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#nex — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #nex, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Sicarius – Nex Review By Tyme

    Sicarius hit the ground raging in 2017 when the Californian black metal upstarts released their scathingly vicious debut album, Serenade of Slitting Throats, which captured the metal heart of AMG’s Diabolus in Muzaka, earning a coveted 4.0. Sicarius’s sophomore effort, 2020’s God of Dead Roots, didn’t fare as well; the band, adjusting to the departure of founding guitarist Argyris, ultimately turned in a less visceral, more workmanlike product. Then, when original drummer Brandon Zackay left to focus on his career in Whitechapel, and the other members exited, both voluntarily and not, Sicarius ostensibly died, leaving God of Dead Roots an unanticipated swan song. Fast forward to 2024, when Argyris reunited with original bassist Carnage and joined forces with new vocalist Akéfalos and session drummer Levi Xvl to begin recording a third album, Nex, which, after six long years, has arrived to reintroduce this risen phoenix iteration of Sicarius to the masses.

    Sicarius the resurrected doesn’t sound much different than Sicarius the dead. Nex adheres to the same modern black metal formula as its predecessors, maintaining channels of influence drawn from Dissection, Dark Funeral, Urgehal, and, despite Mick Kenney’s departure from the booth, Anaal Nathrakh. In keeping with their monikers’ Latin translation, Sicarius brings an assassin’s cache of weaponry to bear. Argyris sounds rejuvenated and lethal, his armory of blistering riffage (“Cold Death,” “No Witnesses”), chaotically tremolodic leads (“Nex”), and nifty solo work (“Crashing Into the Abyss”) on full display.1 Newcomer Akéfalos adds a layer of frigidity to Nex’s surgical, cold-steel across a warm-throat sound, his icy, high-pitched screeches a mix of Abbath and Hat from early Gorgoroth, while his low-bellied growls are reminiscent of Rotting Christ. Nex has the sound of a band pissed, Sicarius attempting to bury the remnants of what was for something altogether more destructive.

    Nex by Sicarius

    There’s no doubt Sicarius is exceptionally capable of speed, but for my money, I connected most with Nex’s melodies and mixed paces. Beginning with a brooding, tremoloed guitar melody, “Opened Obsidian Gateways” uses Sargeistian levels of repetition to drive its earwormy chord progressions home, a variation employed during the verses and identically replicated during the bridge before sliding into a nice, mid-song chug section and then back again. Simple yet effective, the song’s a highlight as I found myself humming the melody randomly throughout the day. Also noteworthy are the slow-moving melodic chords of “Banshee,” which gave off Dissection vibes, and the mid-paced marcher “The Hunger We Cannot Sate,” as it gallops along in true Watain fashion, instigating black-n-roll levels of head bobbery over its 5:24 runtime. There’s a lot of musical nuance woven into the details of Nex; my many play-throughs tell me as much, which makes it all the more disappointing that it’s so hard to hear them.


    “With a (t)reble yell she cried, NO more, more, more.” I’ve taken some slight liberties with Mr. Idol’s classic lyric to illustrate Nex’s most glaring flaw: a thin, imbalanced mix. Nex sounds much louder than its DR score might suggest. Serenade of Slitting Throats, for instance, with a DR lower than Nex’s, sounds light years warmer because Kenney was able to give Serenade’s lower tones some weight. Nex is nearly devoid of low end, completely negating anything Carnage is doing on bass and robbing much of Levi Xvl’s bass drum work of power, making for an extremely exhausting experience. I had to break my focused listening sessions up, in fact, because trying to listen through all 44:10 of Nex’s runtime left me so audially spent that I was reaching for aspirin. Whether this was a deliberate choice, I don’t know. It sure lends Sicarius an icier-than-thou edge, as much black metal of this ilk is known for, but it really robbed a large portion of my enjoyment, which sucks because, in bite-sized pieces, Nex is actually a pretty decent album.

    Sicarius has returned with a vengeance and a we’re-not-fucking-around attitude, as evidenced in no small part by that brutally distinctive cover art. Alongside other bands like Impious Throne, Unholy Altar and Wuldorgast, Sicarius is bringing a sense of menace back to the US black metal scene. Nex is an album worth spinning, despite being hampered by a production that makes it too tiring to listen to in a single sitting, which left me to score it thusly. Still, I’ll be keeping my eyes and ears peeled for the next outing.

    Rating: 2.5/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps mp3
    Label: Adirondack Black Mass | Bandcamp (album)
    Websites: Bandcamp | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: April 10th, 2026

    #25 #2026 #AdirondackBlackMass #AmericanMetal #AnaalNathrakh #Apr26 #BlackMetal #DarkFuneral #Dissection #Nex #Review #Sicarius #Urgehal
  2. Sicarius – Nex Review By Tyme

    Sicarius hit the ground raging in 2017 when the Californian black metal upstarts released their scathingly vicious debut album, Serenade of Slitting Throats, which captured the metal heart of AMG’s Diabolus in Muzaka, earning a coveted 4.0. Sicarius’s sophomore effort, 2020’s God of Dead Roots, didn’t fare as well; the band, adjusting to the departure of founding guitarist Argyris, ultimately turned in a less visceral, more workmanlike product. Then, when original drummer Brandon Zackay left to focus on his career in Whitechapel, and the other members exited, both voluntarily and not, Sicarius ostensibly died, leaving God of Dead Roots an unanticipated swan song. Fast forward to 2024, when Argyris reunited with original bassist Carnage and joined forces with new vocalist Akéfalos and session drummer Levi Xvl to begin recording a third album, Nex, which, after six long years, has arrived to reintroduce this risen phoenix iteration of Sicarius to the masses.

    Sicarius the resurrected doesn’t sound much different than Sicarius the dead. Nex adheres to the same modern black metal formula as its predecessors, maintaining channels of influence drawn from Dissection, Dark Funeral, Urgehal, and, despite Mick Kenney’s departure from the booth, Anaal Nathrakh. In keeping with their monikers’ Latin translation, Sicarius brings an assassin’s cache of weaponry to bear. Argyris sounds rejuvenated and lethal, his armory of blistering riffage (“Cold Death,” “No Witnesses”), chaotically tremolodic leads (“Nex”), and nifty solo work (“Crashing Into the Abyss”) on full display.1 Newcomer Akéfalos adds a layer of frigidity to Nex’s surgical, cold-steel across a warm-throat sound, his icy, high-pitched screeches a mix of Abbath and Hat from early Gorgoroth, while his low-bellied growls are reminiscent of Rotting Christ. Nex has the sound of a band pissed, Sicarius attempting to bury the remnants of what was for something altogether more destructive.

    Nex by Sicarius

    There’s no doubt Sicarius is exceptionally capable of speed, but for my money, I connected most with Nex’s melodies and mixed paces. Beginning with a brooding, tremoloed guitar melody, “Opened Obsidian Gateways” uses Sargeistian levels of repetition to drive its earwormy chord progressions home, a variation employed during the verses and identically replicated during the bridge before sliding into a nice, mid-song chug section and then back again. Simple yet effective, the song’s a highlight as I found myself humming the melody randomly throughout the day. Also noteworthy are the slow-moving melodic chords of “Banshee,” which gave off Dissection vibes, and the mid-paced marcher “The Hunger We Cannot Sate,” as it gallops along in true Watain fashion, instigating black-n-roll levels of head bobbery over its 5:24 runtime. There’s a lot of musical nuance woven into the details of Nex; my many play-throughs tell me as much, which makes it all the more disappointing that it’s so hard to hear them.


