New Year’s Note

Posted in Personal by Thomas Themel on December 31, 2005.

Funny New Year’s Fact for my fellow Austrians: Austria’s most popular new year’s tune (so sue me) was originally performed with a satiric choir ridiculing the sorry state of Austrian politics and the expected invasion by the Prussians after the famous defeat at Königgrätz.

Without getting into any depressing detail about current Austrian politics, I think it ought to be sung nowadays more than ever. Stolen straight from here:


Wiener seid froh

Oho, wieso

No so blickt nur um!

I bitt’, warum?

Ein Schimmer des Lichts

Wir seh’n noch nichts.

Ei, Fasching ist da!

Ah so, na ja!

Drum trotzet der Zeit

Der Trübseligkeit.

Ah! Das wär g’scheidt!

Was nützt das Bedauern

Das Trauern

Drum froh und lustig seid.

|: Ehrt das Faschingsrecht,

   Wenn auch noch so schlecht

   Die Finanzen,

   Laßt uns tanzen;

   Heut zu Tage schwitzt

   Wer im Zimmer sitzt,

   G’rad so wie der Tänzer-Schwall

   Auf’n Ball. :|


|: Der Bauer kratzt sich sehr,

   Daß die Zeiten gar so schwer,

   Nimmt sich an Rand mit G’walt

   Zum Steueramt rennt er halt

   Hin und zahlt. : |

Das Geld ist jetzt hin, das is g’wiß

Das geb’ns nit mehr heraus,

So weil jetzt der Fasching g’rad is,

Ist Ball im G’moanwirtshaus;

S’gibt saubre Diarndl’n noch

An G’strampften tanzen wir doch

Wann uns das Geld auch fehlt.

Es hat ja fast d’ganze Welt

Kein Geld!


Ein dicker Hausherr, der ärgert sich sehr,

Es steh’n im Haus alle Wohnungen leer,

S’macht nix, er geht trotz seiner Gall

Halt doch auf’n Maskenball.

Fehl’n auch sechs Zinsparteien

G’steigert wern d’Andern halt

Morg’n zieht a Künstler ein,

Der aber g’wiß nix zahlt,

Pfänd’t man, ist’s ärgerlich,

D’Leut hab’n nix hint und vorn

So denkt der Hausherr sich

Und tanzt voll Zorn.


Der Künstler fühlt in der Grazien Näh’

Wohl sich und weh

Wie’s Fischlein im See

Verkörpert sieht er im heitersten Strahl

Sein längst schon geträumtes Ideal

Er ist’s, dem die Musen die Stirne geküßt,

S’Leben versüßt,

Den die Schönheit begrüßt

Wo Freude und Liebe erblühen im Keim,

Fühlt sich der Künstler daheim.

Rasch im Schwung,

Frisch und jung

Kündet meisterlich

Jeder Künstler sich,

Drum mit Recht steht die Kunst

Bei den Damen in so hoher Gunst.


Selbst die politischen, kritischen Herr’n

Drehen weise im Kreise sich gern,

Wenn auch scheinbar bewegend sich keck,

Kommen sie doch niemals vom Fleck,

Wie sie so walzen, versalzen sie meist

Trotz der Mühen die Brühen im Geist

Wie’s auch Noten schreib’n noch so so exakt

Kommen’s leider Gott stets aus dem Takt.

D’rum nur zu

Tanzt ohne Rast und Ruh’,

Nützet den Augenblick,

Denn sein Glück

Kehrt nicht zurück.

Nützt in Eil’

Das was Euch heut zu Theil,

Denn die Zeit entflieht

Und die Rose der Freude verblüht.

D’rum tanzt, ja tanzt, ja tanzt

Happy 2006, everyone.

Paul Graham on Wealth

Posted in Link Spam, Technology by Thomas Themel on December 22, 2005.

Paul Graham has posted a new essay from his book on his web site – How to Make Wealth. While long-time fans of Graham will find little new in there, it’s another fine summarization of why you really want to work in a startup if you think yourself smarter than average, with some nice clarifications about the role of wealth creation in getting rich:

There are a lot of ways to get rich, and this essay is about only one of them. This essay is about how to make money by creating wealth and getting paid for it. There are plenty of other ways to get money, including chance, speculation, marriage, inheritance, theft, extortion, fraud, monopoly, graft, lobbying, counterfeiting, and prospecting. Most of the greatest fortunes have probably involved several of these.

The advantage of creating wealth, as a way to get rich, is not just that it’s more legitimate (many of the other methods are now illegal) but that it’s more straightforward. You just have to do something people want.

Moving On

Posted in Personal by Thomas Themel on December 19, 2005.

Today is the first work day in a long time that I have no lectures to attend or deadlines to fear in a long time. Consequently, the need to tinker with stuff that works reasonably well is growing again, and I’m taking some recent trouble with my Dynamic DNS as a reason to move this site.

Until today, Wannabe Everything was hosted on spartakus, a custom-built power horse consisting of our very first 486′s frame and power supply, the motherboard and CPU of my 1995 Pentium and some spare drives that somehow washed up on the shores of my hardware collection. To keep with the professionalism of the hardware, the uplink was a consumer DSL line with changing IP addresses and a DDNS name.

Much as I like this setup, some recent hardware trouble highlighted the difficulty in relying on technology that is not quite mainstream – replacing a crashed hard disk in a machine whose BIOS is so broken that it can’t boot syslinux and freezes if it recognizes a hard disk of more than 32 GB capacigty is a bit more of a disruption than I’m willing to endure. Combined with the fact that I have access to not only one, but two colocated servers, I decided to move the site – the new URL is weblog.themel.com, or blog.themel.com for those who still type in URLs by hand and are more offended by two extra characters than by trendy web lingo.

TU Wien WLAN Authenticator

Posted in Technology by Thomas Themel on December 15, 2005.

I’ve finally found time to clean up and complete the Perl mess that I’m using to automagically auhenticate to the TU Wien wireless network. The result is here, have fun and tell me what’s wrong with it.

Meeting Grandpa

Posted in Technology by Thomas Themel on December 8, 2005.

My girlfriend recently got hold of an IBM ThinkPad 701 CS laptop from 1995. Its tech specs are rather crushing (75 MHz 486, 8 MB RAM, 430 MB HDD), and it’s in rather bad shape, but I still love it because of the sheer geekery of the keyboard [movie].

Here are some more hastily taken pictures comparing it with my X40 (the ten-year old thing actually has less footprint, though it’s about twice as thick) and showing some details of the fold-out keyboard.

Ah, they just don’t make ‘em like that anymore…

Interesting Reading: Nick Szabo

Posted in Link Spam by Thomas Themel on December 4, 2005.

Via MR, I stumbled across Nick Szabo’s Essays, Papers, and Concise Tutorials. I vaguely remember reading some of Nick’s posts to cypherpunks, but I hadn’t got around to reading the stuff on this page until recently. It’s a very impressive combination of computer science, history and economics, and really interesting to read. As a starting point, I recommend A Measure of Sacrifice, which describes the economic effects of the development of modern time-keeping devices on medieval society..

As noted on the site, Nick also blogs at Unenumerated. Notable posts, just from the front page: Negative rights and the United States Constitution, a reminder of what distinguishes enforcable rights like freedom of speech from nebulous rights like "the right to work". Patent goo: Self-replicating Paxil about the legal implications of self-replicating crystals.