The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams is a remarkable book : it begins with earthling Arthur Dent facing the destruction of his house to make room for a new highway. To add insult to injury, Arthur's friend of many years, Ford Prefect, informs Arthur that Earth itself is about to end, as an alien race wishes to make an intergalactic highway and Earth is in its way. The novel then follows what becomes of Arthur and Ford as they hitch their way onto the Heart Of Gold, the most advanced ship in the galaxy, which itself was hijacked by Zaphod Beeblebrox, the two-headed, three-armed, way trippy ex-hippie president of the galaxy. Also on board, they meet the unforgettable Trillian, Zaphod's girlfriend, whom Arthur once tried to mack on, and Marvin, a paranoid, chronically depressed robot. Thus, Arthur and Ford cruise the galaxy, searching for the question to the Ultimate Answer Of Life, the Universe, and Everything.

The book has been rewritten numerous times, been adapted to other media formats, including stage shows, and radio broadcasts. As a result, many versions of the Guide were develloped, all slightly different. And now, a new version has been added in the form of a movie, being released this week in theathers in Belgium. Most of the reviews I've read were going from 'this sucks' to 'could have been better', so I'm not settings my hopes too high for this.

Abulafia ;-) Tue, 08/16/2005 - 09:57

Kristof,
about "...Arthur and Ford cruise the galaxy, searching for the question to the Ultimate Answer Of Life, ..."

Perhaps you can let them know recently "...Harvard University is joining the long-running debate over the theory of evolution by launching a research project to study how life began."
Maybe you can send them next URL for further information:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050816/ap_on_sc/harvard_evolution
Harvard to Investigate Origins of Life.

I like that it, I like it!!!
(See also: "Kapelaan van de duivel" (Richard Dawkins) en "Darwins gevaarlijke idee (Daniel C. Dennet))

kristof Tue, 08/16/2005 - 18:13

In reply to by Abulafia ;-)

zinnen waar geen touw aan vast te knopen valt, en verwijzigingen naar obscure literaire werkjes : dat kan niet anders dat Bernard T. mijn blog gevonden heeft...

Ping4626 Wed, 08/17/2005 - 09:49

In reply to by kristof

Obscure werkjes? Dat moet een vergissing zijn!
1) 'A Devils Chaplain. Selected Essays by Richard Dawkins'; een uitgebreide selectie uit artikelen, lezingen, boekbesprekingen en voorwoorden, huldeblijken en lofuitingen over een periode van 25 jaar. Een selectie waarin een verscheidenheid aan thema's aan de orde komt, sommige uit de sfeer van het darwinisme of de natuurwetenschap in het algemeen, andere in verband met de moraal, andere weer over godsdienst, onderwijs, rechtspraak, geschiedenis der wetenschap, enz ...
2) 'Darwins dangerous Idea; Evolution and the meanings of Life';
Een doorwrochte studie-knoert om en rond Charles Darwin's 'The Origin of species' waarin Dennet poogt langsheen alle voors en tegens van de evolutietheorie de complete geschiedenis van een idee uit te schrijven (en wàt een idee!)
18 hoofdstukken wetenschappelijk-filosofische stuff die dan ook stillistisch nog knap is uitgewerkt. Bijgevolg kan elkeen met een wat ruimere interesse meegenieten, ga daar maar eens aan staan.
Een uitgebreid notenapparaat, een bibliografie die je honger naar meer voor jaren kan stillen, en een register dat het boek echt helemaal afdekt, zijn op zich al goed voor 80blz.

Dawkins en Dennet, niet bepaald auteurs van obscure literaire werkjes.

De bijgevoegde URL lijkt me in die context wel degelijk terecht.

kristof Wed, 08/17/2005 - 10:31

In reply to by Ping4626

Dat doet me een beetje denken aan onze godsdienstleraar van weleer : een overtuigde Teillard de Chardin fan; ik ging al regelmatig met hem in discussie hierover. Uiteindelijk liet hij me een werk van Gerard Bodifée lezen, oorspronkelijk wetenschapper, maar tegenwoordig meer bezig met filosofie en godsdienst, compleet met bijbehorende meterslange baard. Heel zware lectuur, trouwens...

