Die Juristen in der Verwandtschaft würden mich lebenslang müde belächeln, wenn ich auch nur ansatzweise so verfahren würde.
Category: whatever
nur so
WAP 2.0
Remember the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) for use with mobile phones (a.k.a "wait and pay")? I think I got my first wap-enabled phone – a Nokia 7110 – in the summer of 2000. This **** never really worked though, and besides, since the killer application was missing on the german market (except for MMS, which is based on WAP), I never really used it. Okay, maybe a few times, but that’s about it.*
The irony? After more than 5 years, I eventually found a way to make my humble blog accessible via WAP browsers using this neat plug-in.
Contrary to today’s modern XHTML browsers like the one in my Nokia 6230 (that displays the website just like a browser on your computer – including all the images and thus taking even more ages to load…and load…and load), the rather old-fashioned WAP browser based on WML is much faster. Images aren’t included and you get to see the written content only. Nice!
To access Kikuyumoja’s Realm via mobile phones, just point your mobile phone’s wap browser to the following URL:
https://kikuyumoja.com/wp-wap.php
Actually, it is supposed to be http://wap.uhuru.de for more convenience – but this constellation of a subdomain forwarding to a specific php file somehow doesn’t seem to work the way I want it…aaarrghh! That is, the 1.2 WAP browser on my old Nokia 6310 doesn’t like it – this whole thing only works with WAP 2.0 browsers – which are capable of interpreting XHTML so except for the slimmer pages, nothing is gained…. ‘nways, you get the picture. Who’d be accessing my blog via WAP anyways, eh?
Once again, fascinating technology which could be so damn >tight< IF only we could have an affordable flatrate for surfing via WAP + content is interesting enough.
That Wapedia link* – Wikipedia via WAP – sure is.
The Donnas
I just love this band. 
Kikuyumoja Inc.
Someone asked me about this rather strange name “Kikuyumoja” today, and before I keep on explaining it over and over again, let me just blog this once and give out a few juicy details. I know, the first thing some of you out there do whenever you’re on a new blog is to click on the “about” link – which sometimes doesn’t reveal as much as you were prolly expecting. After all, blogs with a domain name (URL) are not as anonymous as all these blogger/wp/twoday services. Whatever. Here’s the story:
When I first went online in Oct 1996 with AOL, I was required to select my own so-called screenname. Back in those days when we were talking of Online Service Providers (OSP) instead of Internet Service Providers (ISP), AOL was one of the big players among Compuserve.
I hate AOL. Do they still exist? Anyways, what they did was forcing me into this screenname-selection-process and so I typed in my first name (“Juergen”).
Now, since there were about hundreds of other “Juergen1234” on AOL (I tend to imagine someone like Joe Dirt whenever I hear my name), I needed to type in something else. I then chose the first thing (name) that came to my mind: KAMAU.
Kamau Njoroge wa Ujerumani, to be precise. I know there’s this friend who goes by the name of Hamisi wa Tanzania. Hamisi probably is what Kamau is in Kenya or Müller, Meier, Schulze in Germany. My folks used to call me that way sometimes because I, a mzungu with a profound interest in anything Kenyan, apparently often behaved liked some Mr Kamau.
To me, life in Kenya is this terrific mixture of meeting ppl from different backgrounds. Be it those high-class people in politics you expect to see on the golf range or just ordinary chaps like you and me. And, before I digress even more, let me just mention how much I hate this system in many countries where you are virtually nothing unless you have a business card or some important title/credentials to show off. That’s so dumb and backwards. I don’t need that. People are so used to a certain frame and try to categorize you right after they’ve met you. They want what? Categorize me? Which part of me? I clearly needed a name that gives me the chance to hide in the masses or otherwise makes me unique. One where ppl wouldn’t ask further questions or maybe even divert this quest for credentials (~”how influential is he”) into a triggered curiosity to know more about me as a person, and not with whom I might have lunch.
In the end, it’s all about marketing yourself – right? How many ppl in Kenya are called Kamau? A million? There you have it…
The name “Kamau” was already given away to another user on AOL. Damn it. I had to think of something else. And the next word that came to my mind was “Kikuyu“. So I typed it in. Basi….woiii? Already someone with that screenname on AOL? wth?!?