    “With a (t)reble yell she cried, NO more, more, more.” I’ve taken some slight liberties with Mr. Idol’s classic lyric to illustrate Nex’s most glaring flaw: a thin, imbalanced mix. Nex sounds much louder than its DR score might suggest. Serenade of Slitting Throats, for instance, with a DR lower than Nex’s, sounds light years warmer because Kenney was able to give Serenade’s lower tones some weight. Nex is nearly devoid of low end, completely negating anything Carnage is doing on bass and robbing much of Levi Xvl’s bass drum work of power, making for an extremely exhausting experience. I had to break my focused listening sessions up, in fact, because trying to listen through all 44:10 of Nex’s runtime left me so audially spent that I was reaching for aspirin. Whether this was a deliberate choice, I don’t know. It sure lends Sicarius an icier-than-thou edge, as much black metal of this ilk is known for, but it really robbed a large portion of my enjoyment, which sucks because, in bite-sized pieces, Nex is actually a pretty decent album.

    Sicarius has returned with a vengeance and a we’re-not-fucking-around attitude, as evidenced in no small part by that brutally distinctive cover art. Alongside other bands like Impious Throne, Unholy Altar and Wuldorgast, Sicarius is bringing a sense of menace back to the US black metal scene. Nex is an album worth spinning, despite being hampered by a production that makes it too tiring to listen to in a single sitting, which left me to score it thusly. Still, I’ll be keeping my eyes and ears peeled for the next outing.

    Rating: 2.5/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps mp3
    Label: Adirondack Black Mass | Bandcamp (album)
    Websites: Bandcamp | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: April 10th, 2026

    #25 #2026 #AdirondackBlackMass #AmericanMetal #AnaalNathrakh #Apr26 #BlackMetal #DarkFuneral #Dissection #Nex #Review #Sicarius #Urgehal
  3. Sicarius – Nex Review By Tyme

    Sicarius hit the ground raging in 2017 when the Californian black metal upstarts released their scathingly vicious debut album, Serenade of Slitting Throats, which captured the metal heart of AMG’s Diabolus in Muzaka, earning a coveted 4.0. Sicarius’s sophomore effort, 2020’s God of Dead Roots, didn’t fare as well; the band, adjusting to the departure of founding guitarist Argyris, ultimately turned in a less visceral, more workmanlike product. Then, when original drummer Brandon Zackay left to focus on his career in Whitechapel, and the other members exited, both voluntarily and not, Sicarius ostensibly died, leaving God of Dead Roots an unanticipated swan song. Fast forward to 2024, when Argyris reunited with original bassist Carnage and joined forces with new vocalist Akéfalos and session drummer Levi Xvl to begin recording a third album, Nex, which, after six long years, has arrived to reintroduce this risen phoenix iteration of Sicarius to the masses.

    Sicarius the resurrected doesn’t sound much different than Sicarius the dead. Nex adheres to the same modern black metal formula as its predecessors, maintaining channels of influence drawn from Dissection, Dark Funeral, Urgehal, and, despite Mick Kenney’s departure from the booth, Anaal Nathrakh. In keeping with their monikers’ Latin translation, Sicarius brings an assassin’s cache of weaponry to bear. Argyris sounds rejuvenated and lethal, his armory of blistering riffage (“Cold Death,” “No Witnesses”), chaotically tremolodic leads (“Nex”), and nifty solo work (“Crashing Into the Abyss”) on full display.1 Newcomer Akéfalos adds a layer of frigidity to Nex’s surgical, cold-steel across a warm-throat sound, his icy, high-pitched screeches a mix of Abbath and Hat from early Gorgoroth, while his low-bellied growls are reminiscent of Rotting Christ. Nex has the sound of a band pissed, Sicarius attempting to bury the remnants of what was for something altogether more destructive.

