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Here are some potential questions for the ATProtocol geo working group to consider. Some of them may not be relevant and some may be nonsensical. This list is just meant as a starting point for discussion.
What is the mission of the working group?
What problems are we trying to address within the Atmosphere?
What's in scope for the working group? What's out of scope?
Here are some notes intended as a starting point for discussion within the ATGeo Gazeteer Working Group. Mostly these are my opinions and I do not hold them dogmatically.
My framing is: How do we mine the 40+ years of accumulated best practices in Geographic Information Systems, and the 20+ years of hard-won experience working with user-generated location data on the Web, for the benefit of ATProtocol developers and their users?
On one hand, I think we should find the minimal subset of these best practices which are applicable to the ATmosphere, and publish protocols and guidelines that enable the ATmosphere community to benefit from past experience.
On the other hand, I'm sure that we are all familiar with overly complex technical architectures that, however well conceived, fail to be adopted because developers don't need or want their complexity.
Around 2010 or so, I bought a print of this photo in a frame at either Target or Ikea, I can't recall which, because it made me nostalgic for New York City, which I had just left.
After spending about a year with this print on my wall, I realized that the orientation of bridge and moon in the original photo could probably be used to work out when the photo was taken.
Prolog script to choose teams for single-elimination "survivor" pools
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These eclipses were chosen by virtue of the possibility of viewing totality from somewhere on
a continental landmass in the temperate or tropical latitudes.
2020 Dec 14 - Chile, Argentina (canceled due to COVID-19)
2023 Apr 20 - Hybrid eclipse, possible totality in Indonesia, or western Australia (1m 15s max)
2023 Oct 14 - An annular eclipse visible from the
western United States, not unlike the annular eclipse of 2012.
2024 Apr 08 - The Great American Eclipse of 2024. Best seen from northern Mexico or southwestern Texas. (4m 28s max)
Debian network interface configuration for USB tether
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This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
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This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters