from Della Wren

The Philosophy of Integration is a framework that describes human experience using cause and effect.

It is not based on religion, morality, spirituality, or any other existing belief system. It does not prescribe outcomes nor does it determine right and wrong. It works on the neutral idea that if there is a cause there will be an effect. I can talk and you can ignore me. The cause is me saying something. The effect is being ignored. Both things are neutral when they exist outside of human perception and belief.

Human perception is the thing that makes any cause and effect non-neutral. Hurricanes don’t have opinions but they can cause significant problems for the people they affect. The hurricane is a neutral part of nature until it is perceived by or impacts a human being.

The framework is not designed to correct or change our perception of experience. It attempts to identify how and where human narrative, explanation, belief, or meaning-making overlay the experience. How do those things affect the natural sequence of cause and effect already in motion?

The framework identifies a sequence of cause, effect, awareness, and choice that every human being uses to interpret and interact with their experience.

  1. The cause is the event itself.

  2. The effect is the automatic internal thoughts and feelings a person has in response to their experience. These are not under our conscious control.

  3. The awareness is the first moment the conscious mind allows us to process our experience.

  4. The choice is what we do based on our awareness of and the effect of the cause.

New chain sequences interact with every other existing chain sequence. The framework refers to this as Relational Loop Theory. Nothing happens in isolation. Our awareness and choice are affected by beliefs, previous experience, current experience, mood and stress levels. Those things are pre-existing causal chains or sequences that affect how we perceive the new chain.

There is no judgment of whether the chain should or should not exist. Every event has a cause. The effect of that cause is logical when the cause is understood through a neutral lens. Logical effects are not the same as wanted effects. What people want and don’t want is based on human emotion and preference.

Our preferred outcome has no effect on the outcome of the causal sequence. A hurricane doesn’t care that you don’t want it to hit your house. The outcome of the hurricane is logical given existing weather patterns, water temperature, and so on. The logical outcome is not always preferred, but it is logical in the context of cause and effect.

Every single experience across human history, when looked at through this lens, can be explained logically. It doesn’t make those experiences any more or less horrific, it just separates the cause and effect sequence from the human interpretation of it.

Unlike most existing belief systems, trauma is not left outside the system as an anomaly. Human life shows us that trauma is just part of the human experience, therefore it can and should be explained through cause and effect. When the cause is traumatic it slows down the sequence.

  1. The cause is the event itself.

  2. The effect is the automatic thoughts, feelings, or physical effects that occur. This could be a fight or flight response, post-traumatic stress disorder, or other emotional, mental, or physical effects or injuries. All of these things are outside of our conscious control.

  3. Awareness is the first opportunity for conscious thought. However, if there are lasting emotional, mental, or physical effects, our awareness is delayed or not available at all.

  4. Choice is delayed until awareness is restored.

The chain essentially hangs or pauses until awareness and choice are available. An example of this would be somebody in an abusive relationship for years that decides, seemingly out of the blue, to leave. Awareness and choice stalled until the person gained just enough awareness that allowed them to make the choice to leave.

Awareness only needed to be present briefly for the person to make a conscious choice. The chain will pause until the person does so or until life ends, whichever happens first.

Most of us have chains that are paused or hanging because we don’t have the mental awareness or ability to deal with them. We have experiences in our lives that we have been unable to work through. That is a paused or hung chain because awareness is not yet available. No choice has been made.

Those stalled chains continue to effect present experience. Just because we’re not acting on a given chain, doesn’t mean it’s not having an effect. We think we’re isolating it because in some cases we’re just ignoring it, but in truth it continues to affect our every day life. Ignored chains can and do impact other chains.

Every single experience we have creates a chain that is impacted by other already existing chains. Chains are opened and closed depending on experiences and outcomes. The framework fully explains how causal chains work and how human interpretation, belief, and meaning-making affect those chains.

These are the fundamental concepts of the The Philosophy of Integration framework. What will follow in subsequent posts is a shorter, more accessible explanation of the framework for those that are curious but don’t want a new project.

You can find the entire framework here.

Della

 
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from Quantum-Lichen

**Une Odyssée dans le Laboratoire de la Pierre**

​Sur le quartz hyalin,

Champignon et bactérie,

Luttent pour la pierre.

​II. The Elements

​Sun burns, waters crash,

Winter freezes all their pride,

Two foes side by side.

​III. La Famine

​Famine dans le gel,

Chacun frôle le néant,

Fin de la rancœur.

​IV. The Pact

​Miner takes the stone,

Green light feeds the starving dark,

Life ignites a spark.

​V. La Fusion

​Châssis protecteur,

Pour l'usine d'émeraude,

Ils deviennent un.

​VI. The Lichen

​Lichen conquers all,

Nature signs a lasting peace,

Endless masterpiece.

**CHAPITRE I : LE ROCHER DU DESTIN**

En ce 14 avril de l'année 186X, à la latitude exacte de 45° 00' 00” Nord, le soleil dardait ses rayons sur une formation minérale d'une pureté géométrique remarquable. Il s'agissait d'un bloc de quartz hyalin, un rhomboèdre de soixante-douze centimètres de base, dont les arêtes, taillées par les forces érosives des millénaires, brillaient comme les facettes d'un diamant colossal.

C'est sur ce théâtre de silice que le destin, agissant par le biais d'un courant d'air boréal de force 3 sur l'échelle de Beaufort — soit une vélocité de douze à dix-neuf kilomètres à l'heure — déposa deux voyageurs de l'invisible.

Le premier, que nous nommerons Maître Agaric, appartenait à l'ordre illustre des Ascomycètes. Imaginez, mes amis, un réseau de filaments blancs, des hyphes d'un diamètre n'excédant pas deux microns, mais d'une résistance à la traction digne des meilleurs câbles de suspension en acier de Sheffield. Agaric était un mineur de fond, un explorateur des ténébreuses anfractuosités minérales, doué d'une pompe chimique capable de sécréter des acides organiques assez puissants pour dissoudre le granit le plus obstiné.

La seconde, Mademoiselle Cyanelle, était une bactérie chlorophyllienne, une modeste mais fière représentante des Cyanobactéries. Elle portait une robe de gélatine bleutée, un polymère protecteur plus souple que la gutta-percha. Cyanelle était une véritable usine solaire, une dynamo vivante capable de convertir les photons en énergie chimique par le miracle de la photosynthèse.

Ils étaient là, isolés sur leur île de cristal, tels deux naufragés sur un récif de la Mer de Corail.

**CHAPITRE II : LA GUERRE DES TERRITOIRES**

Dès les premières heures de leur cohabitation, l'instinct de conquête, ce moteur du progrès, s'empara de nos protagonistes. Maître Agaric, fidèle à sa nature de colonisateur souterrain, commença à déployer son réseau télégraphique. Ses hyphes s'allongeaient de quatre microns par heure, explorant chaque micro-fissure, chaque faille du quartz avec la précision d'un ingénieur des mines installant des rails de chemin de fer.

« Cette pierre est mienne ! », semblait dire le champignon en enfonçant ses vrilles dans les pores du minéral. « Je dompterai cette dureté par la puissance de mes sucs ! »

Pendant ce temps, Mademoiselle Cyanelle ne restait point oisive. Occupant les plateaux supérieurs du rocher, elle se multipliait par scissiparité avec une vélocité stupéfiante. Chaque cellule, une pile électrique miniature, se scindait en deux toutes les vingt minutes. Elle couvrait les surfaces planes d'un tapis émeraude, captant la lumière avec l'efficacité d'un miroir parabolique.