    Nex by Sicarius

    There’s no doubt Sicarius is exceptionally capable of speed, but for my money, I connected most with Nex’s melodies and mixed paces. Beginning with a brooding, tremoloed guitar melody, “Opened Obsidian Gateways” uses Sargeistian levels of repetition to drive its earwormy chord progressions home, a variation employed during the verses and identically replicated during the bridge before sliding into a nice, mid-song chug section and then back again. Simple yet effective, the song’s a highlight as I found myself humming the melody randomly throughout the day. Also noteworthy are the slow-moving melodic chords of “Banshee,” which gave off Dissection vibes, and the mid-paced marcher “The Hunger We Cannot Sate,” as it gallops along in true Watain fashion, instigating black-n-roll levels of head bobbery over its 5:24 runtime. There’s a lot of musical nuance woven into the details of Nex; my many play-throughs tell me as much, which makes it all the more disappointing that it’s so hard to hear them.


    “With a (t)reble yell she cried, NO more, more, more.” I’ve taken some slight liberties with Mr. Idol’s classic lyric to illustrate Nex’s most glaring flaw: a thin, imbalanced mix. Nex sounds much louder than its DR score might suggest. Serenade of Slitting Throats, for instance, with a DR lower than Nex’s, sounds light years warmer because Kenney was able to give Serenade’s lower tones some weight. Nex is nearly devoid of low end, completely negating anything Carnage is doing on bass and robbing much of Levi Xvl’s bass drum work of power, making for an extremely exhausting experience. I had to break my focused listening sessions up, in fact, because trying to listen through all 44:10 of Nex’s runtime left me so audially spent that I was reaching for aspirin. Whether this was a deliberate choice, I don’t know. It sure lends Sicarius an icier-than-thou edge, as much black metal of this ilk is known for, but it really robbed a large portion of my enjoyment, which sucks because, in bite-sized pieces, Nex is actually a pretty decent album.

    Sicarius has returned with a vengeance and a we’re-not-fucking-around attitude, as evidenced in no small part by that brutally distinctive cover art. Alongside other bands like Impious Throne, Unholy Altar and Wuldorgast, Sicarius is bringing a sense of menace back to the US black metal scene. Nex is an album worth spinning, despite being hampered by a production that makes it too tiring to listen to in a single sitting, which left me to score it thusly. Still, I’ll be keeping my eyes and ears peeled for the next outing.

    Rating: 2.5/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps mp3
    Label: Adirondack Black Mass | Bandcamp (album)
    Websites: Bandcamp | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: April 10th, 2026

    #25 #2026 #AdirondackBlackMass #AmericanMetal #AnaalNathrakh #Apr26 #BlackMetal #DarkFuneral #Dissection #Nex #Review #Sicarius #Urgehal
  4. Sicarius – Nex Review By Tyme

    Sicarius hit the ground raging in 2017 when the Californian black metal upstarts released their scathingly vicious debut album, Serenade of Slitting Throats, which captured the metal heart of AMG’s Diabolus in Muzaka, earning a coveted 4.0. Sicarius’s sophomore effort, 2020’s God of Dead Roots, didn’t fare as well; the band, adjusting to the departure of founding guitarist Argyris, ultimately turned in a less visceral, more workmanlike product. Then, when original drummer Brandon Zackay left to focus on his career in Whitechapel, and the other members exited, both voluntarily and not, Sicarius ostensibly died, leaving God of Dead Roots an unanticipated swan song. Fast forward to 2024, when Argyris reunited with original bassist Carnage and joined forces with new vocalist Akéfalos and session drummer Levi Xvl to begin recording a third album, Nex, which, after six long years, has arrived to reintroduce this risen phoenix iteration of Sicarius to the masses.

    Sicarius the resurrected doesn’t sound much different than Sicarius the dead. Nex adheres to the same modern black metal formula as its predecessors, maintaining channels of influence drawn from Dissection, Dark Funeral, Urgehal, and, despite Mick Kenney’s departure from the booth, Anaal Nathrakh. In keeping with their monikers’ Latin translation, Sicarius brings an assassin’s cache of weaponry to bear. Argyris sounds rejuvenated and lethal, his armory of blistering riffage (“Cold Death,” “No Witnesses”), chaotically tremolodic leads (“Nex”), and nifty solo work (“Crashing Into the Abyss”) on full display.1 Newcomer Akéfalos adds a layer of frigidity to Nex’s surgical, cold-steel across a warm-throat sound, his icy, high-pitched screeches a mix of Abbath and Hat from early Gorgoroth, while his low-bellied growls are reminiscent of Rotting Christ. Nex has the sound of a band pissed, Sicarius attempting to bury the remnants of what was for something altogether more destructive.

