South Park: Elnaz is creating South Park characters for every friend and colleague we have. The real interesting thing is that I had created a south park character for myself long ago (using the original thing from the south park studios website), when Elnaz wasn't home for a few days and I had gone back to some of my old bad habits. So, this is me according to myself nine months ago, and this is me according to Elnaz today. Compare and wonder!
No email from the German embassy yet, for the appointment time I had requested. Sara has gone to the embassy, to see what she can do, either trying to arrange an appointment during the time the embassy staff allow for "asking questions", or finding people lingering outside who offer "services".
Update: She's back. It seems that the phone system at the embassy is broken, so things are not as bad as they looked. They have then introduced a certain office near the embassy that does insurance and appointment reservations.
The office could do nothing special, it seems. They simply email the embassy, like we've done. Well, when she asked what may be the difference, they said "We provide printouts of the emails!"
Well, if you want to hear more horror stories about GUADEC organizing (and my visa problems), come around on #guadec on "irc.gimp.org".
The good news is that an email address was also posted on the bulletin board at the embassy, next to the phone number. I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
Someone asked me what does my first name, "Roozbeh", mean. Well, in Persian, it means prosperity.
But last night I came to the idea that it really means "Guevara": It is the family name of a famous Iranian communist gurilla fighter of the 1970s, Khosrow Roozbeh, who was considered the #1 enemy of the Shah and somehow the Iranian version of Che. Roozbeh was finally arrested and executed by the Pahlavi government, after several unsuccessful attempts, one of which involved changing him with someone who looked very similar to him in the high-security prison. Many Iranian men born in late 1970s and early 1980s are named Roozbeh (I once had two friends, both from the same high school and the same department in the same university as me, both named Roozbeh and friends of each other: imagine the hell when we three met and wanted to talk to each other. No numbering scheme ever worked, of course.), but happily not anyone in the free software world that I know.
And no, I don't understand either Khosrow Roozbeh or Che Guevara. I don't believe I like them either.
Apparently This guy is wondering about the cheap Iranian medicine he got in Iraq, and the commentors are worried about the quality.
What I know from living my whole life in Iran, is that the painkillers, the anti-depressants and such are in very good quality, while the supplements (vitamins and mineral tablets, etc.) are not comparable: the previous generation of the family, my mom, my aunt, ... always ask for certain supplements when I travel abroad for meetings and conferences.
As for patents and Iran, we even have a law for software patents! We couldn't subvert the law process (I've personally tried), but I am very happy to say that not a single software patent has been granted yet (our company's chairman is a member that grants them). The committee is very knowledged, and has not bent to the demands yet. The only thing they are worried about: people filing suits against the committee for not granting them the patents they "deserve"! (One example of a recent patent request: Distributing Newspapers on CDs instead of Paper.)
For other kinds of patents, the process is less restrictive, but more interesting. If you "invent" something, you can go and file the patent, putting all the documentation in a pack. It won't even be read, let alone made public. It will be kept in a safe place, and only used when you sue someone of infringing. If that happens, and it is proved that the infringer knowingly did it reverse-engineering your product, not inventing it independently (and of course that yours is original), you will win the case.
New HTML Parser: The long-awaited libxml2 based HTML parser code is live. It needs further work but already handles most markup better than the original parser.
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