| 2732 | http://www.washtimes.com/upi-breaking/20030311-040832-2415r.htm | http://www.washtimes.com/upi-breaking/20030311-040832-2415r.htm | 
| 2733 | http://nugod.net/main/modules.php?name=Top | http://nugod.net/main/modules.php?name=Top | 
| 2734 | http://www.afsoc.af.mil/panews/conventional_bomb.htm | http://www.afsoc.af.mil/panews/conventional_bomb.htm | 
| 2735 |  | http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2003-03-11-us-bomb-test_x.htm | 
| 2736 | jdam: | jdam: | 
| 2737 | http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/smart/jdam.htm | http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/smart/jdam.htm | 
|  |  |  | 
| 2738 |  |  | 
| 2739 |  | l http://www.afsoc.af.mil/nightflyer/ | 
| 2740 |  | http://www.internationalsocialist.org/ | 
| 2741 |  | http://www.apc.org/english/index.shtml | 
| 2742 |  | http://layline.blogspot.com/ | 
| 2743 |  |  | 
| 2744 |  | i http://www.levity.com/alchemy/latin/latintrans.html | 
| 2745 |  |  | 
| 2746 |  | x modified WCron-Job for joko@grasshopper.netfrag.org | 
| 2747 |  | - was: joko/Scripts/shortcuts/cvs_commit_joko-doc.bat | 
| 2748 |  | - now done via rap! | 
| 2749 |  | #> c:\programme\perl\bin\perl C:\home\amo\develop\netfrag.org\nfo\perl\scripts\shortcuts\rap.pl cvs commit joko/doc | 
| 2750 |  | (running each 3600...) | 
| 2751 |  | - introduced 'nfo/hosts/grasshopper.netfrag.org/c/etc/rap.xml' at cvs.netfrag.org | 
| 2752 |  | #> rap.pl | 
| 2753 |  | info: Data::Rap: Using rapfile /etc/rap.xml. | 
| 2754 |  | info: Data::Rap: starting | 
| 2755 |  | info: Data::Rap: determining hostname: grasshopper | 
| 2756 |  | notice: Data::Rap: Reading target database from XML. | 
| 2757 |  | error: Data::Storage::Handler::XML: File not found: '/etc/rap.xml'. | 
| 2758 |  | critical: Data::Rap: XML metadata was empty. | 
| 2759 |  | #> c: | 
| 2760 |  | #> cvs -d :ext:joko@cvs.netfrag.org:/var/lib/cvs checkout -d c:\ nfo/hosts/grasshopper.netfrag.org/c | 
| 2761 |  | #> cvs -d :ext:joko@cvs.netfrag.org:/var/lib/cvs update -d c:\ nfo/hosts/grasshopper.netfrag.org/c | 
| 2762 |  | #> rap.pl | 
| 2763 |  | info: Data::Rap: Using rapfile C:\/etc/rap.xml. | 
| 2764 |  | info: Data::Rap: starting | 
| 2765 |  | info: Data::Rap: determining hostname: grasshopper | 
| 2766 |  | notice: Data::Rap: Reading target database from XML. | 
| 2767 |  | - rap.pl cvs commit joko/doc | 
| 2768 |  | Commits joko/doc to cvs.netfrag.org. [each 30 minutes, (created at 24.01.2003, 06:26:53 by WCron - now wrapped via rap)] | 
| 2769 |  |  | 
| 2770 |  | o where is pcron??? | 
| 2771 |  |  | 
| 2772 |  | o php: | 
| 2773 |  | - use: $_REQUEST, $_SESSION | 
| 2774 |  | - implement: $_APPLICATION | 
| 2775 |  |  | 
| 2776 |  | i Twingle: Wie janosch sagt: "Wieso ist denn da kein Link? Wir sind doch im Internet...!?" | 
| 2777 |  | [als er beim browsen auf bacula.org über tomsrtbt stolperte - wer weiss denn schon was tomsrtbt is?] | 
| 2778 |  | also: | 
| 2779 |  | o http://netfrag.org/twingle/http://bacula.org | 
| 2780 |  |  | 
| 2781 |  | i wargames | 
| 2782 |  | It really *is* absurd: | 
| 2783 |  | The usa leads their tactical war against iraq and | 
| 2784 |  | my friends down here are playing strategical war | 
| 2785 |  | games on their computers. | 
| 2786 |  | Let's gear towards planning a better future without the tactical root of evil. | 
| 2787 |  | Let's try to apply the philosophy of the FSF to the Engineering- and Media- Industry. | 
| 2788 |  | Is there already an Open Engineering License? Is it required in fact? | 
| 2789 |  | The industry seems to be too slow to adapt new innovations.... | 
| 2790 |  | This depends on the definition of "industry", | 
| 2791 |  | which i have to admit i'm not aware of - let's look it up: | 
| 2792 |  |  | 
| 2793 |  | m lookup::industry: | 
| 2794 |  | http://www.dict.org/bin/Dict?Form=Dict2&Database=*&Query=industry | 
| 2795 |  |  | 
| 2796 |  | From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) : | 
| 2797 |  |  | 
| 2798 |  | Industry \In"dus*try\, n.; pl. Industries. [L. industria, cf. | 
| 2799 |  | industrius diligent; of uncertain origin: cf. F. industrie.] | 
| 2800 |  | 1. Habitual diligence in any employment or pursuit, either | 
| 2801 |  | bodily or mental; steady attention to business; assiduity; | 
| 2802 |  | -- opposed to sloth and idleness; as, industry pays | 
| 2803 |  | debts, while idleness or despair will increase them. | 
| 2804 |  |  | 
| 2805 |  | We are more industrious than our forefathers, | 
| 2806 |  | because in the present times the funds destined for | 
| 2807 |  | the maintenance of industry are much greater in | 
| 2808 |  | proportion to those which are likely to be employed | 
| 2809 |  | in the maintenance of idleness, than they were two | 