    Nex by Sicarius

    There’s no doubt Sicarius is exceptionally capable of speed, but for my money, I connected most with Nex’s melodies and mixed paces. Beginning with a brooding, tremoloed guitar melody, “Opened Obsidian Gateways” uses Sargeistian levels of repetition to drive its earwormy chord progressions home, a variation employed during the verses and identically replicated during the bridge before sliding into a nice, mid-song chug section and then back again. Simple yet effective, the song’s a highlight as I found myself humming the melody randomly throughout the day. Also noteworthy are the slow-moving melodic chords of “Banshee,” which gave off Dissection vibes, and the mid-paced marcher “The Hunger We Cannot Sate,” as it gallops along in true Watain fashion, instigating black-n-roll levels of head bobbery over its 5:24 runtime. There’s a lot of musical nuance woven into the details of Nex; my many play-throughs tell me as much, which makes it all the more disappointing that it’s so hard to hear them.


    “With a (t)reble yell she cried, NO more, more, more.” I’ve taken some slight liberties with Mr. Idol’s classic lyric to illustrate Nex’s most glaring flaw: a thin, imbalanced mix. Nex sounds much louder than its DR score might suggest. Serenade of Slitting Throats, for instance, with a DR lower than Nex’s, sounds light years warmer because Kenney was able to give Serenade’s lower tones some weight. Nex is nearly devoid of low end, completely negating anything Carnage is doing on bass and robbing much of Levi Xvl’s bass drum work of power, making for an extremely exhausting experience. I had to break my focused listening sessions up, in fact, because trying to listen through all 44:10 of Nex’s runtime left me so audially spent that I was reaching for aspirin. Whether this was a deliberate choice, I don’t know. It sure lends Sicarius an icier-than-thou edge, as much black metal of this ilk is known for, but it really robbed a large portion of my enjoyment, which sucks because, in bite-sized pieces, Nex is actually a pretty decent album.

    Sicarius has returned with a vengeance and a we’re-not-fucking-around attitude, as evidenced in no small part by that brutally distinctive cover art. Alongside other bands like Impious Throne, Unholy Altar and Wuldorgast, Sicarius is bringing a sense of menace back to the US black metal scene. Nex is an album worth spinning, despite being hampered by a production that makes it too tiring to listen to in a single sitting, which left me to score it thusly. Still, I’ll be keeping my eyes and ears peeled for the next outing.

    Rating: 2.5/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps mp3
    Label: Adirondack Black Mass | Bandcamp (album)
    Websites: Bandcamp | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: April 10th, 2026

    #25 #2026 #AdirondackBlackMass #AmericanMetal #AnaalNathrakh #Apr26 #BlackMetal #DarkFuneral #Dissection #Nex #Review #Sicarius #Urgehal
  5. Sicarius – Nex Review By Tyme

    Sicarius hit the ground raging in 2017 when the Californian black metal upstarts released their scathingly vicious debut album, Serenade of Slitting Throats, which captured the metal heart of AMG’s Diabolus in Muzaka, earning a coveted 4.0. Sicarius’s sophomore effort, 2020’s God of Dead Roots, didn’t fare as well; the band, adjusting to the departure of founding guitarist Argyris, ultimately turned in a less visceral, more workmanlike product. Then, when original drummer Brandon Zackay left to focus on his career in Whitechapel, and the other members exited, both voluntarily and not, Sicarius ostensibly died, leaving God of Dead Roots an unanticipated swan song. Fast forward to 2024, when Argyris reunited with original bassist Carnage and joined forces with new vocalist Akéfalos and session drummer Levi Xvl to begin recording a third album, Nex, which, after six long years, has arrived to reintroduce this risen phoenix iteration of Sicarius to the masses.

