Every deployment is first verified through ABI-level calls, ensuring routers, pairs, and fee logic operate correctly even without a frontend context.
#W3 #W3Rooster
W3Rooster checks revert messages on low-liquidity swaps to ensure clarity in every failure path.
#W3 #W3Rooster

Structure eliminates guesswork.

#W3 #W3Rooster

Seasons of my home, or: Sunlit

A Sijo

newly back in Jerusalem autumn gathered over stone; sunlit droplets veiled the city my delicious walk in the rain; at last, my Jewish liturgy fit the seasons of my home

W3 poetry prompt

For this week’s W3, Artie encourages us to let ourselves drift from Mary Oliver’s poem Drifting. We may use either of the prompt lines, “my delicious walk in the rain” or “what it is that music is trying to say”, directly or indirectly as inspiration.

The goal is not to imitate Oliver’s poem but to follow our own memory, wonder, weather, music, or other experience wherever it leads, especially when it seems to communicate something beyond ordinary language.

Sijo?

A Korean verse form related to haiku and tanka and comprised of three lines of 14-16 syllables each, for a total of 44-46 syllables. Each line contains a pause near the middle, similar to a caesura, though the break need not be metrical. The first half of the line contains six to nine syllables; the second half should contain no fewer than five. Originally intended as songs, sijo can treat romantic, metaphysical, or spiritual themes. Whatever the subject, the first line introduces an idea or story, the second supplies a “turn,” and the third provides closure. Modern sijo are sometimes printed in six lines.

Let’s write poetry together!

When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

Ben Harper (b. 1969)

Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

#Israel #Judaism #Poem #Poetry #Prayer #Rain #Roots #Seasons #Sijo #W3 #Weather

W3 Prompt #215: Wea’ve Written Weekly

Intro

Dear friends,

Welcome to our W3 Poetry Prompt, which goes live on Wednesdays at The Skeptic’s Kaddish.

You may click here for a fuller explanation of W3; but here’s the ‘tldr’ version:

Part I

The main ingredient of W3 is a weekly poem written by a Poet of the Week (PoW), which participants read before participating in the prompt.

Part II

The second ingredient is a writing guideline (or two) provided by the PoW. Guidelines may include, but are not limited to: word counts, poetic forms, inclusion of specific words, and use of particular poetic devices.

Part III

After five days, when the prompt closes, the PoW shall select one participant’s poem as the W3 prompt for the following week, and its author becomes the next PoW.

Simple enough, right?

Kindly note: All entries for the W3 poetry prompt must be the original work of the submitting author. AI-generated poetry is not permitted.

Okie dokie ~ Let’s do this thing!

I. The prompt poem:

‘a runicible frolic’ by Artie Camenzind

dancing lightly by the light of the moon Kitty and Catty, Dilly and Dally delightfully dancing the endless summer was endlessly unfolding deliciously brightly never again would we feel so very carefree the days went uncounted, flowing floating all together for Kitty, Catty, Dilly, Dally, you and me

II. Artie’s prompt: Drifting

Inspired by Mary Oliver’s poem Drifting:

Use either (or both) of these lines as a starting point for your poem:

  • “my delicious walk in the rain”
  • “what it is that music is trying to say”

You don’t need to quote them directly. Let them guide you toward a memory, a moment of wonder, an encounter with weather, music, or something else that seemed to speak in a language beyond words.

See where the drift takes you.

III. Submit: Click on ‘Mister Linky’ below

In order to participate and share a poem, open up this blog post, outside of the WordPress reader. At the bottom, just below these words, you will see a small rectangular graphic with the words ‘Mr Linky’. Click on that to submit.

Submissions are open for 5 days, until Monday, June 15, 10:00 AM (GMT+2)

Last week’s W3 poem

This week’s W3 prompt poem (above), composed by Artie, was written in response to last week’s W3 prompt poem, which Deanna wrote:

‘West/East Combo’ by D. Avery

fledgling imaginings flutter before they soar held safe in the sky’s open palm of dreams manifestations— discarded shells lie empty hear the robins chirp #Community #CreativeWriting #Inspiration #MaryOliver #Poem #Poetry #Prompt #Quotes #W3 #Wonder
W3Rooster reconstructs transaction paths during fork-based swaps to ensure no hidden internal call alters the effective output during a buy.
#W3 #W3Rooster
Liquidity events often fail because of mismatched decimals or misconfigured router versions. W3Rooster checks both the router ABI and the pair initialization sequence to prevent unexpected reverts.
#W3 #W3Rooster #Web3 #crypto #blockchain

Grown-up, or: Don’t say

Hush now, grown-up, don't despair,
God's gonna hear your every prayer.