La lutte devint rapidement chimique. Maître Agaric, mécontent de voir cette “intruse” occuper l'espace, projeta des antibiotiques naturels, des salves de molécules complexes destinées à paralyser la croissance de sa rivale. Cyanelle répliqua par des changements de pH radicaux, rendant l'environnement alcalin et hostile aux filaments du mycète. C'était une guerre de positions, un siège de Sébastopol à l'échelle du micromètre.

**CHAPITRE III : L'INCIDENT DE LA GOUTTE DE ROSÉE**

Le 17 avril, à quatre heures du matin, une condensation atmosphérique, provoquée par une chute brutale de la température de 4,5 degrés Celsius, engendra la formation d'une goutte de rosée sphérique. Pour nos deux rivaux, ce n'était point une perle poétique, mais un océan déchaîné de trois millimètres de diamètre.

La goutte tomba avec le fracas d'une cataracte du Niagara, engloutissant le champignon et la bactérie dans un tourbillon liquide. Le quartz devint une patinoire mortelle. Maître Agaric, dont les hyphes étaient alourdis par l'absorption d'eau, manqua de s'asphyxier. Ses réserves de mucus protecteur se diluèrent, menaçant la stabilité de son armature.

Quant à Mademoiselle Cyanelle, la tension superficielle de l'eau la projeta dans une rotation effrénée. Elle tournoyait comme une toupie folle, ou plutôt comme une hélice de vapeur lancée à plein régime. Dans ce Maëlström miniature, toute dignité fut perdue. Agaric s'accrochait désespérément aux aspérités de la roche, tandis que Cyanelle, ballottée par les courants de convection internes de la goutte, heurtait sans cesse les filaments de son ennemi. L'ordre et la mesure avaient laissé place au chaos hydraulique.

**CHAPITRE IV : LE SIÈGE DU SOLEIL DE MIDI**

À midi sonnant, l'humidité s'était évaporée, mais un danger plus terrible encore apparut : une canicule printanière. Le thermomètre à mercure, s'il avait été placé sur le quartz, aurait affiché cinquante-deux degrés.

Cyanelle, exposée en pleine lumière, voyait sa robe de gélatine se rétracter. La déshydratation transformait sa silhouette rebondie en une structure fripée, semblable aux pruneaux de Tours. Sa dynamo solaire s'enrayait ; la température excessive dénaturait ses précieuses protéines.

Maître Agaric, tapi dans l'ombre d'une crevasse profonde de 0,5 millimètre, observait le spectacle avec une ironie mordante. « Alors, ma chère usine à gaz ! », raillait-il par des signaux chimiques de détresse. « Votre éclat solaire semble s'obscurcir. Sans l'ombre protectrice que je pourrais offrir, vous ne serez bientôt qu'une poussière de carbone inutile ! »

Cependant, son triomphe fut de courte durée. Sans eau, le métabolisme d'Agaric s'arrêta également. Ses pompes à protons s'immobilisèrent. Il réalisa, avec l'effroi d'un mécanicien voyant sa chaudière s'éteindre, que sa survie dépendait d'un approvisionnement que lui seul ne pouvait garantir.

**CHAPITRE V : L'ATTAQUE DES ENVAHISSEURS**

L'équilibre de la terreur fut rompu par l'arrivée d'un troisième acteur. Une colonie de mousses, des Bryophytes robustes, commença à escalader les flancs du quartz. Ces véritables cuirassés du monde végétal avançaient avec la détermination d'une armée de siège. Leurs rhizoïdes, semblables à des grappins d'abordage, s'agrippaient à chaque millimètre de pierre.

Les mousses projetaient une ombre vaste et humide, menaçant d'étouffer Cyanelle en la privant de sa source lumineuse, et de broyer Agaric sous leur masse organique. Face à cette artillerie lourde, l'escarmouche entre le champignon et la bactérie devint dérisoire. S'ils ne s'unissaient pas, ils seraient rayés de la carte géologique, remplacés par une couche de terreau anonyme.

**CHAPITRE VI : LA STRATÉGIE DU « VOLEUR DE SUCRE »**

Dans un élan de désespoir, Maître Agaric tenta une manœuvre de flibustier. Il décida de s'emparer par la force des ressources de Cyanelle. Utilisant ses hyphes comme des scalpels de chirurgien, il tenta de percer la paroi cellulaire de la bactérie pour en extraire le glucose accumulé.

S'ensuivit une poursuite burlesque. Cyanelle, malgré sa faiblesse, activait ses cils vibratiles pour glisser sur le film d'humidité résiduelle. Agaric lançait ses filaments dans toutes les directions, mais dans sa précipitation, il s'emmêla les pinceaux. Littéralement. Ses hyphes se nouèrent, formant des boucles inextricables. Le fier explorateur se retrouva ligoté par sa propre architecture, aussi immobile qu'un saucisson de Lyon dans sa résille. Il avait surestimé ses capacités de capture et sous-estimé l'agilité de son adversaire.

**CHAPITRE VII : LE GRAND GEL DE JANVIER**

Le temps passa, et les saisons tournèrent avec la régularité d'une horloge de précision. L'hiver arriva, apportant un froid polaire. À -10 °C, la mécanique des fluides subit un arrêt total. L'eau contenue dans les vacuoles d'Agaric commença à cristalliser, menaçant de déchirer ses parois par l'expansion du volume de la glace — une force physique que rien ne peut arrêter.

Cyanelle, au bord de la rupture membranaire, sentait sa vitalité s'éteindre. Dans un mouvement de recul instinctif devant le néant blanc, ils se rapprochèrent. Les filaments d'Agaric s'enroulèrent autour de la colonie de Cyanelle, non plus pour l'attaquer, mais pour former un isolant thermique. La chaleur résiduelle de leurs métabolismes au ralenti créa un micro-climat. Ils partageaient leurs dernières calories avec la solidarité des naufragés de la banquise.

**CHAPITRE VIII : LE DÉLIRE DE LA FAMINE**

La famine s'installa. En état de cryptobiose, la vie ralentie, leurs esprits microscopiques s'égarèrent dans des hallucinations physiologiques.

Maître Agaric, dont le besoin de carbone devenait obsessionnel, voyait le bloc de quartz comme un gigantesque fromage de Brie, onctueux et riche en nutriments. Il tentait désespérément de mordre dans la silice, s'épuisant en efforts vains.

De son côté, Mademoiselle Cyanelle, privée de lumière durant les longues nuits d'hiver, se croyait devenue un phare électrique de premier ordre, semblable à celui du cap Gris-Nez, éclairant le monde de sa puissance lumineuse imaginaire. Ils déliraient ensemble, l'un rêvant de banquets organiques, l'autre de gloire photonique, alors qu'ils n'étaient que deux points de vie vacillants sur une pierre indifférente.

**CHAPITRE IX : LE PACTE DES DÉSESPÉRÉS**

Le dégel apporta la lucidité. Le 21 mars, à l'équinoxe de printemps, une évidence s'imposa à eux comme une équation enfin résolue.