    Sicarius the resurrected doesn’t sound much different than Sicarius the dead. Nex adheres to the same modern black metal formula as its predecessors, maintaining channels of influence drawn from Dissection, Dark Funeral, Urgehal, and, despite Mick Kenney’s departure from the booth, Anaal Nathrakh. In keeping with their monikers’ Latin translation, Sicarius brings an assassin’s cache of weaponry to bear. Argyris sounds rejuvenated and lethal, his armory of blistering riffage (“Cold Death,” “No Witnesses”), chaotically tremolodic leads (“Nex”), and nifty solo work (“Crashing Into the Abyss”) on full display.1 Newcomer Akéfalos adds a layer of frigidity to Nex’s surgical, cold-steel across a warm-throat sound, his icy, high-pitched screeches a mix of Abbath and Hat from early Gorgoroth, while his low-bellied growls are reminiscent of Rotting Christ. Nex has the sound of a band pissed, Sicarius attempting to bury the remnants of what was for something altogether more destructive.

    Nex by Sicarius

    There’s no doubt Sicarius is exceptionally capable of speed, but for my money, I connected most with Nex’s melodies and mixed paces. Beginning with a brooding, tremoloed guitar melody, “Opened Obsidian Gateways” uses Sargeistian levels of repetition to drive its earwormy chord progressions home, a variation employed during the verses and identically replicated during the bridge before sliding into a nice, mid-song chug section and then back again. Simple yet effective, the song’s a highlight as I found myself humming the melody randomly throughout the day. Also noteworthy are the slow-moving melodic chords of “Banshee,” which gave off Dissection vibes, and the mid-paced marcher “The Hunger We Cannot Sate,” as it gallops along in true Watain fashion, instigating black-n-roll levels of head bobbery over its 5:24 runtime. There’s a lot of musical nuance woven into the details of Nex; my many play-throughs tell me as much, which makes it all the more disappointing that it’s so hard to hear them.


    “With a (t)reble yell she cried, NO more, more, more.” I’ve taken some slight liberties with Mr. Idol’s classic lyric to illustrate Nex’s most glaring flaw: a thin, imbalanced mix. Nex sounds much louder than its DR score might suggest. Serenade of Slitting Throats, for instance, with a DR lower than Nex’s, sounds light years warmer because Kenney was able to give Serenade’s lower tones some weight. Nex is nearly devoid of low end, completely negating anything Carnage is doing on bass and robbing much of Levi Xvl’s bass drum work of power, making for an extremely exhausting experience. I had to break my focused listening sessions up, in fact, because trying to listen through all 44:10 of Nex’s runtime left me so audially spent that I was reaching for aspirin. Whether this was a deliberate choice, I don’t know. It sure lends Sicarius an icier-than-thou edge, as much black metal of this ilk is known for, but it really robbed a large portion of my enjoyment, which sucks because, in bite-sized pieces, Nex is actually a pretty decent album.

    Sicarius has returned with a vengeance and a we’re-not-fucking-around attitude, as evidenced in no small part by that brutally distinctive cover art. Alongside other bands like Impious Throne, Unholy Altar and Wuldorgast, Sicarius is bringing a sense of menace back to the US black metal scene. Nex is an album worth spinning, despite being hampered by a production that makes it too tiring to listen to in a single sitting, which left me to score it thusly. Still, I’ll be keeping my eyes and ears peeled for the next outing.

