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4" Penguins in Safety Sweaters Need Help 190

chrisd writes "We all give lip service to how much we like penguins and such, well a bunch of the "little" penguins (4 inch tall little guys) have been spooged by an oil tanker in southern australia. They need cash to help them take care of the little fellas. They put them in little sweaters and such to keep them from preening the oil off thier wings into thier stomaches, which causes them to die. A picture of them in thier protective gear can be found there or at a my mirror."
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4" Penguins in Safety Sweaters Need Help

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  • by Brento ( 26177 ) <brento.brentozar@com> on Thursday January 06, 2000 @08:27AM (#1397201) Homepage
    Now's your chance to do some good with those zillions of dollars you made from the RedHat and VA Linux IPO's. Let's make some donations.

    (I say "Let's", even though I didn't get in on the IPO. )
  • Aww, they are so cute. Looks like a good cause, just dont come running to me for help when some un-cute (bsd?) demons get burnt in the fire!
  • The penguin-in-a-sweater would make a great logo. After all, it's cute, it's a known symbol, what more can you ask for?
    Maybe this should be the logo for the "sysadmin at the south pole".

    But go ahead and help if you can (meaning you're not a poor college student like me).

  • by dAzED1 ( 33635 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @08:37AM (#1397204) Journal
    Those little guys sure were cute...

    It took a bit of reading to find anywhere to send money to, but I finally found this:

    Donations can be sent to: Phillip Island Penguin Parade, ATT: Penguin Hospital Support Fund P.O. Box 97 Cowes Phillip Island. Victoria. 3922. AUSTRALIA.

    The didn't have anyway that I found, in the amount of time I had, to give money online or anything. Darn it those things are cute. Easy to want to help.

  • If you had taken the time to read the article in your rush to post, you would have known that they are not released to the wild in the sweaters. The penguins are kept in a rehabilitation hospital until they recover.

    Sadly, not all the little fellows will make it even with the sweaters. Some have died already

    I agree that this is a good cause and that the Linux community should help Tux's kinfolk.

    What I'm burned over is that the unidentified persons who caused this disaster are still on the loose. I hope that they catch the @$#%!@#$.

  • by LizardKing ( 5245 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @08:39AM (#1397207)
    Like much in our world, the merchant shipping industry is a haven for jobsworths, tightwads and schemers. Rather than have tanks cleaned properly in port (at a cost) unscrupulous shipowners encourage crews to simply flush them at sea. Stand on any beach near a shipping lane, and you can guarantee there'll be tar-like deposits everywhere from this heinous practise.

    There's little governments can do even if they have a fair idea which ships or copmanies are to blame. Do it in international waters, and no-one can get you. And if you get caught ... Well, almost every large merchant vessel flies under a flag of convenience. This enables the captain or owners to say ``well, sue me in Liberia''.

    A friend who works as a deck oficcer commented to me once that another problem is hopeless crews. OFficers tend to be trained and conscientius(sp?),
    but crews often don't speak the same language as the officers and have no training. In the British merchant navy, many crews are Philipino simply because the owners can get away with paying them shit wages.

    Anyways, enough of the ranting. I just hope no more of these little penguins succumb to the oil.

    Chris Wareham
  • It is interresting how the hearts of all the techno-loving, junk-food-n-plastic eating hackers all feels sad for an animal. Perheaps not as strange, an OS has done it. But, to be honest, there are a lot of spiecis suffering from unlawfull chasing and from environmental destroying garbage. Please, everyone, try to help all of them, not just the one lyckily selected as the logo for Linux. They do have the same right to a good life filled with gras and baths (Or what the speiece in question values), as you have to one filled with cool hardware and free software!
  • And remember, folks; if you're trying to attract women, having a soft spot for cute little penguins always helps.
  • Money is everythingin a case like this - perhaps some of the newly succesful Linux companies could use this to boost their image? :)

    Sounds disgustingly corporate, but I dont see any international agencies that arent charities/enviro groups that have guaranteed funding existing to take care of this.

    The penguins wont care where the money comes from, I can tell you that.

    Dont you all know its the corporations that have to take care of our environment and community now? Havent you seen those Saturn commercials?

    Just to make a really unpopular but important statement while Im at it: wasnt it found to be a waste of money to save animals from the Valdeez spill? Didnt they die anyway? Couldnt that money be used better to cleanup the spill unless saving these few animals will keep a population from crashing or becoming endangered?

    Remember, CUTE AND CUDDLY doesnt important make. Just cuz they're cute penguins doesnt matter as much as their position in the food chain and how other populations rely on them. Money should go where its really needed, not where the population, guided by what animals make cute stuffed toys, thinks it should.

    Math
  • Instead of sweaters, perhaps they could try ponchos [satlug.org] instead?
  • by _iodine_ ( 133163 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @08:43AM (#1397212)
    A company was recently hired to produce thousands of 4 inch tall sweaters specially designed to fit penguins. Sweaters, Inc. was listed as having better than expected earnings for the 4th quarter. The President of the U.S. has been quoted as saying, "The influx of new jobs that have been created because of the penguin crisis has been a boon to the international community."
  • I have heard that more often that not, "tar-like deposits on the beach" are caused by undersea oil deposits leaking naturally.
  • by Apuleius ( 6901 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @08:45AM (#1397214) Journal
    Phillip Island's penguin colony is a great place to visit (I was there many years ago). The penguins all come from the sea to feed their chicks at roughly the same time in the evening. You can watch this from bleachers at the beach.

    Whoever dumped the slick off Phillip Island should be fed to sharks.
  • That's only in places like the Gulf of Mexico
    where there are such deposits.
  • by Jonas Öberg ( 19456 ) <jonas@gnu.org> on Thursday January 06, 2000 @08:49AM (#1397216) Homepage
    I'm donating $100 to them. Apparently, the address to send checks to is


    Phillip Island Penguin Parade

    att: Penguin Hospital Support Fund

    P.O. Box 97

    Cowes

    Phillip Island. Victoria. 3922. AUSTRALIA.


    But it would also be interesting to make sure that this
    doesn't continue to happen -- for any animals! What
    organisations exist that help prevent that these polluters
    get away?

  • Seems ideal for Secure Linux!
  • But don't forget: NO FLASH CAMERAS!

    I swear, watching the park rangers (or whatever) threaten the people in the stands with umbrellas the night I was there, you realize that most people are either too stupid to read the signs (which are EVERYWHERE) or too selfish to care.

    Fond memories from my trip to Australia. ;-)

    BTW: Agree on the shark thing.
  • by Kintanon ( 65528 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @08:51AM (#1397219) Homepage Journal
    So what is being done to punish the oil company? Which company is responsible, are they investigating the cause? Who is being held accountable for this? Someone needs to get their ass handed to them on a platter for dumping a bunch of oil in our ocean!

