David Reid et al have done a great job getting projects.apache.org up. A long-standing complaint of mine has been that there are dozens of Apache projects that I really don’t know what they are. Granted, I still don’t have any real clear idea what some of these descriptions mean, and we do seem to have an awful lot of projects that describe themselves as a “framework”, but it’s a great start. Thanks, David!
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Millenium Development Goals
6 years ago, the UN proposed the UN Millennium Development Goals as attainable, practical goals that we, as a global community, should attempt to reach. These include, among other things, eliminating extreme poverty.
In the booklet Eradicating Global Poverty, from the National Council of Churches, extreme poverty is simply defined as the kind of poverty that kills. This can take many forms, from dying of hunger, to dying of easily preventable and easily curable diseases, that those of us in wealthy nations would never even think of as being fatal.
Imagine for a moment, if you even can, having to decide which one of your kids is going to have something to eat tonight. No, I can’t imagine it either. I have difficulty saying no when she wants a snack she really doesn’t need. I can only begin to glimpse the anguish of being unable to say yes, no matter how much I wanted to.
It’s a simple matter, of course, to say “the problem is too big, I can’t solve it”, and so resolve to do nothing. I imagine most of us are there. But I have seen numerous times over the last few weeks, where we, as the American people, are shamefully wasteful of the things which we have in embarrassing quantity.
To give one simple example, yesterday I was at Michaels for their weekly craft time. When craft time is over, any left-over materials are thrown away. This is policy. They cannot be sold. They cannot be given to charities, schools, churches, or any individual. They must be thrown away. Presumably there are “good reasons” for this, just like there are good reasons that leftovers from meals at restaurants must be thrown out. But surely there is some way that we can reduce what we waste, and thus share what we have more equitably with the rest of the peoples of the earth.
It is indeed a huge problem, but it is one that economists seem to think that we can actually solve within our generation.
The goal is not a fantasy, says economist Jeffrey Sachs. “Ours is the first generation in the history of the world with the ability to eradicate extreme poverty. We have the means, the resources and the know-how. All we lack is the will.”
Some of us take Lent as a time to consider our overindulgences, and to refrain from them. This is not simply about denying ourselves something, nor is it at all about stopping bad habits. One of the many things that it is about is learning, as Theresa of Calcutta said, to live simply, that others may simply live.
I have a number of other thoughts on this topic, but I’ll keep them for another time. Primarily, I encourage you to read the Millenium Development Goals, and consider in what way you can reduce conspicuous waste in your sphere of influence.
Movie reviews
I recently signed up for the blockbuster.com movie-by-mail service. There were some movies I wanted to see, and some that had been recommended, and this seemed like a very cost-effective way to do that. So I’ve seen more movies in the last month than I’ve seen in the previous 6 months, probably.
Three of them stand out as worth mentioning.
First of all, Pulp Fiction. No, I hadn’t seen it yet. But a number of people, horrified that I hadn’t seen it, said that I absolutely had to. There was very little mention of what it was about, or why it was important that I see it. In retrospect, it seems obvious why that was the case. It’s not about anything. And there’s no reason for someone to waste their time seeing it. I was really very disappointed, since I had really expected that it would be good. But the title is appropriate. It has all the quality of a dime-store novel. I have to think that if less known, but equally talented actors had been in it, it wouldn’t have done so well. I honestly can’t understand why it was, and is, so popular.
On the brighter side, there was Babette’s Feast and Brother Sun, Sister Moon. Babette’s Feast is about a feast. It’s also about love, forgiveness, and community. It’s from a short story by Isaak Denisen (aka Karen Blixen), and was well worth the price of admission. Sorry, no guns, explosions, or blood. Brother Sun, Sister Moon is about the life of Francis of Assisi, and co-stars Alec Guinness as the pope. Ok, so it’s a really minor part, but it was an interesting ending. Also worth seeing, if you’re interested in Francis, as I am, is Francesco.
With the movies-by-mail service, I also get a coupon for one free rental in-store every week. Apparently when I go into a store and choose something spontaneously, I choose much less carefully then when I select my list online.