    Rating: 2.5/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320kbps mp3
    Label: Adirondack Black Mass | Bandcamp (album)
    Websites: Bandcamp | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: April 10th, 2026

    #25 #2026 #AdirondackBlackMass #AmericanMetal #AnaalNathrakh #Apr26 #BlackMetal #DarkFuneral #Dissection #Nex #Review #Sicarius #Urgehal
  6. Testing our #nexprotocol server with few services - flarumdown, podcast, user blogs:

    nex://[202:68d0:f0d5:b88d:1d1a:555e:2f6b:3148]/ - #Yggdrasil
    nex://[505:6847:c778:61a1:5c6d:e802:d291:8191]/ - #Mycelium
    nex://sl5ddrkufwd37xbbf4bj7542qljtnwe6pzd54epqg6zfytkj7q5a.b32.i2p/ - #I2P

    By the way:

    #Nexy server v.0.6.0 release with enhanced Cyrillic listing support (crates.io/crates/Nexy)

    #Yoda browser v0.12.12 release is now support #Markdown renderer for #Nex driver (crates.io/crates/Yoda)

  7. Testing our #nexprotocol server with few services - flarumdown, podcast, user blogs:

    nex://[202:68d0:f0d5:b88d:1d1a:555e:2f6b:3148]/ - #Yggdrasil
    nex://[505:6847:c778:61a1:5c6d:e802:d291:8191]/ - #Mycelium
    nex://sl5ddrkufwd37xbbf4bj7542qljtnwe6pzd54epqg6zfytkj7q5a.b32.i2p/ - #I2P

    By the way:

    #Nexy server v.0.6.0 release with enhanced Cyrillic listing support (crates.io/crates/Nexy)

    #Yoda browser v0.12.12 release is now support #Markdown renderer for #Nex driver (crates.io/crates/Yoda)

  8. Testing our #nexprotocol server with few services - flarumdown, podcast, user blogs:

    nex://[202:68d0:f0d5:b88d:1d1a:555e:2f6b:3148]/ - #Yggdrasil
    nex://[505:6847:c778:61a1:5c6d:e802:d291:8191]/ - #Mycelium
    nex://sl5ddrkufwd37xbbf4bj7542qljtnwe6pzd54epqg6zfytkj7q5a.b32.i2p/ - #I2P

    By the way:

    #Nexy server v.0.6.0 release with enhanced Cyrillic listing support (crates.io/crates/Nexy)

    #Yoda browser v0.12.12 release is now support #Markdown renderer for #Nex driver (crates.io/crates/Yoda)

  9. 26 Pharast: Conquest Day
    #Nex #Geb #ConquestDay
    pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/Conque
    A national holiday in which citizens of Nex renew their pledge to conquer their eternal enemy, Geb. It is a day for words of honor, a day for battle cries, and a day where glory most …

  10. 4333 AR: Nexus House opens
    #Quantium #Nex #Adolphus #Ganjay #Bhopan #4333AR
    pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/Nexus_
    The second Pathfinder lodge outside of Absalom opened in Quantium. Adolphus and his bride Ganjay of Bhopan used Bhopan’s stolen treasury.

  11. NexPhone is a phone you can use as a desktop PC with Android, Linux, and Windows 11 support

    Smartphones are basically tiny computers small enough to fit in your pocket. But most ship with Android, iOS, or other operating systems designed for devices with small touchscreen displays rather than full-fledged desktop environments.

    But there have been multiple efforts over the years to create smartphones (and smartphone operating systems) that you could use as a desktop PC. None have been […]

    #convergence #dualBoot #linuxPhone #nex #nexComputer #nexphone #smartphones #windowsOnArm Read more: liliputing.com/nexphone-is-a-p
  12. NexPhone is a phone you can use as a desktop PC with Android, Linux, and Windows 11 support

    Smartphones are basically tiny computers small enough to fit in your pocket. But most ship with Android, iOS, or other operating systems designed for devices with small touchscreen displays rather than full-fledged desktop environments.

