Kopimi

We have a new religion in Sweden. It is called Kopimi and these are it’s four basic tenets:

 

1. All knowledge to all.
2. The search for knowledge is sacred.
3. The circulation of knowledge is sacred.
4. The act of copying is sacred.
- wikipedia

The religion seems to be spreading fast over the net. Here is for example the Indian version. So it is easy to see the tongue-in-cheek humour, but what is your reaction? Here are some reactions I can think of. (Vote on G+.)
a) Good: This is awesome. I am a/will convert!
b) Neutral: This is like a lolcat. Another blip passing by on the Interwebs.
c) Bad: Please, don’t encourage others to mix religion and politics. We have had some 2000+ years of that already.
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The origins of punctuation marks

It feels strange to imagine the written language without/before our punctuation marks. Makes me wonder what kind of signs our children (or children’s children…) would feel that they can’t live without.

Question Mark ?
Origin: When early scholars wrote in Latin, they would place the word questio – meaning “question” – at the end of a sentence to indicate a query. To conserve valuable space, writing it was soon shortened to qo, which caused another problem – readers might mistake it for the ending of a word. So they squashed the letters into a symbol: a lowercased q on top of an o. Over time the o shrank to a dot and the q to a squiggle, giving us our current question mark.

Exclamation Point !
Origin: Like the question mark, the exclamation point was invented by stacking letters. The mark comes from the Latin word io, meaning “exclamation of joy.” Written vertically, with the i above the o, it forms the exclamation point we use today.

Equal Sign =
Origin: Invented by Welsh mathematician Robert Recorde in 1557, with this rationale: “I will settle as I doe often in woorke use, a paire of paralleles, or Gmowe [i.e., twin] lines of one length, thus : , bicause noe 2 thynges, can be more equalle.” His equal signs were about five times as long as the current ones, and it took more than a century for his sign to be accepted over its rival: a strange curly symbol invented by Descartes.

Ampersand &
Origin: This symbol is stylized et, Latin for “and.” Although it was invented by the Roman scribe Marcus Tullius Tiro in the first century B.C., it didn’t get its strange name until centuries later. In the early 1800s, schoolchildren learned this symbol as the 27th letter of the alphabet: X, Y, Z, &. But the symbol had no name. So, they ended their ABCs with “and, per se, and” meaning “&, which means ‘and.’” This phrase was slurred into one garbled word that eventually caught on with everyone: ampersand.

Octothorp #
Origin: The odd name for this ancient sign for numbering derives from thorpe, the Old Norse word for a village or farm that is often seen in British placenames. The symbol was originally used in mapmaking, representing a village surrounded by eight fields, so it was named the octothorp. – from GooglePlus

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Ayurveda Maharun Yatra

Active Ayurvedist OrganizationOn the 16th to 18th December there will be an Ayurveda seminar in Ahmedabad. It is arranged by the “Active Ayurvedist Organization – International” and some of the prominent speakers are Bhagvan Dash and S.N. Gupta.

I will unfortunately not be able to go myself but I have some friends from the Gujarat Ayurved University who will. If you are a student at the GAU but are not sure who is going yet I can give you more information. Contacting me is easiest through G+.