Good old E.A.R.&H.
In my ongoing quest to convert my old LPs and tapes to usable formats, I came across the tape “Roger Whittaker in Kenya”, and now I’m very homesick, listening to “Good old E.A.R.&H.”, “My Land is Kenya”, and “Shimoni.”
Oh the good old E.A.R.&H. will get you there on time
Those mighty engines rolling down the line
And no boy ever had a railway quite as fine as mine!
Oh the good old E.A.R.&H.
It’s obvious from the songs that Whittaker was from the very privileged class. As, I suppose, was I, while I was in Kenya. One of my favorite songs on the album (except for E.A.R.&H.) is “High” which, although I guess he never says it, seems to be about a hot air baloon ride over the game parks. And so of course, my Kenya isn’t the real Kenya, and I suppose I’ve always known that. But I miss it anyway.
You only have one childhood, and the memories that spring
When you see your house, the tree you climbed
And all those precious things.
The faces of the friends I loved, the images of home
When I close my eyes in the land I love
The land that I call home
My land is Kenya, right from your highlands to the see,
You’ll always stay with me, here in my heart.
My land is Kenya, so warm and wild and free
You’ll always stay with me, here in my heart.
I sure hope I get a chance to go back home some time, and take Sarah with me. It’s been so long.
Just hope that maybe tomorrow, you can come back home again.
Thanks, Joe
Joe, over at AdminSpotting, says nice things about the book. Thanks, Joe.
How the camel got his hump, by Rudyard Kipling
This is a reading of How The Camel Got His Hump, by Rudyard Kipling, from the Just So Stories.
This book is one of those books that will always be best on paper, to be read aloud. Each of the illistrations in the book has an explanatory note, which tells about what’s going on in the picture and how it relates to the story.
I’ve put the pictures in the podcast, but not the explanations. I’ll keep experimenting with them, but I’m not sure what will be a good way to do them so that someone listening, and not watching, will be able to tell what’s going on.
Anyways, tell me what you think. These stories are some of my favorite, and I’m forcing myself to do them in order, and not just jump ahead to The Elephant’s Child.
Zend Studio
I’ve never been a fan of IDEs. They seem to impose their way of doing things to such an extent that I end up not being able to do some picky little thing that ends up annoying me. But I’m starting to look at Zend Studio because it’s specifically for PHP, and because it does phpdoc automatically.
I’m grudgingly impressed. I think I might be able to get used to this. If only it had vi key bindings, I think I would be completely satisfied with it. There’s emacs keybindings, but not vi. Perhaps I’ll find something somewhere.
Curious George
Sarah and I saw Curious George yesterday. It was a lot of fun.
Best quote in the entire movie, as The Man In The Yellow Hat accelerates his VW to 120 mph and prepares to launch it into the air. “Fortunately, movies have taught me exactly what to do in this situation.”
Finding Sarah
On July 7, 2003, I left “Finding Sarah”, a little fish travel bug, in a cache in Portland, Oregon. For 2 years, 7 months, it treked around the USA, and even crossed over into Canadia, travelling 3859.1 miles. On January 31, it arrived in its final destination, Bush Baby, here in Lexington.
I didn’t have a chance to go get it right away, but Sarah and I went to pick it up on February 9th, just in time for her birthday. We discovered that the cache, and the tree in which it was hidden, had been destroyed by some park cleanup crew clearing brush.
I imagine, even if you’ve never tracked a travel bug, you can understand that I was rather disappointed. Fortunately, I sent two of them, and the other one arrived less than a year after I sent it. The Parks and Rec geocaching contact wasn’t able to help me. Apparently he had no idea they were going to do that. 🙁
ApacheCon EU 2006
The ApacheCon Planners are pleased to announce that ApacheCon Europe
2006 will be held in Dublin, Ireland, at the Burlington Hotel, June 26-30.
Further details to follow as they are available. CFP to follow shortly. Please feel free to spread this information far and wide.