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1000 results for “creckling”
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Streaming audio to OpenAI in your browser is cool… until you deal with PCM16.
The browser gives you Float32 audio. The API expects PCM16 at 24kHz.
That means:
Float32 → clamp → Int16 → base64 → send to realtime api
If you don’t handle the conversion properly, you’ll hear it right away — crackling, silence, or wrong pitch.
Wrote a quick guide on how to do it correctly: https://l.zfir.dev/6rbGCiN
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Streaming audio to OpenAI in your browser is cool… until you deal with PCM16.
The browser gives you Float32 audio. The API expects PCM16 at 24kHz.
That means:
Float32 → clamp → Int16 → base64 → send to realtime api
If you don’t handle the conversion properly, you’ll hear it right away — crackling, silence, or wrong pitch.
Wrote a quick guide on how to do it correctly: https://l.zfir.dev/6rbGCiN
-
Streaming audio to OpenAI in your browser is cool… until you deal with PCM16.
The browser gives you Float32 audio. The API expects PCM16 at 24kHz.
That means:
Float32 → clamp → Int16 → base64 → send to realtime api
If you don’t handle the conversion properly, you’ll hear it right away — crackling, silence, or wrong pitch.
Wrote a quick guide on how to do it correctly: https://l.zfir.dev/6rbGCiN
-
Streaming audio to OpenAI in your browser is cool… until you deal with PCM16.
The browser gives you Float32 audio. The API expects PCM16 at 24kHz.
That means:
Float32 → clamp → Int16 → base64 → send to realtime api
If you don’t handle the conversion properly, you’ll hear it right away — crackling, silence, or wrong pitch.
Wrote a quick guide on how to do it correctly: https://l.zfir.dev/6rbGCiN
-
Streaming audio to OpenAI in your browser is cool… until you deal with PCM16.
The browser gives you Float32 audio. The API expects PCM16 at 24kHz.
That means:
Float32 → clamp → Int16 → base64 → send to realtime api
If you don’t handle the conversion properly, you’ll hear it right away — crackling, silence, or wrong pitch.
Wrote a quick guide on how to do it correctly: https://l.zfir.dev/6rbGCiN
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Hans' Bar & Grill
Starters: £6-£16; Mains: £19-£46; Pudding: £9-£14; Wines from £32Hans' Bar and Grill sits just of Sloane Square in Chelsea. It is attached to the 11 Cadogan Gardens hotel, but has a separate entrance on a pedestrianised part of Pavilion Road.
We sat in the upstairs part in the middle of a spacious room. After umming and ahhing about which dishes to pick, and whether to have any from the set menu, we decided on sharing the Truffled Mac & Cheese Croquettes to start. Three 1½ inch cubes, filled with mac & cheese showed up, slightly breaded and fried. They were nice, but they could have been a bit cheesier.
For our mains, I selected the Woodland Mushroom & Asparagus Risotto, which came with some Parmesan crackling. The risotto had a good bite to it, which I like, but it was a little skint on the asparagus. My wife chose the Cured & Roasted Loin of South Coast Cod, served with some fresh peas and brown shrimp on top. Although tasty, the portion was disappointingly bijou, and the fresh peas in the description turned out to be a quenelle and a smear of pea purée.
As we were still a little peckish, we also had a desert. My wife had a sticky toffee pudding, which was nice enough, but again a bit bijou. I had an apple crumble pie, which is just like an apple crumble, but then in a crispy pie case.
Although the food was pleasant, but not great, we found the experience a little "odd". Perhaps that was also because we were the only ones in the room having dinner — the tables on either side of us were only doing drinks — or that with every opening of the door there was a cold blast of air. We won't be returning.
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Hans' Bar & Grill
Starters: £6-£16; Mains: £19-£46; Pudding: £9-£14; Wines from £32Hans' Bar and Grill sits just of Sloane Square in Chelsea. It is attached to the 11 Cadogan Gardens hotel, but has a separate entrance on a pedestrianised part of Pavilion Road.
