EvilCartyen

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
 

Bios:Megafauna starts where the predecessor game Bios:Genesis left off, with the invasion of the land on the daybreak of the Phanerozoic eon. Starting as either a plant, mollusk, insect, or vertebral skeletal type, your flapping, paddling, and squawking carnivores and herbivores make a beachhead on one of the drifting continental plates in the Cambrian, Their struggle for terrestrial dominance may eventually include language-based consciousness. Although this achievement elevated a certain mammal species to notoriety, in your game things may occur differently.

This second edition of Bios:Megafauna is an evolutionary descendant of American Megafauna but as a part of the Bios series of games it is linked to the game Bios:Genesis. It plays well independently but if you have both games you can let the end state of a game of Bios:Genesis affect the starting state of a game of Bios:Megafauna. A successor game, called Bios:Origins (which would be a descendant of Origin), is planned to cover the events of the Quaternary period including the rise of ideas and technology.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Putting feet there like it's a totally vanilla thing 😐

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Sure, that sounds awesome 🙂 where're you going to scrape data from? Does PCS or FirstCycling have an API to hook into?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Thank you! Just printed on a regular printer, cut out, and applied with milk 😁

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

That's a lot of special equipment & artillery. I wonder if they're doing a combined push & interdiction campaign in the south and how that would work.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Jeg overvejer Terry Pratchett som det næste, jeg skal bare lige finde ud af, hvor jeg skal starte, nogen forslag?

Jeg synes der er stor forskel på tidlig Pratchett og sen Pratchett. De tidlige bøger er klassiske og tydelig satire over fantasygenren, men er ikke så medrivende på personsiden, synes jeg. Historierne er bedre i de senere bøger, og hans Tiffany Aching-serie er decideret glimrende som børne-ungdomslitteratur. Så det kommer nok lidt an på hvad du leder efter.

Rent kvalitetsmæssigt vil jeg rate de forskellige story-archs sådan her:

  • Tiffany Aching (The Wee Free Men, A Hat Full of Sky, Wintersmith, I Shall Wear Midnight, og The Shepherd's Crown)
  • Moist von Lipwig (Going Postal, Making Money, Raising Steam)
  • City Watch (Guards! Guards!, Men at Arms, Feet of Clay, Jingo, The Fifth Elephant, Night Watch , Thud! og Snuff)
  • Witches (Equal Rites, Wyrd Sisters, Witches Abroad, Lords and Ladies, Maskerade, Carpe Jugulum)
  • Death (Mort, Reaper Man, Soul Music, Hogfather, Thief of Time)
  • Rincewind (The Colour of Magic, The Light Fantastic, Sourcery)

Men - der er også en point i, at man i de første bøger får en masse worldbuilding som de senere bøger så bygger på. Så selvom jeg personligt synes Rincewind-archen er den svageste rent litterært, så er der også en værdi i at læse bøgerne i den rækkefølge de er skrevet.

Du kan også følge nogle af de forskellige online-guides:

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Jeg har tænkt mig at give Baldurs Gate 3 et skud I denne uge. Ellers har jeg spillet lidt brætspil, fx Neanderthal af Eklund. På TV ser vi Babylon Berlin for tiden, det er overraskende godt.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Thank you! This was cabbage which I'd left around for the winter, and it'd just started sprouting these small leaves in the early early spring. Tiny and very colourful.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

If I could I wouldn't be posting this thread, would I ;)

 

... to post race threads & result threads for at least all WT-races. Does anyone have the skills to run a bot like this?

I often want to throw a quick comment as a race is going on, but creating a race thread or a result thread is a LOT of work and it keeps me from engaging.

I think this is what we need to make this community grow.

 

This is a follis - at this point in time a small bronze coin with thin silvering - stuck in Thessalonica in Greece in AD 324. 18mm and 3.3g.

Obverse: CONSTANTINVS IVN NOB C, Laureate, draped and cuirassed bust left

Reverse: VOT/·/X in three lines within wreath, TSBVI

I have it noted down as RIC VII 128 - which I suppose is true enough, but RIC (Roman Imperial Coinage) is a reference which few people have actual access to, so many dealers and collectors just accept whichever number is noted down at face value and don't double check :)

VOT X on the reverse refers to a vow to rule for 10 years. In reality, Constantine II was only ruler for 3 years - 337 to 340. This coin was struck when he was 8 years old.

 
[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Haven't really made many mistakes in my life, so.... red door!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Back to the interdiction campaign?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I was using Connect

 

Sappho from Mytilene on Lesbos is probably best known for giving her name to being a lesbian, but in fact wrote not (only) about love between women, but about love in general. In these fragments about the love of a young man, Atthis.


On Love and Desire (fragments)

I

…..You burn me…..

II

Remembering those things

We did in our youth…

…Many, beautiful things…

III

…Again and again…because those

I care for best, do me

Most harm…

IV

You came, and I was mad for you

And you cooled my mind that burned with longing…

V

Once long ago I loved you, Atthis,

A little graceless child you seemed to me

VI

Nightingale, herald of spring

With a voice of longing….

VII

Eros, again now, the loosener of limbs troubles me,

Bittersweet, sly, uncontrollable creature….

VII

………..but you have forgotten me…

VIII

You and my servant Eros….

