Those of you who know my older (now inactive) blog also know that I’m a Linux Jingoist. I like Linux because it gives me a clean, reliable, and superior user interface (I use Gnome most of the time) but also allows me to play with ancient, deeply embedded UNIX Mojo whenever I feel like it.One of the early developments on old Unix systems was the “Calendar File” which was manipulated and accessed with the command: calendar. If you go to a terminal prompt in Linux and type in the word, you get a listing of historical events people have entered for today and tomorrow. On some systems, if it is Friday, you get Friday and Monday.You can use this calendar instead of, say Microsoft Outlook if you can figure out how to enter dates for stuff you want to do. I’m still working on that.Anyway….… here is what I get for today:
- Nov 06
- Green March Day in Morocco
- Nov 06
- Bonne fête aux Bertille !
- Nov 06
- Aujourd’hui, c’est la St(e) Léonard.
- Nov 06
- N’oubliez pas les Winnoc !
- Nov 06
- Reichstagswahl: Rückgang der NSDAP, 1932
- Nov 06
- Melbourne Cup (Vic)
- Nov 07
- Abolitionist newspaperman Elijah P. Lovejoy murdered by mob, 1837
- Nov 07
- Lewis and Clark Expedition in sight of the Pacific Ocean, 1805
- Nov 07
- Anniversary of Great October Revolution in Bulgaria
- Nov 07
- October Revolution Day in Hungary
- Nov 07
- Joni Mitchell (Roberta Joan Anderson) is born in Alberta, Canada, 1943
- Nov 07
- Bonne fête aux Carine !
- Nov 07
- Aujourd’hui, c’est la St(e) Karine.
- Nov 07
- N’oubliez pas les Ernest !
- Nov 07
- Bonne fête aux Ernst !
- Nov 07
- Aujourd’hui, c’est la St(e) Willibrord.
- Nov 07
- Oktoberrevolution in RuÃ?land, Putsch der Bolschewisten, 1917
- Nov 07
- Ð?енÑ? пÑ?имиÑ?ÐµÐ½Ð¸Ñ Ð¸ ÑоглаÑиÑ
- Nov 07
- DÃa del Canillita
This is certainly going to increase my Google hit rate from France and Russia.Notice also that the format of this listing uses the HTML/CSS method of “Definition List,” a very underutilized method of formatting text on web sites. If you are using Firefox Web Browser, you can hit “CTRL-U” to see the code that makes this work.I’m playing with the CSS Style Sheet for my definition lists. So if it is now close to 9:10 AM Central Time, and you keep reloading this page, you may notice the format change. The software Science Blog uses to compose posts does not give an adequate preview of what the post looks like, and the method I would normally use off-line to do that does not yet work up here at the lake.So, if you are a geek you already know all this stuff, but if you are only a semi-geek, or a half-baked geek, like me, you can have some fun playing with the calendar command (oh, try “cal” as well) and with the definition list formating!
OK, I’m an old Unix guy (used to work in Bell Labs, when that meant something), but at this point I can only afford Windows (because I have to share machines with my family, etc..).I found old calendar source code, set myself up to run djgpp in a command window, compiled the source code, and get my calendar fix every day. I use vim to enter stuff.
Ahcuah:Your family can’t afford to not switch to Linux!