We sat in the upstairs part in the middle of a spacious room. After umming and ahhing about which dishes to pick, and whether to have any from the set menu, we decided on sharing the Truffled Mac & Cheese Croquettes to start. Three 1½ inch cubes, filled with mac & cheese showed up, slightly breaded and fried. They were nice, but they could have been a bit cheesier.
For our mains, I selected the Woodland Mushroom & Asparagus Risotto, which came with some Parmesan crackling. The risotto had a good bite to it, which I like, but it was a little skint on the asparagus. My wife chose the Cured & Roasted Loin of South Coast Cod, served with some fresh peas and brown shrimp on top. Although tasty, the portion was disappointingly bijou, and the fresh peas in the description turned out to be a quenelle and a smear of pea purée.
As we were still a little peckish, we also had a desert. My wife had a sticky toffee pudding, which was nice enough, but again a bit bijou. I had an apple crumble pie, which is just like an apple crumble, but then in a crispy pie case.
Although the food was pleasant, but not great, we found the experience a little "odd". Perhaps that was also because we were the only ones in the room having dinner — the tables on either side of us were only doing drinks — or that with every opening of the door there was a cold blast of air. We won't be returning.
-
Hans' Bar & Grill
Starters: £6-£16; Mains: £19-£46; Pudding: £9-£14; Wines from £32Hans' Bar and Grill sits just of Sloane Square in Chelsea. It is attached to the 11 Cadogan Gardens hotel, but has a separate entrance on a pedestrianised part of Pavilion Road.
We sat in the upstairs part in the middle of a spacious room. After umming and ahhing about which dishes to pick, and whether to have any from the set menu, we decided on sharing the Truffled Mac & Cheese Croquettes to start. Three 1½ inch cubes, filled with mac & cheese showed up, slightly breaded and fried. They were nice, but they could have been a bit cheesier.
For our mains, I selected the Woodland Mushroom & Asparagus Risotto, which came with some Parmesan crackling. The risotto had a good bite to it, which I like, but it was a little skint on the asparagus. My wife chose the Cured & Roasted Loin of South Coast Cod, served with some fresh peas and brown shrimp on top. Although tasty, the portion was disappointingly bijou, and the fresh peas in the description turned out to be a quenelle and a smear of pea purée.
As we were still a little peckish, we also had a desert. My wife had a sticky toffee pudding, which was nice enough, but again a bit bijou. I had an apple crumble pie, which is just like an apple crumble, but then in a crispy pie case.
Although the food was pleasant, but not great, we found the experience a little "odd". Perhaps that was also because we were the only ones in the room having dinner — the tables on either side of us were only doing drinks — or that with every opening of the door there was a cold blast of air. We won't be returning.
-
Hans' Bar & Grill
Starters: £6-£16; Mains: £19-£46; Pudding: £9-£14; Wines from £32Hans' Bar and Grill sits just of Sloane Square in Chelsea. It is attached to the 11 Cadogan Gardens hotel, but has a separate entrance on a pedestrianised part of Pavilion Road.
We sat in the upstairs part in the middle of a spacious room. After umming and ahhing about which dishes to pick, and whether to have any from the set menu, we decided on sharing the Truffled Mac & Cheese Croquettes to start. Three 1½ inch cubes, filled with mac & cheese showed up, slightly breaded and fried. They were nice, but they could have been a bit cheesier.
For our mains, I selected the Woodland Mushroom & Asparagus Risotto, which came with some Parmesan crackling. The risotto had a good bite to it, which I like, but it was a little skint on the asparagus. My wife chose the Cured & Roasted Loin of South Coast Cod, served with some fresh peas and brown shrimp on top. Although tasty, the portion was disappointingly bijou, and the fresh peas in the description turned out to be a quenelle and a smear of pea purée.
As we were still a little peckish, we also had a desert. My wife had a sticky toffee pudding, which was nice enough, but again a bit bijou. I had an apple crumble pie, which is just like an apple crumble, but then in a crispy pie case.
Although the food was pleasant, but not great, we found the experience a little "odd". Perhaps that was also because we were the only ones in the room having dinner — the tables on either side of us were only doing drinks — or that with every opening of the door there was a cold blast of air. We won't be returning.
