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#repetitive — Public Fediverse posts

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

  1. "This is what destiny intended from the moment it entered the star system"
    --Every Episode of Stargate Universe

  2. Free download codes:

    Draisine - R.R.A.T.S.

    "a flimsy, but decidedly bold voyage into shallow waters of guitar and synth noise, on loop. Use heaphones for binaural !"

    getmusic.fm/l/4ePruO

    #experimental #noise #synth #guitar #repetitive #music

  3. “Always know that real progress is often invisible, boring, repetitive.” - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    Your success will often not involve huge home runs that have you cheering with joy. It will come about through small bunts, working the bases, advancing slowly but surely towards a goal, and muttering about the pace.

    Treat your progress as such.

    Right now, this can be a challenge. After all, we live in a "highlight reel" culture. We see the successful keynote, the published book, or the smooth career pivot and assume that it all happened in a flash of inspiration. But in my 36-year voyage, I’ve learned that the most profound breakthroughs and the biggest wins are rarely the result of a sudden lightning bolt. They are the result of the quiet, daily discipline of showing up when it feels like nothing is changing. Playing the clubs. Putting in the work. Advancing slowly but steadily.

    I did a lot of small events in rural America and small towns in Canada before I hit the big stages of Las Vegas. It was often boringly dull, excruciatingly tiring, and sometimes, with a detached audience, not terribly motivating. But through that, I learned that success is often built on "invisible progress." The small steps that get you closer to a big goal.

    For me, success and learning are about the hundredth hour spent in the lab struggling with a Linux configuration.

    It’s the years of writing a Daily Inspiration post without missing a single workday.

    It’s the repetitive act of studying a disruptive trend long before the world notices it.

    It was spending time on stages that sometimes I did not want to be on.

    Most people quit during this "boring" phase. They mistake the lack of immediate feedback for a lack of progress. They want the dopamine hit of a "win" every day. But as a practitioner, you have to realize that you are building up your skills, capabilities, and knowledge.

    The amateur waits for the quick hit.

    The master relies on patience and effort.

    Success isn't a sprint; it’s the compound interest of your daily discipline.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll has put in the work. He still does. Every day.

    **#Progress** **#Invisible** **#Boring** **#Repetitive** **#Patience** **#Discipline** **#Daily** **#ShowingUp** **#Consistency** **#Compound** **#Effort** **#Foundation** **#Quiet** **#SmallSteps** **#Work** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Mastery** **#Persistence** **#Grind** **#Building** **#Success** **#Highlights** **#Bunts** **#Onwards**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  4. “Always know that real progress is often invisible, boring, repetitive.” - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    Your success will often not involve huge home runs that have you cheering with joy. It will come about through small bunts, working the bases, advancing slowly but surely towards a goal, and muttering about the pace.

    Treat your progress as such.

    Right now, this can be a challenge. After all, we live in a "highlight reel" culture. We see the successful keynote, the published book, or the smooth career pivot and assume that it all happened in a flash of inspiration. But in my 36-year voyage, I’ve learned that the most profound breakthroughs and the biggest wins are rarely the result of a sudden lightning bolt. They are the result of the quiet, daily discipline of showing up when it feels like nothing is changing. Playing the clubs. Putting in the work. Advancing slowly but steadily.

    I did a lot of small events in rural America and small towns in Canada before I hit the big stages of Las Vegas. It was often boringly dull, excruciatingly tiring, and sometimes, with a detached audience, not terribly motivating. But through that, I learned that success is often built on "invisible progress." The small steps that get you closer to a big goal.

    For me, success and learning are about the hundredth hour spent in the lab struggling with a Linux configuration.

    It’s the years of writing a Daily Inspiration post without missing a single workday.

    It’s the repetitive act of studying a disruptive trend long before the world notices it.

    It was spending time on stages that sometimes I did not want to be on.

    Most people quit during this "boring" phase. They mistake the lack of immediate feedback for a lack of progress. They want the dopamine hit of a "win" every day. But as a practitioner, you have to realize that you are building up your skills, capabilities, and knowledge.

    The amateur waits for the quick hit.

    The master relies on patience and effort.

    Success isn't a sprint; it’s the compound interest of your daily discipline.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll has put in the work. He still does. Every day.

    **#Progress** **#Invisible** **#Boring** **#Repetitive** **#Patience** **#Discipline** **#Daily** **#ShowingUp** **#Consistency** **#Compound** **#Effort** **#Foundation** **#Quiet** **#SmallSteps** **#Work** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Mastery** **#Persistence** **#Grind** **#Building** **#Success** **#Highlights** **#Bunts** **#Onwards**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  5. “Always know that real progress is often invisible, boring, repetitive.” - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    Your success will often not involve huge home runs that have you cheering with joy. It will come about through small bunts, working the bases, advancing slowly but surely towards a goal, and muttering about the pace.

