TigerVNC is a high-performance, platform-neutral implementation of VNC (Virtual Network Computing), a client/server application that allows users to launch and interact with graphical applications on remote machines. TigerVNC provides the levels of performance necessary to run 3D and video applications, and it attempts to maintain a common look and feel and re-use components, where possible, across the various platforms that it supports. TigerVNC also provides extensions for advanced authentication methods and TLS encryption.
Yogi adjusted his shawl. “Your Majesty, the truth is not in the stars. The truth is that the princess needed a door. I just showed her where to look. The rest, she opened herself.”
And that is the secret of the astrologer-yogi: not to predict, but to join the sky to the heart, and the heart to the next small step.
“I cannot,” said Yogi. “Only she can read it.” astrology yogi
Chandrika looked. “I see a star.”
But Yogi was not finished. He pointed to another point of light. “And that one there? That is your future husband. He is not a prince. He is a potter’s son, and he is building a wheel tonight, thinking of no one, and yet the stars have bound his fate to yours.” Yogi adjusted his shawl
In the ancient kingdom of Simhapura, where the sun always seemed to scorch a little brighter than elsewhere, there lived a court astrologer named Yogi. He was not a “yogi” in the sense of a meditating hermit, but rather his given name—Yogi—which in the old tongue meant “one who joins.” And join things he did: the stars to the soil, the king’s fate to the farmer’s rain, the past to the future.
“She is not sad,” Yogi murmured to himself. “She is waiting.” I just showed her where to look
Moral: A useful story is not necessarily a true one—it is one that makes the next right thing possible.