-
Hans' Bar & Grill
Starters: £6-£16; Mains: £19-£46; Pudding: £9-£14; Wines from £32Hans' Bar and Grill sits just of Sloane Square in Chelsea. It is attached to the 11 Cadogan Gardens hotel, but has a separate entrance on a pedestrianised part of Pavilion Road.
We sat in the upstairs part in the middle of a spacious room. After umming and ahhing about which dishes to pick, and whether to have any from the set menu, we decided on sharing the Truffled Mac & Cheese Croquettes to start. Three 1½ inch cubes, filled with mac & cheese showed up, slightly breaded and fried. They were nice, but they could have been a bit cheesier.
For our mains, I selected the Woodland Mushroom & Asparagus Risotto, which came with some Parmesan crackling. The risotto had a good bite to it, which I like, but it was a little skint on the asparagus. My wife chose the Cured & Roasted Loin of South Coast Cod, served with some fresh peas and brown shrimp on top. Although tasty, the portion was disappointingly bijou, and the fresh peas in the description turned out to be a quenelle and a smear of pea purée.
As we were still a little peckish, we also had a desert. My wife had a sticky toffee pudding, which was nice enough, but again a bit bijou. I had an apple crumble pie, which is just like an apple crumble, but then in a crispy pie case.
Although the food was pleasant, but not great, we found the experience a little "odd". Perhaps that was also because we were the only ones in the room having dinner — the tables on either side of us were only doing drinks — or that with every opening of the door there was a cold blast of air. We won't be returning.
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A quotation from Thomas Carlyle
But his [Shakespeare’s] laughter seems to pour from him in floods; he heaps all manner of ridiculous nicknames on the butt he is bantering, tumbles and tosses him in all sorts of horse-play; you would say, with his whole heart laughs. And then, if not always the finest, it is always a genial laughter. Not at mere weakness, at misery or poverty; never. No man who can laugh, what we call laughing, will laugh at these things. It is some poor character only desiring to laugh, and have the credit of wit, that does so. Laughter means sympathy; good laughter is not “the crackling of thorns under the pot.” Even at stupidity and pretension this Shakspeare does not laugh otherwise than genially. Dogberry and Verges tickle our very hearts; and we dismiss them covered with explosions of laughter: but we like the poor fellows only the better for our laughing; and hope they will get on well there, and continue Presidents of the City-watch. Such laughter, like sunshine on the deep sea, is very beautiful to me.
Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881) Scottish essayist and historian
Lecture (1840-05-12), “The Hero as Poet,” Home House, Portman Square, LondonMore about this quote: wist.info/carlyle-thomas/82239…
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #carlyle #thomascarlyle #comedy #geniality #humor #laughter #senseofhumor #Shakespeare #sympathy
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A quotation from Thomas Carlyle
But his [Shakespeare’s] laughter seems to pour from him in floods; he heaps all manner of ridiculous nicknames on the butt he is bantering, tumbles and tosses him in all sorts of horse-play; you would say, with his whole heart laughs. And then, if not always the finest, it is always a genial laughter. Not at mere weakness, at misery or poverty; never. No man who can laugh, what we call laughing, will laugh at these things. It is some poor character only desiring to laugh, and have the credit of wit, that does so. Laughter means sympathy; good laughter is not “the crackling of thorns under the pot.” Even at stupidity and pretension this Shakspeare does not laugh otherwise than genially. Dogberry and Verges tickle our very hearts; and we dismiss them covered with explosions of laughter: but we like the poor fellows only the better for our laughing; and hope they will get on well there, and continue Presidents of the City-watch. Such laughter, like sunshine on the deep sea, is very beautiful to me.
Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881) Scottish essayist and historian
Lecture (1840-05-12), “The Hero as Poet,” Home House, Portman Square, LondonMore about this quote: wist.info/carlyle-thomas/82239…
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #carlyle #thomascarlyle #comedy #geniality #humor #laughter #senseofhumor #Shakespeare #sympathy
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A quotation from Thomas Carlyle
But his [Shakespeare’s] laughter seems to pour from him in floods; he heaps all manner of ridiculous nicknames on the butt he is bantering, tumbles and tosses him in all sorts of horse-play; you would say, with his whole heart laughs. And then, if not always the finest, it is always a genial laughter. Not at mere weakness, at misery or poverty; never. No man who can laugh, what we call laughing, will laugh at these things. It is some poor character only desiring to laugh, and have the credit of wit, that does so. Laughter means sympathy; good laughter is not “the crackling of thorns under the pot.” Even at stupidity and pretension this Shakspeare does not laugh otherwise than genially. Dogberry and Verges tickle our very hearts; and we dismiss them covered with explosions of laughter: but we like the poor fellows only the better for our laughing; and hope they will get on well there, and continue Presidents of the City-watch. Such laughter, like sunshine on the deep sea, is very beautiful to me.
Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881) Scottish essayist and historian
Lecture (1840-05-12), “The Hero as Poet,” Home House, Portman Square, LondonMore about this quote: wist.info/carlyle-thomas/82239…
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #carlyle #thomascarlyle #comedy #geniality #humor #laughter #senseofhumor #Shakespeare #sympathy
-
A quotation from Thomas Carlyle
But his [Shakespeare’s] laughter seems to pour from him in floods; he heaps all manner of ridiculous nicknames on the butt he is bantering, tumbles and tosses him in all sorts of horse-play; you would say, with his whole heart laughs. And then, if not always the finest, it is always a genial laughter. Not at mere weakness, at misery or poverty; never. No man who can laugh, what we call laughing, will laugh at these things. It is some poor character only desiring to laugh, and have the credit of wit, that does so. Laughter means sympathy; good laughter is not “the crackling of thorns under the pot.” Even at stupidity and pretension this Shakspeare does not laugh otherwise than genially. Dogberry and Verges tickle our very hearts; and we dismiss them covered with explosions of laughter: but we like the poor fellows only the better for our laughing; and hope they will get on well there, and continue Presidents of the City-watch. Such laughter, like sunshine on the deep sea, is very beautiful to me.
Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881) Scottish essayist and historian
Lecture (1840-05-12), “The Hero as Poet,” Home House, Portman Square, LondonMore about this quote: wist.info/carlyle-thomas/82239…
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #carlyle #thomascarlyle #comedy #geniality #humor #laughter #senseofhumor #Shakespeare #sympathy
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Harry Harrison, "The Streets of Ashkelon" (short story available in Stainless Steel Rat Visions".
#HarryHarrison #StainlessSteelRatVisions
[extract]
He had just reached the fringes of the village clearing when the rumbling grew to a head-splitting roar and the spacer broke through the low-hanging layer of clouds above. Garth shielded his eyes from the down-reaching tongue of flame and examined the growing form of the gray-black ship with mixed feelings.
"You better go ahead, Itin, " he said. "Use the water so you can get to the village quickly. Tell everyone to get back into the swamps, well clear of the hard ground. That ship is landing on instruments and anyone underneath at touchdown is going to be cooked. "
The ship baked dry a hundred square meters of mud, the roaring blast died, and the landing feet crunched down through the crackling crust. Metal creaked and settled into place while the cloud of smoke and steam slowly drifted lower in the humid air.
... a figure stepped out ...
Hi, my name's James Cameron, and I'm a thieving little shit. -
Harry Harrison, "The Streets of Ashkelon" (short story available in Stainless Steel Rat Visions".
#HarryHarrison #StainlessSteelRatVisions
[extract]
He had just reached the fringes of the village clearing when the rumbling grew to a head-splitting roar and the spacer broke through the low-hanging layer of clouds above. Garth shielded his eyes from the down-reaching tongue of flame and examined the growing form of the gray-black ship with mixed feelings.
"You better go ahead, Itin, " he said. "Use the water so you can get to the village quickly. Tell everyone to get back into the swamps, well clear of the hard ground. That ship is landing on instruments and anyone underneath at touchdown is going to be cooked. "
The ship baked dry a hundred square meters of mud, the roaring blast died, and the landing feet crunched down through the crackling crust. Metal creaked and settled into place while the cloud of smoke and steam slowly drifted lower in the humid air.
... a figure stepped out ...
