Ladies and gentlemen, we've left Mars. Well, at least I'm done with theMartian lander from my past few articles. I hope you had chance to experiment withit and find out that it's not too easy to land a craft on any planet!

Sure, you can just say that the moon orbits the Earth every 27.3 days, but that'srelative to the stars, the sidereal orbit. The period between moon phases (such as afull moon) is also known as a synodic orbit, and that's 29.5 days.


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So the simple task of ascertaining whether it's a full moon already has some mathinvolved. Then there's the issue of the moon's illumination level beingrelative to where you are on Earth too. That makes sense. A full moon in PuntaArenas, Chile, is different from that in Lapland (though not by much).

The long and short of it is that the math behind calculating the illuminationlevel of the moon isn't quite as simple as it may seem. You could take a knowndate and time of a full moon (for example, November 14 at 8:52 am EST) and keep addingprecisely 29.530 days or 42,523.20 minutes.

But seriously, you also can let someone else do the work too, right? I mean,this column is just about a shell script, after all. So, let's see howGoogle does it! If you check Google to see the current phase of the moon, itactually references a websiteas shown in Figure1.

Do a bit of digging at the Moon Giant site, and you can see that there are two basicforms of URL that produce the data desired: a specified date or just"today" as the date. Test it by going to this website:

A quick run of the script as I write this (on October 3, 2016), and the output is a ratherconfusing: "6". Six. What does that mean? It's actually just theillumination level with everything else scrubbed out of the output data.

First off, if you aren't familiar with curl, go read the manpage. It's aterrific, quite powerful utility that lets you debug web servers, send queries toweb pages as if you were various web browsers, interact with FTP servers and, ofcourse, just grab a web page's source for further analysis. It's the latterskill I'm using for this task.

Once the source to the page is flowing in, the next step in the pipe is to extractthe line that contains the illumination level. That turns out to be exactly"Illumination:", but unfortunately, it doesn't appear by itself on theHTML source line. In fact, it's quite a complex output line! That's the jobof the next two lines actually.

The invocation to tr turns every comma into a hard return, effectivelybreaking up one really long line into a lot of shorter lines. Thengrep is invoked asecond time to extract the now further isolated illumination level indicator.

Some are easy: 0% is a new moon, 25% is a quarter moon, 50% is a half moon, and 100%is a full moon. Or is it? Actually, there are eight phases to the moon, and 50%illumination is known as a "quarter moon", confusingly enough.

Let's stop here for this article. In my next article, I'll add the ability toanalyze whether it's waxing or waning (for example, compare yesterday's illuminationlevel with today's to see if the moon is getting brighter or darker).

Dave Taylor has been hacking shell scripts on UNIX and Linux systems for areally long time. He's the author of Learning Unix for Mac OSX and Wicked Cool Shell Scripts. You can find him on Twitteras @DaveTaylor, and you can reach him through his tech Q&A site: Ask Dave Taylor.

These calendar commands display the dates and times of the phases ofthe moon (new moon, first quarter, full moon, last quarter). Thisfeature is useful for debugging problems that depend on the phase ofthe moon.

Outside the calendar, use the command M-x lunar-phases todisplay the list of the phases of the moon for the current month and thepreceding and succeeding months. For information about a differentmonth, use C-u M-x lunar-phases, which prompts for the month andyear.

The dates and times given for the phases of the moon are given inlocal time (corrected for daylight saving, when appropriate).See the discussion in the previous section. See Times of Sunrise and Sunset.

The cheapest and easiest way would be to use a flipbook (unless you have a massive moon that takes up a large chuck of the sky). Otherwise you will have to fake lighting the moon as a sphere or do some tricky masking, which is more work for something that will probably look worse.

Use the normal map of a sphere and just use dot with a light vector. Simply ndotl. Have the light vector rotate around the moon position to get the different phases. multiply it with the diffuse of the moon. Cheap in terms of memory and fast and very flexible as you can move the light source wherever you want and it will affect the moon.

