Moved to @[email protected]
From (Spanish) Las salpas, las extrañas criaturas que llenan las playas de Málaga
estos invertebrados no tienen nada que ver con las medusas, por lo que no son urticantes, (…)
“Son el paso intermedio entre los invertebrados y los vertebrados, puesto que tienen una primitiva columna, y forman parte del plancton, la sopa marina que es la base de la cadena alimenticia en el mar”, ha manifestado.
These invertebrates have nothing to do with jellyfish, so they are not stinging, (…)
“They are the intermediate step between invertebrates and vertebrates, since they have a primitive column, and they are part of plankton, the marine soup that is the base of the food chain in the sea,” he said.
Also on their website: Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - LLM
Hover text: Best you can do with cosmos-3.5 is get a universe that’s classical at low speeds.
RSS Feed: https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/rss
Also on their website: Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - LLM
Hover text: Best you can do with cosmos-3.5 is get a universe that’s classical at low speeds.
RSS Feed: https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/rss
By the way, both links in your post lead to two different Spanish editions, mine is the one from the second link.
Thanks… I must have had a brain fart. I don’t know why I though it was a German edition, probably the font (facepalm).
Fixed!
Awesome! Thank you very much for the heads up.
It seems to be working perfectly, even with videos. This is great!
deleted by creator
Also on Webtoons:
https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/system32comics/list?title_no=235074
Which has RSS feed:
https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/system32comics/rss?title_no=235074
returning to the old magic of RSS feeds
I love to read that, RSS-powah!
I’ve been missing this
You probably already saw it, but just in case, the WEBTOON page of The Weekly Roll has RSS feed (lnked above):
https://www.webtoons.com/en/challenge/the-weekly-roll/rss?title_no=358889
such a hard time getting RSS feeds added to Feedly
I cannot help with Feedly, I use www.commafeed.com (2000 feeds limit on the public instance).
You may find help here:
FYI: I use this usercript to block whole instances: https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/469297-block-lemmy-instances
You need to edit line 17
Here adapted to work also with MLMYM (https://old.lemmy.world): https://pastebin.com/z0mShfDP
FYI: I use this usercript to block whole instances: https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/469297-block-lemmy-instances
You need to edit line 17
Here adapted to work also with MLMYM (https://old.lemmy.world): https://pastebin.com/z0mShfDP
FYI: Image previews for URLs with query params (the symbol ‘?’ and what comes after) do not work on some frontends (like mlmym / old.lemmy.world).
Current link (note the ?w=2048
):
https://thejenkinscomic.files.wordpress.com/2023/07/414.png?w=2048
Link without the query params:
https://thejenkinscomic.files.wordpress.com/2023/07/414.png
AFAIK that would be ok, a lot of subreddits don’t even require the posts to be approved, so that would be the same as setting your sub to not require approving and posting to it with a different account.
I was never downvoted on Reddit as hastily as I am on Lemmy.
Note that, unlike reddit, lemmy shows negative vote values. So it may seem a bit more dramatic compared to reddit.
Sadly, that also hides all your own posts, even from your profile page. Which is invonvenient if you also want to keep an eye on them.
FYI: Image previews for URLs with query params (the symbol ‘?’ and what comes after) do not work on some frontends (like mlmym / old.lemmy.world).
Agree! that’s what I’ve been doing: Trying to build critical mass for small communities : fediverse
From the source:
Just over a thousand years ago, the stellar explosion known as supernova SN 1006 was observed. It was brighter than Venus, and visible during the day for weeks. The brightest supernova ever recorded on Earth, this spectacular light show was documented in China, Japan, Europe, and the Arab world.
Ancient observers were treated to this celestial fireworks display without understanding its cause or implications. Astronomers now understand that SN 1006 was caused by a white dwarf star that captured mass from a companion star until the white dwarf became unstable and exploded. Recent observations of the remnant of SN 1006 reveal the liberation of elements such as iron that were previously locked up inside the star. Because no material falls back into a neutron star or black hole after this type of supernova explosion, the liberation of this star’s contents is complete. It represents, therefore, a cosmic version of Independence Day for this star.
This is a composite image of the SN 1006 supernova remnant, which is located about 7000 light years from Earth. Shown here are X-ray data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory (blue), optical data from the University of Michigan’s 0.9 meter Curtis Schmidt telescope at the NSF’s Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO; yellow) and the Digitized Sky Survey (orange and light blue), plus radio data from the NRAO’s Very Large Array and Green Bank Telescope (VLA/GBT; red).
This combined study of the Chandra, CTIO and VLA/GBT observations shows new evidence for the acceleration of charged particles to high energies in supernova shockwaves. An accompanying Hubble Space Telescope image of SN 1006 shows a close-up of the region on the upper right of the supernova remnant. The twisting ribbon of light seen by Hubble reveals where the expanding blast wave is sweeping into very tenuous surrounding gas.
Fast Facts for SN 1006:
Credit: Credit:X-ray: NASA/CXC/Rutgers/G.Cassam-Chenai, J.Hughes et al.; Radio: NRAO/AUI/NSF/GBT/VLA/Dyer, Maddalena & Cornwell; Optical: Middlebury College/F.Winkler, NOAO/AURA/NSF/CTIO Schmidt & DSS
Release Date: July 01, 2008
Scale: Image is 55 arcmin across.
Category: Supernovas & Supernova Remnants
Coordinates (J2000): RA 15h 04m 10.01s | Dec -41° 53´ 44.88"
Constellation: Lupus
Observation Date: 04/08/2003 - 04/11/2003
Observation Time: 61 hours from 11 pointings
Obs. ID: 3838, 4385-4394
Instrument: ACIS
Also Known As : SNR 327.6+14.6
References : G. Cassam-Chenaï et al. (2008), ApJ, 680, 1180
Color Code: X-ray (blue); Radio (red); Optical (yellow & orange)
Distance Estimate: About 7,000 light years
Source: Socks and Puppets, the comic » 779 – Summoning Ray
If I’m not mistaken: @[email protected]
RSS Feed: https://comicpress.socksandpuppets.com/feed/