Hi, my name's James Cameron, and I'm a thieving little shit. -
Harry Harrison, "The Streets of Ashkelon" (short story available in Stainless Steel Rat Visions".
#HarryHarrison #StainlessSteelRatVisions
[extract]
He had just reached the fringes of the village clearing when the rumbling grew to a head-splitting roar and the spacer broke through the low-hanging layer of clouds above. Garth shielded his eyes from the down-reaching tongue of flame and examined the growing form of the gray-black ship with mixed feelings.
"You better go ahead, Itin, " he said. "Use the water so you can get to the village quickly. Tell everyone to get back into the swamps, well clear of the hard ground. That ship is landing on instruments and anyone underneath at touchdown is going to be cooked. "
The ship baked dry a hundred square meters of mud, the roaring blast died, and the landing feet crunched down through the crackling crust. Metal creaked and settled into place while the cloud of smoke and steam slowly drifted lower in the humid air.
... a figure stepped out ...
Hi, my name's James Cameron, and I'm a thieving little shit. -
Harry Harrison, "The Streets of Ashkelon" (short story available in Stainless Steel Rat Visions".
#HarryHarrison #StainlessSteelRatVisions
[extract]
He had just reached the fringes of the village clearing when the rumbling grew to a head-splitting roar and the spacer broke through the low-hanging layer of clouds above. Garth shielded his eyes from the down-reaching tongue of flame and examined the growing form of the gray-black ship with mixed feelings.
"You better go ahead, Itin, " he said. "Use the water so you can get to the village quickly. Tell everyone to get back into the swamps, well clear of the hard ground. That ship is landing on instruments and anyone underneath at touchdown is going to be cooked. "
The ship baked dry a hundred square meters of mud, the roaring blast died, and the landing feet crunched down through the crackling crust. Metal creaked and settled into place while the cloud of smoke and steam slowly drifted lower in the humid air.
... a figure stepped out ...
Hi, my name's James Cameron, and I'm a thieving little shit. -
Harry Harrison, "The Streets of Ashkelon" (short story available in Stainless Steel Rat Visions".
#HarryHarrison #StainlessSteelRatVisions
[extract]
He had just reached the fringes of the village clearing when the rumbling grew to a head-splitting roar and the spacer broke through the low-hanging layer of clouds above. Garth shielded his eyes from the down-reaching tongue of flame and examined the growing form of the gray-black ship with mixed feelings.
"You better go ahead, Itin, " he said. "Use the water so you can get to the village quickly. Tell everyone to get back into the swamps, well clear of the hard ground. That ship is landing on instruments and anyone underneath at touchdown is going to be cooked. "
The ship baked dry a hundred square meters of mud, the roaring blast died, and the landing feet crunched down through the crackling crust. Metal creaked and settled into place while the cloud of smoke and steam slowly drifted lower in the humid air.
... a figure stepped out ...
Hi, my name's James Cameron, and I'm a thieving little shit. -
Just home from seeing this surprising play with fine performances from all actors at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Highly recommend it. Seats still available for January 21 thru 24.
Natasha Mumba’s debut play showcases a cast of Zambian and Canadian actors who take us from downtown Toronto to Zambia’s Copperbelt region to untangle the inner workings of the Kasuba family, their secrets, and their intriguing legacy. Deftly investigating geopolitical and familial power structures through insightful commentary and crackling dialogue, this world premiere explores the clash between personal aspirations, familial expectations, and the steep price some must pay for success.
Edit for specific location.
#nationalartscentre #englishtheatre #natashamumba #livetheatreottawa #OttawaEvents
Copperbelt | by Natasha Mumba | Jan 13 - 24, 2026 | Babs Asper Theatre | National Arts Centre
https://nac-cna.ca/en/event/38314?promo=1439&utm_source=google&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=8993_Ba_Nac-Et-Copperbelt&utm_content=pmax&utm_term=static_15s_en&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23437450467&gclid=Cj0KCQiAg63LBhDtARIsAJygHZ6zGNKBFCdU7xCJzMZnH6ON9-dLOyR1O0hZ0ZbYJkIVcQVL2Wcd_1AaAuLmEALw_wcB#mobile_buy -
Just home from seeing this surprising play with fine performances from all actors at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Highly recommend it. Seats still available for January 21 thru 24.