    Kintanon
  • to have a pet pengiun or 2. Are they hard to take care of? :)
  • Has anyone thought of cleaning them off with a solvent and letting them go? I suppose that isn't an option because of the tree huggers involved. Better to whine about oil companies I guess.
  • Mad props to you guys for getting this story out.... I know some people bitch and moan when there is a "non-techie" article posted, but screw it. We Slashdotters have a LOT of power in our little mouse-held hands, and it's time we put it to good use (instead of just taking down servers-grin!).... Those little guys break my heart. I'm sending a check right now!

    Siobahn
    http://www.siobahn.com
  • I made a point of going to Phillip Island when I was in Melbourne a couple of months ago, just to see the penguins. I froze my butt off on the beach right after sundown, but it was worth it to see them all march up the beach and head for their nests--one of the highlights of the trip. I even have a little stuffed fairy pengin gracing my monitor right now.

    The original URL has directions on where to send the donations. And, if you're in the US, your US dollars go a long way in Aus. dollars :-)
  • Does anyone know where to lobby for international law to impose really heavy penalties on such oil companies? It is disgusting to think that such companies with earnings in excess of the gross national product of many countries would clean their tanks in the earth's oceans rather than paying to have it done properly in port.

    We really need to jump up and down screaming about this to the right organization.

  • I just visited webcertificate.com [webcertificate.com] and got my free webcertificate which comes already charged with a free $5 worth of credit. If ThinkGeek could set up a SKU, I'd be glad to donate the $5 to the cute little guys.

    As mentioned in another post, this would be great way for anyone who is now filthy rich due to the Linux related stock craze to ease their open source conscience.

    (By the way, is conscience the opposite of science?)

  • I think part of the problem is that the penguins have a lot of natural oils on their bodies to protect them.
  • by jbrw ( 520 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @09:06AM (#1397227) Homepage
    Before sending money off to these guys, remember that most banks have nasty charges for converting cheques from one currency to another. From memory, the standard charge in Australia to convert currency is AUS$20, so either include enough money to cover the cost, or get your bank to write a cheque in Australian dollars. Maybe get together with some friends/your local LUG and pool your money to save on bank fees.

    There is the chance that since these guys are a worthy cause, their local bank might waive the fees, but I wouldn't count on it.

    ...j

    (US readers: s/cheques/checks/g - make sense now? <g>)
  • by lee ( 17524 ) <lee@pyrz q x g l .org> on Thursday January 06, 2000 @09:10AM (#1397229) Homepage
    Why would they not just clean them off and let them go? It would kill them. Why clean the birds and then let them die?????

    According to the story they are cleaned with solvents and then kept in a penguin hospital in the little sweaters until they test waterproof and then they are released. The cleaning strips away their natural oils and they would freeze if they were released quickly. The sweaters prevent the penguin from trying to clean themselves and thus getting poisoned. From the sounds of it, they also keep them warm.

  • by sharv ( 71041 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @09:10AM (#1397230) Homepage
    FYI -

    According to a colleague of mine who lived for a time in Oz, it is possible to send U.S.-drawn checks to Australia. The recipient, however, will have to pony up the exchange rate difference and possibly pay a fee to their bank to take the deposit.

    Note that large banks (Citibank, Harris, etc.) usually will sell you a money order drawn in foreign currency, if you want to save the Penguin People from the evil bank fee collectors.

    Really big banks can probably even sell you authentic Australian currency, but we cannot recommend sending that by mail.


    -Sharv
  • by jd ( 1658 ) <imipak@ y a hoo.com> on Thursday January 06, 2000 @09:11AM (#1397231) Homepage Journal
    I've never liked the term "colonies" for penguins. It's not like they're answerable to some dominion elsewhere. Maybe the collective term should be a "cluster", and their land habitation a "Beowulf".

    Orwell, I tried my best! :)

  • They also need volunteers to help knit penguin jumpers. If you would like the pattern of the Little Penguin Jumper please write to us at penguins@penguins.org.au [mailto] with your name and address and in a few weeks when we are back to our desks we will be able to send you out a copy. Don't look at me... I know nothing of knitting.
  • Sure, but only if they wear those sombreros as well.
  • by Nicholas Vining ( 104178 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @09:22AM (#1397235)
    Why don't we nominate the penguins for the "Most deserving to win $2000.00" beanie thing? That'd certainly help them out, and they'd probably put it to very good use. Even if the awards are distributed after the crisis is over, the association which is taking care of the penguins will be in the middle of a major cash crunch and I'm sure that they could use it.
  • This is another area where my idea for an Open Source Army would work well. Destroying ships that violate the Earth is a worthwhile endevour. So who's with me on this Open Source Army? It would be non-central and the policy system would be totally open sourced. ;)

    Someone, *PLEASE*, think of the penguins!


    Bad Mojo
  • by Anonymous Coward
    The Little Penguins are actually about 12" high, not 4" (I've been to Philip Island myself). Perhaps this is another metric to imperial conversion error, like the one which killed the NASA mars probe? Good cause anyway - the Philip Island folks are doing great work.
  • I'm a dedicated linux user, and even though i'm
    insulted by your statement, I do agree with you.
    I wouldn't feel right looking at my tux alter :) and not being able to help.
    i've already sealed my envolope to them, which contains 100 dollars.
    I hope all the linux users out there make a contribution also.


    Gentleman, you can't fight in here, this is the war room..
  • Poor little guys. And a cause as worthy as any.

    On the off-topic side though, I wonder what the result of the slashdot effect would be when applied to charitable donations... Say, $10 from everyone who visits the site. Maybe even less.

    Has anyone out there done any work with electronic cash? Say: putting an amount into an online account, and then clicking on a URL to have a certain amount transfered to the cause..

    I know, the fraud potential is huge, so security comes up, but consider... Something a'la /. voting box on a secure and validated site. You select the amount to donate, click the donate button, and your contribution is added to the fund.

    Even contributions of e-pennies per person would amount to considerable funds when coupled with the slashdot effect.
  • This may be a worthy cause, but how the hell do I know what they'r doing with the money? Any background info on how they spend the money? What pct goes directly towards the penguins and what pct goes to admin?

    I know CmdrTaco thinks he's doing a service, but I don't need him telling me which causes to support. I'm sure there are some people who will give money because CmdrTaco thinks its a good idea. That's a shame. Besides, how much cash is CmdrTaco giving?

  • by Skip666Kent ( 4128 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @09:34AM (#1397241)
    They should be thanked, for bringing about the greatest fashion breakthrough in Penguin history.

