#Website Development Seattle
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ravennainteractive73 · 2 months ago
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Hire Expert Laravel Developers in Washington
Looking for skilled Laravel developers in Washington? Get top-notch web application development with secure, scalable, and high-performance solutions. Our expert Laravel developers deliver custom projects tailored to your business needs. Boost your online presence with professional development services in Washington. Contact us today for a free consultation!
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technology-and-ai · 5 months ago
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Graphic design web design
Is there a difference? The debate continues. Seattle web design agency Serbyte continues to push tech to the edge
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dotzoonetseattle · 1 year ago
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sandcastlewebdesign · 1 year ago
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Sandcastle Web Design & Development
In the dynamic digital landscape of Burien, WA, Sandcastle Web Design & Development stands as a beacon of innovation and creativity.
At the heart of our operation is a passion for crafting visually stunning and highly functional websites tailored to meet the unique needs of each client. As we navigate the intricate realm of Seattle website design, our focus remains steadfast on delivering bespoke web solutions that exceed expectations.
Our proficient team, brimming with ingenuity, specializes in a gamut of software services designed to propel your online presence to new heights. We understand how vital a strong digital footprint is in today's market, and we are dedicated to ensuring yours commands attention.
A seamless fusion of engaging aesthetics and cutting-edge functionality positions us not just as designers but as architects of your virtual real estate. Bridging the gap between user-interface design and robust software architecture, Sandcastle Web Design & Development provides a holistic approach to your web needs.
Leveraging state-of-the-art technology alongside proven strategies, we create websites that are not only visually compelling but also rich in content and smooth in navigation. At Sandcastle Web Design & Development, we believe that your website should be more than just an online placeholder; it should echo the voice of your brand and serve as a catalyst for growth.
Whether you're looking to build an immersive e-commerce platform or establish an informative blog that resonates with readers we have the expertise required to turn those visions into reality. Hailing from Burien yet resonating throughout Seattle with our signature Seattle website design services, our dedication goes beyond mere pixels on a screen.
Connectivity through creativity is what sets us apart; every project embarked upon is meticulously crafted with this ethos at its core. Aspiring to push boundaries and redefine norms within the world wide web’s vast expanse, choose us for designs that truly encapsulate everything you stand for – while steering your business towards tomorrow's successes.
Contact Us :
Sandcastle Web Design & Development
Address : 401 SW 153rd Street, Suite G, Burien, WA 98134, USA
Phone : 206.325.5383
Website : https://sandcastle-web.com/
Company Email : [email protected]
Working Hours : Sunday : Closed Monday : 08:30 - 17:00 Tuesday : 08:30 - 05:00 Wednesday : 08:30 - 17:00 Thursday : 08:30 - 17:00 Friday : 08:30 - 17:00 Saturday : Closed
External Links :
Pinterest
Gravatar
Youtube
Coub
Buzzfeed
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seattlesbestsoftware · 2 years ago
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Best Website Design and Development Services
Your website design and development services is your digital storefront, and it's essential to make a good first impression. A well-designed website can help you attract new customers, grow your business, and increase your bottom line.
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markatoonsmarketing · 2 years ago
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Markatoons: Your Tech Solution Destination
Meet Markatoons, your tech partner for a complete digital transformation. With expertise in web and mobile app development, IT solutions, cloud services, social media marketing, video editing, and e-commerce. With our presence all across the U.S., we have solidified our reputation as the best social media marketing agency in New York City.
Strategic Brilliance: We devise meticulous plans that are tailored to your brand's unique identity, ensuring your message resonates with your target audience.
Local Expertise: We know the pulse of New York City, harnessing diversity its energy to create social media strategies that resonate with the local audience making it the ultimate social media marketing agency in New York City.
Tailored Strategies: When it comes to tailoring strategies to meet the unique needs and objectives of each client, Markatoons is the only social media marketing agency in New York City you can trust.
We are the digital dynamo that keeps your brand wide awake in the world of social media. We don't just follow trends; we set them. So Join us on a journey where innovation meets practicality, and digital success becomes the norm.
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strikefourth · 16 days ago
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Fourth Strike Apr-May-June Roundup!
Hi everyone! We're back with the latest monthly roundup from your favorite queer music collective 🌈 Read on for new music, album AMAs, t4t art shows, and more!
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Our askbox is OPEN for questions about EXPANSION, the Garages' upcoming album covering Blaseball's Expansion Era! We'll be answering as many as we can over the course of the day. Send us your burning questions/wonderings/just pop in to say hi!
