By using Remote Print Driver you can print files on a remote printer over the Internet from a computer connected to the network. Make sure the following points before you can use this service.
To use this service, you need to register your printer and account to Epson Connect first. If you have not registered yet, click the following link and follow the steps provided.
Enable Remote Print on the User Page.
Remote printing is enabled when "Enable Remote Print" is selected from Print Settings for Remote Print on the User Page. Select "Enable Remote Print" if it has not been selected.
If you want to allow specified users to print, enter an access key and click Apply on the Print Settings screen, and then give them the key.
Make sure the printer is connected to a Wi-Fi/Ethernet network with Internet access, and not a USB cable.
Download and setup the Remote Print Driver.
Buchikome High — Kick- -final- -aokumashii-
The opening is a measured breath. Not a breath of anxiety but a breath of calibration: tendons tightening like plucked wires, the spine an axis through which intention flows. Eyes lock with an opponent's like a pair of flint stones: one strike will sparkle and either ignite or snuff. The world narrows to a seam between the brows. Time elongates so the decision may be crafted, not stumbled into.
The "Final" in the name is not theatrical hyperbole. Doors close with that kick. Histories settle; debts tally. Aokumashii's face is not triumphant, only exacting. There is no gloat in precision, only the quiet of obligation fulfilled. The movement contains both ending and an opening: endings clear space for what arrives after. Buchikome High kick- -Final- -Aokumashii-
Aokumashii steps forward — not many steps, the smallest geometry. Weight shifts to the grounded foot, the pelvis rotates, the hip becomes a piston. The leg lifts not merely with knee and hip but with the memory of all training: ankle aligned, toes tucked, hamstrings singing a controlled alarm. The Buchikome is not a flinging but a driving: the thigh rotates with quiet force, the knee snaps like a gate, and then, in a moment that resembles both prayer and engineering, the foot becomes hammer and blade. The opening is a measured breath
If you want this adapted into a screenplay beat sheet, a fight-choreography breakdown, or a poem, tell me which format and I'll convert it. The world narrows to a seam between the brows
In the afterlight, the residues are small but absolute. The sound of a dropped guard, the metallic tang in the mouth, a shoe scuff like punctuation. Spectators rearrange their assumptions. Puppeteers of rumor begin composing new myths. For Aokumashii there is the private ledger: relief and fatigue layered over the unavoidable knowledge that force begets consequence. The body keeps score in bruise and scar; the self keeps score in memory and small mercies.