What does ~rogbeer put here?2018-10-08T05:52:05+00:00http://tilde.townTony Chenphtan90@gmail.comSetting this up with Jekyll2018-10-04T00:00:00+00:00http://tilde.town/2018/10/04/jekyll<p>I thought I would post about the resources that I have had the privilege to
refer to, in trying out the static-site generator Jekyll and one of the themes
for it, Poole.</p>
<h3 id="resources">Resources</h3>
<p>In no particular order,</p>
<ol>
<li>Lande, J. (2014). ‘How I Created a Beautiful and Minimal Blog Using Jekyll, Github Pages, and poole’. URL: <a href="http://joshualande.com/jekyll-github-pages-poole">http://joshualande.com/jekyll-github-pages-poole</a>. Accessed URL on 4th Oct 2018.</li>
<li><a href="http://tilde.town/~resir014">Resi</a>. (2016). ‘Jekyll and tilde.town’. In <em>tilde.town</em> (Issue 2), pp. 5 to 9. URL: <a href="https://github.com/tildetown/zine/blob/master/issue_2/zine.pdf">https://github.com/tildetown/zine/blob/master/issue_2/zine.pdf</a>. Accessed URL on 4th OCt 2018.</li>
<li>Moore, P. (2014). ‘Clearing Up Confusion Around baseurl – Again’. URL: <a href="https://byparker.com/blog/2014/clearing-up-confusion-around-baseurl/">https://byparker.com/blog/2014/clearing-up-confusion-around-baseurl/</a>. Accessed URL on 4th Oct 2018.</li>
</ol>
A new way? nineteenth of March 2018: Night2018-03-19T00:00:00+00:00http://tilde.town/2018/03/19/night<p>When did it become an assumption that I have to have a password on the
Internet or even my desktop-computer? I was inspired to think if
something has gone wrong, in the design of Internet-and-computer
technologies, when I realised that an engineering problem - how to
display certain information on a web-site - could possibly be solved by
letting users run commands on the server (as opposed as viewing data on
a client) Passwords, levels of privilege, ‘admininistrator-rights’ -
don’t all these scream ‘I don’t trust you. I don’t trust others’ Now is
that what I want in my life, I ask. Do I want to indirectly say ‘I don’t
trust others’ every time I use a technology. Or do I want to spend time
building (trust in) relationships that arguably are made and broken by
(mutual) trust. Does using technology necessarily mean that I have to
give up on trust and/or trust-building. Is it possible we could find a
new way to use technology so that we find the satisfaction (and
intimacy) that comes from a rewarding relationship with a something. A
god. A business-partner. So on and so forth.</p>
fifteenth of March 2018: Sunny2018-03-15T00:00:00+00:00http://tilde.town/2018/03/15/sunny10th November 2016: Rainy2016-11-10T00:00:00+00:00http://tilde.town/2016/11/10/rainy<p>I’m suffering. They are suffering.</p>
<p>How to put an end to suffering? For myself.</p>
<p>Others can try out my methods if they want.</p>
<p>And of course they have to find out their own way.</p>
<p>Kodo Suzuki Roshi said that adults have to become like children, and children have to become like adults,
for children to grow. Apparently, he said that.</p>
<p>If I were a foster parent of all these lovable children in the world, my impending death is something
I have to deal with. Preparations have to be made for other people to help all these children grow,
so that my death will not stop their growth.</p>
<p>Yes, as Jobs said, death means having to tell your children what you thought you would
have the rest of your life so tell.</p>
<p>THere is a temple called Antaiji in Japan. The people there practice zazen that is good for nothing.</p>
<p>There is a person who is helping people to find a suitable livelihood. She also practises Zen. Her
book is a work-in-progress. It is predicted to be published in Fall 2017. Her name is Maia Duerr.</p>
<p>There are people who teach Zen in Singapore. Their names are Vivienne and Boey Wah Keong.</p>
<p>They will do what I amy not have the time to do. At least, they can do what I may run out of time to do.</p>
<p>Zazen is good for nothing. It is the way to liberate-save suffering people-human. Suzuki Roshi
said that.</p>