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1000 results for “layer8”

  1. Ah, yes, the "Vite of #AI #agent #orchestration," because what we really needed was another layer of over-engineered scaffolding to complicate our lives even further. 🤖🛠️ Next up: a kit to manage the kits managing your kits, because recursion is apparently the new black. 🌀
    ahk.cardor.dev #Vite #overengineering #techrecursion #complexity #HackerNews #ngated

  2. Ah, yes, the "Vite of #AI #agent #orchestration," because what we really needed was another layer of over-engineered scaffolding to complicate our lives even further. 🤖🛠️ Next up: a kit to manage the kits managing your kits, because recursion is apparently the new black. 🌀
    ahk.cardor.dev #Vite #overengineering #techrecursion #complexity #HackerNews #ngated

  3. Ah, yes, the "Vite of #AI #agent #orchestration," because what we really needed was another layer of over-engineered scaffolding to complicate our lives even further. 🤖🛠️ Next up: a kit to manage the kits managing your kits, because recursion is apparently the new black. 🌀
    ahk.cardor.dev #Vite #overengineering #techrecursion #complexity #HackerNews #ngated

  4. 🚀 Oh, rejoice! #IBM has graced us with the #Granite 4.1 family: a *gargantuan* collection of models only a corporate overlord could love. Apparently, they are the Swiss Army knife of AI—just what every enterprise needs to add a delightful layer of #complexity to their already Byzantine IT infrastructures. 🙄🔧
    research.ibm.com/blog/granite- #AI #AIModels #EnterpriseIT #HackerNews #ngated

  5. 🚀 Oh, rejoice! #IBM has graced us with the #Granite 4.1 family: a *gargantuan* collection of models only a corporate overlord could love. Apparently, they are the Swiss Army knife of AI—just what every enterprise needs to add a delightful layer of #complexity to their already Byzantine IT infrastructures. 🙄🔧
    research.ibm.com/blog/granite- #AI #AIModels #EnterpriseIT #HackerNews #ngated

  6. 🚀 Oh, rejoice! #IBM has graced us with the #Granite 4.1 family: a *gargantuan* collection of models only a corporate overlord could love. Apparently, they are the Swiss Army knife of AI—just what every enterprise needs to add a delightful layer of #complexity to their already Byzantine IT infrastructures. 🙄🔧
    research.ibm.com/blog/granite- #AI #AIModels #EnterpriseIT #HackerNews #ngated

  7. 🚀 Oh, rejoice! #IBM has graced us with the #Granite 4.1 family: a *gargantuan* collection of models only a corporate overlord could love. Apparently, they are the Swiss Army knife of AI—just what every enterprise needs to add a delightful layer of #complexity to their already Byzantine IT infrastructures. 🙄🔧
    research.ibm.com/blog/granite- #AI #AIModels #EnterpriseIT #HackerNews #ngated

  8. 🚀 Oh, rejoice! #IBM has graced us with the #Granite 4.1 family: a *gargantuan* collection of models only a corporate overlord could love. Apparently, they are the Swiss Army knife of AI—just what every enterprise needs to add a delightful layer of #complexity to their already Byzantine IT infrastructures. 🙄🔧
    research.ibm.com/blog/granite- #AI #AIModels #EnterpriseIT #HackerNews #ngated

  9. How does using the #Jolla #JollaC2 (@jolla) with #SailfishOS for about a week as a daily driver now (with my old #iPhone at home as a backup)?

    In general, it works much better than I had hoped after my experiences with other alternative #smartphone systems and it indeed is the first (and so far only) system that indeed works quite well. Also at around 285€ (commerce.jolla.com/products/jo) it isn't too expensive, so one can simply try it out.

