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2002 Dec 2 (Mon), 18:37 I hope everyone had a nice Turkey day. Ours went fairly well. We ate a lot of food, visited with friends and relatives, and ate more tasty food. I also went for four entire days without doing any work. I did stop by my office once but only to check email. Speaking of email, I notice spam levels continue to rise. Our mail server blocked 32,614 spams during November - and I still ended up with 30 or so per day making it to my mailbox. I'd say the majority of the SMTP traffic on our network is now spam. Well, it turns out that even though DMOZ/ODP provides "open content" they do it using closed software. So no luck with my offer to help them debug the RDF export problem. They had plenty of other offers to help from editors who were also hackers but all the offers of help in the world won't do any good if they keep their source code secret. I posted links to some Free Software/Open Source propoganda in the hopes it might change a mind or two but I'm not going to hold my breath.
2002 Dec 8 (Sun), 21:42 I spent a little time tonight working on our annually Christmas letter that we send to friends and family. I realized that 2002 turned out to be a fairly boring year! I'm resolving to make 2003 a bit more interesting. We saw the Die Another Day, the new James Bond movie, last night and it was okay but a bit disappointing. It's the same story as Diamonds are Forever and Golden Eye; an evil guy with a lot of diamonds builds a big laser satellite so he can take over the world. Major reality disconnects were Bond's invisible car, the MI6 Holodeck, and Bond surfing a 1000 ft high tsunami wave. And what's with the guy with the diamonds embedded in his head? Oh well, looking forward to seeing the LoTR and Star Trek movies soon. 2002 Dec 13 (Fri), 17:38 With the approach of another birthday, I've been complaining too much about getting old, I think. My friends are beginning to feel sorry for me and have been doing all sorts of nice things. On Wednesday, a bunch of balloons showed up at the office courtesy of Erin. Interestingly, the bunch consisted of two mylar balloons and five of the older-style latex rubber balloons. Within 24 hours the rubber balloons had lost enough helium to reach neutral buoyancy and by this morning were all lying on the floor. The two mylar balloons are still flying high. Since I parked the balloons where they are visible on my webcam, this experiment in the helium permeability of materials is being carried out live on the Internet. Of course, if I'd read the balloon FAQ, I'd have known this stuff already! Thursday, Lacey was in town and we had lunch at Sherlock's Baker St. Pub. She also invited me to the Christmas party over at Alexander & Kienast. I put in a brief appearance and did my best to act like a regular person instead of an introverted computer geek (don't know if I fooled anyone). I ate some cookies and listened to the very nice Jazz combo. I guess the last party I saw was the Mozilla 1.0 launch party where I was present just long enough to get my photo snapped as proof I'd been there. Hmmm... that's two parties in the same year, I really need to slow down (especially at my age!). Today, Erin took me out to lunch at Houston's. Filet Mignon was followed by a birthday dessert complete with candle (thankfully no singing waiters, however). Tonight is Susan's turn. And then back to work for another year... 2002 Dec 16 (Mon), 22:43 Okay, it's time to go over my list of major and minor nits with Star Trek: Nemesis (as if anyone really cares!) I don't think there are any spoilers in here but read at your own risk if you haven't seen the movie.
2002 Dec 26 (Thu), 22:38 Another Christmas has come and gone. A few of us gathered at my sister Linda's house and joined her family for Christmas day. The usual sorts of holiday activities occured - food, games, lots of talking, and helping the kiddos assemble a few toys. And we made some calls to those who couldn't (or didn't wish to) come. We decided to take today and tomorrow off work as well. Today we visited a few of the antique malls on highway 80 near Forney and saw everything from an antique Russian MIG to a Jeanette Cube cup and saucer that Susan had actually been looking for. We brought the cup and saucer home with us but left the MIG - it had too many rivets. I closed an eBay transaction today that has been pending for some time. I've been searching for a particular Canon FD macro lens for nearly a year. Earlier this month I finally found one in good condition and managed to nab it at the right price on eBay. Unfortunately, the seller was located in Guam which was hit by a major typoon within hours of my winning the auction. After a few days the seller did manage to get an email through saying they had no power, no water, no public services of any kind (including mail), so no lens. This week, however, the seller made it to California and is shipping all his eBay stuff from there. So by this time next week I may finally have my new lens to play with. 2002 Dec 28 (Sat), 18:59 My recent discussions with the ODP guys about open-sourcing the ODP backend software have led me to read up on RDF, which is the format used by ODP for exporting the ontological information and content of the directory. One thing I immediately ran into was XTM, the ISO standard for creating XML Topic Maps. These seem to me to be competing standards in that they both use XML to describe ontological information. RDF seems to be enjoying much more widespread use on the web but I'm playing catch-up in this particular area right now, so I may be missing some uses of XTM. One helpful document I've found is a paper by Lars Marius Garshol comparing XTM, RDF, and two RDF extensions, DAML and OIL. If anyone knows of other introductory-level documents describing the similarities and differences of XTM and RDF, I'd be curious to hear about them.
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