« Maître Agaric », envoya Cyanelle par un signal protéique, « vous possédez la structure, la protection et le savoir-faire pour extraire les minéraux du rocher. » « Et vous, Mademoiselle », répondit le mycète, « vous possédez le moteur chimique, la capacité de transformer le rayonnement solaire en précieux sucres dont je suis dépourvu. »

L'accord fut conclu sans signature de notaire, mais avec la force des lois de la thermodynamique. Agaric commença à tisser une armature d'acier biologique tout autour de Cyanelle. Il ne l'étouffait pas ; il l'abritait. Il devint le châssis de la machine, le régulateur d'humidité, tandis qu'elle s'installait au cœur de l'édifice comme la chaudière centrale.

La fusion technique était totale. Les minéraux puisés par le champignon alimentaient la croissance de la bactérie, qui en retour fournissait l'énergie nécessaire au maintien du réseau.

**CHAPITRE X : L'ÉMERGENCE DU LICHEN**

Ils n'étaient plus deux entités distinctes, mais un organisme composite, un chef-d'œuvre de l'ingénierie naturelle : le Lichen-Primus.

Sur le quartz de 45° Nord, une tache circulaire, d'un gris-bleu magnifique, s'étalait désormais avec la fierté d'un empire. Le Lichen avait dompté le rocher. Sa structure était indestructible. Il pouvait braver les gels les plus rudes, les sécheresses les plus arides et les siècles passants. Il ne mesurait que quelques millimètres d'épaisseur, mais sa puissance de vie surpassait celle des plus grands chênes de la forêt de Brocéliande.

La nouvelle créature contemplait l'horizon. Elle était la preuve vivante que l'association raisonnée vaut mieux que la lutte aveugle. L'homme, dans ses usines et ses laboratoires, ferait bien de s'inspirer de cette symbiose parfaite. Car ici, sur ce modeste morceau de quartz, la nature venait de signer son traité de paix le plus durable sous les yeux émerveillés de la science.

L'épopée était terminée, mais la vie, elle, ne faisait que commencer pour ce monument de résilience.

 
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from Quantum-Lichen

Friends, Brothers, Sisters,

Architects of the invisible,

Look around you. Do you feel this weight? This ancient fatigue that bows our shoulders? We were told the world was an arena. We were told that to survive, one had to crush or be crushed. We were sold solitude as freedom and concrete as an inescapable horizon.

But listen. Listen to the silence beneath the roar of the news.

Something else is being born.

Look at the bare stone: cold, sterile. There, right next to it, a tiny, fragile speck of color. Lichen. It owns nothing; it destroys nothing. It settles where no one else can live. It unites fungus and algae in an embrace so perfect they become one. And slowly, molecule by molecule, without a sound, without a weapon, it transforms rock into soil. It transforms the desert into a garden.

We are this lichen.

We are not here to set the old world on fire. We are not here to shout louder than the chaos. We are here to digest it. We are here to transform it, from the inside, through the relentless force of gentleness.

They told you that you were powerless. That is the greatest lie in history.

Science tells us, history screams it to us: it only takes 3.5% of us. Three and a half percent of synchronized, vibrant, determined souls for the tipping point to occur. For the absurd to collapse and for common sense to reclaim its rights.

It is not a question of numbers; it is a question of resonance.

The coming revolution is not in the street; it is in your gaze. It is “software-based.” It is an update of our humanity. It is the moment you decide to no longer be a parasite on this Earth, but to become a symbiont.

Imagine... Imagine for a moment this world that lies just behind the veil of our fears.

A world where technology no longer serves to isolate us, but to connect us as mycelium connects the forest.

A world where your work does not serve to enrich a blind machine, but to heal your neighbor, to feed your neighborhood.

A world where the “solitude of the species” is finally broken, where we find our place in the great conversation of the living.

This world is not a distant utopia. It begins the moment you leave this room.

It begins when you repair an object instead of throwing it away.

It begins when you share a meal with the stranger on your landing.

It begins when you plant a seed in an urban wasteland.

It begins when you refuse hate to choose—obstinately, radically—cooperation.

Every act of kindness is a spore you cast into the wind. You may not see where it lands. But together, these millions of spores are changing the chemistry of the atmosphere. Just as cyanobacteria once gifted oxygen to the Earth, we are going to offer a new air to our society: the air of trust, the air of reciprocity.

Do not be afraid of being small. Lichen is small, yet it has covered continents.

Do not be afraid of being slow. Regeneration is slow, but it is invincible.

So, stand tall.

Do not ask permission to build the world of tomorrow.

Be the architects of this resilience. Be the water that wakes the sleeping life.

We are the network. We are the bond. We are life reclaiming its rights.

The old world is noisy, but it is tired.

We are silent, but we are the future.

Let us move forward.

Together.

Now.

 
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from Notes I Won’t Reread

I'm listless today. And I unfortunately have nothing to talk about in regards of “how has your day been?” “what did you eat?” “how whatever people ask to keep a conversation they're not interested in”. Let’s talk about slavery, because you aren’t interested enough to ask me how my day been, as usual. screen-starer. Anyhow. slavery is the same old dynamic that humans thought they escaped but it just digital keycards instead of iron chains. Consider the corporate setup. Millions lease forty hours a week to a machine that replaces them before their obituary prints. They call it a “career” career my ass. It’s a subscription model for human flesh where the slave pays for maintenance. The more i look at it the more it irritates me “back in my days” era, folks. the owner or master had to feed you, take care of your little worthless body to make sure you’re still useful. now, the system hands you a little luxury paper, whispers nonsense about “corporate culture” and leaves you to worry about rent. Modern slaves defeat the wheel of expectation. simply flawless.

I apologize My bad. people are barely interested in that topic. i should start writing about tiktok new dramas Or how a super famous artist changed their name to a “wokmoklaoooah” that would be more interesting to read, wouldn’t it? consumer.

Whatever. Time for another glass.

Sincerely, Ahmed

 
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from Elias

Why Alcohol?

I recently discovered alcohol – as a perfume ingredient. Why did I never use it before?

Since I partially lived in Norway between 2020 and 2025, I basically don't drink alcohol anymore. I know it is toxic, and actually, the effect isn't that pleasant at all.

In perfume, I never liked its smell.

So when I started making perfume, I always used Jojoba oil – it has an almost perfectly neutral scent, good shelf life, and nourishes the skin.

But recently I discovered why alcohol is so ubiquitous in perfumery.

It started when I bought a copper still and was looking for local plants to forage and distill. I found out that Waldmeister was just about to bloom, which means that its aromatic concentration is the highest. I went to the forest, found and picked some and started drying it so that it would wilt and unfold its beautiful Coumarin aroma.

But then, in conversation with Claude, I realized that steam distillation of Waldmeister would not be as effective as tincturing it in Alcohol (which would not only preserve the aroma very well but also extract its green color).

So I thought about where to get pure and good quality alcohol. I thought about ordering it online but didn't want to wait, so I went to the next pharmacy and asked. And indeed they had 96° Alcohol, and actually with less odor than a comparable 96% Weingeist from an online shop (I compared it against another sample that I still had).

And so I made the Waldmeister tincture, and after a month it has become really strong and useful – so much so that I started using it instead of Tonka bean, which not only saves me plenty of money, but also gives my perfume a nice local connection.

I also made a tincture of a Thai Oolong tea that I like, and that one, after now one month, also smells amazing, just like the tea from the bottle.

