Abstract This paper introduces Receiver-First Rail as an extension of the Chromatic Rail architecture. Earlier work established Rail, Trail, and Veil as a low-symbolic carrying family, and Chromatic Broadcast as a receiver-first field condition in which systems align to state differences rather than decoding symbolic messages first. The present paper connects these lines. It argues that a rail is not only a carrying surface for placed meaning, but also a selective receiver of relevant change. A slot may be activated either by user placement or by modulation when a previously bound attractor changes state. The system therefore does not receive the whole world, but only updates to what is already carried. The paper also formalizes dual incoming object logic. Some incoming objects are chromatic-native messages, appearing first as complete chromatic sequences before collapsing into carried payload-states. Others are symbolic payloads, such as email or chat fragments, which appear as typed color-handles while deeper symbolic content remains available on demand. This allows symbolic systems to be represented within Rail without collapsing Rail into a text-first interface. Finally, the paper proposes a device-agnostic carrying model. Meaning is not bound to a single device category, but may be carried across strips, wearables, environmental layers, and future centralized hardware. The result is a receiver-first carrying architecture in which relevant change is received, symbolic systems remain compatible, and digital meaning becomes portable without returning to centralized symbolic overload.
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Raynor Eissens
Accenture (Switzerland)
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Raynor Eissens (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c229b2aeb5a845df0d4909 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19160656
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