    There are a few limitations though:

    * I am really missing biometric unlocking
    * There is no predictive text input, so typing could be more comfy
    * The UX experience sometimes feels strange (but no no-gos for me)
    * It is not a snappy and fast device
    * Audio quality is so-so
    * GPS really needs a GPS signal, so no WIFI-based location

    What is great:

    * It is a real #Linux, so it has a #terminal, #sshd, you can e.g. use the #Nix package manager etc.
    * Android apps are running in a container
    * You can have different users to limit data access

    Unfortunately there are nearly no high-quality native apps so far and the built-in ones are very basic (e.g. email).

    But: The #Android compatibility layer is very good, the system comes with #Fdroid and #AuroraStore (#Google store front-end) pre-installed, so you can easily install practically all official Android apps.

    Most apps work very well, some (especially banking) apps do not though as they complain that the system is rooted, so YMMV regarding the apps you need.

    In general I am really happy with this system.

    And: All the de-ggoglefied Android phones like the #Volla will always still remain just that: A more limited Android. SailfishOS offers a path towards powerful native (#Qt/#QML/#Cplusplus/#Python/you name it) based apps.

    I am hoping that Jolla will provide a significantly more powerful device option and that some of the problems above will be solved.

    But already now, even with the limitations above, if you are somewhat technically inclined (but without the need to fiddle with a command line unlike with the open mobile Linux distributions), want to get rid of #Google or #Apple for whatever reason, want a #Linux #smartphone, support a #European company from #Finland, this phone is really usable.

  10. How does using the #Jolla #JollaC2 (@jolla) with #SailfishOS for about a week as a daily driver now (with my old #iPhone at home as a backup)?

    In general, it works much better than I had hoped after my experiences with other alternative #smartphone systems and it indeed is the first (and so far only) system that indeed works quite well. Also at around 285€ (commerce.jolla.com/products/jo) it isn't too expensive, so one can simply try it out.

    There are a few limitations though:

    * I am really missing biometric unlocking
    * There is no predictive text input, so typing could be more comfy
    * The UX experience sometimes feels strange (but no no-gos for me)
    * It is not a snappy and fast device
    * Audio quality is so-so
    * GPS really needs a GPS signal, so no WIFI-based location

    What is great:

    * It is a real #Linux, so it has a #terminal, #sshd, you can e.g. use the #Nix package manager etc.
    * Android apps are running in a container
    * You can have different users to limit data access

    Unfortunately there are nearly no high-quality native apps so far and the built-in ones are very basic (e.g. email).

    But: The #Android compatibility layer is very good, the system comes with #Fdroid and #AuroraStore (#Google store front-end) pre-installed, so you can easily install practically all official Android apps.

    Most apps work very well, some (especially banking) apps do not though as they complain that the system is rooted, so YMMV regarding the apps you need.

    In general I am really happy with this system.

    And: All the de-ggoglefied Android phones like the #Volla will always still remain just that: A more limited Android. SailfishOS offers a path towards powerful native (#Qt/#QML/#Cplusplus/#Python/you name it) based apps.

    I am hoping that Jolla will provide a significantly more powerful device option and that some of the problems above will be solved.

    But already now, even with the limitations above, if you are somewhat technically inclined (but without the need to fiddle with a command line unlike with the open mobile Linux distributions), want to get rid of #Google or #Apple for whatever reason, want a #Linux #smartphone, support a #European company from #Finland, this phone is really usable.

  11. How does using the #Jolla #JollaC2 (@jolla) with #SailfishOS for about a week as a daily driver now (with my old #iPhone at home as a backup)?

    In general, it works much better than I had hoped after my experiences with other alternative #smartphone systems and it indeed is the first (and so far only) system that indeed works quite well. Also at around 285€ (commerce.jolla.com/products/jo) it isn't too expensive, so one can simply try it out.

