Ranking for Tagore settings, continued

“Tagore settings” moved at Lycos from 14th to the 19th position, and at AllTheWeb even more: from 9th till 21th position. Clearly, the ranking mechanism is totally different then that of Google (and AOL), where it ranks still at first postion!

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Big companies equal big countries

A recent report from UNCTAD provides a list of 100 countries and companies, in order of its contribution to the world economy. There are 29 companies amongst them! First, at 45, is Exxon, which is a bigger contributor then Pakistan. The Netherlands is at 15, Royal Dutch at 62 (7th company)

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Moselbahn

This summer, my family and I stayed near Leiwen, in Germany, a small town on the right bank of the river Moselle. One of the things I like to notice in a landscape are tracks of a recent past, which are invisible, unless you look very carefully. In this case, it became clear to me that once there was a railway: in Leiwen there exists a Bahnhofstrasse (Station street). I found the evidence in the Heimatmuseum in the town of Neumagen-Dhron (first picture). There is a room dedicated to the history of the line, once known as the Moselbahn. Of course the museum contains also rooms dedicated to the wine business, and to the rich Roman history of this district.

After seeing the photographs in the small exibition, I came to realise that the strange arched wall alongside the road Leiwen – Neumagen (picture at right, near Trittenheim) was in fact the remaining understructure of the former railroad.

Neumagen - Heimatmuseum
The Heimatmuseum (district’s museum) of Neumagen-Dhron, with in the back, the forest and vineyards across the Moselle
.

remains of railway understructure
The remaining understructure of the railway track, near Trittenheim, with on the right, in the middle, the remains of a small, metal viaduct (see next picture)

railway track Moselle
The remains of a small viaduct, in the direction of Leiwen, now in use as an unofficial lavatory to the many cyclists…

A few days later, during a brief visit to Bernkastel-Kues, we left our car in the busy car-park on the river bank, where the ferries embark. That happened to be the former station yard, with the Railway station turned into a restaurant.

The Moselle track has been partly turned into a cycle path. And very popular too, as it offers a beautiful, scenic view of the Moselle valley, with its forests and vineyards, and all the small towns.

Station Bernkastel
The former Station of Bernkastel, now turned into a restaurant
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History of the Moselbahn

The first track, Trier-Leiwen, was opened on 2 April 1903, with the final track, Bernkastel-Bullay, opened 19 Augst 1905 (link to info on the complete track). The track was built, after long discussions (in German), as standard gauge. Link to an overview of literature on this railway. There exists a video from an SFB tv-series. Here an interview (in German, dated 16 March 2002) with the last driver, Otto Heydt.

The railway played an important role in the development of the Moselle wine-industry. It was shut down in the sixties, like so many other railways, with the last track, Trier-Neumagen, being closed on 31 January 1968.

That was the end of a railway which time-table read like a wine-card. Only who looks carefully at the landscape now, will catch a glimpse of its old glory.


Bernkastel-Kues, 1930

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Editing blogpost containing table

Editing the table in previous post gives me some problems. Hopefully, nobody sees a distorted page. Seems to be an interference with the Blogger HTML, probably due to all code within these links…

Two days later, I have found IE5.5 with NT to be the problem. Working with WIN98+IE5.5 gives no problems. Of course, now I have to check again my other pc, on XP+IE6. At least, I am rid of the worsest look of the table

Checking the appearance of buttons with NT and IE5.5 in Blogger: they still don’t appear. So be it.

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Searching for Tagore settings

Yesterday, I conducted a little test to see where I pop up in search engines. I did make use of the list of major search engines from Search EngineWeb and checked for “Tagore settings”, a page on music set to or inspired by words of Rabindranath Tagore, the Indian poet and 1913 Nobel laureate.

Why do I want a high ranking? Well, I need input from others. While doing this little survey, I came across still further useful info!

Search Engine Results for 6 August 2002
AllTheWeb no.9 for Lindo’s blog
AltaVista
AOL Search no.1 for Tagore page & no.2 for Lindo’s blog
Ask Jeeves
Google no.1 for Tagore page & no.2 for Lindo’s blog
HotBot
Inktomi N/A ?
LookSmart
Lycos no.14 (page 2) for Lindo’s blog
MSN
Netscape
Open Directory
Yahoo!

Some conclusions: I need to get listed in the Open Directory, and figure out why AltaVista and Yahoo! miss me completely. Further, I need to get listed in the Google’s directory. Work ahead.

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Googling Tagore settings

This week I found out that googling “Tagore settings” will lead directly towards my Tagore project. This week, I also got a first reaction from one of the contemporary composers on the list, Tajo Kadajas, adding some missing bio details.

I realised this moring, that the most important composer is missing from the list of composers: Tagore himself! He is also the one with most of the settings, so much work is ahead…

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Remarkable

Remarkable 1: remittances of immigrants from third world countries form a substantial part of the GDP for most of those countries. In some cases this money flow is even the biggest, or almost the biggest part of the GDP! see ILO site. One recommendation to labor-exporting countries is to introduce micro-finance intermediaries, because savings/remittances of their expats are not always invested well. Expats are not always also good enterpreneurs.

Remarkable 2: Moving all trade barriers would be benefiting for most African countries, with the exception of eight. For those, more competition would lead to higher import prices because they cannot produce enough added value. See LEI (Wageningen Univ.)

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Genealogy operational

Finally something to blog: my genealogy is operational. Still in its infancy, but nevertheless another project being started: genea.lindosblog.com

I also published new pages in the airblog reports, and included a link to it from the projects page.

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In between..

At last I did find some time to adjust my settings for this blog. Most work went into scaling up the Tagore page. When you come across this page, well, hello. But, sorry, so much time goes into these projects, no time and energy is left to blog in this blog itself. So be it.

In the mean time, I am reading “Religions, Values, and Peak-Experiences” by Maslow. Yes that’s the same person who gave us “self-actualisation”. One conclusion: value-free education and value-free science are no good option, as are orthodox religions.

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Learning Dutch? The “IJ” disaster…

Want to learn (the) Dutch? Look what Steven Pemberton, back in 1993, had to say on the “IJ disaster” and the “-isch stupidity” and many more.

Want to know about the history of the Dutch language? See an overview originally published by the Vienna University, now (2011) at the Berlin University, author Matthias Hüning.

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