And if your troubles linger still,
God's gonna work His hidden will.

And if your doubts begin to chafe,
God's gonna keep your spirit safe.

And if the years seem long and late,
God's gonna smile, "Just trust and wait."

And if your road stays hard to tread,
God's got a blessing yet ahead.

And if the wicked win this day,
God's gonna have the final say.

And if these dark and mortal years cease,
God's gonna grant you lasting peace.

And if that peace still seems delayed,
God's got more promises He's made.

W3 poetry prompt

For this week’s W3 prompt, Deanna encourages us to write a poem inspired by a nursery rhyme. We can use a nursery rhyme character, borrow a line from a nursery rhyme, or let a nursery rhyme lead us to a completely new poem.

Let’s write poetry together!

When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

Ben Harper (b. 1969)

Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

#Doubt #Faith #God #Irony #Mortality #MotherGoose #Poem #Poetry #Promises #Skepticism #W3
W3Rooster assesses how tax logic affects swap outputs during extreme volatility to confirm no internal rounding error accumulates into long-term imbalance.
#W3 #W3Rooster

W3 Prompt #214: Wea’ve Written Weekly

Intro

Dear friends,

Welcome to our W3 Poetry Prompt, which goes live on Wednesdays at The Skeptic’s Kaddish.

You may click here for a fuller explanation of W3; but here’s the ‘tldr’ version:

Part I

The main ingredient of W3 is a weekly poem written by a Poet of the Week (PoW), which participants read before participating in the prompt.

Part II

The second ingredient is a writing guideline (or two) provided by the PoW. Guidelines may include, but are not limited to: word counts, poetic forms, inclusion of specific words, and use of particular poetic devices.

Part III

After five days, when the prompt closes, the PoW shall select one participant’s poem as the W3 prompt for the following week, and its author becomes the next PoW.

Simple enough, right?

Kindly note: All entries for the W3 poetry prompt must be the original work of the submitting author. AI-generated poetry is not permitted.

Okie dokie ~ Let’s do this thing!

I. The prompt poem:

‘West/East Combo’ by D. Avery

fledgling imaginings flutter before they soar held safe in the sky’s open palm of dreams manifestations— discarded shells lie empty hear the robins chirp

II. Deanna’s prompt: Mother Goose Muse

For many of us, our first introduction to poetry came through nursery rhymes — those strange, playful, memorable verses we heard long before we understood what poetry even was.

For this week’s W3 challenge, you are invited to use a nursery rhyme as inspiration for an original poem. Your poem does not need to rhyme, and it may be written in any form you choose, but please try to keep it to no more than 24 lines.

You might:

  • Incorporate a nursery rhyme character into your poem — as narrator, subject, symbol, or inspiration.
  • Borrow or adapt an opening line from a nursery rhyme.
  • Simply follow the memory of a rhyme wherever it leads you.
  • Perhaps “Humpty Dumpty” becomes a poem about aging. Perhaps “Jack and Jill” becomes a memory. Perhaps one forgotten line opens an entirely unexpected door.

    If you cannot recall a favorite nursery rhyme, a list can be found on this PDF. The Poetry Foundation also has an excellent collection of nursery rhymes available online.

    III. Submit: Click on ‘Mister Linky’ below

    In order to participate and share a poem, open up this blog post, outside of the WordPress reader. At the bottom, just below these words, you will see a small rectangular graphic with the words ‘Mr Linky’. Click on that to submit.

    Submissions are open for 5 days, until Monday, June 8, 10:00 AM (GMT+2)

    Last week’s W3 poem

    This week’s W3 prompt poem (above), composed by Deanna, was written in response to last week’s W3 prompt poem, which Reena wrote:

    ‘Door shut’ by Reena Saxena

    Bang!
    Shut!
    the past shrieks
    with pain
    of being cut out
    -I breathe free #Adaptation #Community #CreativeWriting #Inspiration #Nostalgia #NurseryRhyme #Poem #Poetry #Prompt #W3