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2. Gabi ( @girlballz) has a new single out on bandcamp and streaming! Check out "how can i be gay when i am just a passionate ally?" at the links below:
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3. Gabi's also a member of the Seattle Trans and Nonbinary Choral Ensemble, who had their spring showcase early last month! The performance recording is up now for you to watch back:
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4. @dynamicentropy is taking commissions to help cover school applications fees! You can check out their art and rates over on their blog (linked below too for easy access). If you've got the money to spare, why not commission a cool young artist to draw your blorbos/original characters?
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5. Pre-orders are open for Aran P. Ink's upcoming EP DEADNAMES, releasing July 4th! If you've heard any of Ceri's song jam tracks, you know her tell-tale slick production and breakneck pacing, both of which are audible on lead single "SCATTERBRAIN," available now for listening:
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6. @girltentacles has been working towards its senior composition recital for actual years--and it shows. You can support her by checking out the concert recording over on YouTube:
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7. Nia did her first-ever event mix for FieldFX's shader livecoding jam at the end of last month! In her words, "It's 20 tracks I like at 174 BPM, mostly drum 'n' bass but with a few other genres thrown in — hopefully people will enjoy it!" You can take a listen on MixCloud, or over on Nia's blog:
What's that? You want to download it in FLAC? Well, they've got that up for you too!
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8. Resni's surreal RPG Mythic Mire is out now on Steam! Play as Faeya as you work with the digital Pixies to traverse the dream-like Tower and find out what happened to your town...
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9. Bagel's been a developer on Cloutchase, a "social media parody personification visual novel based on the real time events that were/are happening to the management of these sites. And it is incredibly lgbtqia+ and 100% Transgendah!!" Itch and socials below:
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10. June September will have a piece in The Factory's upcoming T4T art show on June 12th! If you're in the area, definitely go check it out; there's going to be tons of cool local artists showcasing work!
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11. Sunny's band, Care, will be performing at the Utah Pride Festival in SLC this weekend! They go on at 4:30 on Saturday. Also, CupcakKe's headlining. Full lineup below!
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That's all for this month! See you in July, and don't forget to send in your Expansion questions 🪙🎸
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justinspoliticalcorner · 16 days ago
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Trudy Ring at The Advocate:
U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids is observing Pride Month by reintroducing a bill aimed at improving mental health care for LGBTQ+ and intersex youth. Her Pride in Mental Health Act, introduced Thursday, would update care standards, develop training for caregivers, identify school bullying prevention guidelines. It would call for a report on the mental health and mental health care of LGBTQ+ and intersex youth in foster care and other federal social services programs and direct the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to review and update resources listed on its website that pertain to LGBTQ+ communities. Davids, a Kansas Democrat who is gay and Native American, introduced similar bills in 2023 and 2024, and a Senate version was introduced in 2024, but no version has passed. In a press release announcing the bill, Davids pointed to the challenges faced by young LGBTQ+ people. They report worse mental health than their non-LGBTQ+ peers, and surveys have indicated nearly 40 percent have considered suicide.
“Children here in Kansas and across the country continue to struggle with mental health challenges, but we are failing many of our most vulnerable children on this issue,” Davids said in the release. “My Pride in Mental Health Act takes a comprehensive and data-driven approach to tackling the mental health crisis among LGBTQI+ youth. By increasing access to mental health support for our children and teens, we can save lives.” The act has been endorsed by the Congressional Equality Caucus, Human Rights Campaign, GLSEN, National Education Association, Advocates for Trans Equality, PFLAG National, American Psychological Association, Institute for Health Research and Policy at Whitman-Walker, interACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth, National Alliance on Mental Illness, Trevor Project, Seattle Indian Health Board, and American Academy of Pediatrics.
Rep. Sharice Davids (D-KS) introduces Pride in Mental Health Act, a bill designed to improve mental health services for LGBTQ+ youth.
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ndconceptarchive · 1 year ago
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Art from the Haunted Carousel Part I.
Image Sources & Info Below:
Lot 224 - A Free Ride to Holder of Brass Ring(sic) (davidlay.co.uk)
Despite a lot of googling, I could not find the original artist who painted this image, only some information on a UK auction website where this wooden plaque was sold for a total of 70 pounds.
2. The image of the Carousel Horse and Zebra came from a 1987 book entitled, The Carousel Animal, text by Tobin Fraley, and photography by Gary Sinick.