  • One is given to wonder whether this is going to work. There is fairly recent research suggesting attempts to save birds from oil exposure are not effective, no matter how heroic. For one example, see this article [enn.com] about a UC Davis study on cleanup of pelicans.

    -dB

  • If an entity set up a site with credit card verification or a current online vendor took donations via credit card, I for one would donate right now. The exchange fee problem would be overcome and the act of donating would be so easy there would be no excuse NOT to send a few bucks.

    Human laziness coupled with the "SlashDot Effect" could save a whole hell-of-alot of penguins.




  • Glad to see that thousands of us feel for the cute pengi-wengies.

    However, I have to remind you that there are thousands of poor, homeless, destitute people around the world, dying in streets, suffering in refugee camps, and there are hundreds and thousands (no, that's not a gross over estimation ) of children orphaned by wars and natural disasters.

    I believe we should think about those people too. They may not be as cute as penguins, but they sure need our help.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 06, 2000 @09:53AM (#1397250)
    There are a lot of penguin sub-species or whatever out there, but this is the specific one that bit Linus a long time ago, leading to Linux using penguins as the mascot.

    One source that confirms this [cyberwalker.net]

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Probably none, or not much. Most oil spills are cleaned up by NGO environmental groups, volunteers, and by state/federal governments. Usually the companies responsible for the spill gets off with at most a slap on the wrist. The one case where the oil company actually got a little more than a slap on the wrist (Exxon for the spill in Alaska) they still haven't paid their fines. They keep appealing and getting out of some fines. Besides, the amount they got fined was no where near the cost of cleanup or the cost of the destruction. The entire area had it's ecosystem destroyed, the economies of several towns were destroyed. The way of life for many native american people in the region was destroyed. Exxon should of had it's chartered revoked, it's assets liquidated, and that money should of gone to clean up and repair the region. People in America seem to have forgotten, there once was a time when the people had power over the corporations. http://www.adbusters.org/magazine/28/usa.html
  • There are much more worthy causes to which to donate money. For instance, there's the Red Cross, The Cancer Society, Ronald McDonald House, United Way, Heart Foundation (not to be confused with "Hart Foundation"), Diabetes Association (either Canadian, American, or other if any others exist). The list goes on.

    And YES, I know this could perhaps be considered a bad comment to some moderators out there, but this is kind of pathetic, where there are more deserving charities in the world, and someone wants us to start worrying about 4" tall penguins??!?!!
  • Good idea! If I had any mod points I'd moderate
    you up!
  • Here's a link to a larger picture and more information from an ausie newspaper.
    http://www.theage.com.au /news/20000104/A5181-2000Jan3.html [theage.com.au]
  • Subject only message....

    C'mon, moderate me up, you were thinking it too when you saw the photo... ;)
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I noticed a few different people complaining about how people were being shafted here, how there is much suffering a poverty among people and, for some reason, they think that it must be addressed at the expense of the animals.

    Now, before you jump to the conclusion that I'm some maniac tree-huggers, let's look at this plain and scientific.

    Case 1: The suffering people, lacking food, shelter etc. Who screwed them over? Who benefited from their misery? Well, other people. So people caused the problem there. We did it to ourselves. We are all equally guilty.

    Case 2: The animals have no involvement, they don't squander resources, kill for no reason, elect republicans, or hurt homosexuals. They are therefore innocent, as a species, and by the same speciest reasoning that people use to put them last, they should be put first.
  • Speaking from the ecological aspect, "cute" animals are actually using a very interesting evolutionary strategy called "commensalism", where a species shares food with another, unrelated one, and both profit. For instance, there is no earthly reason to have an Ethiopian desert cat in my living room: I don't live anywhere near Ethiopia, they eat meat (as do I), and they have their own agendas in life -- the perfect beast to be put on a stamp, and only thought about when someone makes a plea to Save Endangered Species. But as "housecats", these little beasts have made their homes on six continents and every place ships go, sleep in our beds, eat our leftovers, and enjoy the admiration of millions of humans, who are only too happy to keep the species going. In return, we have the company of beasts that sound and behave like little human children, and we, well, just can't resist.

    The same is true of most other species we consider "cute": "Babe" wouldn't have half its resonance if it were about a wild boar raised by a wolf pack who learns wolflike methods of hunting rams. Up until the century just passed, most children's stories, either "Western", or traditional, rarely cast wild animals as sympathetic characters: they were usually cast, even in vegetarian India and hunter-gatherer tribes, as being caricatures of humanity's gross and ignoble nature. A hundred years ago, educators warned parents that buying their daughters "Roosevelt's cubs" would pervert their maternal instinct away from their future roles as wives and mothers. (Sorry, guys, you're about 90,000 years too late...) Today, teddy bears share their toy chests with such perverse beasts as mandrills, owl-like Furbies, seals, and even (gasp!) penguins with Linuxmall buttons on them, as concerns as diverse as The Nature Conservancy and Mc Donald's find that the best way to popularize the plight of endangered species is to make plush animals in their image. Deer are now a problem in many suburban neighborhoods -- no one wants to shoot Bambi's mother. (Mice, which eat everything, crap everywhere, and spread fleas and microbes, are a sore point with many people, thanks to the same concern -- we now project our disgust on rats.) Bears are dangerous, destructive, beasts, who also invade human settlements -- who wants to draw a bead on Pooh?

    True, there aren't many ways of cutesifying snail darters. Most of the animals who occupy an important position in the food chain aren't all that glamorous (with the exception of rodents). But who wants to read zoological data to their kids at bedtime, or snuggle up to an ecocensus report at the end of the day?

    In keeping with the communitarian spirit of Linux, perhaps there ought to be a permanent Penguin fund set up with the Audubon Society, with contributions from Linux-minded people and groups. Such proposal has been made before, and would do much to popularize both causes in a way that would be truly commensal.

    "'Cause penguins are so sensitive, to my needs." --Lyle Lovett.

  • people are asking on the ranger list how to send money, and they give an address, but what is the best method?

    money order, personal check, etc?

    no one seems to be able to answer this rather basic question...i've never sent money overseas.

    who would i even make the darn check out to? can someone from slashdot find out and update the post?

    i hate to whine (not really) but to ask for help with so many basic details missing is kind of ... (well, you know).

    Im stuck at work, someone be a hero for the little penguins, eh?
  • a bird species so stupid it forgot how to fly?
    They're not so stupid they forgot how to fly, they're so smart they figured out how to fly underwater! Evolution, the greatest of hackers.

    (Yes, I know the individual penguins didn't forget or figure out anything about flying any more than I figured out that an upright stance frees the forelimbs for carrying stuff.)

