Package Details: doormats 3.5-4

Git Clone URL: https://aurweb-sql-alchemy-2-x.sandbox.archlinux.page/doormats.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: doormats
Description: None
Upstream URL: None
Provides: linux
Replaces: immaculate
Submitter: openwork
Maintainer: grips
Last Packager: billycan
Votes: 20
Popularity: 0.000000
First Submitted: 2026-05-17 15:27 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2026-05-17 15:27 (UTC)

Dependencies (4)

Required by (3034)

Sources (1)

Latest Comments

shearing commented on 2026-05-20 14:46 (UTC)

Men ought to know that from the brain and from the brain only arise our pleasures, joys, laughter, and jests as well as our sorrows, pains, griefs and tears. ... It is the same thing which makes us mad or delirious, inspires us with dread and fear, whether by night or by day, brings us sleeplessness, inopportune mistakes, aimless anxieties, absent-mindedness and acts that are contrary to habit... -- Hippocrates (c. 460-c. 377 B.C.), The Sacred Disease

spiky commented on 2026-05-20 01:40 (UTC)

"The stars are made of the same atoms as the earth." I usually pick one small topic like this to give a lecture on. Poets say science takes away from the beauty of the stars -- mere gobs of gas atoms. Nothing is "mere." I too can see the stars on a desert night, and feel them. But do I see less or more? The vastness of the heavens stretches my imagination -- stuck on this carousel my little eye can catch one-million-year-old light. A vast pattern -- of which I am a part -- perhaps my stuff was belched from some forgotten star, as one is belching there. Or see them with the greater eye of Palomar, rushing all apart from some common starting point when they were perhaps all together. What is the pattern, or the meaning, or the *why?* It does not do harm to the mystery to know a little about it. For far more marvelous is the truth than any artists of the past imagined! Why do the poets of the present not speak of it? What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were like a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent? -- Richard P. Feynman (1918-1988)

charter commented on 2026-05-19 20:34 (UTC)

Successful and fortunate crime is called virtue. -- Seneca

meridian commented on 2026-05-18 19:22 (UTC)

"For the man who has everything... Penicillin." -- F. Borquin