Saturday, October 27, 2001
During lunch yesterday seeking some solitude from the office I wandered into the Oakville library. Just as I was heading out from there, I saw a sign mentioning that there was a book sale in the auditorium downstairs. Turns out there’s an organization called “The Friends of the Library”, and a small hall was filled with books, consisting of discards from the library and donations from the “friends”. The books were being sold by the pound, at a cost of a dollar a pound.
I didn’t have a lot of money with me (and I still wanted to get lunch), so I was perhaps more choosy than I otherwise would have been. There was a lot of stuff that were deservedly discards, both from the library and its friends, but I did manage to come away with three-and-a-half pounds worth of books.
Here’s what I picked up:
- Monty Python’s Flying Circus: All the Words (Vol. 1), by Graham Chapman et al
- Just Six Numbers: The Deep Forces that Shape the Universe, by Martin Rees
- The Mahogany Tree: An Informal History of Punch, by Arthur Pragar
It’s a pretty motley collection of books, isn’t it?
I found the Rees book while looking through a science section of books. I had picked up a book on astronomy when an older fellow with a large wine-glass birthmark covering his left check asked me whether I liked astronomy. I had a brief chat with him, though I was a bit diffident, as I was really not in a mood to chat at the time. He was clearly interested in meeting somebody else with that interest, though my mind somehow wasn’t in the right “gear” to talk about astronomy at that moment. Subsequently I feel a bit bad at ending the conversation peremptorily. If I run into him again I’ll stick around and chat more.
Tree Damage
Turns out I was wrong when I said the other day that the large tree branch that fell down didn’t do any damage. I notice last evening some blue tarpaulin flapping in the steady wind on the roof of the house that got whacked. It doesn’t seem too bad, but it must’ve given the people inside the house at the time a real jolt.
The Book
Last night I did more serious work on the revised CSS book. Yesterday I discovered a more definitive listing online detailing not only Internet Explorer extensions to CSS, but some for Netscape Navigator (based on material from Mozilla builds) as well. I am leaning towards the idea of integrating everything: CSS1, CSS2, CSS extensions and draft CSS3 into one whopping section instead of dividing things up. The idea would be to base individual chapters listing a family of similar properties, and then simply point out which spec individual properties belong to. Am going to re-draft my outline, more to see where everything would fit.
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