Downfall (2025)
He clutched the windowsill. His reflection stared back—not a mountain, but a tired old man in expensive clothes. Outside, the lights of Heliopolis flickered. A power fluctuation. The eastern aqueduct, he knew, was failing. The fractures had become a breach.
For three hours, Valerius read. He wasn’t an engineer, but he had conquered worlds—he knew how to read between lines. The aqueduct, the great artery that supplied fresh water to the capital’s agricultural domes, had been developing microfractures for eleven years. Each report had been “optimistically amended” by a succession of prefects who did not wish to alarm the throne. The fractures had been patched, not repaired. The patching had been paid for by reallocating funds from the northern defense grid.
He began to dig.
One by one, the pillars of his empire turned to sand. The food synthesis plants reported ninety-eight percent efficiency, but the raw material stockpiles were at twelve percent—diverted to black markets run by provincial governors he himself had appointed. The military academies were producing officers who had never seen combat, only simulation scores that could be bought. The communication relays that tied the hundred worlds together were running on century-old backup systems because the replacement parts had been sold to mining colonies.
As the lights of the capital dimmed for the first time in a millennium, Emperor Valerius the Indomitable slid down the glass. His last thought was not of his empire, his enemies, or his legacy. It was of a cup of lukewarm tea, and an old man who had known, in his shaking hands, that even emperors are not immune to the slow, patient work of small failures. Downfall
A lie, he realized. Because if everything was stable, why had no one told him about Caelus?
Valerius turned slowly, the weight of his purple cloak shifting like a storm cloud. The courtiers in the antechamber fell silent. Their practiced smiles faltered. They saw the slight twitch in his jaw, the way his fingers drummed once, twice on the cup’s golden handle. He clutched the windowsill
The news arrived like a stone dropped into a still pond. Valerius dismissed the court. He walked the length of his empty throne room, his boots clicking on the polished obsidian floor. He passed the Throne of Screens, where a thousand holographic displays showed him the state of his empire: trade routes, fleet positions, public sentiment indices. Everything was green. Everything was stable.
Margherita
Posted at 17:05h, 18 MarzoNon conoscevo questo plugin, ho visto che esistono la versione free e diverse possibilità a pagamento: quella free può andare bene o è necessario aggiungere estensioni a pagamento? E rispetto a woocommerce che è in dotazione in quasi tutti i temi wp professionali, quali sono differenze e vantaggi? Personalmente trovo woocommerce un po’ troppo articolato per un sito che vende al massimo una decina di servizi/prodotti, ma essendo un po’ capra, è meglio che chieda a te! Grazie mille!
Maddalena
Posted at 09:31h, 19 MarzoCiao Margherita. La versione free di Easy digital download va benissimo se vuoi vendere online il tuo servizio o pochi prodotti. Per eshop complessi con molto prodotti è indicato usare Woocommerce perchè ti da la possibilità di personalizzare ed inserire diversi dettagli per ogni prodotto.
Margherita
Posted at 17:17h, 20 MarzoGrazie 1000, sempre chiarissima
fabinardo
Posted at 10:36h, 29 AprileMa come funziona con l’IVA?
sto leggendo online che dovrei applicare IVA diversa a paesi diversi a seconda di dove si trova il compratore. Ma si può fare attraverso Easy Digital Downloads? Ho visto ore di tutorial ovunque e nessuno ne parla.
Lascio perdere, applico lo stesso prezzo a tutti e poi pago le tasse?
Maddalena
Posted at 15:42h, 29 AprileCiao, nel menu IMPOSTAZIONI / TASSE di Easy Digital Download trovi una tabella dove puoi impostare un’aliquota diversa per ogni paese in cui desideri vendere. Puoi fare qualche prova e vedere se fa al caso tuo. 😉
Pingback:Scopri i vantaggi di aggiungere dei corsi online al tuo modello di business, e perché ho scelto Podia [MC #24] • Silvia Lanfranchi, the quiet coach
Posted at 08:15h, 21 Maggio[…] e qui trovi 2 articoli che ti spiegano meglio come impostare Easy Digital Download per iniziare a vendere […]