Introduction Yuru Fuwa Noka no Moji-bake is a niche, stylistic skillset popular in certain Japanese indie visual-novel and mobile game communities. The term combines playful aesthetics—yuru (ゆる, relaxed/cute) and fuwa (ふわ, fluffy/soft)—with “noka” (のか, an interrogative or stylistic suffix) and moji-bake (文字化け), literally “character garbling” or “text-glitch” effects. In practice, the skill focuses on designing and implementing soft, imperfect, or intentionally “glitched” text effects and type treatments that convey warmth, nostalgia, or surreal charm.
Absolute Linux will continue development under eXybit Technologies, built with the same approach and
structure we've used to develop RefreshOS. We're not here to reinvent what made Absolute great, we're here
to carry it forward.
Since 2007, Absolute has stood for being simple, pre-configured, and lightweight. Slackware made easy.
That core philosophy isn't changing. Absolute will always be free, open-source, built for ease of use,
and based on the Slackware foundation.
As of now, there is no set release date for the first eXybit-developed stable version of Absolute Linux. We're bringing Absolute into modern computing while keeping it minimal. The first step is to preserve what already exists, rebuild the underlying infrastructure, and create a canary version of the next major stable release.
You can still download the original versions of Absolute Linux by Paul Sherman on SourceForge.