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- e-mail
- aswang@earthlink.net
- AIM
- nananaginip
- Yahoo
- nananaginip
- ICQ
- 22085331
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Arma virumque cano Troiae qui primus ab
oris
Italiam, fato profugus, Laviniaque venit
litora, multum ille et terris iactatus et alto
vi superum saevae memorem Iunonis ob iram
multa quoque et bello passus, dum conderet urbem
inferretque deos Latio, genus unde Latinum
Albanique patres, atque altae moenia Romae
These are the opening verses of the epic poem
The Aeneid by the Roman poet Vergil.
A rough translation: I sing of arms, and a man who first came
from the shores of Troy to Italy, exiled by fate, he comes to the
beaches of Lavinia. The powerful might of cruel Juno has thrown him
about through many lands and through the deeps, on the account of
her unforgotten wrath; through many wars he suffered, during which
time he founded the city, and he brought forth his gods into
Latium, from where the Latin race came, and the Albanian fathers,
and the walls of high Rome.
Fato profugus means "exiled by Fate." I feel that I have
been compelled to take the path I have taken by forces beyond my
control. This site is my attempt at finding some sort of linearity
in this otherwise chaotic universe.
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The short version
I am a first-year medical student at Finch University of Health Sciences/The
Chicago Medical School who likes writing and screwing around
with my computer.
The long version
I'll get to it someday.
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I can't really explain exactly what an aswang is. Some
describe them generically as sorcerors and witches or warlocks.
Others equate them with vampires originating from Eastern Europe
and similarly use garlic and crosses to keep them away. Others
conflate them with the mananangal , a creature found also in
Japanese mythology (I forget the name), which is a normal human
during the day, but at night, the head and viscera detach from the
legs and can fly around, eventually perching on the chimney of some
unsuspecting pregnant woman and using its incredibly long tongue to
suck the fetus out of her womb.
Why an aswang? Well, I got tired of my AD&Dish
e-mail address in college, sorceror@uclink2.berkeley.edu (now long
defunct) and I guess I wanted to name myself after a peculiarly
Filipino mythological creature. Perhaps it was also an expression
of my subconcious self-criticism of my artistic aspirations. I long
to create original work, but somehow I always end up feeding off of
others.
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This website is best viewed with a browser that is capable of
utilizing Cascading Style Sheets, i.e., Netscape Navigator 4.0 or
higher or Internet Explorer 4.0 or higher. I have tested this
website mostly with Galeon, an open-source web
browser that utilizes the Mozilla rendering engine, and requires
GNOME.
In theory, this means that Mozilla (milestone 18 or higher)
and/or a Netscape 6.0 would
also be good choices.
For the most part, I have edited the pages of this site
using Emacs.
Images were generated and/or processed with the GIMP.
For offline testing purposes, I am running an Apache Webserver on my Linux box, which
simplifies things a bit.
A few of these pages (and eventually, hopefully, most of these
pages) were originally written in XML and transformed into HTML via
XSLT and Xalan,
Apache's XSL processor which depends on Xerces, Apache's XML parser.
It's a bit convoluted, but I think it will be worth it in the long
run.
Finally, the whole thing is all really held together by some
Perl and bash (Bourne-again
shell) scripts, for miscellaneous preprocessing tasks. They work
just like duct tape. I'll put my sources up someday just for the
hell of it, but they really are ugly, ugly kludges, and it would be
great if you could suggest to me a better way to maintain this
site.
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I disclaim all responsibility for any liability, loss, injury or
damage incurred as a consequence, directly or indirectly, of the
use and application of the information on this site.
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