I heard from an Aboriginal tour guide that in native populations everyone just did the role they wanted / were good at, and it was only from the introduction of Christian missionaries that such a division of labour was encouraged.
Parked account.
Currently using [email protected]
I heard from an Aboriginal tour guide that in native populations everyone just did the role they wanted / were good at, and it was only from the introduction of Christian missionaries that such a division of labour was encouraged.
Are there any good fan-edits of ep 3, that keep the good and remove the sucky parts?
Looks like it. The last Spock and T’Pring episode was that fun body-swap one, I think.
I think you’re limited to when the first person on your instance subscribed to a community on another instance - from that point on, all posts/votes/comments will shared with your instance and be visible, but before that, I’m not sure (you might get the post, but not the comments, or you might not get the post at all).
I wanted to comment on a couple of 2-year old posts I found via google - when searching from my instance, I found one post (but no comments), but not the other post. When I added my comment and re-viewed it through google, it was there alongside the 2-year old ones.
If lots of people are signed up to lots of different instances, then a ‘fediverse’ will grow as expected, but if a majority are congregated on a few big ones, it limits the potential for spread.
I’m still trying to understand all this, so I might be wrong.
This post is very old, but it’s what came up when I googled it, so for anyone else, here’s some basic scripts for logging in and then using the authentication to get something that may help you get started in exploring the API.
I’m still transferring stuff between my phone and computer using FTP, like some caveman.
On the upside, we now have a trans Chief transporter (no hate, just mildly amused by the wordplay).
From what I can tell, those subreddits participated in the blackout, but neither are “permanently locked”.
Interesting to see though that r/startrek’s header says “now at startrek.site”
Interesting. My source is obviously anecdotal and from another country. Is it verified that Buffalo tribes always thought this vs. being influenced by European colonisers?
(I don’t want to fall into the trap of thinking older civilizations didn’t have the same gender hang-ups as modern ones.)