    Treat your progress as such.

    Right now, this can be a challenge. After all, we live in a "highlight reel" culture. We see the successful keynote, the published book, or the smooth career pivot and assume that it all happened in a flash of inspiration. But in my 36-year voyage, I’ve learned that the most profound breakthroughs and the biggest wins are rarely the result of a sudden lightning bolt. They are the result of the quiet, daily discipline of showing up when it feels like nothing is changing. Playing the clubs. Putting in the work. Advancing slowly but steadily.

    I did a lot of small events in rural America and small towns in Canada before I hit the big stages of Las Vegas. It was often boringly dull, excruciatingly tiring, and sometimes, with a detached audience, not terribly motivating. But through that, I learned that success is often built on "invisible progress." The small steps that get you closer to a big goal.

    For me, success and learning are about the hundredth hour spent in the lab struggling with a Linux configuration.

    It’s the years of writing a Daily Inspiration post without missing a single workday.

    It’s the repetitive act of studying a disruptive trend long before the world notices it.

    It was spending time on stages that sometimes I did not want to be on.

    Most people quit during this "boring" phase. They mistake the lack of immediate feedback for a lack of progress. They want the dopamine hit of a "win" every day. But as a practitioner, you have to realize that you are building up your skills, capabilities, and knowledge.

    The amateur waits for the quick hit.

    The master relies on patience and effort.

    Success isn't a sprint; it’s the compound interest of your daily discipline.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll has put in the work. He still does. Every day.

    **#Progress** **#Invisible** **#Boring** **#Repetitive** **#Patience** **#Discipline** **#Daily** **#ShowingUp** **#Consistency** **#Compound** **#Effort** **#Foundation** **#Quiet** **#SmallSteps** **#Work** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Mastery** **#Persistence** **#Grind** **#Building** **#Success** **#Highlights** **#Bunts** **#Onwards**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  6. “Always know that real progress is often invisible, boring, repetitive.” - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    Your success will often not involve huge home runs that have you cheering with joy. It will come about through small bunts, working the bases, advancing slowly but surely towards a goal, and muttering about the pace.

    Treat your progress as such.

    Right now, this can be a challenge. After all, we live in a "highlight reel" culture. We see the successful keynote, the published book, or the smooth career pivot and assume that it all happened in a flash of inspiration. But in my 36-year voyage, I’ve learned that the most profound breakthroughs and the biggest wins are rarely the result of a sudden lightning bolt. They are the result of the quiet, daily discipline of showing up when it feels like nothing is changing. Playing the clubs. Putting in the work. Advancing slowly but steadily.

    I did a lot of small events in rural America and small towns in Canada before I hit the big stages of Las Vegas. It was often boringly dull, excruciatingly tiring, and sometimes, with a detached audience, not terribly motivating. But through that, I learned that success is often built on "invisible progress." The small steps that get you closer to a big goal.

    For me, success and learning are about the hundredth hour spent in the lab struggling with a Linux configuration.

    It’s the years of writing a Daily Inspiration post without missing a single workday.

    It’s the repetitive act of studying a disruptive trend long before the world notices it.

    It was spending time on stages that sometimes I did not want to be on.

    Most people quit during this "boring" phase. They mistake the lack of immediate feedback for a lack of progress. They want the dopamine hit of a "win" every day. But as a practitioner, you have to realize that you are building up your skills, capabilities, and knowledge.

    The amateur waits for the quick hit.

    The master relies on patience and effort.

    Success isn't a sprint; it’s the compound interest of your daily discipline.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll has put in the work. He still does. Every day.

    **#Progress** **#Invisible** **#Boring** **#Repetitive** **#Patience** **#Discipline** **#Daily** **#ShowingUp** **#Consistency** **#Compound** **#Effort** **#Foundation** **#Quiet** **#SmallSteps** **#Work** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Mastery** **#Persistence** **#Grind** **#Building** **#Success** **#Highlights** **#Bunts** **#Onwards**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  7. “Always know that real progress is often invisible, boring, repetitive.” - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    Your success will often not involve huge home runs that have you cheering with joy. It will come about through small bunts, working the bases, advancing slowly but surely towards a goal, and muttering about the pace.

    Treat your progress as such.

    Right now, this can be a challenge. After all, we live in a "highlight reel" culture. We see the successful keynote, the published book, or the smooth career pivot and assume that it all happened in a flash of inspiration. But in my 36-year voyage, I’ve learned that the most profound breakthroughs and the biggest wins are rarely the result of a sudden lightning bolt. They are the result of the quiet, daily discipline of showing up when it feels like nothing is changing. Playing the clubs. Putting in the work. Advancing slowly but steadily.

