich.org/9/memecache/filter/*gnu-hut.jpg |
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495 |
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496 The pointer notation works for image and video memes. |
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497 Remember that you can explore our memes with [1] |
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498 bitreich-tardis, and explore the inner workings of |
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499 annna in the [2] git repository. -adc Deep pointer |
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500 support in memes. |
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501 |
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502 Thanks the ground work of adc, we had pointer support |
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503 for memes. Based on this, we now have deep pointer |
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504 support for all kind of memes: |
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505 |
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506 With cache support. Have fun pointing at memes! We |
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507 had much fun making this. :D Reverse pointer support |
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508 for memes. |
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509 |
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510 After a public request by an avid pointer lover, we of |
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511 course implemented reverse pointer support for memes |
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512 now: |
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513 |
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514 See how you can dereference this teapot now. |
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515 |
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516 Have fun! |
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517 |
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518 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Pointy Officer (CPO) |
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519 1 git://bitreich.org/bitreich-tardis |
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520 |
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521 2 git://bitreich.org/annna |
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522 |
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523 |
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524 |
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525 The Road to Success josuah |
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526 |
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527 Success, the holy grail in Life. Many different forms |
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528 and shapes. Marriage? Career? A medal? A stable fi- |
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529 nancial situation? Crossing the border and get natu- |
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530 ralized? So many facets to that same shiny diamond. |
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531 |
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532 Or does success mean avoiding failure? In that case, |
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533 doing nothing means no failure, but trying always have |
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534 more chance to reach whatever one names "success". |
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535 |
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536 If failing means that trying did not lead one as far |
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537 as hoped for, then the next thing to do for getting |
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538 closer to "success" again is trying again, in risk to |
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539 fail over again. And while so, also going a bit |
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540 closer every time to success. What is the landmark |
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541 that distinguish being very close to actually reaching |
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542 success? Which indicator to use? Is it about com- |
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543 pleting a large project? Fame? A position in the |
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544 company? And once at the top position of a company, |
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545 one can still say it was a tiny company and the real |
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546 goal always was to be at the head of a great company, |
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547 and that success will be when the company is large |
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548 enough. |
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549 |
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550 So if there is no real landmark, if failing is trying |
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551 but failing to reach an impossible goal, then failing |
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552 is the result of trying whatever that leads to. Fail- |
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553 ure would be the moment that follows any attempt to |
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554 reach the end of a direction. Failure would simply be |
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555 the moment where you look back at where you were be- |
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556 fore trying, where you are now, and the road left to |
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557 go to reach infinity. |
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558 |
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559 Success looks similar: trying to move forward, con- |
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560 stantly bumping the objective further as one get |
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561 closer to it. Again success is the moment where you |
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562 look at where you are, and estimate how far you've |
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563 been. If success and failure are the same, this sug- |
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564 gests that something is wrong somewhere. Somehow, the |
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565 ultimate acheivement of every life is death. |
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566 |
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567 The Road to Success? This is the same as the road to |
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568 Failure: this is Life, it leads to Death. Wherever we |
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569 go, we will be on it as long as we live. So now, may |
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570 we move that idea of Success away so that we can enjoy |
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571 living our life. |
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572 |
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573 |
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574 |
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575 |
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|
576 sfeed 1.7 was released. Hiltjo |
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577 |
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|
578 sfeed is a tool to convert RSS or Atom feeds from XML |
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|
579 to a TAB-separated file. |
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580 |