Carmel c. 1914
Charles Carmel's experience with Looff and Stein & Goldstein gave him the basics in the Coney Island style of carving. When Carmel started his own shop he borrowed many decorative elements from his former employers while developing a style all his own. The feathers, fish scale blanket, bedroll, and tassels can all be found on other carvers' animals, but Carmel has captured the essence of a carousel horse in the expression, proportions, and flow of the mane. Last Operated - Woodland Park, Seattle, Washington Collection of Jane Shuttleworth. Restored by Tobin Fraley Studios. 64'' long, 53'' high.
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3. The image of the Zebra and Carousel Horse came from a 1987 book entitled, The Carousel Animal, text by Tobin Fraley, and photography by Gary Sinick.
Herschell-Spillman Zebra c. 1912.
"All of Herschell-Spillman's zebras were carved without trappings, making them the only animals created that way by any of the major manufacturers. Not only are the stripes much more striking without interruptions, but there is a sense of wildness about an animal with no man-made accessories. This zebra came from a class 1 carousel. Hershell-Spillman had 5 categories from which to choose, starting from class 5, a two-abreast carousel of simple horses, to class 1, an extra fancy machine with a full menagerie. Last operated - Newton Lake, Carbondale, Pennsylvania Collection of John and Cathy Daniel. Restored by Tobin Fraley Studios. 46'' long, 54'' high."
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beetlearmand · 10 days ago
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moving sucks ass all my homies hate moving why the fuck am i moving to the city anyway when i just want to disappear into the woods huh?? look im no vent poster but jesus fucking christ in the last year and a half i have had to walk out on a job because my supervisor and manager were Both calling me transphobic slurs...together, went into major dental debt after an emergency, totaled my car in the middle of the mountains which i have not been able to afford to replace and has led to me feeling suffocatingly trapped and at the mercy of others, found the first and only job i love, started having increasingly intense manic, depressive, and dissociative episodes that made me unable to keep up with school a semester and a half before i was meant to graduate and put me into more debt towards the university (i obviously have not been able to afford to seek treatment), had to stop taking my hormones bc i couldn't afford those either, oh and then that job i love and helped me feel comfortable in this town after living here with no real friends for 4 years? laid off with a week and a half notice, had to close down the store myself. i live in a small southern town with no public transportation so i was dependant on the walkability of my work commute having no car, so now i have to panic pack everything and sleep on my friend's couch in a whole different state to find work that isn't some wfh email bs that will make me want to die or a goddamn fetish website (i will probably still look into the fetish websites let's be real). and now unemployment services won't pay me on time while im eating one bowl of rice a day and struggling to get any sleep. that's like the surface level of what i've been doing these past 2 years. like did someone kick me into a ring of hell fire of something?? give me a break. it's not like life was all that calm before this either, but a hell of a lot calmer than all this bullshit, financially at least. genuinely just need to feel validated that this is a lot of bullshit for a mentally struggling 23 yr old living paycheck to paycheck with no family or support other than my friends because I'm really tired of just pretending this shit doesn't pile up and basically paralyze me with dread for my immediate future and the development of my personal relationships. i need the sacrifice of this move to grant me at least the potential for better circumstances in life. i have to say goodbye to the childhood home that holds all my major trauma in a few days and then i start over new. a few boxes, a couch, and a city i don't love. but in 7 months i get to upgrade from couch to hopefully a beautiful place outside of seattle, a city i do love but is very far from my appalachian roots. i have dreams and i have things i want to do but i just need my life to finish its incessant fucking crash and burn so that i can start actually living a life that isn't just this. when i watched the passenger last year, all i could see is exactly where i would be if i stayed here living this way. too defeated and stuck to even think helping myself was an option. repeating my own cycles of trauma and violence until it's too much to take back. i just want things to be different. things will be different. thanks for listening if you read all that. it's just a lot to keep to myself.
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ravennainteractive73 · 3 months ago
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Looking for expert Laravel website development in Olympia, WA? We create custom, secure, and high-performance web applications tailored to your business needs. Our skilled developers ensure seamless functionality, scalability, and top-notch security.
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mariacallous · 1 year ago
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It is a measure of the divisiveness and tolerance for violence in the United States that the possibility of civil war looms so large over the 2024 presidential election—no matter which candidate wins. It is even the subject of a hit dystopian thriller. Though an actual civil war resulting from the election’s outcome remains unlikely, a range of sufficiently alarming politically violent scenarios are nevertheless quite possible.
Former President Donald Trump’s conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records has sharpened frictions, with threats to the judiciary and his opponents immediately intensifying. “Time to start capping some leftys. This cannot be fixed by voting,” was one typical reaction tracked by Reuters on Gateway Pundit, a right-wing news site. Far-right media personality Stew Peters said on his Telegram channel that “our judicial system has been weaponized against the American people. We are left with NO option but to take matters into our own hands.”