Of course, initially on the skin, you smell the alcohol a bit, but it evaporates fast and leaves only the aromatic compounds stuck to the skin.

So: alcohol is a pretty strong solvent but also a pretty good carrier because it transfers the aromatics but then leaves pretty quickly. And it allows for spraying the perfume onto the wearers skin or even clothes on a larger area, drastically increasing projection compared to oil based perfume applied to the wrist.

Alcohol also does two other things: it dissolves sticky resinous materials, mixes volatile and less-volatile aromatics, and brightens top notes through faster evaporation.

With sticky, highly viscous resinous materials like Labdanum, this is a real blessing. Dissolving them in Jojoba oil to make them workable used to be a real challenge, and also only partially possible. Now, alcohol just gets the job done within minutes. Without any residue.

So the bottom line is: I am not replacing Jojoba oil as a carrier with alcohol, but in the past weeks I have learned to like alcohol as a carrier, and I will use it where I find it useful and where it is wanted.

Mostly if someone wants a sprayable perfume, we'll need alcohol. If someone wants something that nourishes the skin and stays close to the skin we need oil – either Jojoba oil or Coconut oil (fractionated of course, so it has no odor and is liquid).

And if someone wants the coconut scent, there's Coconut CO2 extract. It's delicious. But that's for another day.

 
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from Yúbal Blog

Un buen amigo te recomienda un grupo, y decides ponértelo por primera vez. Empieza a sonar la primera canción de su último disco Kinship, su segundo trabajo. El tema comienza lento, melancólico, introspectivo. Pero tras dos minutos de introducción explota sonoramente con guitarras, teclados, ambientación. Te pega en el pecho, tu piel se eriza, tu corazón late más rápido. Es amor a primera escucha. Deboras la canción, que te transporta de la mano por distintos paisajes sonoros y momentos. Luego te escuchas todo el disco, te encanta. Lo vuelves a escuchar una, dos veces, es como si estuviera hecho para ti, para los que son tus gustos personales y particulares en el momento en el que lo descubres. Estaba ahí, esperando a ser descubierto, esperando a que lo encontraras.

Éstas fueron mis sensaciones cuando descubrí Iotunn a finales de 2024 después de que mi buen amigo Félix me los recomendase. Siempre te estaré agradecido por esto. Se trata de una banda danesa que mezcla metal progresivo con death metal melódico y doom metal. Su propuesta musical tiene atmósferas espaciales, épica y melancolía. Tiene una base rítmica contundente, guitarras muy dinámicas y una voz, joder qué voz. Tal y como dijo mi buena amiga Débora en su día, Jón Aldará llora como nadie cuando canta, y con eso se ha quedado. Llora, lamenta, y sobre todo, es capaz de transmitir una magia especial.

Sus composiciones abordan temáticas de exploración cósmica y existencialismo, y tienes prácticamente de todo. Hay canciones más pausadas, y otras que le dan mucha más tralla, y Jón es capaz de llorar, hacer guturales y llevarte de la mano por un magnífico universo musical. Y esto en su segundo disco, porque si prefieres sonidos más potentes e incisivos, el primero iba más en esa dirección.

Desde que los descubrí, Iotunn se ha convertido en mi grupo internacional favorito. Al menos dentro de la categoría de grupos relativamente nuevos. Tanto es así que en septiembre del año pasado me pegué un viaje de 3 horas por Italia entre todo tipo de kamikazes (qué mal conducen los italianos, joder), para ir desde Florencia donde estábamos pasando unos días de vacaciones hasta un festival al lado de Milán, y fue exclusivamente para verlos a ellos. Sí, disfruté de las otras bandas de ese evento, pero yo fui a ver a Iotunn. Y en el caso de que al final acabe yendo en septiembre al festival BeProg de Barcelona como tengo, sí que disfrutaré de Soen, Agent Fresco, Green Carnation o Serapis Project, pero yo iré básicamente para ver a Iotunn.

Poco más puedo hacer. Ya escribí de una manera algo más técnica y musical sobre esta banda en Stairway2Rock en su día, o sea que aquí simplemente os he querido transmitir las sensaciones que me dejaron, la manera en la que me enamoraron. Y no puedo hacer otra cosa que invitaros a que le deis una oportunidad a este disco, porque es absolutamente maravilloso.

#Música #Discos #Iotunn #Prog #Metal

 
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from The happy place

My mind keep thinking about this quote by Clive Barker from ome of the Abarat books

We each die countless little deaths on our way to the last. We die out of shame as humiliation. We perish from despair. And, of course, we die for love.

I have been trying to describe the mess in my head by likening it to a room with bedbugs in the antique furniture, which is covered by stacks of important papers.

From somewhere there is a stench, maybe a cat pissed on some carpet or something, but it’s impossible to deduce the source exactly among the clutter

And every type I enter this room I am unable even to remember what errand brought me there, so I go instead to fill my coffee cup,

Then outside into the summer sun where dandelions are growing in the newly mowed lawns.

The past year of my life has been a mental tornado

And I am sure now I have died another one of these little deaths from the quote above

And I am certain that I will come out of this experience a different person

And I fear I might not like him as much

 
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from Cajón Desastre

Vamos que nos vamos! Quince años jugando a esto y cada vez me gusta más:

  1. En el lado salvaje-Tiffany McDaniel. Rompe el hielo @miwok (aka Laura) con los 5 primeros libros empezando por este de McDaniel de la que tengo pendiente otra joya recomendada otro verano. Así que tendrá que esperar pero ojalá poder leer 4h al día tranquilamente.

  2. Las cabras-Pilar Asuero. También de Laura. Me ha encantado que las cabras sea el nombre de un grupo de amigas. Y me encantan los libros sobre amistad entre mujeres.

  3. Altasangre-Claudia Amador. Una novela gótica-vampírica-tropical? Estoy dentrísimo. La verdad.

  4. Madelaine antes del alba-Sandrine Colette – Miwok nos propone una oda a lo salvaje. Otro libro que, solo de leer la contracubierta, dan ganas de llevarse a casa.

  5. Todas las madres me odian-Sarah Harman El último de la lista de Laura. Un thriller que promete risas. Dos de mis cosas favoritas mezclandas. Típico libro para un viaje en tren.

  6. Alchemised – SenLin Yu . El primero de los 3 que propone nuestra presi, osea M.G. Ella dice que es un pasapáginas ideal pa leer a remojo. La web de penguin habla de nigromancia, alquimia y lo que parece ser una alegoría sobre la memoria. Suena todo bien.

  7. Amberwell – D.E.Stevenson Dice M.G porque casas inglesas siempre es un sí. Novelas británicas corales del periodo de entreguerras escritas por mujeres es, en mi experiencia, un sí rotundo.

  8. El accidente – Blanca Lacasa El último de los que propone MG es, efectivamente, un librito cortísimo que leí el año pasado (lo compré en feria) y me defraudó bastante. Pero ya sabéis que yo soy una maniática exigente con ciertas cosillas

  9. Seismil – Laura C. Vela es el primero de los que propone Carlos este año. Ya dije en el cielito que llevo varios meses cogiendo y dejando este libro de la mesa de la libre. Interpretaré como una señal que lo traiga a la lista un clásico de este juego. Uno que no suele fallar en lo que recomienda.