    I did a lot of small events in rural America and small towns in Canada before I hit the big stages of Las Vegas. It was often boringly dull, excruciatingly tiring, and sometimes, with a detached audience, not terribly motivating. But through that, I learned that success is often built on "invisible progress." The small steps that get you closer to a big goal.

    For me, success and learning are about the hundredth hour spent in the lab struggling with a Linux configuration.

    It’s the years of writing a Daily Inspiration post without missing a single workday.

    It’s the repetitive act of studying a disruptive trend long before the world notices it.

    It was spending time on stages that sometimes I did not want to be on.

    Most people quit during this "boring" phase. They mistake the lack of immediate feedback for a lack of progress. They want the dopamine hit of a "win" every day. But as a practitioner, you have to realize that you are building up your skills, capabilities, and knowledge.

    The amateur waits for the quick hit.

    The master relies on patience and effort.

    Success isn't a sprint; it’s the compound interest of your daily discipline.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll has put in the work. He still does. Every day.

    **#Progress** **#Invisible** **#Boring** **#Repetitive** **#Patience** **#Discipline** **#Daily** **#ShowingUp** **#Consistency** **#Compound** **#Effort** **#Foundation** **#Quiet** **#SmallSteps** **#Work** **#Freelance** **#Lessons** **#Mastery** **#Persistence** **#Grind** **#Building** **#Success** **#Highlights** **#Bunts** **#Onwards**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  8. 🚀✨ Wow, another Linux distro! Because what the world urgently needed was an "atomic and transactional" version of #Tumbleweed wearing a #Plasma hat. 🧢🔄 Who knew #innovation could be so... repetitive? 🙄
    kalpadesktop.org/ #LinuxDistros #Repetitive #HackerNews #ngated

  9. 🚀✨ Wow, another Linux distro! Because what the world urgently needed was an "atomic and transactional" version of #Tumbleweed wearing a #Plasma hat. 🧢🔄 Who knew #innovation could be so... repetitive? 🙄
    kalpadesktop.org/ #LinuxDistros #Repetitive #HackerNews #ngated

  10. 🚀✨ Wow, another Linux distro! Because what the world urgently needed was an "atomic and transactional" version of #Tumbleweed wearing a #Plasma hat. 🧢🔄 Who knew #innovation could be so... repetitive? 🙄
    kalpadesktop.org/ #LinuxDistros #Repetitive #HackerNews #ngated

  11. 🚀✨ Wow, another Linux distro! Because what the world urgently needed was an "atomic and transactional" version of #Tumbleweed wearing a #Plasma hat. 🧢🔄 Who knew #innovation could be so... repetitive? 🙄
    kalpadesktop.org/ #LinuxDistros #Repetitive #HackerNews #ngated

  12. 🚀✨ Wow, another Linux distro! Because what the world urgently needed was an "atomic and transactional" version of #Tumbleweed wearing a #Plasma hat. 🧢🔄 Who knew #innovation could be so... repetitive? 🙄
    kalpadesktop.org/ #LinuxDistros #Repetitive #HackerNews #ngated

  13. I don't usually watch the NFL and watching the pre-game shows today reminds me why I don't. FFS the mindless dribble! 🤢🤮🏈

    #nfl #superbowl #mindless #repetition #repetitive #advertising #fakepeople #propaganda #bigpharma #pharmaceuticals

  14. I don't usually watch the NFL and watching the pre-game shows today reminds me why I don't. FFS the mindless dribble! 🤢🤮🏈

    #nfl #superbowl #mindless #repetition #repetitive #advertising #fakepeople #propaganda #bigpharma #pharmaceuticals

  15. #GRASSMAN-Vs-BIGFOOT hurlent et martèlent leur #vision d'un #rock-n-roll non #formaté, rugueux, crasseux et sauvage. Influencé aussi bien par le #blues du #delta, que le proto #punk des #50’s et les #dissonances #chamaniques des #musiques #industrielles, le #duo propose une #musique #primitive et #répétitive menée par une #batterie #minimaliste, des #guitares #rockab’ rouillées et une #voix scandée et rocailleuse.

    Les
    #concerts, sur #scène ou au milieu du #public, invitent à la #transe et aux #dérapages.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jR8HpIDuZek

  16. #GRASSMAN-Vs-BIGFOOT hurlent et martèlent leur #vision d'un #rock-n-roll non #formaté, rugueux, crasseux et sauvage. Influencé aussi bien par le #blues du #delta, que le proto #punk des #50’s et les #dissonances #chamaniques des #musiques #industrielles, le #duo propose une #musique #primitive et #répétitive menée par une #batterie #minimaliste, des #guitares #rockab’ rouillées et une #voix scandée et rocailleuse.