Natasha Mumba’s debut play showcases a cast of Zambian and Canadian actors who take us from downtown Toronto to Zambia’s Copperbelt region to untangle the inner workings of the Kasuba family, their secrets, and their intriguing legacy. Deftly investigating geopolitical and familial power structures through insightful commentary and crackling dialogue, this world premiere explores the clash between personal aspirations, familial expectations, and the steep price some must pay for success.
Edit for specific location.
#nationalartscentre #englishtheatre #natashamumba #livetheatreottawa #OttawaEvents
Copperbelt | by Natasha Mumba | Jan 13 - 24, 2026 | Babs Asper Theatre | National Arts Centre
https://nac-cna.ca/en/event/38314?promo=1439&utm_source=google&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=8993_Ba_Nac-Et-Copperbelt&utm_content=pmax&utm_term=static_15s_en&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23437450467&gclid=Cj0KCQiAg63LBhDtARIsAJygHZ6zGNKBFCdU7xCJzMZnH6ON9-dLOyR1O0hZ0ZbYJkIVcQVL2Wcd_1AaAuLmEALw_wcB#mobile_buy -
Just home from seeing this surprising play with fine performances from all actors at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Highly recommend it. Seats still available for January 21 thru 24.
Natasha Mumba’s debut play showcases a cast of Zambian and Canadian actors who take us from downtown Toronto to Zambia’s Copperbelt region to untangle the inner workings of the Kasuba family, their secrets, and their intriguing legacy. Deftly investigating geopolitical and familial power structures through insightful commentary and crackling dialogue, this world premiere explores the clash between personal aspirations, familial expectations, and the steep price some must pay for success.
Edit for specific location.
#nationalartscentre #englishtheatre #natashamumba #livetheatreottawa #OttawaEvents
Copperbelt | by Natasha Mumba | Jan 13 - 24, 2026 | Babs Asper Theatre | National Arts Centre
https://nac-cna.ca/en/event/38314?promo=1439&utm_source=google&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=8993_Ba_Nac-Et-Copperbelt&utm_content=pmax&utm_term=static_15s_en&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23437450467&gclid=Cj0KCQiAg63LBhDtARIsAJygHZ6zGNKBFCdU7xCJzMZnH6ON9-dLOyR1O0hZ0ZbYJkIVcQVL2Wcd_1AaAuLmEALw_wcB#mobile_buy -
Just home from seeing this surprising play with fine performances from all actors. Highly recommend it. Seats still available for January 21 thru 24.
Natasha Mumba’s debut play showcases a cast of Zambian and Canadian actors who take us from downtown Toronto to Zambia’s Copperbelt region to untangle the inner workings of the Kasuba family, their secrets, and their intriguing legacy. Deftly investigating geopolitical and familial power structures through insightful commentary and crackling dialogue, this world premiere explores the clash between personal aspirations, familial expectations, and the steep price some must pay for success.
#nationalartscentre #englishtheatre #natashamumba
Copperbelt | by Natasha Mumba | Jan 13 - 24, 2026 | Babs Asper Theatre | National Arts Centre
https://nac-cna.ca/en/event/38314?promo=1439&utm_source=google&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=8993_Ba_Nac-Et-Copperbelt&utm_content=pmax&utm_term=static_15s_en&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23437450467&gclid=Cj0KCQiAg63LBhDtARIsAJygHZ6zGNKBFCdU7xCJzMZnH6ON9-dLOyR1O0hZ0ZbYJkIVcQVL2Wcd_1AaAuLmEALw_wcB#mobile_buy -
Just home from seeing this surprising play with fine performances from all actors at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. Highly recommend it. Seats still available for January 21 thru 24.
Natasha Mumba’s debut play showcases a cast of Zambian and Canadian actors who take us from downtown Toronto to Zambia’s Copperbelt region to untangle the inner workings of the Kasuba family, their secrets, and their intriguing legacy. Deftly investigating geopolitical and familial power structures through insightful commentary and crackling dialogue, this world premiere explores the clash between personal aspirations, familial expectations, and the steep price some must pay for success.