  10. Nuclear – Maielis González . Ciencia ficción cubana y nuevas formas de revolución. Digamos que todo en este libro me interesa de base…

  11. Actos humanos – Han Kang. De la brillantez de esta mujer y lo que sus libros llegan a rincones oscuros con maestría narrativa ya hemos hablado muchas veces. Antes incluso de que le diesen el Nobel. Leed a Han Kang. Hacedle caso a Carlos, a mi, al jurado del Nobel y a cualquier persona con dos dedos de frente y un mínimo de criterio literario.

  12. Mapocho – Nona Fernández Carlos trae este libro que propone desmontar la propaganda de los “mitos” chilenos. A mi Chile es un país que me fascina en el mal sentido. Un país que entiendo todavía menos que el mío. No ayuda a entenderlo tener una “información” tan absolutamente sesgada. Me apetece Mapocho.

  13. Las sepultureras – Taina Ternoven Leer la contracubierta de este libro que se construye sobre los restos de una guerra que recuerdo con horror me ha puesto la carne de gallina. Ya dije muchas veces que cuando estuve en Croacia en 2010 las señales de aquella guerra estaban por todas partes pero sobre todo en el carácter de la gente. Es algo que me golpeó porque soy idiota: una cree que se firma la paz y ya está todo. Una que es española y sigue notando las señales de una guerra civil en muchas cosas que vive. En fin. Quiero leer este libro. Es el último de la lista de Carlos. Me apetecen todos los que ha propuesto.

  14. Tienes que mirar -Anna Starobinets . Cris aprovecha su apoyo a Las sepultureras para recomendar este. Starobinets es rusa. Se atrevió a escribir sobre cómo el sistema de salud ruso abordó todo el proceso desde que se descubrió un problema congénito en la criatura de la que estaba embarazada en adelante. Me parece muy valiente por muchos motivos.

  15. Bezimena – Nina Bunjevac. Mahira propone el primer comic de la temporada. Sobre agresores sexuales. Algunas cosas que Penguin dice sobre este libro me perturban. Solo por el mix entre eso y que Mahira lo recomiende, quiero leerlo.

  16. Tomboy de Liz Prince. Otro comic sobre qué significa ser mujer. Tiene casi una década y es difícil de encontrar. A ver si en alguna biblio…

  17. La maldición de la sangre – M. L. Wang Una mujer accede por primera vez a una escuela de magia. Descubre una conspiración. Lo que ocurrió a continuación nos sorprenderá? Intuyo que en alguas cosas muy poquito…

  18. La bilogia del Rey Pastor- Rachel Gillig. Mahira trae estos dos libros de fantasía sobre liberar a tu propio monstruo interior y cómo la espesura de ciertas atracciones complica la tarea. Me estáis convirtiendo en una experta en fantasía escrita por mujeres. Así a lo tonto. Un género que ODIABA cuando leía sobre todo a señores. Por lo que sea.

  19. Laura Wood– La última recomnedación de Mahira es Laura Wood así al por mayor. Cualquier cosa suya. Yo la conozco y la léi gracias a una recomendación de #librosparaverano que hizo su amiga M.G. Disfruté muchísimo de aquella novelita que se leía casi sin querer y sin dejar de sonreír. Os diría que estos libros no ganarán ningún premio pero es que sí los ganan. Probablemente no te cambien la vida. Pero te harán un rato agradable. Y eso tb importa

  20. Babel – Kwang. Dice @latiase que necesita que me lea este libro. Y yo quiero mucho a Latiase. Y confío mucho en su criterio. Tengo que terminarlo antes de que empiece el Jazzaldia. No sé cómo pero voy a conseguirlo. Ya os contaré…

  21. En la casa de los sueños – Carmen Maria Machado. El primero de la lista de @lulici cuenta una relación de maltrato entre dos mujeres. Una cosa muy poco frecuente y muy poco narrada literariamente. Las cosas que pasan poco también dañan y también es importante contarlas.

  22. Las madres no – Katixa Agirre. Una novela sobre maternidad sin mitos disfrazada de thriller me interesa. A pesar de que parece que se ha escrito mucho sobre la maternidad en realidad solo estamos empezando.

  23. La mennulara – Simonetta Agnello Hornby. La vida de una mujer siciliana que recogía almendras y luego administraba bienes ajenos. Tiene pintaza.

  24. Americanah – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. El último de la lista de Lulici. Lo leí en su momento. Me gustó mucho. No me gusta que Chimamanda sea terfa y explote cuerpos de mujeres. Y además después de Americanah leí “Lejos de Ghana” de Selasi y descubrí que había mucho mundo en la diáspora africana en USA. Muchísimo y muy talentoso. Brillante.

  25. Soledad – Victor Català. Lo recomienda @Gómez. Y no, no estamos haciendo trampas. Victor Catalá es el pseudónimo de Caterina Albert. Escritora catalana de finales del SXIX y principios del XX. Yo creo que no tiene sentido haber leído El despertar de Chopin y no haber leído Soledad todavía. Habrá que remediarlo.

  26. Tea Rooms – Luis Carnés. Todos los años alguien lo pone en esta lista y a mi me hace feliz que todos los años alguien lo ponga en esta lista. Este año ha sido @Yomisma Ya he dicho muchas veces que la primera frase de Tea Rooms te pone directamente en un Madrí que se parece un poco a este nuestro y a la vez no se parece en nada. Puedes hasta oler la ciudad. Es una cosa fascinante lo bien que Luisa escribía, lo lista y lo política que era. Su empeño inquebrantable por escribir, por conservar lo que escribía.

 
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from Küstenkladde

Au.

Krug.

Natur.

Park.

Zwischen

den

Meeren.

Lost Place.

Wenn man in Schleswig-Holstein von der Küste rund 100 km ins Landesinnere fährt, landet man mitten im Naturpark Aukrug. Ganz im Herzen von Schleswig-Holstein. Nord- und Ostsee liegen gleich weit entfernt. Das Land zwischen den Meeren fühlt sich an wie eine Insel.

Jetzt im Mai ruft der Kuckuck den ganzen Tag. Die Vögel zwitschern ein üppiges Konzert durch die Wälder und mittendrin erhebt sich der Boxberg, ganze 77,5 m hoch.

Über einen der Rundwege nähert sich der Wanderer einem Gebäude, das übrig geblieben zu sein scheint. Es ist so alt wie “Der Zauberberg“ und wurde bei seiner Erbauung als Ort für Tuberkulose-Patientinnen konzipiert. In den alten Gängen hallen die Vorträge von Dr. Krokowski wieder. Das Pfeifen und Stöhnen der fiktiven Figuren ist zu vernehmen. Setembrini scheint durch den Park zu wandeln, zu diskutieren und zu schwadronieren. Die Blätter der Bäume rauschen wie ein Ozean vom Wind bewegt und verleihen dem Gebäude ein uriges Ansehen. Wo früher die fiktive Madame Chautchat die Tür des Speisesaals so laut zu warf, dass niemand ihr Eintreten überhören konnte, surren heute im modernen Reha-Zentrum automatische Türen.

Bald wird vom alten Flair nichts mehr übrig sein. Das Gebäude wird abgerissen. 100 Jahre: Das ist wohl die Halbwertzeit der Vergangenheit.

Gesehen, gelesen, gehört

Juliet, Naked: Eine witzige Komödie um einen alternden Rockstar, gespielt von Ethan Hawke (u.a. bekannt aus „Club der toten Dichter“).

