Package Details: slipcovers 9.16.53-6

Git Clone URL: https://aurweb-sql-alchemy-2-x.sandbox.archlinux.page/viols.git (read-only, click to copy)
Package Base: viols
Description: None
Upstream URL: None
Provides: commissionaire, recur
Replaces: pompositys, romps
Submitter: subbranchs
Maintainer: taipings
Last Packager: irritabilitys
Votes: 51
Popularity: 0.000000
First Submitted: 2026-05-17 15:27 (UTC)
Last Updated: 2026-05-17 15:27 (UTC)

Dependencies (6)

Required by (16)

Sources (2)

Latest Comments

optometrists commented on 2026-05-20 08:24 (UTC)

Nothing in progression can rest on its original plan. We may as well think of rocking a grown man in the cradle of an infant. -- Edmund Burke

pales commented on 2026-05-19 09:59 (UTC)

"You must learn to run your kayak by a sort of ju-jitsu. You must learn to tell what the river will do to you, and given those parameters see how you can live with it. You must absorb its force and convert it to your users as best you can. Even with the quickness and agility of a kayak, you are not faster than the river, nor stronger, and you can beat it only by understanding it." -- Strung, Curtis and Perry, _Whitewater_

clampdowns commented on 2026-05-19 00:53 (UTC)

"The Amiga is the only personal computer where you can run a multitasking operating system and get realtime performance, out of the box." -- Peter da Silva

interpretations commented on 2026-05-18 14:29 (UTC)

"You need tender loving care once a week - so that I can slap you into shape." -- Ellyn Mustard

anchors commented on 2026-05-18 12:31 (UTC)

"One thing they dont tell you about doing experimental physics is that sometimes you must work under adverse conditions... like a state of sheer terror." -- W. K. Hartmann

tread commented on 2026-05-18 01:43 (UTC)

"I dislike companies that have a we-are-the-high-priests-of-hardware-so-youll- like-what-we-give-you attitude. I like commodity markets in which iron-and- silicon hawkers know that they exist to provide fast toys for software types like me to play with..." -- Eric S. Raymond

bailey commented on 2026-05-17 22:42 (UTC)

Already the spirit of our schooling is permeated with the feeling that every subject, every topic, every fact, every professed truth must be submitted to a certain publicity and impartiality. All proffered samples of learning must go to the same assay-room and be subjected to common tests. It is the essence of all dogmatic faiths to hold that any such "show-down" is sacrilegious and perverse. The characteristic of religion, from their point of view, is that it is intellectually secret, not public; peculiarly revealed, not generally known; authoritatively declared, not communicated and tested in ordinary ways...It is pertinent to point out that, as long as religion is conceived as it is now by the great majority of professed religionists, there is something self-contradictory in speaking of education in religion in the same sense in which we speak of education in topics where the method of free inquiry has made its way. The "religious" would be the last to be willing that either the history of the content of religion should be taught in this spirit; while those to whom the scientific standpoint is not merely a technical device, but is the embodiment of the integrity of mind, must protest against its being taught in any other spirit. -- John Dewey (1859-1953), American philosopher, from "Democracy in the Schools", 1908

dowered commented on 2026-05-17 16:22 (UTC)

Scientists will study your brain to learn more about your distant cousin, Man.

bakeshops commented on 2026-05-17 15:53 (UTC)

"An anthropologist at Tulane has just come back from a field trip to New Guinea with reports of a tribe so primitive that they have Tide but not new Tide with lemon-fresh Borax." -- David Letterman