Meanwhile, our assessments suggest that elements on the far left in this country are also escalating militant threats. A call to “Fuck the Fourth” recently appeared on an anarchist website, heralding a day of action on July 4 targeting the ports of Seattle, Oakland, Los Angeles, Boston, New York, New Jersey, and Baltimore. Additional summons to “Flood The Gates: Escalate” over the Gaza War both on college campuses and in communities across the nation this summer and fall are circulating on social media. At a pro-Palestine protest at the White House in June, one protester held up a decapitated likeness of President Joe Biden’s head, while crowds chanted “Revolution.”
These would-be violent extremists represent a microcosm of a U.S. political landscape that is increasingly willing to tolerate violence. A survey conducted last year found that 23 percent of Americans agreed with the statement that “because things have gotten so far off track, true American patriots may have to resort to violence in order to save our country.” Another more recent poll similarly found that 28 percent of Republicans strongly agree or agree that “Americans may have to resort to violence in order to get the country back on track.” Meanwhile, 12 percent of Democrats agreed with the premise.
Among gun owners in the United States, these sentiments are even more prevalent. According to a survey conducted by the University of California, Davis, “About 42% of owners of assault-type rifles said political violence could be justified, rising to 44% of recent gun purchasers, and a staggering 56% of those who always or nearly always carry loaded guns in public
As the United States approaches its November election, the risks of violence will thus rise. This should not be surprising. Historically, violence is actually quite common in the United States, especially during election seasons. During the Reconstruction era, much of white supremacist violence directed against freed Black men and women was intended to intimidate would-be voters, ensuring that segregationist Democrats maintained their grip on power in the Deep South.
More recently, the 2022 midterms saw an assassination attempt target the speaker of the House of Representatives in an attack that seriously wounded her husband. The 2020 election, of course, sparked the Jan. 6, 2021, terrorist attack on the U.S. Capitol. In the 10 days leading up to the 2018 midterms, there were no fewer than four far-right terrorist attacks, most notably the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh. The mail bombs that circulated that same week showed that threats to politicians have in fact been particularly frequent during the Trump era.
Despite that disquieting pattern, 2024 appears to provide even more fertile ground for militant responses to electoral developments. Trump’s court cases, coupled with the insistence from both parties that—in Trump’s words—“If we don’t win this election, I don’t think you’re going to have another election in this country,” have painted the election in existential terms.
As the United Nations Development Program concluded from its research into election violence around the world, “A common cause of election violence is that the stakes of winning and losing valued political posts are in many situations … incredibly high.”
Rendering the threat yet more severe is the range of possible locations and individuals that extremists may target, spanning the duration of election season. But how might violence differ at various stages of the campaign? Before the election, extremists may be more likely to target politicians on the campaign trail, seeking to intimidate them into changing their policies or deter them from running in the first place. Presidential candidate Nikki Haley had, for instance, requested Secret Service protection during her Republican Party primary challenge, while prominent Republican Rep. Mike Gallagher hinted that he was forced into retirement by threats against his family.
Based on experience, the election itself will likely feature armed intimidation at polling places and threats levied against election officials. A database analyzed by scholars Pete Simi, Gina Ligon, Seamus Hughes, and Natalie Standridge found that threats against public officials are likely to hit an all-time high in 2024. The data initially jumped in 2017, the year of Trump’s inauguration.
In the weeks after the forthcoming election, depending on the results, extremists will likely direct their animus toward representatives of the government—especially on one of the many ceremonial dates accompanying the transition of power—such the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, for instance. An exact repeat of that attack is probably less likely; law enforcement agencies will be far better prepared this time, and the groups that led the assault on the Capitol have been effectively dismantled by seditious conspiracy charges targeting their leadership.
Although white supremacist and anti-government extremists will be the likeliest to lash out, in line with trends over the past decade, violence from the far left cannot be discounted. Stabbing attacks have repeatedly targeted right-wing political leaders in Germany, for instance, and the harassment and violence targeting American Jews on U.S. college campuses have highlighted a more militant political left that has historically been quite open to violent action, including in the United States. This violent fringe has frequently deployed armed threats against politicians in particular—never more seriously than the lone gunman who targeted the Republican team practice for the congressional baseball game in 2017, or the far-left extremist from California who brought weapons to the home of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh to threaten him in 2022.
