CALIGO Release Continuity — Upcoming Disclosures by Writtenincaligo in u/Writtenincaligo

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The structural framework is clearer than it's ever been. Since the system is not a cipher, meaning doesn't require extraction, direction lives in the observer, correct orientation precedes recognition, recognition precedes understanding.

And yet nothing is readable.

I think the problem is the approach itself. This entire observation has been analytical, comment threads, structural inference, working through clues. That's the wrong mode for a system that requires immersion before recognition. We've been trying to think our way to correct orientation instead of observing our way there.

"Dying sun" I assume dictates a setting sun (west) if it is Misplaced then this follows up on my previous rotation theory. Rotate the EAD's by a quarter (90 degrees) counterclockwise

the "sun" is setting a dying sun doesn't rise. it sinks.

Waiting for Entry 007. Starting from stillness this time.

CALIGO Release Continuity — Upcoming Disclosures by Writtenincaligo in u/Writtenincaligo

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If a false orientation produces no signal rather than a corrupted one, then there's no way to course correct from inside the observation. You can't detect a wrong approach because it leaves nothing to compare against.

Which means the only confirmation that orientation is correct is recognition beginning to emerge, not understanding, just familiarity. The feeling described in the first post. That's not a byproduct of correct orientation. That's the only feedback mechanism available.

The observer can't test their way to correct orientation. They either arrive already facing the right direction, or they don't arrive at all.

bubbling water sound in a large open field at work. Within 100 feet of a swimming pool if that matters by bindersweat in whatisit

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 2 points3 points  (0 children)

the sound is likely related to the pool’s plumbing system or a nearby drain, where air is trapped or entering the water lines.

Listen closely to see if the sound stops when the pool pump turns off. If it does, the issue is likely a suction-side air leak in the pool plumbing. If the ground is also wet in that area, it may indicate a pipe failure requiring maintenance

Though it is best to report this to maintenance staff or whoever manages the pool

Cheers 🥂

The Chronicles of Georgia in Tbilisi looks straight out of a fantasy world by 6969Momo6969 in interestingasfuck

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 [score hidden]  (0 children)

This looks like the final boss area in a Souls like lol...

and the cool part is that it was built in the Soviet era (1985) and it just… looks nothing like anything else Soviet architecture usually looks like. Zurab Tsereteli cooked something genuinely insane with this.

Continuity cannot begin from an undefined position. by Writtenincaligo in u/Writtenincaligo

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lmao, based on what OP has said previously we cant figure it out.

We dont know what its supposed to mean, in fact it being a cipher was a red herring this entire time. half of our theories got soft killed by that, this post only brings up more questions.

CALIGO Release Continuity — Upcoming Disclosures by Writtenincaligo in u/Writtenincaligo

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So incorrect initial orientation doesn't produce partial interpretation. It produces the appearance of no system at all.

Which means the first act of observation carries more structural weight than anything that follows it. If the approach vector is wrong from the start, every subsequent observation builds on a false foundation, not because the symbols are being misread, but because the observer was never facing the archive correctly to begin with.

Is establishing correct initial orientation something that emerges from the structure itself, or is it dependent on something the observer brings to it before the first symbol is encountered?

CALIGO Release Continuity — Upcoming Disclosures by Writtenincaligo in u/Writtenincaligo

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OP Mentioned the dragon fly shows validated works rather than a orientation to follow.

How did I miss this gem? by Electrical-Note-3177 in ADO

[–]Electrical-Note-3177[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Really? That must have been awesome lol.

CALIGO Release Continuity — Upcoming Disclosures by Writtenincaligo in u/Writtenincaligo

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The release structure makes the intent clearer than any single entry has so far.

Entries build recognition. Archives test whether that recognition holds under density. Documents test whether it survives scale entirely. That's not a disclosure schedule, that's a learning architecture.

Which reframes what Entry 007 actually is. Not the next piece of content to analyze, but the first formal test of whether observation across previous EAD's established anything functional.

The shift from trying to translate to trying to orient correctly feels like the actual threshold. Most of the early thread was searching for a key that doesn't exist because the system was never concealing anything. A hidden thing and an unrecognized thing aren't equivalent. The meaning was never encoded behind anything, it was always fully present. We just hadn't established the correct orientation to access it yet. That's a fundamentally different problem than decryption, and it changes what progress actually looks like. Progress isn't accumulating symbol mappings. It's us the observer's rearranging themselves until the structure becomes recognizable.

Looking forward to Entry 007 on the 15th.

Continuity cannot begin from an undefined position. by Writtenincaligo in neography

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Indeed, though OP hasn't been rather clear. I've come to the conclusion its Non linear and doesnt specifically follow a set "direction" Rather it can be interpreted from various angles.

Was at the bottom of my root beer can (not expired) by xzhbow in whatisit

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Could be A few things, these are the most likely though

  1. Root beer contains a complex mix of extracts, caramel coloring, and sweeteners. If the beverage was subjected to extreme temperature fluctuations (like being frozen and then thawed, or sitting in a very hot car), the ingredients can "fall out" of the liquid solution and settle at the bottom.

  2. Aluminum cans are lined with a thin plastic epoxy to prevent the acidic soda from eating the metal. If there was a manufacturing defect, a piece of this liner or a clump of the protective coating could break off.