Edit for specific location.
#nationalartscentre #englishtheatre #natashamumba #livetheatreottawa #OttawaEvents
Copperbelt | by Natasha Mumba | Jan 13 - 24, 2026 | Babs Asper Theatre | National Arts Centre
https://nac-cna.ca/en/event/38314?promo=1439&utm_source=google&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=8993_Ba_Nac-Et-Copperbelt&utm_content=pmax&utm_term=static_15s_en&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23437450467&gclid=Cj0KCQiAg63LBhDtARIsAJygHZ6zGNKBFCdU7xCJzMZnH6ON9-dLOyR1O0hZ0ZbYJkIVcQVL2Wcd_1AaAuLmEALw_wcB#mobile_buy -
https://greygalaxie.substack.com/p/what-the-gemini-full-moon-revealed
What the #Gemini Full #Moon Revealed When I Wrote Your #Horoscopes
#GreyGalaxie #astrology…"There are weeks when the sky behaves, and there are weeks when the cosmos decides to lean in close and breathe on the back of your neck. This is the second kind. The Moon drifts from Pisces through Aries into Taurus and finally Gemini, moving from dissolving tide to warrior spark to earth’s hunger to the mind’s crackling electricity. It crescendos into a Full Moon in Gemi."…
-
https://greygalaxie.substack.com/p/what-the-gemini-full-moon-revealed
What the #Gemini Full #Moon Revealed When I Wrote Your #Horoscopes
#GreyGalaxie #astrology…"There are weeks when the sky behaves, and there are weeks when the cosmos decides to lean in close and breathe on the back of your neck. This is the second kind. The Moon drifts from Pisces through Aries into Taurus and finally Gemini, moving from dissolving tide to warrior spark to earth’s hunger to the mind’s crackling electricity. It crescendos into a Full Moon in Gemi."…
-
https://greygalaxie.substack.com/p/what-the-gemini-full-moon-revealed
What the #Gemini Full #Moon Revealed When I Wrote Your #Horoscopes
#GreyGalaxie #astrology…"There are weeks when the sky behaves, and there are weeks when the cosmos decides to lean in close and breathe on the back of your neck. This is the second kind. The Moon drifts from Pisces through Aries into Taurus and finally Gemini, moving from dissolving tide to warrior spark to earth’s hunger to the mind’s crackling electricity. It crescendos into a Full Moon in Gemi."…
-
https://greygalaxie.substack.com/p/what-the-gemini-full-moon-revealed
What the #Gemini Full #Moon Revealed When I Wrote Your #Horoscopes
#GreyGalaxie #astrology…"There are weeks when the sky behaves, and there are weeks when the cosmos decides to lean in close and breathe on the back of your neck. This is the second kind. The Moon drifts from Pisces through Aries into Taurus and finally Gemini, moving from dissolving tide to warrior spark to earth’s hunger to the mind’s crackling electricity. It crescendos into a Full Moon in Gemi."…
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Any #Fedora users who have experienced this?
I’ve been using regular Workstation with #Gnome, but lately have become #Sway curious.
On my gaming computer, I’ve successfully improved game performance by increasing screen refresh rate, allowing screen tearing, and I have emulated #caffeine behavior by using inhibit_idle for fullscreen windows.
My next issue is that some games - for example #DirtRally2 - have occasional bouts of distorted/crackling sound in #SwayWM but not in Gnome.
Are there any obvious things to look for? My personal hypothesis is that sound buffers may be too small in some situations where CPU usage increases, but that’s just a wild guess.
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Any #Fedora users who have experienced this?
I’ve been using regular Workstation with #Gnome, but lately have become #Sway curious.
On my gaming computer, I’ve successfully improved game performance by increasing screen refresh rate, allowing screen tearing, and I have emulated #caffeine behavior by using inhibit_idle for fullscreen windows.
My next issue is that some games - for example #DirtRally2 - have occasional bouts of distorted/crackling sound in #SwayWM but not in Gnome.
Are there any obvious things to look for? My personal hypothesis is that sound buffers may be too small in some situations where CPU usage increases, but that’s just a wild guess.