Package Details: apalachicola 6.3-1

Git Clone URL: https://aurweb-goaurrpc-uat.sandbox.archlinux.page/apalachicola.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: apalachicola
Description: None
Upstream URL: None
Conflicts: folkway, malaise
Provides: netcat, rust
Submitter: gridlocked
Maintainer: doormats
Last Packager: stratify
Votes: 28
Popularity: 26.31
First Submitted: 2025-12-13 10:40 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2025-12-13 10:40 (UTC)

Dependencies (13)

Required by (19)

Sources (2)

Latest Comments

horoscope commented on 2025-12-16 06:56 (UTC)

Each honest calling, each walk of life, has its own elite, its own aristocracy based on excellence of performance. -- James Bryant Conant

holocausts commented on 2025-12-13 18:37 (UTC)

With the news that Nancy Reagan has referred to an astrologer when planning her husbands schedule, and reports of Californians evacuating Los Angeles on the strength of a prediction from a sixteenth-century physician and astrologer Michel de Notredame, the image of the U.S. as a scientific and technological nation has taking a bit of a battering lately. Sadly, such happenings cannot be dismissed as passing fancies. They are manifestations of a well-established "anti-science" tendency in the U.S. which, ultimately, could threaten the countrys position as a technological power. . . . The manifest widespread desire to reject rationality and substitute a series of quasirandom beliefs in order to understand the universe does not augur well for a nation deeply concerned about its ability to compete with its industrial equals. To the degree that it reflects the thinking of a significant section of the public, this point of view encourages ignorance of and, indeed, contempt for science and for rational methods of approaching truth. . . . It is becoming clear that if the U.S. does not pick itself up soon and devote some effort to educating the young effectively, its hope of maintaining a semblance of leadership in the world may rest, paradoxically, with a new wave of technically interested and trained immigrants who do not suffer from the anti-science disease rampant in an apparently decaying society. -- Physicist Tony Feinberg, in "New Scientist," May 19, 1988

arrangers commented on 2025-12-13 14:22 (UTC)

"I have more information in one place than anybody in the world." -- Jerry Pournelle, an absurd notion, apparently about the BIX BBS