| 2810 |  | or three centuries ago.               --A. Smith. | 
| 2811 |  |  | 
| 2812 |  | 2. Any department or branch of art, occupation, or business; | 
| 2813 |  | especially, one which employs much labor and capital and | 
| 2814 |  | is a distinct branch of trade; as, the sugar industry; the | 
| 2815 |  | iron industry; the cotton industry. | 
| 2816 |  |  | 
| 2817 |  | 3. (Polit. Econ.) Human exertion of any kind employed for the | 
| 2818 |  | creation of value, and regarded by some as a species of | 
| 2819 |  | capital or wealth; labor. | 
| 2820 |  |  | 
| 2821 |  | Syn: Diligence; assiduity; perseverance; activity; | 
| 2822 |  | laboriousness; attention. See Diligence. | 
| 2823 |  |  | 
| 2824 |  |  | 
| 2825 |  | From WordNet (r) 1.7 : | 
| 2826 |  |  | 
| 2827 |  | industry | 
| 2828 |  | n 1: the people engaged in a particular kind of commercial | 
| 2829 |  | enterprise; "each industry has its own trade | 
| 2830 |  | publications" | 
| 2831 |  | 2: the organized action of making of goods and services for | 
| 2832 |  | sale; "American industry is making increased use of | 
| 2833 |  | computers to control production" [syn: manufacture] | 
| 2834 |  | 3: persevering determination to perform a task; "his diligence | 
| 2835 |  | won him quick promotions"; "frugality and industry are | 
| 2836 |  | still regarded as virtues" [syn: diligence, industriousness] | 
| 2837 |  |  | 
| 2838 |  | m lookup::diligent | 
| 2839 |  |  | 
| 2840 |  | http://www.bartleby.com/61/roots/IE503.html | 
| 2841 |  |  | 
| 2842 |  | The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.  2000. | 
| 2843 |  |  | 
| 2844 |  |  | 
| 2845 |  | Appendix I | 
| 2846 |  |  | 
| 2847 |  | Indo-European Roots | 
| 2848 |  |  | 
| 2849 |  | ENTRY: ster-2 | 
| 2850 |  | DEFINITION: Also ster-. To spread. | 
| 2851 |  | Derivatives include destroy, industry, straw, street, and stratagem. | 
| 2852 |  | I. Extended form *streu-. 1. strain2, from Old English stron, something gained, offspring, from Germanic suffixed form *streu-nam. 2. structure; construct, destroy, instruct, instrument, obstruct, substruction, from Latin struere, to pile up, construct. 3. Zero-grade form *stru-. industry, from Latin industrius, diligent, from Archaic Latin indostruus (endo-, within; see en). 4. bremsstrahlung, from Old High German strla, arrow, lightning bolt, from Germanic *strl. | 
| 2853 |  | II. O-grade extended form *strou-. 1. Suffixed form *strou-eyo-. a. strew, from Old English str(o)wian, to strew; b. streusel, from Old High German strouwen, strowwen, to sprinkle, strew. Both a and b from Germanic *strawjan. 2. Suffixed form *strow-o-. straw, from Old English straw, straw, from Germanic *strawam, “that which is scattered.” | 
| 2854 |  | III. O-grade extended form *stroi-. perestroika, from Old Russian stroj, order. | 
| 2855 |  | IV. Basic forms *ster-, *ster-. 1. Nasalized form *ster-n--. estray, stratus, stray, street; consternate, prostrate, substratum, from Latin sternere (past participle strtus from zero-grade *st-to-), to stretch, extend. 2. Suffixed form *ster-no-. sternum; sternocleidomastoid, from Greek sternon, breast, breastbone. | 
| 2856 |  | V. Zero-grade form *st-, *st-. 1. Suffixed form *st-to-. stratagem; stratocracy, from Greek stratos, multitude, army, expedition. 2. Suffixed form *st-to-. strath, from Old Irish srath, a wide river valley, from Celtic *s(t)rato-. 3. Suffixed extended form *st-m. stroma; stromatolite, from Greek strma, mattress, bed. (Pokorny 5. ster- 1029.) | 
| 2857 |  |  | 
| 2858 |  |  | 
| 2859 |  | http://www.bartleby.com/61/34/B0473400.html | 
| 2860 |  |  | 
| 2861 |  | The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.  2000. | 
| 2862 |  |  | 
| 2863 |  | bremsstrahlung | 
| 2864 |  |  | 
| 2865 |  | SYLLABICATION: brems·strah·lung | 
| 2866 |  | PRONUNCIATION:   brmshträlng | 
| 2867 |  | NOUN: The electromagnetic radiation produced by a change in the velocity of an electrically charged subatomic particle, such as an electron, as when it collides with another object. | 
| 2868 |  | ETYMOLOGY: German : Bremse, brake (from Middle Low German premse, from pramen, to press) + Strahlung, radiation (from strahlen, to radiate, from Strahl, ray, from Middle High German strle, from Old High German strla, arrow, stripe; see ster-2 in Appendix I). | 
| 2869 |  |  | 
| 2870 |  | google::bremsstrahlung | 
| 2871 |  | http://rd11.web.cern.ch/RD11/rkb/PH14pp/node16.html | 
| 2872 |  | http://www.desy.de/pr-info/Roentgen-light/roentgenstrahlung/roentgenstrahlung8.html | 
| 2873 |  |  | 
| 2874 |  | Okay, this gave no further facts, but some nice history about word-stems... | 
| 2875 |  | Also, alles klar: "Industrie" kommt von "Streu" - hamma ja scho immer geahnt....    ;-) | 
| 2876 |  |  |