It happens to me when I am taking creatine. As you did, I trained myself to keep my eyes shut until it is safe to reopen them. I do this automatically now.
If I build a workflow in the visual editor, can I use that same flow inside my own app just by using the runtime/engine? Or is it mainly tied to the Statewright platform and Claude Code plugin?
I’m wondering if the runtime can be used as a standalone piece to power apps I build.
Their universes disconnect the moment they make contact, but Marcus knows Pompeii well and escapes the eruption just before it happens. So he can point Ulyses to places where things will be buried or hidden.
I also needed the relationship to go both ways, not just Marcus getting ideas from the future. That makes the plot more interesting.
I know and love the Acoup Blog, and the premise of the story does not contradict what Acoup says. In fact, if you look carefully, there is an Easter egg hidden somewhere in the story about the Acoup Blog.
You're only as good as the tools you use. They are improving fast though, you can already see a noticeable difference between the artwork in Volume 1 and Volume 2, and they were made about six months apart.
I actually disagree a bit. The whole premise of the story is that there are shortcuts indeed, when someone has the entire tech tree available at the push of a button.
The Romans were very capable engineers. If you give them a few key ideas and steer them away from dead ends, progress can compress a lot.
A few months ago, I shared the first issue of The Lydian Stone Series here [0].
It was a raw "proof-of-concept" about an archaeology student in Pompeii who can text across time to a Roman slave. The feedback was better than I ever expected, so I kept writing.
A few weeks ago I released Volume 2, and today I’m releasing Volume 3: The Boats.
As with Volume 1 and 2, Diffusion models generate and refine the visual layer. The narrative, research, and script are by the author.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on the story's direction, the pacing, and the overall plausibility of the industrial shift.
Just making sparkling water. You don't drink the water that reacts with the soda/acid though. The CO2 produced is pressure injected into a separate bottle.
I had both a De'Longhi FH1363 MultiFry Extra and a T-fal ActiFry.
You can throw in frozen vegetables, meat and seasoning, turn the machine on, come back in 25 minutes and your food will be cooked uniformly to perfection. E.g., frozen brussels sprouts, chopped chicken sausages, a bit of olive oil and sambal sauce.
Prep time under 30 seconds.
Bonus points: Both fryers come with dishwasher-safe paddle and bowl. You can detach and wash the lid too of the De'Longhi one.
Sodastream is a money making scheme. Canisters are super expensive.
After years of paying $30 per exchange, I decided to switch to an Spärkel Carbonator machine, which just takes a tablespoon of citric acid powder ($5/lb) and a tablespoon of baking soda ($1/lb) per bottle. So much cheaper.
I had multiple air fryer models over the years. The stirring functions (a rotating paddle that stirs the food) is an ABSOLUTE GAME CHANGER and a must for me.
Unfortunately those equipped with a stirring function come up as expensive. I would love to see a < $100 air fryer equipped with it.
https://thelydianstone.com/