    There are a few limitations though:

    * I am really missing biometric unlocking
    * There is no predictive text input, so typing could be more comfy
    * The UX experience sometimes feels strange (but no no-gos for me)
    * It is not a snappy and fast device
    * Audio quality is so-so
    * GPS really needs a GPS signal, so no WIFI-based location

    What is great:

    * It is a real #Linux, so it has a #terminal, #sshd, you can e.g. use the #Nix package manager etc.
    * Android apps are running in a container
    * You can have different users to limit data access

    Unfortunately there are nearly no high-quality native apps so far and the built-in ones are very basic (e.g. email).

    But: The #Android compatibility layer is very good, the system comes with #Fdroid and #AuroraStore (#Google store front-end) pre-installed, so you can easily install practically all official Android apps.

    Most apps work very well, some (especially banking) apps do not though as they complain that the system is rooted, so YMMV regarding the apps you need.

    In general I am really happy with this system.

    And: All the de-ggoglefied Android phones like the #Volla will always still remain just that: A more limited Android. SailfishOS offers a path towards powerful native (#Qt/#QML/#Cplusplus/#Python/you name it) based apps.

    I am hoping that Jolla will provide a significantly more powerful device option and that some of the problems above will be solved.

    But already now, even with the limitations above, if you are somewhat technically inclined (but without the need to fiddle with a command line unlike with the open mobile Linux distributions), want to get rid of #Google or #Apple for whatever reason, want a #Linux #smartphone, support a #European company from #Finland, this phone is really usable.

  12. New ‘King’ of the Kaiwi Channel after record-breaking swim

    HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – With a thin layer of sunscreen still clinging to his skin, Loren King raised his…
    #NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #BreakingNews #Hawaii #Headlines #kaiwichannel #lorenking #molokai #oahu #record #Record-breaking #swim #swimming #Topstories #TopStories
    newsbeep.com/us/614991/

  13. I decided that I should probably have a variant of my last #NotSafeFromWhimsy post where I'm wearing more clothes. I can't know the reasoning that my brain does, but I also am not going to miss the opportunity to share the cuteness going on here.

    #FitCheck wise, the flannel and tank/crop is still going strong, but generally layered under a fuzzy hoodie even indoors because it's a bit chilly in Michigan

    #WhimsicalWednesday #KatPics #KatsTats #Snek

  14. Eve Risser, Red Desert Orchestra – Eurythmia (2022, France/Europe/Burkina Faso)

    Our next spotlight is on number 679 on The List, submitted by platenworm.

    The Red Desert Orchestra is a free jazz group headed by French composer and pianist Eve Risser, its core members originating from various spots in Europe alongside, for this record, three Burkinabe musicians: Antonin-Tri Hoang (alto sax, analog synth), Sakina Abdou (tenor sax), Grégoire Tirtiaux (bari sax, qarqabas), Nils Ostendorf (trumpet, analog synth), Matthias Müller (trombone), Tatiana Paris (electric guitar, voice) Ophélia Hié (balafon, bara, voice), Mélissa Hié (balafon, djembe, voice), Fanny Lasfargues (electro-acoustic bass), Oumarou Bambara (djembe, bara), and Emmanuel Scarpa (drums, voice).

    The songs are each titled in a language belonging to one of the musicians and integrate a wide variety of elements, as might be expected by reading the list of instruments involved. The effect is rather stunning, seamlessly blending and layering jazzy horn and piano sections into West African percussion solos on top of electronic bloops and bleeps and abstract vocals, often with a hypnotic, minimalist tempo. While all songs are noted as being composed by Risser, she didn’t provide written notation for the musicians so as to prevent posing a barrier for those who didn’t read music. The group instead worked through the pieces together and provided their own improvisations, and each individual musician is given the opportunity to shine at one point or another in the album. The result is that all the musicians are credited for the fantastic collaborative arrangements, and the listener is left wanting more. Beautiful.

    #BurkinaFaso #EveRisser #freeJazz #improvisation #ListenToThis #music #musicDiscovery #RedDesertOrchestra #WestAfricanMusic
  15. Eve Risser, Red Desert Orchestra – Eurythmia (2022, France/Europe/Burkina Faso)

    Our next spotlight is on number 679 on The List, submitted by platenworm.