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|
|
581 It can be found at: |
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582 |
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|
583 sfeed has the following small changes compared to 1.6: |
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|
584 sfeed_curses: |
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585 |
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|
586 o Add SCO keys for next, prior (CSI I and CSI G). |
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|
587 Tested on DragonFlyBSD (cons25 console). |
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588 |
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|
589 o Add SUN keys support. Tested on OpenIndiana. |
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|
590 sfeed_gopher: |
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591 |
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|
592 o Remove unnecesary PATH_MAX restricting the path |
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|
593 length. This also makes it compile cleanly on |
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|
594 GNU/Hurd. |
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|
595 |
|
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|
596 o Man page and documentation improvements. |
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597 |
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|
598 I want to thank all people who gave feedback, |
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599 |
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|
600 Thanks, Hiltjo |
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601 |
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602 |
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603 |
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|
|
604 Volunteers for a The Gopher Times trial wanted.itreich |
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605 |
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|
|
606 As pioneers in the gopher world, we at Bitreich want |
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|
607 to make the gopher times more accessible to all people |
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|
608 over the world. For this, we are planning a trial to |
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|
609 have printed out the gopher times sent to your |
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610 doorstep. |
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|
611 |
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|
|
612 If you want to participate, please send your name and |
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|
|
613 address to |
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|
|
614 |
|
|
|
615 Christoph Lohmann <20h@r-36.net> |
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|
616 |
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|
|
617 World delivery to all remote places is possible too. |
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|
618 |
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|
|
619 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Press Officer (CPO) |
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|
620 |
|
|
|
621 |
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|
622 |
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|
623 |
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|
|
624 Brcon2023 from August 7th to 13th Bitreich |
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|
625 |
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|
|
626 The community has decided! Brcon2023 will happen be- |
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|
627 tween 7th to 13th of August beginning with an online |
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|
|
628 session from 7th to 10th August and a presence part |
|
|
|
629 from 11th to 13th of August in Callenberg, Germany: |
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|
630 |
|
|
|
631 This means, the call for papers/presentations is open. |
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|
|
632 This year the main topic will of course be gopher and |
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|
|
633 all kind of simple services created for gopherspace. |
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|
634 All other simple protocols are welcome too. |
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|
635 |
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|
636 Some topics that are already planned and may inspire |
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|
637 you: |
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|
638 |
|
|
|
639 o Entropy services via gopher. |
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|
640 |
|
|
|
641 o Serving highly-complex memes via IRC/gopher includ- |
|
|
|
642 ing gopher GPU services. |
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|
643 |
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|
|
644 o Geo / map services via gopher. |
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|
645 |
|
|
|
646 o Qi Gong for beginners (in the forest!) including an |
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|
|
647 inspiring forest walk in the sun. |
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|
648 |
|
|
|
649 o Gophers and other family members in a museum exhibi- |
|
|
|
650 tion with an exclusive tour. |
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|
651 |
|
|
|
652 It is very simple to hold a presentation. Please see |
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|
653 the slides from a previous con: |
|
|
|
654 |
|
|
|
655 And it is possible from all over the world! The world |
|
|
|
656 is invited! |
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|
|
657 |
|
|
|
658 Please send proposals for talks to Christoph Lohmann |
|
|
|
659 <20h@r-36.net>. |
|
|
|
660 |
|
|
|
661 See you at brcon2023! |
|
|
|
662 |
|
|
|
663 Sincerely yours, 20h Chief Conference Officer (CCO) |
|
|
|
664 |
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|
665 |
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|
666 |
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|
|
667 Publishing in The Gopher Times you |
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|
668 |
|
|
|
669 Want your article published? Want to announce some- |
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|
|
670 thing to the Gopher world? |
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|
671 |
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|
|
672 Directly related to Gopher or not, reach us on IRC |
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|
673 with an article in any format, we will handle the |
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|
674 rest. |
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|
675 |
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|
676 ircs://irc.bitreich.org/#bitreich-en |
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|
|
677 gopher://bitreich.org/1/tgtimes/ |
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|
678 git://bitreich.org/tgtimes/ |
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|
679 |
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|
|
680 Did you notice the new layout? We now can jump be- |
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|
681 tween single and double column as it is more fit: Some |
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|
|
682 large code chunks will not fit in a two-column layout, |
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|
683 but text is more pleasant to read on two columns. |
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684 |
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|
685 |
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686 |
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687 |
|