IX

Like the sweet-apple reddening high on the branch,

High on the highest, the apple-pickers forgot,

Or not forgotten, but one they couldn’t reach…

X

Neither for me the honey

Nor the honeybee…

XI

Come from heaven, wrapped in a purple cloak…

XII

Of all the stars, the loveliest…

XIII

I spoke to you, Aphrodite, in a dream….

XIV

Yet I am not one who takes joy in wounding,

Mine is a quiet mind….

XV

Like the mountain hyacinth, the purple flower

That shepherds trample to the ground…

XVI

Dear mother, I cannot work the loom

Filled, by Aphrodite, with love for a slender boy…


The verse measure - the Sapphic stanza - consists of three 11-syllable verses of dactyls (long-short-short) and trochees (short-long) followed by a short five-syllable final verse. What greater honor can there be for a poet than to have a type of verse named after you?

She was one of the 9 poets who were studied in the classical academies for almost 1000 years. Plato, who lived 200 years after Sappho, called her 'the tenth muse', and Horace - 500 years after her death - considered her almost divine.

The poet Catullus, who is still read in our time, became widely famous for his translations of Sappho's poems. Unfortunately for all of us, the vast majority have been lost.

However, in the last 15 years more and more fragments of her poems are coming to light due to new technology for analyzing fragile papyrus fragments. New poems by Sappho are therefore periodically published - approximately 2600 years after they were written. Isn't it wonderful how her poetry can create an emotional connection to a woman who lived before the Romans even got out of bed?

The Coin

The coin is a silver Diobol struck 400-350 BC in Mytilene. 10mm, 1.31g.

Obverse: Laureate head of Apollo right

Reverse: MYTI. Head of Aphrodite or Sappho right; uncertain symbol to left; all within incuse circle

Personally, I find it appropriate that we do not know whether the reverse features one of the greatest love poets of all time - or the god of love she usually invokes in her poems.

31
Ghent, Belgium (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/raining
 

Why the orientation issue?

 

A perspective from coinweek on ancient coin collection, specifically I suppose on choosing a collection focus.

My own collecting is not focused per se, I collect what I find cool. Still, over the years some themes have emmerged:

  • I like coins of Philip I the Arab because they are affordable in good grade and have many cool reverses
  • I like small greek coins because they often feature interesting gods and other themes and the variety is so great
  • I like coins from Rhodes as they feature a rose and generally look nice
 

I like cabbage, don't judge.

 

Miletos was a Greek city in the area that was called Ionia in antiquity, and which is today part of Turkey. The ruins can be visited near the village of Balat, which lies approximately halfway between the holiday islands of Samos and Rhodes.

Like so many other cities in the area, Miletos was founded in prehistoric times, when the Greek tribe called the Ionians colonized the area around 1000 BC. The period from around 1100 BC to 800 BC is often called "The Greek Dark Ages" - and it was indeed a dark time following the total collapse of the Mycenaean civilization.

But after darkness comes light, and from 800 BC and henceforth the Greek cities of Anatolia were very successful in at least one thing; they had children and the children survived. It is believed that the population increased by a minimum of 4% each year.

Let's go somewhere nice...

All those people needed a place to live, and for the Greeks the solution was clear; colonization. From the 8th to the 6th century BC the Greek peoples - the Ionians, Dorians, Achaeans & Aeolians - founded thousands of cities around the Mediterranean (Fig. 1).

GreekColonies

More city-states means more trade, and with more trade comes prosperity. And with prosperity comes the energy and time for other pursuits than toiling for your daily bread.

The birth Thales - and philosophy

And so, in Miletos around 624 BC, Thales was born - a man who can without exaggeration be called one of the most important people who ever lived.

You see, Thales had a theory:

Everything - EVERYTHING - is made of water!

The earth obviously floats on water, and earthquakes are when the earth is moved by waves. Blood is water, and without blood you die, trees are water, because they grow when they are watered. If you burn off gas, it turns into water, and fog condenses into water. Metal is also a type of water, because when it is heated it melts, and water can clearly condense into earth - you could see this in real time when you looked at the river Meander and how the water over the years condensed and created new earth.

To our modern minds, it seems absurd, of course.

But you need to understand that Thales is the first (at least in the Western tradition) to even consider explaining nature without referring to gods and mythology. Who tried to explain nature with nature, so to speak. And he attempted to do this without having a single scientific or philosophical concept at his disposal.

What an intellectual effort

In that sense, he is the first philosopher - and the first scientist. And by the way, he is also considered to be the first Greek mathematician.

The Coin

The coin here is a small 9mm silver coin from Miletos, a diobol, with a roaring lion on the front and a sort of star pattern on the back. It weighs only 1.16 grams.

Obverse: Forepart of lion left, head to right

Reverse: Stellate pattern within incuse square

It was struck somewhere between the end of the 6th and the beginning of the 5th century BC. - that is, while Thales was alive.

SNG Kayhan 462-75

30
Fried Broccoli (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I do most of my macro photography with a Nikon d3300 and an old manual lens, a 55/f3.5 Micro-Nikkor P Auto from 1972.

3
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/raining
 

Well, upload won't work it seems.... Sorry

 

Currently on holiday with the family in France, came across a coin shop and went in to ask if they had ancient coins (not many do). To my delight they did, although in a fairly middle quality.

Still, it was priced fairly and to reward the guy for pulling out the stuff for me I bought this Philip I antoninianus with a victory reverse for 30 euro.

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