    The Red Desert Orchestra is a free jazz group headed by French composer and pianist Eve Risser, its core members originating from various spots in Europe alongside, for this record, three Burkinabe musicians: Antonin-Tri Hoang (alto sax, analog synth), Sakina Abdou (tenor sax), Grégoire Tirtiaux (bari sax, qarqabas), Nils Ostendorf (trumpet, analog synth), Matthias Müller (trombone), Tatiana Paris (electric guitar, voice) Ophélia Hié (balafon, bara, voice), Mélissa Hié (balafon, djembe, voice), Fanny Lasfargues (electro-acoustic bass), Oumarou Bambara (djembe, bara), and Emmanuel Scarpa (drums, voice).

    The songs are each titled in a language belonging to one of the musicians and integrate a wide variety of elements, as might be expected by reading the list of instruments involved. The effect is rather stunning, seamlessly blending and layering jazzy horn and piano sections into West African percussion solos on top of electronic bloops and bleeps and abstract vocals, often with a hypnotic, minimalist tempo. While all songs are noted as being composed by Risser, she didn’t provide written notation for the musicians so as to prevent posing a barrier for those who didn’t read music. The group instead worked through the pieces together and provided their own improvisations, and each individual musician is given the opportunity to shine at one point or another in the album. The result is that all the musicians are credited for the fantastic collaborative arrangements, and the listener is left wanting more. Beautiful.

    #BurkinaFaso #EveRisser #freeJazz #improvisation #ListenToThis #music #musicDiscovery #RedDesertOrchestra #WestAfricanMusic
  16. ✨The emperor Numerian✨

    This layered cameo is thought to be a portrait of the late third century emperor Numerian (283–284 CE).

    Numerian’s death whether a natural death or a murder (the sources disagree) meant his rule was short, but his portrait has stood the test of time.

    #AncientRome #RomanEmpire

  17. ✨The emperor Numerian✨

    This layered cameo is thought to be a portrait of the late third century emperor Numerian (283–284 CE).

    Numerian’s death whether a natural death or a murder (the sources disagree) meant his rule was short, but his portrait has stood the test of time.

    #AncientRome #RomanEmpire

  18. ✨The emperor Numerian✨

    This layered cameo is thought to be a portrait of the late third century emperor Numerian (283–284 CE).

    Numerian’s death whether a natural death or a murder (the sources disagree) meant his rule was short, but his portrait has stood the test of time.

    #AncientRome #RomanEmpire

  19. ✨The emperor Numerian✨

    This layered cameo is thought to be a portrait of the late third century emperor Numerian (283–284 CE).

    Numerian’s death whether a natural death or a murder (the sources disagree) meant his rule was short, but his portrait has stood the test of time.

    #AncientRome #RomanEmpire

  20. ✨The emperor Numerian✨

    This layered cameo is thought to be a portrait of the late third century emperor Numerian (283–284 CE).

    Numerian’s death whether a natural death or a murder (the sources disagree) meant his rule was short, but his portrait has stood the test of time.

    #AncientRome #RomanEmpire

  21. HELLO SUMMER: High Tides, Higher Rebellion (June 2025 Cover)

    Filed Under: Sun, Smoke & Rebellion

    It’s June. The pre-rolls are packed, the pool is warm, and rebellion is floating in the deep end.

    For this month’s cover, we’re done with subtle. We’ve done the high-concept, the hand-planted symbolism, the layered metaphors. But sometimes you don’t need a whole damn dissertation to spark a conversation. Sometimes all it takes is a woman, a joint, and a watermelon float.