I have just watched an interesting video about Moonphase watch. But why would I need to know about current Moon phase anyway as a layperson? I just can't think of any practical application for the moonphase indicator on the watch.

It is also worth noting that 12 times the length of the period between the two same phases (around 354 days) is approximately the same as one solar year (365.25 days), but not quite. Thus, they need to add leap month in some years.

Also, you can determine the angular distance between the Sun and the Moon. Thus, you can predict where the Moon is currently, which helps with tides or just observing the Moon. Many people which are not versed in astronomy think that the Moon is only visible in the night. With the moon phase you can determine whether the Moon is visible at the moment. Even in the daytime!

On 2nd thought this is actually a valid question: What does a layperson care about moon phases if (s)he is not into astrology, but interested in tangible applications? So far, I can imagine three possible applications:

Lucifer's Linux is a Live CD distro based on Arch Linux, aimed at providing a bidding occultist a lightweight, yet beautiful desktop. Packages carefully selected from the AUR, Arch Linux's main repository, as well as some custom packages help provide this. You can find screenshots of this in the Screenshots menu item as well as the sourceforge page.

As for why this was made, the closest distribution that I could find was Ubuntu: Satanic Edition, which only focused on the artwork as opposed to gathering software to help in this area. I also wanted to learn how to use the archiso scripts to generate a Live CD.

[EDIT] The reason why I mentioned the licensing issue was because even though the license is stated as free, non-commercial for the enochian font, I'd like to contact the original author to make sure they're fine with their font being packaged. Their site is down and looking in the archives for contact information on their site doesn't give me much information to go by for contact. I've done the same with the elder futhark font currently in the repositories and am waiting to hear from the author of the Elder Futhark font. Dunno why I forgot to type this out in the original draft of the OP.

The reason why the project is put into planning is because I still need to sort out some things, like which logo to use and organizing the files that lay within. I currently have two logos, one of which I have not uploaded due to being careful regarding the DeveloperWiki's trademark policy. One of the logos is a peacock in ritual robes with Lucifer's sigil on it. I'll send an email tonight to the specified address in the wiki page about the second logo. If it's allowed, a few more new wallpapers will be added featuring the second logo.

Please, please, please test this in a VM and report any bugs before you decide to install this to a hard drive! Even though I did testing of this in a VM several days before releasing it, it'd be handy to have some feedback!

Allan-Volunteer on the (topic being discussed) mailn lists. You never get the people who matters attention on the forums.

jasonwryan-Installing Arch is a measure of your literacy. Maintaining Arch is a measure of your diligence. Contributing to Arch is a measure of your competence.

Griemak-Bleeding edge, not bleeding flat. Edge denotes falls will occur from time to time. Bring your own parachute.

And what would be the main advantage of this distro over regular arch for an occultist? How do their computing needs differ from other people in ways that cannot be dealt with by arch (which is very customisable)?

I'm curious too (just for curiosity's sake). Different theming makes sense to me - though a separate distro for a separate theme seems a bit much. But what software differences would their need to be? Does someone's cultural or religious views influence which text editor or window manager they would use?

Nope. Not unless you provide specific apps by default. For eg. The Ubuntu Muslim edition, I believe came with an app that gave prayer times depending on your location & timezone. The Christian Edition also had themes that had to do with Christianity.

Nothing is too wonderful to be true, if it be consistent with the laws of nature -- Michael Faraday

Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine. -- Alan Turing

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An occultist would want software for things such as astrology, tarot, I Ching, numerology, etc. as lorin mentioned. Some packages I may still need to add to the repos include Maitreya and astrolog. There's also custom fonts that one may need for either aesthetic purposes or for writing purposes (regardless if the written document is digital). That's why I mentioned the Theban, Enochian, and Elder Futhark in my forum post as soon as I get the PKGBUILDs written for the proper DejaVu modified fonts that feature these. Openastro, QTarot, and ChronosLNX are included in the live CD for astrology and tarot purposes. 152ee80cbc

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