Salafi jihadi actors are also emboldened by recent successes in Afghanistan, Iran, and Moscow, and they may seek to take advantage of this particularly divided moment in the United States to elbow themselves back into the national consciousness. FBI Director Christopher Wray has suggested that his organization is growing increasingly concerned about the “potential for a coordinated attack here in the homeland, not unlike the ISIS-K attack we saw at the Russian concert hall back in March.” The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has similarly warned that “threat actors” will likely “converge on 2024 election season,” with foreign adversaries using influence operations to further divide the U.S. populace and create new sources of divisiveness and violence.
Is the violence likely to lead to civil war? Trump and many of his allies have repeatedly warned that another election loss—coupled with forthcoming trial verdicts—would trigger one or lead to revolution in the United States. A post on Truth Social shared by Trump, for instance, suggested that 2024 might resemble 1776, “except this time the fight is not against the British, it’s against communist Americans.” The threat doubled down on Trump’s previous warning that his defeat would spark a “bloodbath” in this country.
Punditry, however, is not prophecy. Despite the warnings from scholars, policy wonks, journalists, and others, civil war is in fact unlikely in this country. Geographic distinctions between would-be warring factions today run urban-rural rather than north-south, robbing any potential seditious movement of the geographical safe haven it would need to engage in nationwide conflict. But political rhetoric and the proliferation of threats is almost certain to lead to some level of violence.
Making the threat even more serious is that the Biden administration carries little-to-no legitimacy among most hardcore Trump supporters—who still persist in believing that the 2020 election was stolen. The vice grip that these conspiracy theories hold on many mainstream Republicans means that any response by the Biden administration will be regarded as illegitimate—whether that response is deploying additional law enforcement or even the National Guard to polling places or seeking to educate the public about the veracity and integrity of U.S. elections.
In other words, the United States finds itself in a security dilemma, where any defensive measures designed to safeguard the electoral process will in fact likely be interpreted as an offensive strike—that is, to ensure a repeat electoral fraud. As the aforementioned White House protests have demonstrated, Biden also has little legitimacy in the eyes of the far left, meaning that particular movement would not likely be sated by a Democratic election victory.
Countermeasures will need to focus on education and law enforcement preparation. In particular, the Biden administration should champion education tools that reassure the U.S. public about the resilience of its electoral system from hacking or cheating while also pioneering digital literacy measures that might help protect Americans from disinformation and conspiracy theories shared online, including through artificial intelligence.
In particularly high-risk areas, which might include swing states, the administration should also consider raising the law enforcement presence to deter violent actors from targeting such locations. Successfully stopping violence, however, will require a bipartisan commitment to accept election results and publicly praise the integrity of the election and its many officials—which seems completely unrealistic at this stage.
Americans are therefore left with a political landscape defined by existential rhetoric and violent threats, with very little that the government can do to effectively counter these charges. Accordingly, the threat may be less of another civil war than of the total breakdown of the democratic electoral process that has defined the country since its creation.
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siteitnow · 1 year ago
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Site It Now is a leading Seattle web design company offering top website development services to all types of businesses in Seattle WA.
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campaign-spotlight · 4 months ago
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On Location at OrcaCon (Part 1) [S3F5]
In this week's Flashlight, we head to the OrcaCon tabletop games convention in Seattle! We hear about a bunch of cool projects, we spot a prominent state official, and Jake is flummoxed by the concept of 24-hour livestreams. This convention was honestly so much fun, and we're already scheming to get to more tabletop gaming events.
Here's everyone we spoke with in this episode. Some of these were booths at the con, and some were people who saw us with a mic and wanted to let our listeners know what they were working on. We're really grateful to everyone who took the time to speak with us!
Rainbow Roll Network features actual plays by LGBTQIA+ creators and runs Rainbow Roll Fest, which is an online TTRPG festival
Legends of Gadia is a fantasy card game with an active Kickstarter based on an upcoming fantasy novel series
Game On Youth is a gaming group for neurodivergent youth in Seattle
Extra Life is a peer-to-peer fundraising organization that supports Children's Miracle Network hospitals through gaming
Brush Wielders Union is a community with a bunch of cool resources for miniatures gamers including a podcast
Terminal City Tabletop Convention is coming up in Vancouver next month
Chance Encounter Games offers TTRPG workshops, games, and accessories in Seattle
Outsider Comics is a cozy and inclusive comic book store in Seattle
Goblin Society Games is an independent developer and publisher of board, card, and tabletop roleplaying games
Around the Table is a local game store, cafe, and pub in Lynnwood
Green Ronin Publishing, a roleplaying game company that's producing a Fifth Season TTRPG we're really excited about
Cay Fletcher is an independent author and artist in Portland
Also, thanks to everyone from the Oppegaard Meadery episode who recommended OrcaCon to us!
