Sunnanvind

It's the stuff dreams are made of.

Fabric of reality

Everything is a dream, but that kind of doesn't matter. Put it this way: Even if the windfish is in name only, it is a metaphor that is the world. Metaphors are true in some sense, false in some sense, meaningless in some sense, true and false in some sense, true and meaningless in some sense, false and meaningless in some sense and true, false and meaningless in some sense.

On computers

For those who wonder what this page is made of; what OS I'm running and such trivialities...
The page is made under Windows, with a text editor I've modified with a lot of macros (Arachnophilia). Most of the original pages were written as RTF-files and converted, but all of the code has changed since then. It doesn't really matter what you run, the coolest computer is still Game Boy. Dot Matrix with Stereo Sound - it doesn't get hipper than that. Not that I want to advertise anything, there's a bug in my GBC; noise when I'm playing the black/transparent cartridges and using the headphone out. It may be present only in the earliest releases.
I've used Unix a lot as well, it's a nice OS - especially the licenses (BSD and GPL). I've tried BeOS but it wasn't my thing, really.

On HTML

It should be possible to view the page using any browser, I've only checked it in IE , Amaya, Lynx, Mozilla, Netscape and Opera so far, but of course it's best viewed with PinealWeb. Use whatever resolution you're comfortable with. I'm trying to keep the page simple, like using <EM> instead of <I>. The idea is to use the markup tags to describe what the elements really are; and then add style sheets for formatting and other fancy stuff. In that way I gain complete backwards compability, and when I want to change the design, I don't have to fiddle with the contents and vice versa. I've yet to find drawbacks with the method. Oh, and the pages seem to be faster this way, too.

©Sunnanvind Briling 1999 and forward (in the the improbable case of this page surviving the Y2K )
To the main page. To a fate-chosen page.