My apologies to anyone who tried to download and open that
zip file. I tried uploading and downloading it a few times
and same thing: corruption. So I've gone back to my trusty
old tar.gz format, which works fine:

   http://purl.org/ceryle/misc/xindice-img.tar.gz

What the heck actually happened I dunno. It worked fine with
ftp directly, but not with a browser...

Murray Altheim wrote:
Vadim Gritsenko wrote:

The Apache Xindice team is pleased to announce the release of the
next version of the Xindice native XML database:

                Apache Xindice 1.1b4

This is the fourth release in the series of 1.1 beta releases.
Xindice 1.1b4 offers numerous bug fixes and improvements over
the last beta release. Some new features and enhancements were
introduced as well.

[...]

Vadim,

I'd just like to say thanks and congratulations to you and all who
put in so much effort to get this latest release together. The
Xindice project is definitely on its feet again, and seems to be
once again an improvement over the previous release.

I couldn't find a little Xindice badge icon, so I've created a
few (including one animated one) and posted a zipfile at
>
[...]

These are a donation to the project, so feel free to do what you like with them in promoting Xindice.

Murray

......................................................................
Murray Altheim                    http://kmi.open.ac.uk/people/murray/
Knowledge Media Institute
The Open University, Milton Keynes, Bucks, MK7 6AA, UK               .

    An Australian scientist says studying the kangaroo genome might
    help scientists modify genes in cows so that they produce highly
    nutritious milk.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3604045.stm

    Do we really want this kind of nonsense? What animal has more
    common sense than genetic scientists, such that we can implant
    a gene or two?





--

Murray

......................................................................
Murray Altheim                    http://kmi.open.ac.uk/people/murray/
Knowledge Media Institute
The Open University, Milton Keynes, Bucks, MK7 6AA, UK               .

  An Australian scientist says studying the kangaroo genome might
  help scientists modify genes in cows so that they produce highly
  nutritious milk.
  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3604045.stm

  Do we really want this kind of nonsense? What animal has more
  common sense than genetic scientists, such that we can implant
  a gene or two?



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