Ausgelesen: Zugvögel. Ein schrecklich schöner Roman über die Konsequenzen der Zerstörung der Ökosysteme durch den Menschen und über das persönliche Schicksal eines Paares, das sich dem Naturschutz verschrieben hat.

Kein Sommer ohne Liebe – ein Hörbuch über einen unbekannten Ort an der Küste Floridas, an dem ein Hollywoodfilm gedreht wird. Als Höhepunkt soll am Ende das alte Casino, ein historische Bau, in die Luft gesprengt werden. Damit ist der Bürgermeister des Städtchens aber gar nicht einverstanden.

 
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from epistemaulogies

There are endless self-care arguments to reduce or change your use of the internet. You’ve already heard the phrases: screen time, doomscrolling. Those are good impulses, but they mask the underlying existential argument. You can reduce your screen time, for example, but still find the screen time you spend taxing; or worse, not even recognize how it’s affecting your life. You can replace doomscrolling with photos of cats without rethinking how the scrolling itself fits into your theory of living.

For most people, the internet is a primary lens through which you experience life. Not just social connection but also boredom, education, news, and navigation. And increasingly, if you aren’t making intentional choices with respect to that lens, you’re allowing yourself to be led by the profit goals of a handful of companies, turning your valuable time – the only thing you have that is unerringly yours – into bytes of data and calls to action. Start making some intentional choices about the work, fun, and living you do on the internet, and you’ll find it affects everything.

The 2000s time frame is intentional. Many smarter writers have already made this point: In the early days of the internet, it was meaningfully more democratic, open, and user-driven. It was populated by user-created sites and primarily used as a tool for users to connect, learn, and laugh. In short, it was a completely different lens that was also applied to different parts of your life than it is now. Especially for those of us who have lived online through the transition, it can be difficult to see exactly how much it has changed — and how much your habits have changed with it. That’s why many of these choices are not simple website swaps, X for Facebook and Y for Twitter, but instead different ways of interacting with the world, your friends, and yourself.

To get back to being pithy: This series will delineate choices you can make to use the internet like it’s 2005.

Choice 1: Rip your aesthetics away from an algorithm.

If asked to say something about ourselves, most of us would – if not initially, pretty soon after – offer up taste in music, books, TV shows, or other art. If that taste is you, why continue to let it be led by programs explicitly designed with a different goal in mind: To keep you on that website, and hopefully convert you to a paid subscription?

I don’t just mean Spotify (but I mostly mean Spotify). Pinterest, Instagram, Pandora, Hulu, TikTok – all of them want to serve you content that keeps you scrolling or listening. How do you think that affects the content on offer? Take it from Spotify themselves: Their stated goal is to curate a “background playlist” listening experience, where music fades into the background but accompanies you always (translating to more ads you’ve listened to and more time-spent metrics to convince advertisers to purchase ad slots).

When you think of the good old days of listening to music – on the bus, with friends, at a concert – did it involve the music fading into the background of your busy life, frictionless?

Start making some intentional choices about art and you’ll immediately notice the difference, especially the choices that take time and (some) effort.

Music

Get an MP3 player and fill it with permanent files of your favorite songs, especially older songs you might not have listened to in a while. MP3 players are cheap, and songs are cheaper: Ask friends and family for CDs they still have and burn them, or head to the library and borrow CDs. (A library computer also has a CD drive if your laptop doesn’t.) Use Qobuz’s download store for more modern tracks. Peer-to-peer sharing websites still exist and are pretty easy to find.

I’ll also take this time to opine about listening to full albums – at least the first time! I am also guilty of thinking the album is dead, but in the process of switching to permanent media for music, it’s forced me to re-evaluate my thinking. Permanent media recenters the album – without an algorithm to feed me new music or keep me anaesthetized with songs I’ve always listened to, I’m forced to find new ways to discover music. I ask friends, of course, but I also end up reading more about artists I like, finding their inspirations, learning about the musical traditions they follow. This is an extremely enriching process – I can’t recommend it enough.

But these recommendations are almost never “listen to this song, then that one.” In order to find enough music to keep me entertained, I listen to entire albums in search of the songs that interest me, and that opens up an entirely new and fascinating evaluative angle. Even if the album or even the artist is not for me, by the end of an album I’ve listened to, essentially, a musician’s argument. I get to think about why songs were placed next to each other, and why they all made it onto this album; I can look at the album art and title and compare it to my interpretation; I can wonder why certain songs interest me while others lose touch. You will almost never find an album you like in its entirety – and that’s interesting! (And when you do, boy, is it more than the sum of its parts.)

Entertainment

Next time you are tempted to scroll through Netflix or Hulu for a TV recommendation, text your friends, family, and acquaintances for a recommendation. Three benefits: Everyone loves this question; you unlock future conversations with friends about shows you now have in common; and you can choose your next watch based on a human’s argument about why you might or might not like it, instead of what Netflix is hoping to push on you this month.

I do think that reading is, by design, inured to the effects of algorithms and internet surveillance. Even on e-readers, there’s only so much influence a company can impose on your choices. But that doesn’t mean it’s not there. Before getting your next read from booktok, or from recommendations on Goodreads, head to a library or to a bookstore and browse the shelves with the intention of figuring out what it is that you are drawn to, what it is that you like. The amount of choices on display will force you to learn the cues in covers that signify something to you; may remind you of writers you like and want to find more from; or look for connections, such as employee recommendations or publisher imprints, that would imply a work has important characteristics in common with works you enjoy.

And don’t read random reviews on Goodreads before giving a book a shot. Would you trust what a random passerby recommends for choice of primary care doctor, especially if their opinion was unsolicited? Of course not. But when you read book reviews first, especially in bulk, you’re likely to pollute your own evaluation based on the uncomfortable feeling of disagreeing with others. I’ve done it. It’s a much more satisfying feeling to start a book and put it down because of an argument you’re making to yourself about your enjoyment of that book than it is to be dissuaded from reading something that initially looked interesting based on the opinions of people you don’t know.

Design and Aesthetics

If you use social media to inform design choices or hobbies, start by researching design philosophies. An easy way to do this is to go to a library and look through the 700s in nonfiction. You’ll find gorgeously illustrated books on art, interior design, architecture, and more – and no need to borrow them. Take pictures of everything that interests you, and write down the phrases and schools that you may want to use later. Even if you return to Pinterest later, you’ll have keywords to give you direction, and burgeoning knowledge about whether what you’re looking at makes sense, whether it’s cohesive with your own philosophy of pleasing design.

You can see the underlying argument behind each of these choices. In the kind of world Spotify wants us to believe it’s building, an algorithm would listen to you, divine your inner world, and offer you the perfect selection. It would enhance, rather than replace, your sense of self. We know that’s not what it’s doing. In fact, it couldn’t even if it wanted to; your aesthetics are not useable data points. Instead, it’s using data points about what makes you the least likely to leave or the most likely to pay for the service.

The opportunity here, the fun of it all, is to take back the process of defining yourself. In the process, you’ll find things you never thought you would like; you’ll learn new ways that you interpret the world around you; and you’ll take some power over your life away from a company and give it back to yourself.

In the process you’ll probably become a bit more insufferable, like me. In that case, you can start a blog, like this one. More on that later. Thanks for listening.