    Yes, it’s summer. But this isn’t a lifestyle shoot. This cover is about defiance dressed as leisure. It’s a nod to every person who’s been told to tone it down, hide it, go inside, keep it low. She’s doing none of that. She’s in the sun, unapologetic, and lighting up in plain sight. That’s what legalization was supposed to look like. And in a time when we’re watching rollbacks, reclassifications, and the ghosts of prohibition try to slink back into the room, we’re reminding you what freedom still looks like.

    We kept the aesthetic bold. A sharp, photo-real color grade. Clean type. A background that practically begs you to jump in. No clutter. No apologies. Just attitude and sun, and smoke. Because the truth is, this summer is going to set the tone for a lot of what’s coming next.

    Rescheduling news is on deck. Federal movement is being teased. Meanwhile, local crackdowns and corporate nonsense keep trying to turn cannabis into a gated product line. But our culture doesn’t sit quietly while decisions get made behind closed doors. We throw the curtains in the pool and light one up.

    So yeah, this is the June cover. And she’s not asking for permission.

    High tides, higher rebellion.

    © 2025 Pot Culture Magazine. All rights reserved. This content is the exclusive property of Pot Culture Magazine and may not be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written permission from the publisher, except for brief quotations in critical reviews.

    DIFFERENT TOKES

    #420CommunityLegalWeedWeedLifeCannabisCommunityCoverStoryRebellion #2025 #cannabis #CannabisCommunity #CannabisCulture #CannabisCommunity #Cover #June #June2025 #JuneCover #Marijuana #MarijuanaNews #PotCultureMagazine #Rebellion #Weed

  22. NCSC named the AI patch wave on 1 May 2026. The operators that hold ground through the forced correction will be the ones with a cryptographic position on what they patched, in what order, under whose key.

    The Mickai audit substrate is that position at the primitive layer: FIPS 204 ML-DSA-65, SHA-3-512 hash chain, browser-resident offline verifier.

    mickai.co.uk/articles/ncsc-nam

    #NCSC #AICyber #PostQuantum #Mickai

  23. The Power of Relationships in Shaping Identity

    We Do Not Move Through Life Alone

    I often return to the same idea when I cannot sleep.

    On the surface, life appears singular. One body, one name, one mind moving through time. It can feel as though we travel through existence as isolated entities, responsible only for our own thoughts and choices. Yet when the world quiets—when the distractions fall away and the night opens space for reflection—that illusion begins to soften.

    Photo by Antonio García on Pexels.com

    Who I am today is not the result of a solitary path, but a reflection of every experience I have encountered along the way. Every interaction, every shared moment—no matter how brief or seemingly insignificant—has shaped something within me. Some of these moments announced themselves loudly. Others flow quietly, unnoticed at the time, only revealing their influence later. Still, each one left an imprint.

    We are not separate beings moving past one another untouched. We are vibrations, interconnected in a complex, ever-shifting dance of energy. Each encounter subtly alters that rhythm. A conversation can change the way we see ourselves. A look can linger longer than words. A moment of grace can soften a place inside us that we didn’t realize had hardened. Even moments of tension or misunderstanding carry information, reshaping the inner landscape in ways we may only recognize much later.

    Life unfolds, and we unfold with it.

    Photo by Debendra Das on Pexels.com

    There is a natural ebb and flow to existence—of emotions, of resilience, of learning, of becoming. We are constantly shifting in small, often imperceptible ways to accommodate this unfolding. Some days, the shifts are gentle. Other days, they are disruptive, demanding attention. But they are always happening. We are never static.

    When we allow this process—when we move with life rather than against it—there is a sense of alignment. Not perfection, not ease in every moment, but a kind of coherence. The inner and outer worlds speak to one another in a shared language. We respond rather than resist. We listen rather than brace.

    When we fight the natural movement of existence, however, we encounter friction.

    Resistance To Flow

    That resistance creates a different vibration. It tightens the body. It clouds perception. It turns experience into something to endure rather than something to integrate. This friction is not a failure; it is information. It signals that something is being held too rigidly, that we are attempting to remain unchanged in a reality that is defined by change.