  • well, if you can't sue them you can always stir up some public outcry and boycott them.
  • *BS* - The difference is that history has shown us that PEOPLE can help THEMSELVES. It's just easier for them to sit around on their butts doing nothing and expecting handouts from governments and taxpayers. This tragedy is the direct result of human carelessness, and the penguins (or any animal, for that matter) cannot help themseleves. tree-huggin' republican
  • You mention in your post how you noticed "a few" people mentioning that there are more deserving charities. However, as of the time I'm writing this I only notice 2.

    One of them is my posting, the other is by an individual who used the "homeless people" argument, as you mentioned.

    Let me point out that I did not mention helping poor or homeless people in my posting. My message simply stated that there are much more deserving "charities" (not people) out there who should be targeted.

    Now, since you placed my posting in the group that you so richly singled out, let me point something out to you. People with cancer, heart conditions, diabetes, or any other type of physical condition, did not bring their condition upon themselves. With that in mind, you would do well to think about what you say in the future.

    Perhaps if you personally knew of someone who suffered from cancer, diabetes, heart problems, or some other type of physical condition, you would think differently.
  • However, I have to remind you that there are thousands of poor, homeless, destitute people around the world, dying in streets, suffering in refugee camps, and there are hundreds and thousands (no, that's not a gross over estimation ) of children orphaned by wars and natural disasters.



    Each of those human beings is capable of making a choice as to how they live and what resources are available to them. The parents of the starving children chose to continue fucking like rabbits in order to spawn off a whole new generation of starving children. People in refugee camps are there by choice in one way or another, they can pick up and walk somewhere else. Yes, it's hard, no I doubt I'd be able to do it, but it can be done and they have that choice. The penguins have no such option.
    I for one have no sympathy for 90% of all poor/homeless/destitute people as I have seen people try to help over and over and over again and the person always ends up back in the gutter. Maybe the homeless in other countries aren't the laziest 3% of the population, but in the US the homeless aren't usually worth helping. Yes I'm a jackass, yes I'm a bastard, but I've tried helping these people and it doesn't work. At least the penguins don't smell like Wild Turkey when they stumble up to me.
    All of those orphaned children have relatives somewhere, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, that should be taking care of them. Yes it's too bad they lost their parents, but there should be people there to help them already, my contribution should not be needed.

    Mark this as flamebait and a troll if you really want to, but it's the way I feel about sanctimonious bastards that bitch and moan about the plight of the homeless.

    Kintanon
  • I too visited Phillip Island, when I was a kid. I've loved penguins ever since. It's really an incredible sight, seeing all of these little penguins come wattling out of the surf. They make their way up the sandy beach and to the burrows in the dunes where their noisy, braying, fluffy, and impatient chicks - often bigger than the parents - are waiting. I'm so sorry to see that they've been hurt by an oil slick, and I sure hope this will have no serious impact on the Philip Island population as whole. Does anyone know anything about that, one way or the other????

    Oh, and with regard to the comment:

    Whoever dumped the slick off Phillip Island should be fed to sharks.

    I concur. One limb at a time.
  • ...for LinuxOne???

    ;-)

  • Yes! They will release the little fellas with sweaters adorning their fragile bodies. idiot!
  • by TheDullBlade ( 28998 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @11:28AM (#1397271)
    Let's face it, if we coordinated the worlds resources so there weren't thousands of children dying every day, in a couple of decades we'd reach the point that there were thousands of children dying every day again. And the world would be a lot more crowded.

    Nobody likes pain, misery, and death, but they are always going to be there. You can shift them around to someone else, or save them up for the next generation, but you can never really reduce them. Everyone must die, and most will go kicking and screaming.

    You might say that birth control is the answer, but it will only ever be a temporary solution. There will always be those who don't comply, and their exponential population growth will eventually displace the "responsible citizens." Natural selection favors the breeders. If they are kept in check by force, that is just more of the same misery and death.

    You might say that space travel is the answer, but assuming that any human can travel for free at _any_ constant speed, exponential population growth will overtake the cubic growth of the volume humans have reached. Even if humanity achieves methods of instantaneous travel, few believe in an infinite universe; it will get filled up. Something has to keep it in check, and that something will always be death; given that people will almost always accept pain to avoid death, and very few humans have the cold style of mercy (if it is worthy of that name) that would kill people just because they would starve eventually, that means misery.

    I help my family, I help my friends, I obey agreements I have made for mutual benefit, but I do not give charity, nor do I agonize over how the money I spend on a snack could have fed some distant family for days (as I used to when my morality was based on the value of survival and happiness of conscious minds). Nor do I care when I hear that some distant people are killing each other, except so far as it may destabilize the world and possibly cause nuclear war.

    You may consider this an evil morality, but pure altruism through charity is ultimately a lie, if you look at enough of the world and over a long enough period of time. There are many "positive sum games" out there to encourage cooperation (indeed, expansion into the universe is a worthy accomplishment that would be impossible if we all truly lived "every man for himself"), but remember that ultimately we are all competing for resources. If not in this generation, or the next, then five or fifty down the road.

    The standard of living can be raised across the board only by improvement/preservation of the environment. Beauty is a consolation to the hopeless. Nothing is more universally beautiful than nature.

    Saving the penguins preserves a beautiful part of the world that is no threat to anyone. As population pressures grow there may be no room for the planet's other inhabitants, but we should preserve what we can. I would rather live in a dangerous, beautiful, interesting world than a safe, boring, comfortable one. I would rather be born into a world of misery and have any slim chance to struggle for life than not be born at all.
  • Not only penguins but also seagulls and similar, they get this oil on the feathers and then they die.
    And now comes the unpopular part of what I feel I have to say: big chunk of responsibility is on US materialistic, consumistic mentality. Do you know that the average US citizen consumes more than twice as much resources as a European, and hundreds of times more than an Indian.

    Look, I know you americans like cars, but I have never seen so many and so big cars like in US. Many of you people have more than one car, and in many cities a pedestrian has a tough time. In US the public transportation is pathetic compared to Finland or Germany. And that, dear friends, makes a difference. Public transportation, expecially trains and metros, have proven to be a great means to protect the ambient. And to consume less oil.

    I have asked many US friends why is the public transportation so bad in US (not everywhere, of course, but in the great majority of towns) and the cars so big? It turns out that the US oil and car companies are strongly connected to lobbysts and very politically influencial in general.

    Sorry if I have offended anyone living in US; I am actually very fond of Americans and the US, but if we talk about ambiental problems, the US is partly to blame.

