Super Kong World
A person interested in nature, science, sustainability, music, and videogames. I’m also on Mastodon: @glennmagusharvey@scicomm.xyz and @glennmagusharvey@sakurajima.moe
My avatar is a snapping turtle swimming in the water.
Super Kong World
How big is their userbase? I presume it’s far smaller than Instagram’s, so there’s going to be less concern with having a sudden influx of users than with Meta’s Threads.
Can someone provide or point me to a quick rundown of how Misskey and Calckey/Firefish differ?
I heard that foundkey’s development has stalled. I’m guessing we’re gonna see instances move from Foundkey to either Misskey or Firefish?
So it seems their reasoning is as follows:
I doubt that they will readily consider the following information with a level head, but if they are willing to listen, you may want to cite the following:
Tangential sidenote: I find the Lemmy easier to understand than Reddit.
So that means that programmers are being replaced with debuggers. Human debuggers.
Egads! An error SSL occurred. Secure connect to server be not here.
Does kbin standardly use “@magazinename@kbin.domain” instead of “!magazinename@kbin.domain”? (asking this as a Lemmy user)
You’re welcome!
You might already know this, but I just wanted to mention (for anyone curious) that one neat thing about what NYC did is that it’s actually one of the more famous textbook examples of ecosystem services.
Basically, at some point they actually calculated how much it’d cost to build a water filtration plant vs. how much it’d cost to maintain the Catskills watershed, and found that the latter was significantly cheaper, proving the notion that well-functioning natural systems can do things that are worth huge amounts of money, seemingly for “free”, so they’re well worth the effort to understand and safeguard such resources.
Here’s an article about it: https://blogs.edf.org/markets/2017/11/07/how-and-why-farmers-in-the-catskills-protect-new-york-citys-drinking-water/
And here’s an article about how policy approaches have changed over time. https://news.climate.columbia.edu/2015/11/30/the-catskill-watershed-a-story-of-sacrifice-and-cooperation/
The way Mario seems to teleport when turning around in the water seems to say something about the way hitboxes worked in the original DKC1.