    Photo by Nancy B. on Pexels.com

    Our inner landscape reflects this tension. Just as environments respond to pressure—eroding, cracking, reshaping—so do we. The emotional terrain shifts. Old beliefs are challenged. Patterns either deepen or dissolve. Nothing remains untouched.

    This is not a call to passive acceptance or disengagement. Rather, it is an invitation to participation. To recognize that we are co-creators in this process, shaped by what we meet and shaping in return. Every relationship, every experience, every shared moment contributes to who we are becoming.

    In this way, identity is not fixed. It is relational.

    Deepening of Self

    We are composed not only of our own thoughts and histories, but of the echoes of others—their words, their presence, their absence. Our inner worlds are populated landscapes, layered with meaning gathered over time. This does not diminish individuality; it deepens it. It reminds us that depth comes from contact, not isolation.

    Photo by Nataliya Vaitkevich on Pexels.com

    Perhaps this is why these thoughts surface at night. When we are no longer performing our separateness, the truth of interconnection becomes harder to ignore. The mind, finally unoccupied, begins to integrate what the day delivered. Sleep resists not because something is wrong, but because something is still settling.

    There is comfort in this understanding.

    It tells us that we are not broken for being affected. That sensitivity is not weakness. The way we carry others within us is evidence that we have lived fully, openly, and in relationship with the world. It reminds us that meaning is not manufactured alone, but emerges in the spaces between.

    We are shaped by life as it happens—and we, in turn, shape the life unfolding around us. This shared movement, this mutual influence, is not a distraction from who we are. It is who we are.

    .

    In stillness I sit
    awareness blossoms
    flow, naturalness, suchness.
    In stillness I am
    emptiness and everything
    sat-chit-ananda.

    ~K.M. Simonds

    #awareness #balance #buddhist #change #connection #ego #egoDeath #experience #flow #healing #holistic #holisticLife #identity #innerLandscape #interbeing #interconnected #LOVE #meditation #mindful #mindfulLife #mindfulness #moments #naturalLiving #philosophy #relationships #resilience #resistance #satChitAnanda #seeking #spirituality
  24. The Power of Relationships in Shaping Identity

    We Do Not Move Through Life Alone

    I often return to the same idea when I cannot sleep.

    On the surface, life appears singular. One body, one name, one mind moving through time. It can feel as though we travel through existence as isolated entities, responsible only for our own thoughts and choices. Yet when the world quiets—when the distractions fall away and the night opens space for reflection—that illusion begins to soften.

    Photo by Antonio García on Pexels.com

    Who I am today is not the result of a solitary path, but a reflection of every experience I have encountered along the way. Every interaction, every shared moment—no matter how brief or seemingly insignificant—has shaped something within me. Some of these moments announced themselves loudly. Others flow quietly, unnoticed at the time, only revealing their influence later. Still, each one left an imprint.

    We are not separate beings moving past one another untouched. We are vibrations, interconnected in a complex, ever-shifting dance of energy. Each encounter subtly alters that rhythm. A conversation can change the way we see ourselves. A look can linger longer than words. A moment of grace can soften a place inside us that we didn’t realize had hardened. Even moments of tension or misunderstanding carry information, reshaping the inner landscape in ways we may only recognize much later.

    Life unfolds, and we unfold with it.

    Photo by Debendra Das on Pexels.com

    There is a natural ebb and flow to existence—of emotions, of resilience, of learning, of becoming. We are constantly shifting in small, often imperceptible ways to accommodate this unfolding. Some days, the shifts are gentle. Other days, they are disruptive, demanding attention. But they are always happening. We are never static.

    When we allow this process—when we move with life rather than against it—there is a sense of alignment. Not perfection, not ease in every moment, but a kind of coherence. The inner and outer worlds speak to one another in a shared language. We respond rather than resist. We listen rather than brace.

    When we fight the natural movement of existence, however, we encounter friction.