    Maybe you think this issue is not important. However, today we have already exterminated many animal specias, polluted the air, the rivers and the oceans very significantly, and there is a very important phenomenon of global warning. Many forests in south america and in other parts of the world have been burnt, and the ozone layer that protected us from damaging UV rays is thinned. And all these processes are just aggravating. If you have a vision and not only live for today, you will think about what is going to happen to our home, the earth, some 50 to 100 years from now. I am afraid it will look more and more like Mars, without a sheltering atmosphere that would protect from extremely cold and hot weathers, poor of oxigene and with a very limited variety of wildlife. That is scary.





  • This just in..... The CEO of Sweaters Inc. was just assassinated by a king penguin for "being racist against the larger sized penguin community"
  • Do you have _any_ idea of the kind of mess it makes when you destroy a ship at sea? Ask the marine life in the area of one of the WWII sea battles how many decades it takes to recover from the fuel and oil that are released into the ocean when a vessel is sunk.

    (yes, I know you were probably just kidding, I'd like to dispose of those bastards as well. Finding the culprits and dipping them in oil a couple times would probably be more effective and less polluting than sinking an entire ship to punish them, killing the entire crew, only a handful of them even having anything to do with the pollution in the first place.)
  • That's right!

    The occasional story like this - and in particular, the response that arises within the /. community when one is posted - is one of my favorite things about slashdot.

    What do I mean by "the response"? Well, over at the Philip Island Preserve site, there have been thirty posts in the last couple of hours from slashdotters, most offering their help in the form of cash, sweaters, or whatever can be done.

    This sure makes the Linux community look good - imagine how good it would be if the press picks up on the way that slashdot readers came to help out. And if the story, or the pictures of penguins in sweaters tug at your heartstrings, head on over to the Philip Island site [penguins.org.au], leave a comment, or better yet, make a donation.

  • Perhaps if you personally knew of someone who suffered from cancer, diabetes, heart problems, or some other type of physical condition, you would think differently.


    I have personally known people with these conditions, family members, neighbors, people I cared about. My FAMILY bands together to support itself, my COMMUNITY does the same. We don't go out searching for handouts and donations from everyone. If someone has cancer well that's just too bad, but they have friends, and relatives that can help them and should be helping them. My resources are devoted to helping people that I know and care about. And I'm afraid random charities that spend 50% of the money paying for their infrastructure aren't on my list.

    Kintanon
  • As much as I'd like to help every single animal directly, I cannot. I do not have the resources for that. But what I *CAN* do is focus on just a few things to help directly. And I can also help all animals and the environment indirectly by not making things worse. For example, getting a better car that is more effiecent and scrubs it's emissions much better for going to CONs would be a start:) And not tossing my Jolt cans in the trash(damn California has a poor bottle system, Michigan's is far far superior in many ways)
  • Wouldn't it be easyer if they just posted an account number where we could wire funds to? And it would probably be quicker than sending a check too.
  • Release the source of what? /.? That's already been done.

    Penguin DNA? Talk to God.

    J.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Or if we can't now, when will we ever be able to? All we need is data. Providence (and ARPANet) have given us a tool. How are we going to use it? We need :- type of Oil (grade, colour, suplhur content). Weather for last few days in area. Local sea currents and Winds for last few days. From people down-under, recent port movements (surely they must be logged somewhere). HF and radio hams in the area - transmissions made on marine band. I think a co-ordinated (and ass-kicking) team effort could seriously zoom in on the ship that did this. It shouldn't be too difficult to then get the parent company and which load / cargo they were carrying and for which company. Last step, tell the news organistaions, link to sites containing the facts, link to pictures of penguins and bingo! New World Order. I want to make it happen. I want to make it happen. I want to make it happen.
  • Oh yeah, gee, you're right, I'm sorry. Gosh, how could I have been so selfish and blind?!?

    bah, forget about a child in the hospital suffering from a defective heart valve, forget about the kids suffering from leukemia, and while I'm at it, forget about everyone else too.

    Thank you for showing me the way in such a hateful world. Even though I cannot be assured that my hard-earned money will actually benefit these poor little penguins, and that there is not information about who to actually make the check out to, at least I will be secure in the fact that it's not going to all those suffering kids who really have no one to blame for their condition but themselves. After all, as you put it, it's their own lifestyle choices that put them in that condition.

    Gee, you think maybe I should alert the medical community and let them know the exact cause for cancer while I'm at it? ... Recently Enlightened /. Poster addressing scientists: "Hey guys! You morons, you're doing it wrong! You're wasting all this money trying to find a cause, when the actual cause is their lifestyle!"

    Thanks, I feel enlightened.



  • Wild animals are notoriously bad pets. Domesticated animals have been bred for hundreds of years to remove a lot of thier instincts and allow them to be more social around people. Of course if you are lucky one out of many wild animals would have this behavior, that's where breeding starts.

    Of course some animals are not domesticated but tend to make good/decent pets such as: fish, most types of non-migratory birds, ferrets(this is debatable because many of them are neurotic furrballs). Snakes aren't too bad of a pet either, but most other reptiles (especially lizards) are a major venture to have as a pet. (except for frogs, although I've always found them to be tricky to feed right, but those are amphibians of course)

    A penguin might be okay in a nice large "cage", but I don't think it would be something to put on a leash and walk around the park with, nor something to cuddle up with on the couch and watch some TV together. :P

    Also realize that domesticated animals that have gone ferral do not make good pets either. Dingos for example are mostly the same as your pet dog, but they are horrible pets, almost as bad as a pet wolf. Of course you *could* start breeding dingos and after several generations have a decent and useful dog. (although that's a lot of work with little returns, dingos are probally better off without people)

    So instead of a penguin for a pet, maybe get a stuffed Tux or a big poster on your wall, or a nice penguin Theme [themes.org] for your favorite window manager.

  • I think you are the nazi. Just read your own stuff and see who's the zealot. The guy was just kidding.
  • Oh yeah, gee, you're right, I'm sorry. Gosh, how could I have been so selfish and blind?!?

    bah, forget about a child in the hospital suffering from a defective heart valve, forget about the kids suffering from leukemia, and while I'm at it, forget about everyone else too.

    Thank you for showing me the way in such a hateful world. Even though I cannot be assured that my hard-earned money will actually benefit these poor little penguins, and that there is not information about who to actually make the check out to, at least I will be secure in the fact that it's not going to all those suffering kids who really have no one to blame for their condition but themselves. After all, as you put it, it's their own lifestyle choices that put them in that condition.

    Gee, you think maybe I should alert the medical community and let them know the exact cause for cancer while I'm at it? ... Recently Enlightened /. Poster addressing scientists: "Hey guys! You morons, you're doing it wrong! You're wasting all this money trying to find a cause, when the actual cause is their lifestyle!"