Monster Makita

M. bought some curtains last month, and wanted them installed asap. But when I tried to drill some holes into the wall with my old B&D, the drillhead came out red glowing, with almost no drill hole being made. So I knew I needed some more powerfull stuff. The person in the DIY store almost laughed at me when he heard which drilling machine I used.
So meet monster Makita, a drilling machine the size of half a bazooka. Comes with a 'wall demolition' option, and drills holes into concrete walls as if they were packets of soft butter. And it even comes with a little LED illuminating the spot were to drill.

Animal farm

Our neighbours are on holiday, and left us with the important task of taking care of their animals. That is : including three sheeps, a dog and 4 chickens. Not all that difficult, except that some of the chickens prefer to take a trip around the neighbourhood. I really don't know how those hens manage to break out from their fenced home, but they sure like to take a holiday themselves.

An advantage of this all is that we may keep the hens eggs, which means that we have some 11 eggs lying around in the fridge. Time to make a giant cake, I guess...

Anonymous Fri, 08/05/2005 - 21:40

So Kristof, that's good to know; Give me ring when you have your cake with you at the office...
call me at nr. 52640

kristof Tue, 08/09/2005 - 15:04

In reply to by Anonymous

Hehe; Dirk, wanneer ik een stuk meebreng, zal ik je verwittigen ;)

Argonath (a new firewall) part 2

My new firewall is in place at last : as I did not have much time last week, I used half an hour here and there to install and harden the server. I must say that I like the new Debian installer : it took some time to get used to, but the result is nice. I'm quite impressed by the partitioner in the installer : it's quite powerfull, but I'm afraid it will be a bitch for newbies, as it's not really the most user-friendly part of the installation.

The configuration of Shorewall took most time : for some reason, the box refused to masquerade large tcp packets. Browsing went fine, but initiating a ftp request or some nntp traffic would only let some packets drip in. But then I recalled a problem I encountered at work with a new Solaris8 machine and pppoe customers. Pppoe uses a MSS which is quite lower than the default 1500 MTU used on most networks, which can give problems with big packages. Luckily, the Shorewall CLAMPMSS configuration parameter takes care of that.

I noticed that Debian installs some more experimental modules with its default installed 2.4.27 kernel. For pppoe, it uses the pppoe kernel module, which moves pppoe back to kernel space. The performance is quite impressive : whereas my previous firewall CPU would hit the ceiling while downloading large files, the new box doesn't even sweat.

Wouter Verhelst Sun, 09/04/2005 - 19:05

You've probably missed the bit where it asks you whether you want to automatically set up your hard disk, and switched to manually partitioning instead. That's quite hard for newbies indeed, but then that's not the recommended way for newbies to partition their system...

Any system to allow partitioning your hard disk is going to be hard on newbies, I'm afraid.

kristof Mon, 09/05/2005 - 07:40

In reply to by Wouter Verhelst

You're quite right that the automated install is what most people will take. I'm just so used to choosing for the manual install (I never like the proposed disk layout as offered by most installers), that I indeed missed that bit.

Belgian providers close MP3 newsgroups

It looks like the music industry has won another battle : ISPA members (which contain all Belgian internet providers) have closed all mp3 newsgroups on their newsservers. One might consider this move quite strange, as some of the mp3 newsgroups were used to post own mp3 samples, like people posting music they made themselves. On the other hand, won't this encourage people to spoil other (non-binary) groups with mp3 stuff ? Anyway, a sad decision; I have downloaded music in the past too via newsgroups, and even bought some CD's from the music I downloaded, so it wouldn't surprise me if this decision might even further lessen the CD sales.

But it seems that the music industry is even winning the war : the majority of downloaded music is coming from 'legal' sources like iTunes and stuff : thousands of people downloading crapp-ass-quality mp3's or wma's (128 kbit encoding really sucks) for a price that is as expensive as a normal CD.
How ironical.