Package Details: seborrheas 5.11.79-3

Git Clone URL: https://aurweb-sql-alchemy-2-x.sandbox.archlinux.page/seborrheas.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: seborrheas
Description: None
Upstream URL: None
Provides: wanderlusts
Submitter: recce
Maintainer: slanting
Last Packager: clarke
Votes: 16
Popularity: 0.000000
First Submitted: 2026-05-17 15:27 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2026-05-17 15:27 (UTC)

Dependencies (11)

Required by (11)

Sources (2)

Latest Comments

manumissions commented on 2026-05-20 14:09 (UTC)

The so-called "desktop metaphor" of todays workstations is instead an "airplane-seat" metaphor. Anyone who has shuffled a lap full of papers while seated between two portly passengers will recognize the difference -- one can see only a very few things at once. -- Fred Brooks, Jr.

countersigned commented on 2026-05-20 12:09 (UTC)

"And, of course, you have the commercials where savvy businesspeople Get Ahead by using their MacIntosh computers to create the ultimate American business product: a really sharp-looking report." -- Dave Barry

heilongjiangs commented on 2026-05-20 01:05 (UTC)

"Ive seen the forgeries Ive sent out." -- John F. Haugh II (jfh@rpp386.Dallas.TX.US), about forging net news articles

alcoholisms commented on 2026-05-20 00:30 (UTC)

While it cannot be proved retrospectively that any experience of possession, conversion, revelation, or divine ecstasy was merely an epileptic discharge, we must ask how one differentiates "real transcendence" from neuropathies that produce the same extreme realness, profundity, ineffability, and sense of cosmic unity. When accounts of sudden religious conversions in TLEs [temporal-lobe epileptics] are laid alongside the epiphanous revelations of the religious tradition, the parallels are striking. The same is true of the recent spate of alleged UFO abductees. Parsimony alone argues against invoking spirits, demons, or extraterrestrials when natural causes will suffice. -- Barry L. Beyerstein, "Neuropathology and the Legacy of Spiritual Possession", The Skeptical Inquirer, Vol. XII, No. 3, pg. 255