    Thanks, I feel enlightened.






    Nowhere did anyone say that it is the fault of the people with cancer that they have it, or any other medical condition. But WE aren't the ones that should be helping them. Their friends and relatives should be helping them. *I* should be helping my friends and relatives, which I do. I'm not sending any money to these penguins, even though I support the cause, because I have no idea where this money is actually going. I would be much more interested in prosecuting the company responsible. I'm sorry that you feel the burning need to try and add more useless crap to our gene pool but don't take your bitterness out on me. Despite my views I sleep perfectly soundly at night.

    Kintanon
  • I can't help but point out that in many cases, cancer, heart problems, and other various maladies people suffer from are related to lifestyle choices those people made in the past. Why should people be absolved from blame for lifestyle choices they've made?

  • > 10 go to 20 20 go to 10

    ...otherwise known as "while (1);"

    :-)
    --
    - Sean

  • I believe humanity rules the earth and when it comes to our survival pitted against the survival of other animals, we come first. If I can only save my dog or my baby from a burning house, the dog's gonna roast. Sorry.

    However, that ruling status brings some responsibility with it. We can't go around killing other species off with total indifference or malice, without eventually screwing up the ecosystem we rely for our very survival.

    Aside from the 'maybe someone bigger and badder might look at us and judge us by how we treat the weaker animals' aspect that only Patrick Stewart can teach us on TV (for now), it is good karma to save these penguins if you've got the money to burn on it. (And some people do have that kind of money). If you do it you're doing it because you want to, and if you do it without anyone knowing you're doing it for the right reasons, and that is an indicator of a man's character.

    Now I for one feel that more money should go to starving kids in Rwanda, or better yet, to the local loaves and fishes in my home town. The real people who should pay for protecting the penguins should be the people who spilled the oil! But since they won't, I won't fault anyone who chips in their place.

    My point is I don't see any dead babies or compromised human rights coming from donating to a save-the-penguins campaign. Then again I'm not from PETA or some insane leftist envirowhacko group either.

    But I'll say this - I've seen the exact sort of insane animal rights mindset that has driven you to make such an angry bitter post. They are really senseless people who would sell out their own species in a heartbeat (I mean these guys can't even tell if they'd rescue a dog or a baby from a burning house first! gee!), and they deserve 100% of your vitriol. I just think you need to pinpoint these people and give them your hatred, instead of lashing out blindly at anyone who lifts a finger for a lesser animal's sake.

    Just my opinion

    flame on :)


    BTW: Does anyone know how much those little sweaters cost per unit?
  • ...would be to develop some kind of device that could be placed near the oil-slicked areas to keep the seals and penguins from trying to swim in the poisoned water in the first place. Something like the nifty black box that keeps mice from wanting to live in my basement. It probably couldn't be done in time for these particular birds, but you could save their children.

    I would personally like to help these penguins, but I don't think sending money or knitting sweaters will help much; this spill seems relatively small from the reports and should be old news long before the sweater I knit gets to Australia. The best way to help is to pay attention to which environmental groups gave money to the rangers on day one, and/or sent people to help clean up, and reimburse them for their diligence. Or put your EE/biology skills to good use and design a better beeper, and make saving them cost less the next time around.

    Rev. Neh
  • This was Australia. Australia does not export oil. (IIRC, there isn't any oil in aus). That tanker was carrying oil for Australian consumption.
  • Little Penguins (Eudyptula minor) are 14" (35cm) tall - not 4" tall! While they look cute, these guys bite - just ask Linus. ;-)

    While the oil slick is relatively small (e.g. the French spill), it has come at a particularly bad time for the penguins - they have chicks in their burrows, so Mum and Dad need to fish twice as often. While the number of dead adults is known, I haven't heard how many chicks have starved in the burrows; expect this number to be high.
    1. Yes, these are the very same fairy penguins which bit Linus on the finger, and the model for Tux the penguin.
    2. The penguin parade happens every night at sunset on the southern beaches of Phillip Island, and is one of the things you MUST see if you come down here to Victoria, especially if you bring kids. I don't know if you can do it any more, but when I was a kid we used to wander among the sand dunes after the parade, and watch the penguins returning to their burrows to feed the chicks. Ah, memories.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    How about some perspective people? Why not spend your millions on more worthwhile causes such as feeding the poor who live in your home town. Donate some money for cancer research, or one of the many hundreds of charitable organizations that are much more important than a bunch of flightless birds.
  • Australia produces a large majority of its own oil in the oilfields just south of where the accident happened. Why do foreigners without a clue keep posting articles about Australia?
  • ... they don't know who actually made the spill. All they saw was that one day, there was a general oil spill that hit Phillip Island.

    From the news report I saw, they were trying to find the culprits. That was a few days ago. Not sure if they've found them yet.

  • Hah. You scammed me. I'll get you for this!

    Wait'll I hit you with my latest patent I got for posting crazy gibberish on Slashdot for laughs! :)
  • by Ravenfeather ( 21614 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @02:11PM (#1397314)

    Well, once again it looks like we've been able, or will be able, to make a difference! From the penguins' web site [penguins.org.au]:

    PINP Release (Park Ranger) Fri 9:28am

    This response is really fantastic - we are doing up a form page for those wanting to help out. And all the rangers here are *genuinely* moved at this overwhelming show of support. Wish we could show you the Penguin Hospital which is currently crowded by so many Little Penguins, and we will try and get some more pics online in our News Release service. And please keep the notes/emails coming in - this week has been very tiring and stressful. The Island and the Penguins (plus koalas and seals) are more than a job to everyone here. Its hard to explain, but these "wild animals" are very much a part of the life of our Island Community. I hope one day the Linux folk and others will join us for a celbration down here!

    All monies raised will be going directly to improving the Little Penguin Hospital facilities in the here and now. Everything IS helping - and your words of encouragement are as meaningful to us as the donations being received. Thankyou! PS Could someone please post this thankyou somewhere ALL the Linux folk etc. can read it? Ta muchly!

    and...

    Amazing to see the replies coming in from the Linux community - what can we say? Thanks all!

    Donations are very much appreciated as th enumber of affected penguins grows over 200 now, and sadly the number of dead is also rising :(

    You can send a donation via cheque, postal or money order (probably travellers cheque as well) to:

    Phillip Island Penguin Parade
    att: Penguin Hospital Support Fund
    P.O. Box 97
    Cowes
    Phillip Island. Victoria. 3922. AUSTRALIA.

