Miss Junior Akthios Cap D Agde 29 Guide

At dusk she walks the promenade, hem of dress stirring memories of other people’s endings and beginnings. The lighthouse throws its white pulse across the bay; on good nights you can count the boats as if they were promises kept. Akthios stops, watches a young couple tie a ribbon to the iron fence—some say it binds a wish to the town—then ties her own ribbon, not for luck but as an agreement with herself: to be kind, to be brave, to keep learning.

She arrives on a salt-bright morning, a small gold coin of sun slipping over the quay. The seaside town still holds its breath between tides; shutters lift like sleepy eyelids, cafés polish their cups, fishermen knot familiar lines. Akthios stands at the edge of the jetty in a dress the blue of shallow water, hands folded as if learning to keep the sea contained. miss junior akthios cap d agde 29

Akthios loves the market, where the vendors know the weight of a smile and the exact right way to slice a peach. She composes her life in small acts—steaming a pot of lentils until the kitchen smells like hearth; reading ancient postcards found in secondhand shops; learning the chord shapes of an old guitar passed down by an uncle who taught her to listen to silence. Each piece fits into a mosaic of modest pleasures, making a life worth returning to. At dusk she walks the promenade, hem of

Cap d'Agde smells of fish and sunscreen and sea glass warmed by the sun. Seagulls stitch the sky with impatient stitches. Tourists unfurl their umbrellas on the sand; lovers trace initials in driftwood. Akthios moves through it with a gaze that catalogues details: a chipped tile with a painted star, a boy chasing a bronze ball, an old woman scattering breadcrumbs for the pigeons. She notices the world as if it were a book she’d been allowed to read ahead in. She arrives on a salt-bright morning, a small

At twenty-nine, the number presses differently—neither the burn of youth nor the cool of a later age. It is the hinge between two doors. She writes letters to herself on napkins and tucks them into pockets: small promises, stern reminders, a list of songs she means to learn. Her laugh arrives like the clink of cutlery, spontaneous and bright. When she speaks, people lean in; not because she commands them, but because she offers them a way to see themselves reflected in the ordinary.

At dusk she walks the promenade, hem of dress stirring memories of other people’s endings and beginnings. The lighthouse throws its white pulse across the bay; on good nights you can count the boats as if they were promises kept. Akthios stops, watches a young couple tie a ribbon to the iron fence—some say it binds a wish to the town—then ties her own ribbon, not for luck but as an agreement with herself: to be kind, to be brave, to keep learning.

She arrives on a salt-bright morning, a small gold coin of sun slipping over the quay. The seaside town still holds its breath between tides; shutters lift like sleepy eyelids, cafés polish their cups, fishermen knot familiar lines. Akthios stands at the edge of the jetty in a dress the blue of shallow water, hands folded as if learning to keep the sea contained.

Akthios loves the market, where the vendors know the weight of a smile and the exact right way to slice a peach. She composes her life in small acts—steaming a pot of lentils until the kitchen smells like hearth; reading ancient postcards found in secondhand shops; learning the chord shapes of an old guitar passed down by an uncle who taught her to listen to silence. Each piece fits into a mosaic of modest pleasures, making a life worth returning to.

Cap d'Agde smells of fish and sunscreen and sea glass warmed by the sun. Seagulls stitch the sky with impatient stitches. Tourists unfurl their umbrellas on the sand; lovers trace initials in driftwood. Akthios moves through it with a gaze that catalogues details: a chipped tile with a painted star, a boy chasing a bronze ball, an old woman scattering breadcrumbs for the pigeons. She notices the world as if it were a book she’d been allowed to read ahead in.

At twenty-nine, the number presses differently—neither the burn of youth nor the cool of a later age. It is the hinge between two doors. She writes letters to herself on napkins and tucks them into pockets: small promises, stern reminders, a list of songs she means to learn. Her laugh arrives like the clink of cutlery, spontaneous and bright. When she speaks, people lean in; not because she commands them, but because she offers them a way to see themselves reflected in the ordinary.


Edited by Mārtiņš Možeiko on
Hi,
thank you very much for the distribution of the videos. Currently episodes 554 and 556 are missing. Can you add them?
Both files should be available now.
Thank you very much!
I've accidentally deleted downloaded file and now I can't download it (synchronize) again. What should I do to restore syncing?
Im using Resilio Sync 2.7.2.

Thank you.

Do you have the subtitles (SRT) files as well?

Afaik nobody is creating subtitles for these streams, so there are no srt files.

I am creating the subtitles. Do you want to create a GitHub repo and let me commit to it?

From the Handmade Hero complete playlist on YouTube, 433 out of the 674 videos have automatic speech recognition (ASR) subs. I have already downloaded those ASR subs. Interestingly, 3 subtitles were manually uploaded (day 1 and 2 of Intro to C and day 1 of Hero). So maybe someone was subbing but gave up?

As I watch, I have also been pasting the YouTube link into Kapwing and converting the JSON into SRT files. I have done several so far. Need to do this 200+ times for the remaining videos of the Hero series.


Replying to mmozeiko (#26347)

The subtitles are here.

Handmade Hero subtitles:

https://github.com/XP1/Handmade-Hero-subtitles

I have created the organize and rename scripts, which will sort each series into their folders and add titles to the video filenames.


Edited by XP1 on
Replying to XP1 (#26352)

Is this still seeded? My resilio sync client shows 0 of 0 peers online. If not, is there any way to get these original files?

Yes, it is. Usually ~20 to 30 peers are online all the time.


Replying to Manu (#29596)

Hi, thank you very much for this! Is there a separate token for handmadehero_prestream as well by any chance?

Any reason why the latest episode is day 663? Why haven't you updated to day 667 yet?


Replying to mmozeiko (#29598)

Thank you so much for doing this!

I started syncing yesterday and got around 33% which was about 400gb+. I booted up handbrake and converted the Handmade Hero Day 663 from h264 to h265 bringing the file size from 6.3gb to 2.4gb (NVEnc) or 986MB (CPU). To me, the quality looks the same.

I started off with the H.265 MKV 1080p 30 template changing the following parameters:

Video:

  • Video Encoder: H.265 (NVEnc) / H.265
  • Framerate: Same as source
  • Encoder Preset: Slowest (NVEnc)/ Slow (H.265)

Audio:

  • Codec: AAC Passthru

I thought I'd share in case anyone has concerns about disk space. I'm going to try and batch through it, but I'm not sure how far I'll get.


Edited by martyn on Reason: Made a typo

Please seed people, It's not possible to download at the moment due to lack of seeders.


Edited by Pooria on