If you like the music on the show, go check out more of Reilly's music.
Follow us wherever you get your podcasts, including Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube. You can also get episodes right from the source at our RSS feed. If you enjoy Campaign Spotlight, consider subscribing to our Patreon. For more on the show, including links to all our social media, visit our website.   
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lboogie1906 · 9 months ago
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Trish Millines Dziko (1957) is the co-founder and Executive Director of the Technology Access Foundation. A native of New Jersey, she focused on college and became a first-generation college student. She made history by becoming the first woman to be awarded a full basketball scholarship for Monmouth College. She received her BS in Computer Science.
She spent 15 years working in the high-tech industry as a software developer, manager, and consultant as well as a database designer in such industries as military weapons, business systems, communications, and medical equipment.
She became one of the early employees at Microsoft Inc. She became active in promoting awareness of the importance of diversity in the corporate world. She became a co-founder of the Technology Access Foundation, a Seattle-based organization designed to provide science, technology, engineering, and mathematics skills to children of color. She became the full-time TAF Executive Director. As one of the young Microsoft millionaires at 39, She contributed over $150,000 to establish TAF.
TAF’s programs seek to increase mathematical and literacy competencies for K-8 students through project-based activities that use technology as a tool for learning in an after-school environment. Each year about 70 teenagers enroll in the Technical Teens Internship Program which includes courses in programming, website development, networking, and career development skills. The program provides job-readiness training, college entrance preparation, and paid summer internships with local corporations or small businesses for practical experience. In addition, about 200 five to twelve-year-olds take computer classes to enhance their reading, math, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills. Since its founding on October 1, 1996, TAF has taken the lead in preparing African Americans and other students of color for training in science and technology fields in colleges and universities.
She received an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Seattle University. She continues to guide the Technology Access Foundation. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
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this-week-in-rust · 3 months ago
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This Week in Rust 593
Hello and welcome to another issue of This Week in Rust! Rust is a programming language empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software. This is a weekly summary of its progress and community. Want something mentioned? Tag us at @ThisWeekInRust on X (formerly Twitter) or @ThisWeekinRust on mastodon.social, or send us a pull request. Want to get involved? We love contributions.
This Week in Rust is openly developed on GitHub and archives can be viewed at this-week-in-rust.org. If you find any errors in this week's issue, please submit a PR.
Want TWIR in your inbox? Subscribe here.
Updates from Rust Community
Newsletters
The Embedded Rustacean Issue #42
This Week in Bevy - 2025-03-31
Project/Tooling Updates
Fjall 2.8
EtherCrab, the pure Rust EtherCAT MainDevice, version 0.6 released
A process for handling Rust code in the core kernel
api-version: axum middleware for header based version selection
SALT: a VS Code Extension, seeking participants in a study on Rust usabilty
Observations/Thoughts
Introducing Stringleton
Rust Any Part 3: Finally we have Upcasts
Towards fearless SIMD, 7 years later
LLDB's TypeSystems: An Unfinished Interface
Mutation Testing in Rust
Embedding shared objects in Rust
Rust Walkthroughs
Architecting and building medium-sized web services in Rust with Axum, SQLx and PostgreSQL
Solving the ABA Problem in Rust with Hazard Pointers
Building a CoAP application on Ariel OS
How to Optimize your Rust Program for Slowness: Write a Short Program That Finishes After the Universe Dies
Inside ScyllaDB Rust Driver 1.0: A Fully Async Shard-Aware CQL Driver Using Tokio
Building a search engine from scratch, in Rust: part 2
Introduction to Monoio: A High-Performance Rust Runtime
Getting started with Rust on Google Cloud
Miscellaneous
An AlphaStation's SROM
Real-World Verification of Software for Cryptographic Applications
Public mdBooks
[video] Networking in Bevy with ECS replication - Hennadii
[video] Intermediate Representations for Reactive Structures - Pete
Crate of the Week
This week's crate is candystore, a fast, persistent key-value store that does not require LSM or WALs.
Thanks to Tomer Filiba for the self-suggestion!
Please submit your suggestions and votes for next week!
Calls for Testing
An important step for RFC implementation is for people to experiment with the implementation and give feedback, especially before stabilization.
If you are a feature implementer and would like your RFC to appear in this list, add a call-for-testing label to your RFC along with a comment providing testing instructions and/or guidance on which aspect(s) of the feature need testing.