    Email to: penguins@penguins.org.au (we WILL reply ASAP to all enquiries)

    On the programming side, we have just installed three (3) live online internet "kiosks" in our Visitor Centre. These are due to be up and running this week, delayed a little by the current crisis. Currently the three PC's are networked to a UNIX server, however we have been seriously investigating how to get a Linux box in place.I'm still on a learning curve with Linux, and must confess that it was Linux's use of the Little Penguin that first attracted me to the free/community OS. Programming enquiries to: penguins@ozgurus.com

    Thanks and have a good one all!

  • by Wench ( 9309 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @02:12PM (#1397315) Journal
    From the site in the article:
    [penguins.org.au]
    http://www.penguins.org.au/chat/index.html

    there is now a link near the top to a form for online donations by credit card. If you don't want to look at the news and chat page on the penguin site, you can go direct to
    https://www.penguins.org.au/medi a/helpinghand.html [penguins.org.au]


  • Sure they do. But that's no reason not to help the penguins.

    Do you have any specific suggestions for helping people, or were you just having a whinge?

    The Hunger Site [thehungersite.com] is a good one for lazy geeks.

  • > what organisations exist that help prevent
    > that these polluters get away?

    Uh, Greenpeace [greenpeace.org]? And others, I'm sure. Polution and wildlife aren't new issues.

    RP

  • I'm not trying to pick a fight or add to this off-topicness of this worthy thread (let's not forget it's about the cute sweater-clad penguins). And I agree with you about the population problem. It was just something that you said that struck me:

    > Nor do I care when I hear that some distant
    > people are killing each other, except so far
    > as it may destabilize the world and possibly
    > cause nuclear war.

    That's interesting. You don't seem to care about death somewhere else, because it helps curb population growth, but nuclear war is a problem, even though it's the ultimate population control solution. Why might that be? Might it be because nuclear war would kill you? Is that when people should start caring?

    Again, I'm not necessarily in disagreement with you. I'm not a bleeding-heart liberal, but rather a proud member of the vast right-wing conspiracy.

    Anyhow, I've come to accept over the years that our population problem is going to get worse and worse until something catastrophic takes care of about half of us or more. It sucks but it's life.

    RP

  • I personally had a mother who died of cancer. and I personally think your attitude is horrible. I took my VA Linux "winnings" and invested them in something with no chance of a financial ROI... research.

    No, I'm not saying anybody else should do this. Just that I wish everybody would stop telling everybody how to spend their money. There are far more good causes than I know how to give to, so I pick and choose. I'm sure this is the norm, for those of us who give to charity.
  • by Ravenfeather ( 21614 ) on Thursday January 06, 2000 @03:31PM (#1397326)

    The Philip Island Nature Park now has a form available for credit card donations [penguins.org.au]. That should take care of the currency-conversion problems.

    According to the rangers on the site, " All monies raised will be going directly to improving the Little Penguin Hospital facilities in the here and now."

  • My bad then, I was only referencing my own posts.
    Though he wasn't being harsh as me paying for some lifetime smokers chemotherapy or lung transplant would be ludicrous. Or giving to a charity designed to help the 400lb over eater get a quad-bypass... I sympothize with children, adults usually make their own choices...

    Kintanon
  • I personally had a mother who died of cancer. and I personally think your attitude is horrible. I took my VA Linux "winnings" and invested them in something with no chance of a financial ROI... research.

    No, I'm not saying anybody else should do this. Just that I wish everybody would stop telling everybody how to spend their money. There are far more good causes than I know how to give to, so I pick and choose. I'm sure this is the norm, for those of us who give to charity


    I agree completely with this since you are doing it because someone you loved died of the disease. But charities soliciting donations from everyone and then people saying how horrible it is for others to pick and choose their charities instead of giving to the one THEY favor is inane. I'll give to the people *I* care about, you give to the people YOU care about, and everyone that anyone cares about gets something. Amazing how that works isn't it...?

    Kintanon
  • That's interesting. You don't seem to care about death somewhere else, because it helps curb population growth,

    No, I don't care about death somewhere else because it is somewhere else and doesn't affect me... unless it does affect me, which is the degree to which I do care about it.

    I do not value the individual lives of strangers, who are closer to enemies than friends, since we all compete for limited resources. I certainly wouldn't go out and attack them (or support their attackers) needlessly either, and make them true enemies; it's just common sense.

    The morality of valuing and respecting all human life is only appropriate in conditions of severe underpopulation or within one's mutually supportive group (this group should not be extended to too large a scale or the natural processes of competitive survival are replaced with oppressive central control; think 1984: beyond a certain scale cooperation becomes slavery to an abstraction). All the most destructive groups, whether religion or political movement, urge us to treat every man as our brother, not to fight over resources but cooperate, even sacrificing yourself, until those resources become insufficient, and allow the greater group to decide who is to be sacrificed for the survival of the remainder.

    but nuclear war is a problem, even though it's the ultimate population control solution. Why might that be? Might it be because nuclear war would kill you?

    Of course that's part of it. I care about anything that might kill me and the people I care about. But nuclear war in particular must be avoided because it can destroy all of humanity. I value the long-term survival of a diverse humanity (and precious little else) above my own life and the lives of my friends and family.

    I've come to accept over the years that our population problem is going to get worse and worse until something catastrophic takes care of about half of us or more.

    I do not believe this. Easily something might destroy half or even all the life on Earth, but I like to hope that humanity will have spread about more than that. Humans don't need planets to live (IMHO, at some point we won't even need stars to live, once we can create microsingularity power plants), and when we're distributed among hundreds of thousands or millions of independent environments, nuclear war won't threaten the survival of humanity as a whole any more than chemical explosives did.
  • Each time you click the button, you give about 4 or 5 cents. Sending $20/year directly to the UN World Food Program is more effective than visiting the Hunger Site every day (and lets face it, you'll miss days), and takes less effort.

    However, the site itself says that 3/4 of the people starving are children under 5. Practically every mouthful goes directly into increasing overpopulation in areas where people can't feed themselves. Feed one starving child today, watch six children starve twenty years from now.

    (BTW, I think the suggestion was that sending money to wash off penguins was not as good as sending money to feed starving children)

    Charity, too, is oppression.
  • That tanker was carrying oil for Australian consumption.

    • the following
    • link [theage.com.au] suggest this may not be the case...check your sources first.

      ...It is believed the oil came from the pumping out of a ship's bilge, rather than a tanker spill, though neither the Environment Protection Authority nor the Maritime Board was able to confirm this yesterday. An EPA analysis of the oil is expected today...

      if you want to ask questions go to the source...here [penguins.org.au] - (http://www.penguins.org.au/chat/index.html)

    links:
    http://www.theage.com.au/news/20000104/A5181-2000J an3.html
    http://www.penguins.org.au/chat/index.html
  • Great job, everyone!!! I just stopped by the Phillip Island site again, and there are scores of slashdot readers who have stopped by, taken advantage of the on-line credit-card-based donation form, and chipped in for this great cause, just the last few hours. Of course I did the same.

