Techpriest Baunach's avatar
Techpriest Baunach
techpriest@nostrplebs.com
npub1tvw3...s44n
| human being | catholic priest | artist | XMR: 464Jt5FXUUxBvNQuM6795feeXxfP3aHxhDCogCtnprFg8NB3EgVLAQ3V6UgiHfpMWKLAs4tvF1W9B84xJ21ZXP4U1XkJfBd
Hand #sewing nerd thing: finally figured out how to splice thread, and having potentially never-ending thread on a project is giving me so much joy! This video is what made it click for me: https://yewtu.be/watch?v=Iacr1totn8A I believe it's only really possible for me because I use thicker thread, and I really can't wait until I can try it out next time I do sashiko.
So I stepped way out of my comfort zone, and tried to figure out adding rss to my site. I found a few examples of the minimal viable xml file, and gave it a go. Here's what I came up with: And it works! Or at least, sort of. I tried it out on Akregator, and everything works beautifully. But then I tried it out on BlogCat and it completely breaks the reader. I'm open to any thoughts or corrections or directions! My goal is to keep it as simple as possible, but if there one or two other tags that need to be in there to make it work for more feed readers, I'm fine adding a few things.
Made these (re-imaginings of a few of the Stations of the Cross) last year during Lent, unfortunately all three are still relevant: Nothing new under the sun.
Been in a bunch of meetings recently, so some doodling had to happen. Mixed a few different techniques I've used before, I'm digging the mix: image
A test crosspost from Openvibe to my Mastodon, Nostr, and Bluesky accounts
In my smolweb explorations, found that all browsers I tested will render a txt file. This is interesting to me for many reasons, but the main one is it makes it easy to run a handwritten website where regularly changing stuff is just txt files linked by the homepage. So far, I've updated the Homilies section of my website (davidbaunach.com), all my homilies in one txt file, new ones added to the top (whenever I remember). But it's just text, even with ten years of homilies, the file would remain small. Text is best.
Had to turn the most metal line from the second reading today into some art: image
Been working on making my own clothes for over a year (a more general post on that here: A related part of that quest, has been coming up with an alternative to the clerical suit I used to wear. And I think I've done it! Here's a not great picture of what I've come up with: image The base layer is a Greek style square tunic, and the second layer is a medieval style apron, with a square of white fabric at the neck to mimic a roman collar. The tunic itself is incredibly comfortable, and the apron seems to give it more of a defined shape. The whole getup is lightweight, which is good in the hot and humid southern part of Missouri where I reside.
Been working on and off on this the past few weeks, think it's polished enough to share at this point. It was published first on my wiki, link to that at the bottom of the post: # Initial Findings in my Studies of Anarchism-The Human Mycelial Network I'm not going to be citing sources for everything here, this is just where I'm at in my thinking as I continue on this now year-long quest into studying Anarchism. However, I will say that the main influences for my overarching comprehension, rely on the writings of Teilhard de Chardin, as well as the book I'm currently working through, 'The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia' by James C. Scott. In the background are the various other authors I've read in the past year, including Dorothy Day, Peter Maurin, Bakunin, Kropotkin, Proudhon, and then stuff I've read further back that I'm now seeing in a new light by Belloc, Chesterton, Tolkien, and my all time favorite, Illich. And I suppose that I needed to fit these new ideas into some framework I already had, and that ended up being the Omega Point. That there is a procession happening over the course of history, a progression towards an inevitable perfection. This allows anarchism to fall into a necessary place within the organism of humanity. Anarchism (and thus the voluntarism, mutualism, conviviality, and personalism contained therein) precedes the development of the state, and it continues to this day, growing like the weed that pokes through the concrete and grows in the paved wasteland. It cannot only be found on the edges and peripheries of state oppression, but right under it's very nose. Whenever two people voluntarily decide to help each other, anarchism exists. And thus it makes sense that it is only so recently in our history as a species, that we've begun to explore this phenomenon. Only the ever-growing reach of states into the lower levels of the human network, made the study of this thing necessary. We needed to describe the thing that we knew should be there, but was being diminished. And the closest analogy I can use to describe it, is a mycelial network. Anarchism is the human network, moving nutrience and information around, because that's what human beings do. Not through greed or duty or coercion, but just through the fact that we're human. This also makes it obvious that the state has some role to play. Like a tree benefiting from the mycelial network, and also benefiting it, especially when it dies; a state can only exist because of the underlying anarchic network, and when it dies, it gets incorporated back into the network. This fits into the framework of the Omega Point, because an evolutionary growth that has been around long enough, even with it's many integral evils, must be playing some part in the overall development of humanity, even if that part is only allowed to remain in order to purify the whole. So while the state may eventually become vestigial, at least right now, it is doing something for us. Even if all that is, is teaching us the importance of anarchism.
Just a fun post today, noticed where I've got the cat beds set up, looks like my armour is watching over them as they cat nap: image
Been testing out Garnet for roughly the last week, and oh boy, XMR tipping is such a good feeling! Even though I've got my lightning wallet hooked up as well, I've just completely stopped using it. Why give BTC, when you can give XMR? Now obviously using a mainchain comes with some tradeoffs, but those essentially got fixed in the last update of Garnet, since you can now use external wallets for tipping. On the Monero chain it takes roughly 20 minutes for a transaction to be fully confirmed and thus you can't send another transaction for those 20 minutes. So with the one built-in wallet for Garnet, that was one tip per 20 minutes. But now that I can use my external wallet, where I have a bunch of sub addresses, I can pretty much tip non-stop. For those waiting before trying something so new, I can report that I've had a bug-free experience thus far (I'm sure now that I've said that something will happen!), it just works like Amethyst. And also I haven't really seen this discussed, but my tipical Monero tip has been 0.001, which is about $0.16, which seems enough for a micro transaction. If you want to try it out here's where to get the apk: #garnet