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I have no idea yet just what this will be about, but I'm sure something will develop.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

That 2004 post is very dated now, in 2007, although more than one link in it is still live.

Interesting electronic places to interact in or on continue to proliferate, even as my list of physical places to visit grows ever longer.

Cybersethia is a very changed place, while I've since discovered The Daily Grail and Comment is Free's blog section , among others.

Meanwhile, my own circa-1997-style website, RealityTest, changes too, but quite slowly.

Bill

Thursday, January 01, 2004

New Year's Day, 2004

The last thing I need is yet another place to post my writing, but all attempts to access my friend Gina's blog site fail -- instead of the site, I arrive at E Blogger's New Blogger page.

Gina had referenced her blog in a post to the RealityTest mailing list, a list I moderate associated with the ever expanding cosmos of cyberSethia, a realm of cyberspace inhabited by enthusiasts of the Seth material
(see the RealityTest Resources page for some background information regarding Seth).

I have been interacting in this zone since 1995; subbing to the very first Internet Seth list so long ago was really no different from passing through a very strange doorway, but it is exactly such doorways which make life interesting. (The latest twist to this adventure is the appearance of my "Loose in Time" column in Tom Bauer's SethWeb News.)

I am hoping that registering and starting yet another blog will enable me to visit Gina's site.

I first met Gina, live and in-person, in Central Park, New York, on a hot and muggy August day at the rendevous location for The Great Coordination Point Expedition, an ancient obelisk, known as "Cleopatra's Needle." (The obelisk is twin to one in London, both actually wrought for Thutmose III, not Cleopatra.) I intend to add the notes from that expedition to the above GCPE site soon.

So here I find myself, "blogging," as if the column, the websites, the yet-to-be-launched RealityTest Explorer, and the dozen or so mailing lists I am already adding my thoughts to are not enough.

Bill

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