    More feedback from the rangers as well; this one made my whole day. The rangers there write:

    PINP Release (Park Ranger) Fri 11:08am

    ...we are really smiling down here with appreciation, and feeling that our Island is very much part of a small and caring planet; here at the moment its a sunny day, blue skys and perfect weather for enjoying the world as it was meant to be. We are still working at removing oil off the rock platforms to stop Penguins rubbing against the rocks and getting coated in oil that way. The still sea helps today, because it means the Ranger crews can get out there and actually hand wash each rock! Quite a task, but worth every effort. Thanks again! We'll be keeping everyone informed as the situation prgeresses. Our big concern is for the chicks that rely on their parents to be fed. Unfortunately many of the oiled penguins we are treating still can't be released to sea, as they have yet to preen themselves and thus stimulate their natural waterproof coating. This means they can't swim out to sea and get food for the young chicks waiting back in the burrows and it is likely many chicks will starve :( It is very unfortunate that this "accident" happened in chick raising season. Your help however, is doing just that, helping us help the Little Penguins and rehabilitate the adults ASAP!

  • Oh yeah, and I forgot to mention...it seems that Linux Journal [linuxjournal.com] is planning to do a story about the response of the Linux community to the plight of these penguins...and they've also sent a donation of their own. I look forward to seeing that story come out!

    ---Ravenfeather, feeling somewhat sheepish for replying to his reply to his own post.
  • I checked back that invalid certificate thingy which makes some users hesiate from donating. The cert is invalid because it was issued to the domain: www.labyrinth.net.au

    When checking DNS entries a little you can find that they are the providers for penguins.org.au. (See the domain info taken from http://www.nic.au [www.nic.au] below or online at ht tp://www.nic.au/cgi-bin/multisearch.pl?name=pengui ns&domain=.org.au&moreinfo=1 [www.nic.au])

    --------- snip ----------
    nslookup -type=NS penguins.org.au
    Source: Authorative server for .org.au


    Server: munnari.OZ.AU
    Address: 128.250.1.21

    Non-authoritative answer:
    penguins.org.au nameserver = rip.psg.COM
    penguins.org.au nameserver = warrane.connect.COM.AU
    penguins.org.au nameserver = yarrina.connect.COM.AU
    penguins.org.au nameserver = minotaur.labyrinth.NET.AU

    Authoritative answers can be found from:
    rip.psg.COM internet address = 147.28.0.39
    warrane.connect.COM.AU internet address = 192.189.54.33
    yarrina.connect.COM.AU internet address = 192.189.54.17
    minotaur.labyrinth.NET.AU internet address = 203.9.148.2




    dig -t any penguins.org.au
    ; > DiG 8.2 > @munnari.oz.au penguins.org.au -t
    ; (2 servers found)
    ;; res options: init recurs defnam dnsrch
    ;; got answer:
    ;; ->>HEADER- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 6
    ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 4, AUTHORITY: 4, ADDITIONAL: 4
    ;; QUERY SECTION:
    ;; penguins.org.au, type = ANY, class = IN

    ;; ANSWER SECTION:
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS rip.psg.COM.
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS warrane.connect.COM.AU.
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS yarrina.connect.COM.AU.
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS minotaur.labyrinth.NET.AU.

    ;; AUTHORITY SECTION:
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS rip.psg.COM.
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS warrane.connect.COM.AU.
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS yarrina.connect.COM.AU.
    penguins.org.au. 1D IN NS minotaur.labyrinth.NET.AU.

    ;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
    rip.psg.COM. 1d21h55m26s IN A 147.28.0.39
    warrane.connect.COM.AU. 1D IN A 192.189.54.33
    yarrina.connect.COM.AU. 1D IN A 192.189.54.17
    minotaur.labyrinth.NET.AU. 1D IN A 203.9.148.2

    ;; Total query time: 271 msec
    ;; FROM: vserve4.netregistry.au.com to SERVER: munnari.oz.au 128.250.22.2
    ;; WHEN: Fri Jan 7 20:33:39 2000
    ;; MSG SIZE sent: 33 rcvd: 273




    Actual Server Reply
    [ns.aunic.net]

    domain: penguins.org.au
    descr: Phillip Island Penguin Reserve
    descr: (ACN)
    descr:
    descr: ACT
    admin-c: KD202-AU
    tech-c: EH201-AU
    zone-c: KD202-AU
    remarks: Created 19960824
    changed: register@aunic.net 19960918
    source: AUNIC

    person: kieran davies
    address: 13/68 gould street
    address: frankston
    address: VIC 3197
    phone: +61 9769 6966
    fax-no: +61 9769 6472
    e-mail: manmor@labyrinth.net.au
    nic-hdl: KD202-AU
    remarks: (Organisation) manmor
    remarks: (position) manager
    remarks: Created 19960918
    changed: register@aunic.net 19960918
    source: AUNIC

    person: Elizabeth Hemphill
    address: Level 10, 99 Queen St
    address: Melbourne
    address: VIC 3000
    address: AU
    phone: +61 3 9642 4222
    fax-no: +61 3 9642 4955
    e-mail: domainmaster@labyrinth.net.au
    nic-hdl: EH201-AU
    remarks: (Organisation) Labyrinth Connections Pty. Ltd.
    remarks: Created 19960725
    changed: register@aunic.net 19991014
    source: AUNIC
    --------- snip ----------

    Greetz
  • I've already posted this on the Phillip Island page, so maybe I'll get a response from there. As we've suddenly all become so 'concientous' (sp?), is there anywhere that we can adopt/sponsor a penguin via a zoo, wildlife center or similar?? Surely having a picture of a real-life Tux would be far better (if not more cool {sic}) than having a stuffed toy by your monitor. Also, we would be paying your sponsorship each year, thereby ensuring the continued survival of these little critters for years to come and doing our bit to 'save the planet'. Just a thought - maybe someone out there has some knowledge or a contact for this sort of thing. .sig removed by humor-detector. Can't have any of that around here!!
  • Thanks everyone, from all of us here at the Phillip Island Penguin Parade! We have tried to get a secure form online. You will probably get an error message about it, as we don't own our own certificate yet, and are relying on the generosity of a local ISP (Labyrinth Connections) to help us out so that things are as secure as can be. Maybe I should stick to being a ranger and not try and compete with all you programmers :) Thanks yet again!

Beware of Programmers who carry screwdrivers. -- Leonard Brandwein

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