    Les
    #concerts, sur #scène ou au milieu du #public, invitent à la #transe et aux #dérapages.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jR8HpIDuZek

  17. #GRASSMAN-Vs-BIGFOOT hurlent et martèlent leur #vision d'un #rock-n-roll non #formaté, rugueux, crasseux et sauvage. Influencé aussi bien par le #blues du #delta, que le proto #punk des #50’s et les #dissonances #chamaniques des #musiques #industrielles, le #duo propose une #musique #primitive et #répétitive menée par une #batterie #minimaliste, des #guitares #rockab’ rouillées et une #voix scandée et rocailleuse.

    Les
    #concerts, sur #scène ou au milieu du #public, invitent à la #transe et aux #dérapages.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jR8HpIDuZek

  18. #GRASSMAN-Vs-BIGFOOT hurlent et martèlent leur #vision d'un #rock-n-roll non #formaté, rugueux, crasseux et sauvage. Influencé aussi bien par le #blues du #delta, que le proto #punk des #50’s et les #dissonances #chamaniques des #musiques #industrielles, le #duo propose une #musique #primitive et #répétitive menée par une #batterie #minimaliste, des #guitares #rockab’ rouillées et une #voix scandée et rocailleuse.

    Les
    #concerts, sur #scène ou au milieu du #public, invitent à la #transe et aux #dérapages.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jR8HpIDuZek

  19. #GRASSMAN-Vs-BIGFOOT hurlent et martèlent leur #vision d'un #rock-n-roll non #formaté, rugueux, crasseux et sauvage. Influencé aussi bien par le #blues du #delta, que le proto #punk des #50’s et les #dissonances #chamaniques des #musiques #industrielles, le #duo propose une #musique #primitive et #répétitive menée par une #batterie #minimaliste, des #guitares #rockab’ rouillées et une #voix scandée et rocailleuse.

    Les
    #concerts, sur #scène ou au milieu du #public, invitent à la #transe et aux #dérapages.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jR8HpIDuZek

  20. "500 Miles" (also known as "500 Miles Away from Home" or "Railroaders' Lament") is a song made popular in the United States and Europe during the #1960sFolkRevival. The simple #repetitive lyrics offer a #lament by a traveler who is far from home, out of money, and too ashamed to return. In a May 1963 interview on Folk Music Worldwide, #PaulStookey of #PeterPaulAndMary characterized the song, which appeared on the group's 1962 debut album.
    youtube.com/watch?v=1p1C7za9xic

  21. "500 Miles" (also known as "500 Miles Away from Home" or "Railroaders' Lament") is a song made popular in the United States and Europe during the #1960sFolkRevival. The simple #repetitive lyrics offer a #lament by a traveler who is far from home, out of money, and too ashamed to return. In a May 1963 interview on Folk Music Worldwide, #PaulStookey of #PeterPaulAndMary characterized the song, which appeared on the group's 1962 debut album.
    youtube.com/watch?v=1p1C7za9xic

  22. "500 Miles" (also known as "500 Miles Away from Home" or "Railroaders' Lament") is a song made popular in the United States and Europe during the #1960sFolkRevival. The simple #repetitive lyrics offer a #lament by a traveler who is far from home, out of money, and too ashamed to return. In a May 1963 interview on Folk Music Worldwide, #PaulStookey of #PeterPaulAndMary characterized the song, which appeared on the group's 1962 debut album.
    youtube.com/watch?v=ARsVeP7_30c

  23. Uhm... I'm finalizing another piece of #music. This time is quite a long one, it is the first time one of my pieces exceeds 6 min. At 50 bpm, the style is once again experimenting with #repetitive patterns, blending #synths with a string #orchestra, plus a combination of drum patterns. I will probably publish it tomorrow, it just remains to do some finishing touches and find an appropriate title. #minimalism #composition

  24. 🚀 Ah, the riveting exploration of HTML's "Content #Template," where techies gather to discover... absolutely nothing new! 🤖 Skip everything and dive into an abyss of #references that even a bot would find #repetitive. But hey, at least the emojis are more engaging than the actual #content. 😂
    developer.mozilla.org/en-US/do #HTML #Tech #Humor #Emoji #Fun #HackerNews #ngated

  25. How to Stop Thinking Too Much via Raptitude [Shared]

    I appreciate Sam Harris’s apt analogy about inner monologues — being caught up in your own thinking is like having been kidnapped and held hostage by the most boring person on earth. You’re forced to listen, as though at gunpoint, to an internal commentator who insists on telling you its impressions of everything it notices or thinks about.

    Nothing is too petty, too repetitive, or too obvious for the boring kidnapper’s ongoing monologue: Susan was wrong to criticize people who wear Crocs to the grocery store; a certain politician is the worst person alive and here’s why; your ex-partner was definitely out of line when he accused you of wasting dish detergent that time; the two halves of this Oreo don’t line up, but it would be so much nicer if they did.

    welchwrite.com/blog/2025/07/28

    #Thinking #mind #overthinking #meditation #settling #repetitive #methods #technique #shared