Semantics at the Edge
When you send a packet across a network, nobody in the middle knows what it means. Routers forward bytes, proxies cache responses, CDNs balance load — but meaning never travels with the message. It only appears when the packet reaches an agent that knows how to interpret it.
The same is true of URLs. A query string is just an encoded intention — a compact expression of state and purpose — until it’s decoded by a viewer, a realm, or a mind. Every layer between creation and comprehension is an opaque tunnel.
In the Logoverse, we make this principle explicit. A glyph is a semantic packet: sealed, transportable, and interpretable only at the edge — the place where code and consciousness meet. The meaning doesn’t live in the data; it emerges at the boundary that knows how to see.
Semantics at the edge is not a limitation — it’s the design of the universe. Everything between sender and receiver is structure. Meaning happens where you stand.