    Resistance To Flow

    That resistance creates a different vibration. It tightens the body. It clouds perception. It turns experience into something to endure rather than something to integrate. This friction is not a failure; it is information. It signals that something is being held too rigidly, that we are attempting to remain unchanged in a reality that is defined by change.

    Photo by Nancy B. on Pexels.com

    Our inner landscape reflects this tension. Just as environments respond to pressure—eroding, cracking, reshaping—so do we. The emotional terrain shifts. Old beliefs are challenged. Patterns either deepen or dissolve. Nothing remains untouched.

    This is not a call to passive acceptance or disengagement. Rather, it is an invitation to participation. To recognize that we are co-creators in this process, shaped by what we meet and shaping in return. Every relationship, every experience, every shared moment contributes to who we are becoming.

    In this way, identity is not fixed. It is relational.

    Deepening of Self

    We are composed not only of our own thoughts and histories, but of the echoes of others—their words, their presence, their absence. Our inner worlds are populated landscapes, layered with meaning gathered over time. This does not diminish individuality; it deepens it. It reminds us that depth comes from contact, not isolation.

    Photo by Nataliya Vaitkevich on Pexels.com

    Perhaps this is why these thoughts surface at night. When we are no longer performing our separateness, the truth of interconnection becomes harder to ignore. The mind, finally unoccupied, begins to integrate what the day delivered. Sleep resists not because something is wrong, but because something is still settling.

    There is comfort in this understanding.

    It tells us that we are not broken for being affected. That sensitivity is not weakness. The way we carry others within us is evidence that we have lived fully, openly, and in relationship with the world. It reminds us that meaning is not manufactured alone, but emerges in the spaces between.

    We are shaped by life as it happens—and we, in turn, shape the life unfolding around us. This shared movement, this mutual influence, is not a distraction from who we are. It is who we are.

    .

    In stillness I sit
    awareness blossoms
    flow, naturalness, suchness.
    In stillness I am
    emptiness and everything
    sat-chit-ananda.

    ~K.M. Simonds

    #awareness #balance #buddhist #change #connection #ego #egoDeath #experience #flow #healing #holistic #holisticLife #identity #innerLandscape #interbeing #interconnected #LOVE #meditation #mindful #mindfulLife #mindfulness #moments #naturalLiving #philosophy #relationships #resilience #resistance #satChitAnanda #seeking #spirituality
  25. A bold blackwork forearm piece combining vertical kanji lettering with a flowing dragon design. The dragon is built with sharp, swirling lines and layered shading, giving it movement and depth as it wraps through the composition. Soft floral elements add contrast, balancing the strong strokes with lighter, organic detail while maintaining a cohesive flow along the arm.

    #Dash #blackworktattoo #dragontattoo

    ironpalmtattoos.com/portfolio/

  26. Generally speaking, #Xwayland should be avoided for gaming where possible (which still isn't always possible, especially until Steam fix their overlay). The high latency people experience after switching from #X11 to #Wayland does not come from Wayland itself, but the indirection of this legacy compatibility layer. Don't take my word for it, this was measured in detail by David Justo this year:

    davidjusto.com/articles/m2p-la

  27. Generally speaking, #Xwayland should be avoided for gaming where possible (which still isn't always possible, especially until Steam fix their overlay). The high latency people experience after switching from #X11 to #Wayland does not come from Wayland itself, but the indirection of this legacy compatibility layer. Don't take my word for it, this was measured in detail by David Justo this year:

    davidjusto.com/articles/m2p-la

  28. Generally speaking, #Xwayland should be avoided for gaming where possible (which still isn't always possible, especially until Steam fix their overlay). The high latency people experience after switching from #X11 to #Wayland does not come from Wayland itself, but the indirection of this legacy compatibility layer. Don't take my word for it, this was measured in detail by David Justo this year:

    davidjusto.com/articles/m2p-la