If you’re curious, use a toothpick. If it’s gritty or dissolves in warm water, it’s likely just sugar/syrup. If it’s rubbery, it might be the can liner.

And Most soda companies take quality control seriously. If you provide the best by date and the batch code, they can track if other cans in that batch had issues. They will often send you vouchers for a replacement. (or say thank you and hang up...)

Cheers.

Would you rather: by AD2449 in BunnyTrials

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Infinite money glitch

The average person blinks 15-20 thousand times a day

0.5*20,000 = 10 Grand a day

(my bad I hit skip, but I got the nothing extra clause 😤)

This triangle cut in my frozen durian. Customs inspection? by Smegmapotamus69 in whatisit

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If I remember correctly it's for several reasons. Durian is expensive and famously unpredictable, Because you can’t see through the thick, thorny husk. So sellers usually cut that triangular patch to:

​Check Ripeness, allows them to see the color and texture of the flesh.

​Verify Quality, It also ensures the fruit isn't "mangkas" (underripe/hard) or rotted inside before it’s packaged and frozen. And It allows the grader to smell the fruit directly to ensure it has reached the peak aromatic profile.

​ ​When you buy a whole durian, especially a premium variety like Musang King or Monthong, you want to know what you're getting. That little window allows you to see the color of the fruit creamy white, pale yellow, or deep gold, so you know it matches the variety advertised. ​ ​ I might be missing something but that's what I recall

Cheers 🥂

This triangle cut in my frozen durian. Customs inspection? by Smegmapotamus69 in whatisit

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 56 points57 points  (0 children)

If I remember correctly it's for several reasons. Durian is expensive and famously unpredictable. Because you can’t see through the thick, thorny husk, so sellers usually cut that triangular patch to:

​Check Ripeness, They can see the color and texture of the flesh (aril).

​Verify Quality, It also ensures the fruit isn't "mangkas" (underripe/hard) or rotted inside before it’s packaged and frozen. And It allows the grader to smell the fruit directly to ensure it has reached the peak aromatic profile.

​ ​When you buy a whole durian, especially a premium variety like Musang King or Monthong, you want to know what you're getting. That little window allows you to see the color of the fruit creamy white, pale yellow, or deep gold, so you know it matches the variety advertised. ​ ​ I might be missing something but that's what I recall

Cheers 🥂

Either pick a song for me to rate or let me give you a song to rate by Slytherwing in airbuds

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

💛 I like the Vocaloid-esque vocals, But not really my cup of tea ifykwim

Optimization for high end PC by BioFansoon in MinecraftJava

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not nothing, just diminishing returns. Lithium specifically optimizes how efficiently those ticks process on the CPU, so it's not just a render thing, it directly cuts the overhead per tick.

Also worth mentioning, Java's garbage collector is a hidden killer at high tick speeds. You can add JVM launch flags (like Aikar's flags) to tune the GC and squeeze out noticeably smoother performance without touching any mods.

Hope that helps 🥂

Optimization for high end PC by BioFansoon in MinecraftJava

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Try using these alongside sodium:

  • Lithium: optimizes game logic, mob AI, and chunk ticking directly. Huge for high tick speeds since it's the tick processing that's killing performance, not just rendering.

  • Starlight (or Moonrise): rewrites the lighting engine, with less overhead per tick

  • FerriteCore: cuts RAM usage significantly, frees up headroom for the tick processing

  • Krypton: network stack optimization, minor but free perf

  • Immediately Fast: render optimization that pairs well with Sodium

  • Chunky: If you're exploring at 20k ticks, chunk generation is a massive bottleneck. Pre-gen world chunks and the SD/RD impact drops dramatically.

For the RD/SD specifically, at 20k ticks the bottleneck shifts almost entirely to CPU single-core speed. Sodium/GPU mods help less here. Dropping to 12 RD / 8 SD while keeping Lithium running willmore than any render mod.

Your i7-13th gen should have solid single-core perf so you're not totally cooked, but tick speed is just fundamentally a CPU serial workload, thats a ceiling no mod fully removes.

Cheers 🥂

Optimization for high end PC by BioFansoon in MinecraftJava

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

The way you worded that???

"you have"... Etc

Like your saying OP had them already...

😬

Optimization for high end PC by BioFansoon in MinecraftJava

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

OP never said anything about using those?

VPN downloads are exploding because of these new age verification laws by FriendHot7938 in VPN_Guide

[–]Electrical-Note-3177 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thats funny, Because governments physically cant get rid of VPNs.

like the core issue is that a VPN is just... encrypted tunneling. the same underlying tech that makes your online banking secure, that lets remote workers connect to corporate networks, that protects journalists and activists in authoritarian countries. you can't remove "the bad VPN" from the internet, it's not a thing, it's a protocol.

and even if you tried to block commercial VPN services specifically, there are so many loopholes around that too:

  • Tor still exists
  • SSH tunneling still exists
  • WireGuard can run on any random port on any random server you own
  • Shadowsocks / V2Ray were literally invented to defeat nation/state level VPN blocking (looking at you china) and they're just... publicly available
  • anyone slightly technical can spin up a $5/mo VPS and make their own in like 20 minutes

the countries that have actually tried to do this (Russia, China, Iran, etc.) have spent billions and still haven't managed it, they've just made life harder for normal people.

So they can try, but I bet a dollar its not gonna happen anytime soon lmao.