No calls for testing were issued this week by Rust, Rust language RFCs or Rustup.
Let us know if you would like your feature to be tracked as a part of this list.
Call for Participation; projects and speakers
CFP - Projects
Always wanted to contribute to open-source projects but did not know where to start? Every week we highlight some tasks from the Rust community for you to pick and get started!
Some of these tasks may also have mentors available, visit the task page for more information.
If you are a Rust project owner and are looking for contributors, please submit tasks here or through a PR to TWiR or by reaching out on X (formerly Twitter) or Mastodon!
CFP - Events
Are you a new or experienced speaker looking for a place to share something cool? This section highlights events that are being planned and are accepting submissions to join their event as a speaker.
* Rust Conf 2025 Call for Speakers | Closes 2025-04-29 11:59 PM PDT | Seattle, WA, US | 2025-09-02 - 2025-09-05
If you are an event organizer hoping to expand the reach of your event, please submit a link to the website through a PR to TWiR or by reaching out on X (formerly Twitter) or Mastodon!
Updates from the Rust Project
438 pull requests were merged in the last week
Compiler
allow defining opaques in statics and consts
avoid wrapping constant allocations in packed structs when not necessary
perform less decoding if it has the same syntax context
stabilize precise_capturing_in_traits
uplift clippy::invalid_null_ptr_usage lint as invalid_null_arguments
Library
allow spawning threads after TLS destruction
override PartialOrd methods for bool
simplify expansion for format_args!()
stabilize const_cell
Rustdoc
greatly simplify doctest parsing and information extraction
rearrange Item/ItemInner
Clippy
new lint: char_indices_as_byte_indices
add manual_dangling_ptr lint
respect #[expect] and #[allow] within function bodies for missing_panics_doc
do not make incomplete or invalid suggestions
do not warn about shadowing in a destructuring assigment
expand obfuscated_if_else to support {then(), then_some()}.unwrap_or_default()
fix the primary span of redundant_pub_crate when flagging nameless items
fix option_if_let_else suggestion when coercion requires explicit cast
fix unnested_or_patterns suggestion in let
make collapsible_if recognize the let_chains feature
make missing_const_for_fn operate on non-optimized MIR
more natural suggestions for cmp_owned
collapsible_if: prevent including preceeding whitespaces if line contains non blanks
properly handle expansion in single_match
validate paths in disallowed_* configurations
Rust-Analyzer
allow crate authors to control completion of their things
avoid relying on block_def_map() needlessly
fix debug sourceFileMap when using cppvsdbg
fix format_args lowering using wrong integer suffix
fix a bug in orphan rules calculation
fix panic in progress due to splitting unicode incorrectly
use medium durability for crate-graph changes, high for library source files
Rust Compiler Performance Triage
Positive week, with a lot of primary improvements and just a few secondary regressions. Single big regression got reverted.
Triage done by @panstromek. Revision range: 4510e86a..2ea33b59
Summary:
(instructions:u) mean range count Regressions ❌ (primary) - - 0 Regressions ❌ (secondary) 0.9% [0.2%, 1.5%] 17 Improvements ✅ (primary) -0.4% [-4.5%, -0.1%] 136 Improvements ✅ (secondary) -0.6% [-3.2%, -0.1%] 59 All ❌✅ (primary) -0.4% [-4.5%, -0.1%] 136
Full report here.
Approved RFCs
Changes to Rust follow the Rust RFC (request for comments) process. These are the RFCs that were approved for implementation this week:
No RFCs were approved this week.
Final Comment Period
Every week, the team announces the 'final comment period' for RFCs and key PRs which are reaching a decision. Express your opinions now.
Tracking Issues & PRs
Rust
Tracking Issue for slice::array_chunks
Stabilize cfg_boolean_literals
Promise array::from_fn is generated in order of increasing indices
Stabilize repr128
Stabilize naked_functions
Fix missing const for inherent pointer replace methods
Rust RFCs
core::marker::NoCell in bounds (previously known an [sic] Freeze)
Cargo,
Stabilize automatic garbage collection.
Other Areas
No Items entered Final Comment Period this week for Language Team, Language Reference or Unsafe Code Guidelines.
Let us know if you would like your PRs, Tracking Issues or RFCs to be tracked as a part of this list.
New and Updated RFCs
Allow &&, ||, and ! in cfg
Upcoming Events
Rusty Events between 2025-04-02 - 2025-04-30 🦀
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Communicate with Channels in Rust
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Rust Circle Meetup
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Fourth Tuesday
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**Beyond embedded - OS development in Rust **
2025-04-24 | Virtual (Berlin, DE) | Rust Berlin
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Part 2: Quantum Computers Can’t Rust-Proof This!"