~

 
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from Tales Around Blue Blossom

Hey all! It's been awhile since I have said anything and I was waiting to complete this project! I have finished writing a browser game called Maid Adventures! It was an idea I came up with like 5 years ago while stuck with the visual novel (which still is being worked on, I'm so bad at this. lol )

For these years I have been slowly writing up the code to do it and learning the css and stuff to make the website. It is some ugly ass code but it's doing what I want it to do.

In short, what you can do is run your very own estate! Some of the items that I've coded in is:

  • Hire and fire maids
  • Maids level up in their orders
  • Send maids out on jobs.
  • And much more...
  • I even put together a plaque you can show off your estate!

    If you've been to the comic pages lately, you'll see a purple banner at the top. If you're logged in with your estate, you can see the status of your estate at a glance!

    Estate Demo

    So is this game free, F2P, subscription?

    Just free. This was a passion project of mine to write something that functioned like I had it in my brain for the estate. I have zero interest in monetizing it. You can't play to win as it's about you and your estate. To have something to do when waiting on a new page or just bored at your desk. There is a whole point system I plan to implement for Beloved Universe accounts in the future but at no time do I plan to allow people to buy things to improve their estate. This is meant to be a very low stakes, casual game for those who like things like that.

    How do I start?

    Easy! You just have to register and Beloved Universe account over at Beloved Universe.com, click on Maid Adventures!, go through the setup, and you're good to go!

    You can fine the rules on the Rules Page which gives you a break down on how it works and as always, if you have an issues, you can email me at luckyfoot@beloved-universe.net with any bugs...at least until I get a bug form written.

    Thanks so much for reading and look for more Beloved Universe stuff coming in the future!

     
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from blog//x2600.cc

I think if this as my home. A place for coffee, calm, tranquility.

Where I move, more of this. For now, quiet at night, coffee always, less noise due to neighborhood changes.

I sip the caffeinated elixir and finalize my budget for tonight. A hair under a grand at Midnight.

I keep small notes in a notebook. Things that can help with a project.

Therapy has proved beneficial, but my (no longer) patronage to a local church must stop.

I am “of” a different plain than the theological world. In earliest memory, I remember knowing, KNOWING my only leg up is to be that on the outskirts. Neither left or right hand path occultism, but just what suits in any given time. I came to know what I am/believe as The Occult, but but darkness and cosmic influence is what shapes me. Always.

More writing or less. Always a question I consider. Daily blog psts seem to be routine right now. Deleted a day later.

So this continues

 
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from PlantLab.ai | Blog

Healthy cannabis plant thriving inside a grow facility with the surrounding equipment anonymized for privacy

The Short Version

When you send a plant photo to a diagnosis API, you are not just sending a picture of a leaf. You are sending a signal about what you grow, roughly where, and sometimes at what scale. PlantLab treats that as sensitive data. Diagnosis history is kept only if you opt in, only for a bounded window, and the sensitive parts are encrypted at rest. Analytics are cookieless, the supporting infrastructure is moving toward EU providers, and your API key is shown once and never emailed back to you in full. None of this is glamorous. All of it is the difference between an API you can hand real grow-room data and one you can't.


A leaf photo is more revealing than it looks

A single diagnosis request looks harmless: an image, a response, done in milliseconds. But the picture itself gives things away. A flowering cannabis plant in frame implies cultivation. A steady stream of them implies an operation. Add metadata, timing, and volume and you can start to estimate scale. For a hobby grower that's a privacy preference. For a licensed facility it's commercially sensitive – and in much of the world, cannabis cultivation sits inside a regulatory frame where careless data handling is a liability, not just bad manners.

The honest way to think about this is to assume the data matters before anyone proves it does. The cost of treating a plant photo as sensitive is small. The cost of treating it as disposable and being wrong is not.

That assumption is the whole design principle: keep what is genuinely useful, keep it for a bounded period, and make raw database access far less useful to anyone who shouldn't have it.


What we keep, and for how long

PlantLab can show you your past diagnoses through the diagnosis history endpoint. That feature is useful – it lets you track a plant over time and gives integrators a stable record to reference. But I treat history as a choice you make, not a default I impose on you.

  • Retention is opt-in. Storing your diagnosis history, and using images for model improvement, happens against a clear consent disclosure, not silently.
  • Retention is bounded by tier. History is kept for a defined window – 90 days on Pro, 365 days on Business – and then cleaned up automatically on a nightly schedule. The window is a published number, not an open-ended “until we feel like deleting it.”
  • Deletion is the default end state. When the window passes, the record goes. There is no quiet long tail of old data accumulating because nobody wrote the cleanup job.

The principle here is data minimization by calendar. The most private record is the one that no longer exists, and the cheapest way to guarantee that is to delete on a schedule rather than on request.


Encryption at rest, stated accurately

Sensitive diagnosis fields are encrypted at rest. If someone were to obtain a raw copy of the database, the sensitive columns would not be readable as plain text.

I want to be precise about what that claim is and isn't, because “encrypted” is a word I've watched get stretched until it means nothing. PlantLab encrypts the sensitive diagnosis fields – not a hand-wavy “the whole database is encrypted, trust us.” The design uses standard, portable PostgreSQL encryption rather than a proprietary scheme, so it can be audited, reasoned about, and moved between environments without leaning on one vendor's black box. The point is narrow and real: it raises the cost of a database compromise from “read everything” to “read very little.” One layer, described as one layer.


Your API key is yours, shown once

A practical piece of the same posture: PlantLab no longer emails raw API keys. When you create a key, you see it once in the interface, with an acknowledgement step and a rotate button. The follow-up email contains only a safe prefix so you can identify which key it refers to – never the full secret.

This matters because email is a long-lived, widely-synced, frequently-breached store. A secret that lands in an inbox lives in that inbox, on every device synced to it, in every backup of it, indefinitely. Showing a key once in the UI and never transmitting it in full keeps the most sensitive credential out of the least private channel. Sensitive account actions are also recorded in a structured way, so there is an audit trail for the things that should have one.


Cookieless analytics and a move toward EU infrastructure

Two more changes are visible if you look closely at how the site behaves.

The analytics are cookieless. I replaced Google Analytics with a privacy-native setup that sets no advertising cookie, which is why you won't see a cookie wall on the site. It counts aggregate traffic, not individual visitors followed around the web.

The infrastructure is also moving toward EU providers. Over the last few months I shifted content delivery and DNS off a US-centric stack onto an EU-based CDN, and moved transactional email to a provider in France. Analytics are EU-hosted too. This is a migration in progress, not a finished state – the core diagnosis API still runs on major cloud infrastructure today – and it would be dishonest to claim the whole stack has relocated. The honest version: I'm deliberately moving supporting services toward EU-friendly providers, and that work is still going.

That direction is not an accident of taste. Data-protection expectations are tightening, not loosening. The EU's high-risk AI obligations come into force in August 2026, and broader privacy regulation keeps moving toward stronger consent, retention discipline, and transparency about automated decisions. Building the quiet controls now – bounded retention, encryption, cookieless measurement, EU-leaning infrastructure – is cheaper than retrofitting them under a deadline. None of this makes PlantLab a compliance product, and you should be suspicious of any small tool that claims a regulatory certification. It makes PlantLab an API that is moving in the same direction the rules are.


