Keytar Wolf

59 Followers
207 Following
549 Posts
Just a wolf who plays a keytar. Also an embedded systems/firmware engineer. he/him, chaotic good.
LocationGundungurra country (Blue Mountains), Australia
Vivid K-paws I spotted on the side of the road today. #Bloomscrolling

https://www.honest-broker.com/p/four-steps-to-hell

"The real heroes of the #creative #world will be forced into operating as a #resistance #movement

The actual #artists will now form a #counterculture

The only sustaining #work will come from the #indie world, not the established order.

Those who care about #culture absolutely must support this #alt #rebellion and indie vibe."

#art #artist

Four Steps to Hell

Can this really be the aesthetic vision of the 21st century?

The Honest Broker
I've done some terrible things for money. Like getting up early to go to work.
Bees dance to communicate. If they do it to a really catchy jazz tune, that’s a bee bop.

Things everybody needs to hear more often:

- you are loved
- your feelings are valid
- you deserve rest
- you don't need to be available at all times
- that's not a raven, that's a crow
- it's okay. a crow is a pretty big and cool bird, too

“Given the gap between the world as it is and the world that I dream of, how then shall I live?” (not my quote but in a piece/podcast I wrote in November that might be helpful if you're struggling w/ the Horrors right now)

brightgreenfutures.substack.com/p/ep-37-triage-transition-and-transformation

READERS need to lead the way by moving to retailers other than Amazon:
@bookshop.org has ebooks now.

AUTHORS need to get their books over there too (via @draft2digital.bsky.social ).

I'm already on 4 other retailers (plus print, audio, libraries), but I'm working on getting my books on Bookshop.

Happy World 303 Day! I’m celebrating by noodling on my “TBish” code in #CircuitPython #303day #tb303
I love the Welsh word for 'dawn' which is "gwawr". It's like the noise I'd imagine a little monster would make. Gwawr. Makes me think of the sun peeking over the horizon and exclaiming "gwawr!".

How far back in time can you understand English?

It’s a thousand years of the English language, compressed into a single blog post.

"... as his post goes on, his language gets older. A hundred years older with each jump. The spelling changes. The grammar changes. Words you know are replaced by unfamiliar words, and his attitude gets older too, as the blogger’s voice is replaced by that of a Georgian diarist, an Elizabethan pamphleteer, a medieval chronicler."

https://www.deadlanguagesociety.com/p/how-far-back-in-time-understand-english

#english #language

How far back in time can you understand English?

An experiment in language change

Dead Language Society