Asia
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In person Rust April 2025 at Braavos in Tel Aviv in collaboration with StarkWare
Europe
2025-04-02 | Cambridge, UK | Cambridge Rust Meetup
Monthly Rust Meetup
2025-04-02 | Köln, DE | Rust Cologne
Rust in April: Rust Embedded, Show and Tell
2025-04-02 | München, DE | Rust Munich
Rust Munich 2025 / 1 - hybrid
2025-04-02 | Oxford, UK | Oxford Rust Meetup Group
Oxford Rust and C++ social
2025-04-02 | Stockholm, SE | Stockholm Rust
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2025-04-03 | Oslo, NO | Rust Oslo
Rust Hack'n'Learn at Kampen Bistro
2025-04-08 | Olomouc, CZ | Rust Moravia
3. Rust Moravia Meetup (Real Embedded Rust)
2025-04-09 | Girona, ES | Rust Girona
Rust Girona Hack & Learn 04 2025
2025-04-09 | Reading, UK | Reading Rust Workshop
Reading Rust Meetup
2025-04-10 | Karlsruhe, DE | Rust Hack & Learn Karlsruhe
Karlsruhe Rust Hack and Learn Meetup bei BlueYonder
2025-04-15 | Leipzig, DE | Rust - Modern Systems Programming in Leipzig
Topic TBD
2025-04-15 | London, UK | Women in Rust
WIR x WCC: Finding your voice in Tech
2025-04-19 | Istanbul, TR | Türkiye Rust Community
Rust Konf Türkiye
2025-04-23 | London, UK | London Rust Project Group
Fusing Python with Rust using raw C bindings
2025-04-24 | Aarhus, DK | Rust Aarhus
Talk Night at MFT Energy
2025-04-24 | Edinburgh, UK | Rust and Friends
Rust and Friends (evening pub)
2025-04-24 | Manchester, UK | Rust Manchester
Rust Manchester April Code Night
2025-04-25 | Edinburgh, UK | Rust and Friends
Rust and Friends (daytime coffee)
2025-04-29 | Paris, FR | Rust Paris
Rust meetup #76
North America
2025-04-03 | Chicago, IL, US | Chicago Rust Meetup
Rust Happy Hour
2025-04-03 | Montréal, QC, CA | Rust Montréal
April Monthly Social
2025-04-03 | Saint Louis, MO, US | STL Rust
icu4x - resource-constrained internationalization (i18n)
2025-04-06 | Boston, MA, US | Boston Rust Meetup
Kendall Rust Lunch, Apr 6
2025-04-08 | New York, NY, US | Rust NYC
Rust NYC: Building a full-text search Postgres extension in Rust
2025-04-10 | Portland, OR, US | PDXRust
TetaNES: A Vaccination for Rust—No Needle, Just the Borrow Checker
2025-04-14 | Boston, MA, US | Boston Rust Meetup
Coolidge Corner Brookline Rust Lunch, Apr 14
2025-04-17 | Nashville, TN, US | Music City Rust Developers
Using Rust For Web Series 1 : Why HTMX Is Bad
2025-04-17 | Redmond, WA, US | Seattle Rust User Group
April, 2025 SRUG (Seattle Rust User Group) Meetup
2025-04-23 | Austin, TX, US | Rust ATX
Rust Lunch - Fareground
2025-04-25 | Boston, MA, US | Boston Rust Meetup
Ball Square Rust Lunch, Apr 25
Oceania
2025-04-09 | Sydney, NS, AU | Rust Sydney
Crab 🦀 X 🕳️🐇
2025-04-14 | Christchurch, NZ | Christchurch Rust Meetup Group
Christchurch Rust Meetup
2025-04-22 | Barton, AC, AU | Canberra Rust User Group
April Meetup
South America
2025-04-03 | Buenos Aires, AR | Rust en Español
Abril - Lambdas y más!
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Jobs
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Quote of the Week
If you write a bug in your Rust program, Rust doesn’t blame you. Rust asks “how could the compiler have spotted that bug”.
– Ian Jackson blogging about Rust
Despite a lack of suggestions, llogiq is quite pleased with his choice.
Please submit quotes and vote for next week!
This Week in Rust is edited by: nellshamrell, llogiq, cdmistman, ericseppanen, extrawurst, U007D, joelmarcey, mariannegoldin, bennyvasquez, bdillo
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