…so I just added the third next word which was “moja“, thus making it
(The Agikuyu, ethnic group in Kenya; moja = 1 in Kiswahili => Kikuyu1, K1, etc.)
What a dumb name.
My Kenyan friends would surely ask me nasty questions. And the Germans? They would pronounce it like [Kiikuujuumohhhjaaaaah] – a long moooojaaaaahh. Like in this Rastafarian JAAAAH. Yeah….great.
I stuck to that name though, after I left AOL in December 1996 because I got used to it and then after some time I even registered my first domain name on it. And now, almost ten years after that, this story still makes me think: WTF?! :-))
That’s it! That’s how I got my name. Simple as that! Kikuyumoja.
It could be anything else. Luomoja? Juergenimoja? Mzungumoja? Wait, Mzungumoja – wacha, that’s you, Hash :-) Ama?
tumaini?
Look what I’ve found in the basement the other day:

a “blueprint for a new Kenya, Post Election Action Arogramme (PEAP)”
An interesting paper, issued with the help of the Friedrich-Naumann-Foundation in 1992 in Nairobi, which summarizes some interesting facts and data as of 1992 – and on which the former regional director of FNF Kenya got expelled from the country. Sure, a document that played a role in Kenyas democratisation process at some point – and the initial starting point to this blog entry today…
Now, 14 years later, Kenya has experienced a major shift from something I call “the Kartasi era” to “the simu ya mkononi era”.
We’ve witnessed a lot of change, people advancing in so many ways and especially this breakup spirit right after the last elections in 2002 that made a lot of KTs reconsider their own coming home and thus reducing the brain drain.
There was hope that things might change to the better.
With the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 – a wall that separated two parts of Germany for more than 28 years – the people in Germany soon realized that next to that hope for a much desired change, they needed to learn how to get along after all those years of separation and ideological distance.
Kenya (I think) experiences a similar fate: mixing the difficult past of colonial rule and a single party system with a new challenge of globalization and internal conflicts. Accepting diversity within the country and using this huge potential to sustain stability.
No one ever assumed this would become an easy task. And no one expects drastic change within a few days.
However, there’s this issue of politicians vs. leaders; business(wo)men vs. civil servants that keeps on coming up:
Be it Kenya or Germany – I think what we need are dedicated leaders that restore faith and hope and make us believe in the system again. Because if not, the world(s) will continue breaking up into little pieces and the only bigger social net we’ll have then is the Internet.
Where and who are those leaders of tomorrow?
einfach nur genial, dieses Zeugs :-)

€ 4.50 bei Europas größtem Musikhaus Thomann…
redonculous
Ummmm….youtube again, sorry, but there’s something I still wanted to show you.
On my first visit to Munich last year, the capital of this strange empire also known as Bavaria, I came across an interesting spot – something that every Munich tourist apparently already knows but to me this was new. There’s this creek called Eisbach (Eis, as in icecold!) which flows through the Englische Garten and if you look at the map, you’ll see that it’s directly within the city centre.
Now, parts of this river are underground and the spot where it shoots out of the underground tunnel (system), the flow velocity and the underwater weir (just 40 cm beneath the bottom of the wave) produce a steady wave that can reach up to 1 m and higher in good conditions. Remember, all of this DOWNTOWN! (360° image of the scenery)
(youtube video offline)
Imagine me standing there for ages, watching crazy dudes jumping on their boards and riding the wave as if there’s nothing else in life than a good, steady wave. Munich, you rock – big times!
Ehrensenf
Endlich wird mein LieblingsVlog Internet TV Ehrensenf beim größten deutschsprachigen Blog a.k.a Spiegel Online (SPON) erwähnt.
Jetzt können die Gelegenheitssurfer aus der Generation Golf endlich ruhigen Gewissens verkünden, dass sie bei SPON was ganz großartiges gefunden haben. Womit sie ja auch absolut Recht haben.
mein Vorschlag: BigBrother, DSDS & Co. mindestens 1x/Woche durch Dauerpenetration von Xtra3, Polylux, Toni Mahoni, Ehrensenf & Dittsche ersetzen. :-)