    But there have been multiple efforts over the years to create smartphones (and smartphone operating systems) that you could use as a desktop PC. None have been […]

    #convergence #dualBoot #linuxPhone #nex #nexComputer #nexphone #smartphones #windowsOnArm Read more: liliputing.com/nexphone-is-a-p
  13. NexPhone is a phone you can use as a desktop PC with Android, Linux, and Windows 11 support

    Smartphones are basically tiny computers small enough to fit in your pocket. But most ship with Android, iOS, or other operating systems designed for devices with small touchscreen displays rather than full-fledged desktop environments.

    But there have been multiple efforts over the years to create smartphones (and smartphone operating systems) that you could use as a desktop PC. None have been […]

    #convergence #dualBoot #linuxPhone #nex #nexComputer #nexphone #smartphones #windowsOnArm Read more: liliputing.com/nexphone-is-a-p
  14. NexPhone is a phone you can use as a desktop PC with Android, Linux, and Windows 11 support

    Smartphones are basically tiny computers small enough to fit in your pocket. But most ship with Android, iOS, or other operating systems designed for devices with small touchscreen displays rather than full-fledged desktop environments.

    But there have been multiple efforts over the years to create smartphones (and smartphone operating systems) that you could use as a desktop PC. None have been […]

    #convergence #dualBoot #linuxPhone #nex #nexComputer #nexphone #smartphones #windowsOnArm Read more: liliputing.com/nexphone-is-a-p
  15. 3923 AR: Merivesta Olinchi assassinated by Red Mantis
    #Nex #MerivestaOlinchi #RedMantis #ConceptionException #3923AR
    pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/Merive
    The halfling satirist Merivesta Olinchi was the first victim of the Red Mantis, when she was assassinated at the p…

  16. 4711 AR: Queen's Lament set aflame
    #Nex #Relentless #QueensLament #4711AR
    pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/Queen%
    The sailing ship ended its days stranded in the ocean off Nex with a mutinous crew turned to cannibalism. The ship was eventually set aflame by the crew of t…

  17. I have long planned to write a utility for synchronizing #Snac profiles with the #Nex blog, and I recently published its initial release:
    https://codeberg.org/postscriptum/snac2nex

    Additionally, I want to create a local copy of media data so that it can be accessed without going out into the HTTP space.

    #snac2nex #Rust

  18. I have launched the #Yggdrasil mirror of my gemlog for the #Nex protocol:
    nex://[302:68d0:f0d5:b88d::b]/
    nex://ps.ygg/

  19. After some pause in development, the #Yoda browser version 0.11.6 has been released, and now supports the #Nex protocol, including its original markdown format:

    github.com/YGGverse/Yoda

  20. I have just published the initial release of #Nexy, a multi-network server for the #Nex protocol, written in #Rust.

    This is not the final version, but I want to share the code for review because I am unsure about the multi-thread implementation without Tokio and am looking for testers. I created it for my personal Yggdrasil+Mycelium instance, which I plan to launch using it soon.

    https://github.com/YGGverse/nexy
    https://crates.io/crates/nexy

  21. I have just published the initial release of #Nexy, a multi-network server for the #Nex protocol, written in #Rust.

    This is not the final version, but I want to share the code for review because I am unsure about the multi-thread implementation without Tokio and am looking for testers. I created it for my personal Yggdrasil+Mycelium instance, which I plan to launch using it soon.

    https://github.com/YGGverse/nexy
    https://crates.io/crates/nexy

  22. I have just published the initial release of #Nexy, a multi-network server for the #Nex protocol, written in #Rust.

    This is not the final version, but I want to share the code for review because I am unsure about the multi-thread implementation without Tokio and am looking for testers. I created it for my personal Yggdrasil+Mycelium instance, which I plan to launch using it soon.

    https://github.com/YGGverse/nexy
    https://crates.io/crates/nexy

  23. 26 Pharast: Conquest Day
    #Nex #Geb #ConquestDay
    pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/Conque
    A national holiday in which citizens of Nex renew their pledge to conquer their eternal enemy, Geb. It is a day for words of honor, a day for battle cries, and a day where glory most …