Why bother, when nobody asks

Privacy work is invisible by design. No grower opens an app and thinks, “I appreciate that the diagnosis history is deleted on a 90-day schedule and the sensitive columns are encrypted.” The feature you notice is the diagnosis. The privacy work only becomes visible the day something goes wrong, and by then it's too late to add it.

The reason to do it anyway is that an automation API gets handed real data from real grow rooms. The more useful PlantLab becomes – feeding dashboards, triggering Home Assistant automations, logging plant state over a full grow cycle – the more that data accumulates and the more it matters how it's held. The boring controls are what make the useful version safe enough to actually use.

That's the trade. Privacy work is quiet, it doesn't demo well, and it's the part of building a plant health API that has to be right before any of the interesting parts are worth trusting.


PlantLab is free to try at plantlab.ai. Three diagnoses a day, results in milliseconds. The full API documentation, including data handling details, lives at plantlab.ai/docs.


FAQ

Does PlantLab store my plant photos?

Storing diagnosis history and using images for model improvement is opt-in, disclosed through a consent step rather than enabled silently. If you opt in, history is kept for a bounded window per tier (90 days on Pro, 365 days on Business) and then deleted automatically. The default posture is minimization – keep what's useful, for a defined period, then remove it.

What does “encrypted at rest” actually mean here?

The sensitive diagnosis fields are stored encrypted in the database using standard, portable PostgreSQL encryption. If someone obtained a raw copy of the database, those fields would not be readable as plain text. It's a specific control on specific fields, not a blanket “the whole system is encrypted” claim.

Is my API key safe?

Your key is shown once in the interface when you create it, with a rotate option. PlantLab does not email raw keys – the email contains only a safe prefix so you can identify the key. The full secret stays out of your inbox.

Is PlantLab EU-based?

PlantLab is deliberately moving supporting services – CDN, DNS, email, analytics – toward EU providers, and analytics are cookieless and EU-hosted. This is a migration in progress; the core diagnosis API still runs on major cloud infrastructure. I'd rather describe it accurately than overclaim a finished relocation.

Why does plant diagnosis data need privacy at all?

Because a cannabis plant photo gives things away – that you're growing, the kind of setup you run, and across many photos, the scale of it. For a licensed operation that's commercially sensitive and often regulated. Treating it as sensitive by default costs little; treating it as disposable and being wrong costs a lot.


Related reading:How PlantLab Knows When It Might Be Wrong: The reliability_score Field – The trust signal on every diagnosis – How PlantLab's AI Diagnoses 31 Cannabis Plant Problems in 18 Milliseconds – The pipeline behind the API – What's Wrong With My Cannabis Plant? A Visual Diagnosis Guide – The grower-facing diagnostic hub

 
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from 💚

Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil

Amen

Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!

Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!

 
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from 💚

Under a quiet year renew Speaking of sanctions in the low This prison past and mother esteem The weary of the war And to his officers a death That efforts to be sure of fire at an altar And in knowing well To Ahmadinejad retort This hurry of the West And militant to wolf And under these attacks, a man in view To North and East a road ahead To have aged in scurvy by the right And yield well a place to call St. Andrew The midnight men from the oblast Seeking city skies and wonder May they put not an altar to the liar And beast in view to very hers A victim to the rite And rigid on this very her This curse anew Fighting dens and barren must The fifteenth of November And its people on their way home To the lectern of abuse And every Sun to small repeats- For this hour and grizzly man That no exception to be then The lights of St. Peter were not there But this man of rot and pain Will kill to know his power And surely does suppose That we seeing nothing is a fault And to fault this early war of such pretence No to bitter trysts and making then A man needing madness to his esteem The fault of good in world fact No more war to see the latent march The skies not him and to Iran The heavens near upon this Canadian noon And only us to imbibe on separate cure The beast is him and on all sides The day alight and canary would Lochs of heaven to end this war And paying ten on sixteen cents for very will To govt apprehend and seeking plan The storm in sewers aching Dan And in this ferry to Capital Hills Wouldn’t it be neat to see it all Apparatchik to no mention end this power And this time in season people will amass A jury and collection for peace in May A trial by war cannot be fulfilled And maybe then to never Peace for Anne Boleyn at final cure In damage seek to know And Heaven has a keep The Body of Christ in all faith While the distance from regret Peace to many members- of the faithful stand to reason Riding on the Sun to very high Up and strong to know That Vlad is dead and Russia then The Earth shall be our past But solemn ten and mercy All as made anew In prophecy The paper of our choosing Very Dawn in Maine And echoes to suppose The lantern last At night and no suppose That war is more than March All that ever to dismay This man of peace And Trudeau is his name.

 
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from Zéro Janvier

Lord of Emperors est un roman de Guy Gavriel Kay publié en 2000. Il s’agit du second volet du diptyque intitulé The Sarantine Mosaic, qui prend place dans un univers de fantasy historique inspiré de l’Empire Byzantin.

The thrilling sequel to Sailing To Sarantium and the concluding novel of The Sarantine Mosaic, Kay’s sweeping tale of politics, intrigue and adventure inspired by ancient Byzantium.

Beckoned by the Emperor Valerius, Crispin, a renowned mosaicist, has arrived in the fabled city of Sarantium. Here he seeks to fulfill his artistic ambitions and his destiny high upon a dome that will become the emerror's magnificent sanctuary and legacy.

But the beauty and solitude of his work cannot protect his from Sarantium's intrigue. Beneath him the city swirls with rumors of war and conspiracy, while otherworldly fires mysteriously flicker and disappear in the streets at night. Valerius is looking west to Crispin's homeland to reunite an Empire – a plan that may have dire consequences for the loved ones Crispin left behind.

In Sarantium, however, loyalty is always complex, for Crispin's fate has become entwined with that of Valerius and his Empress, as well as Queen Gisel, his own monarch exiled in Sarantium herself. And now another voyager – this time from the east – has arrived, a pysician determined to make his mark amid the shifting, treachearous currents of passion and violence that will determine the empire's fate.

Le récit reprend dans la continuité de Sailing to Sarantium, à tel point que j’ai du mal à distinguer où s’arrêtait le premier volet et où commence celui-ci. Les deux romans constituent véritablement un ensemble continu, l’un ne pouvant être lu sans l’autre.

Cela signifie que je pourrais faire les mêmes remarques pour ce roman que pour celui qui le précède : l’écriture de Guy Gavriel Kay est toujours aussi ciselée et plaisante à lire, ses personnages sont mémorables, et les intrigues qui aboutissent dans la deuxième partie de ce diptyque sont sont aussi spectaculaires qu’émouvantes. Tout trouve sa place et sa conclusion dans un récit parfaitement mené.

L’histoire a commencé avec Crispin et s’achève avec lui, même si entre temps nous avons eu l’occasion de rencontrer, d’aimer et parfois de détester plusieurs personnages inoubliables, que ce soient les puissants de Sarantium ou d’autres moins habitués aux intrigues de la cour impériale.

L’art et la religion restent des thématiques omniprésentes dans ce roman, avec en arrière-plan une réflexion sur l’histoire et la mémoire. Tous ces thèmes sont parfaitement enchâssés dans le récit, ce qui permet plusieurs niveaux de lecture.

Chaque roman de Guy Gavriel Kay m’enchante et m’émerveille. Je ne suis pas loin de penser qu’il est devenu en quelques semaines mon auteur favori de fantasy.

 
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