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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)JO
Posts
2
Comments
51
Joined
2 mo. ago

  • Well, thank you for all that you did! (I really, really appreciate that)

    Sure, I'm willing to do anything I can to help the FV project. I mean, I'm not very technically-oriented myself, but I do my best to create and maintain fun / interesting projects like EGN, for what that's worth. For example:

    https://piefed.social/c/eurographicnovels

  • Lemmy Directory @lemmy.dbzer0.com

    Any chance of re-listing our /c in to the "lists," now that we've moved to PieFed.Social?

  • While initial versions of the hypothesis regarded the Sea Peoples as a primary cause of the Late Bronze Age collapse, more recent versions generally regard them as a symptom of events which were already in motion before their purported attacks.

    Interesting; I hadn't heard or read that before. So perhaps the late BA situation was a bit like the late Western Roman Empire period, in that enough internal weaknesses had arisen such that neighboring peoples could take advantage of the situation, i.e. conquer them.

    Of course the BA situation was vastly different as I understand it, in that it was a diverse trading network of regions and cultures, not a unification of any particular peoples in the usual sense. Still...

  • Well, dang!

    A lot of the old Popeye hasn't aged too well for me, often being on the repetitive and dull side, but this sequence is hilarious, sharp, and has aged really well IMO. So... we're looking at a date of... Dec 19th, 1937, is it?

  • I don't understand. This is specifically an AI community, yet people are downvoting this post for some reason. Why?

    I could understand if this AI art was posted to just about any other /c, for example "funny animal pics," or such, but this is a place created specifically for this sort of thing, no?

    Not to mention, I do find the image hilarious. XD

  • Ah, thanks. However, seen from different angles, the statues still appear unusually squat to me, as if the figures were little more than 5' tall.

    Checking with Google's AI, I'm surprised to learn (tentatively) that the average Ancient Egyptian male was in fact about 5'6," which creates a little bit of a mystery, here. What's more, Rameses II himself evidently stood about 5'11" in his prime(!)

  • But we are animals who can recognize and control whatever urges we have.

    --> insert bark-like, high-pitched PeeWee Herman laugh! <--

    Anyway, I think I lean in your general direction on this, but I'm open to the idea that it might help someone, somewhere. At least, I don't think I've ever heard of this type of /c before.

  • I've queried ChatGPT to some extent on this, bringing in cross-examples and fact corroboration, and yes-- it seems that the (peculiarly large) chest opening was indeed used to help let air enter the suit before embarking. A key point is that the opening would then be tied off somehow, sealing it up tightly, such that water couldn't enter even if the wearer fell in to the drink.

    It's also possible that what looks like the darker, back interior skin of the suit might actually be the back of an extra chamber which of course would exist on the front of the suit, i.e. in front of the wearer's body. Which means that it might alternately function as a storage pouch for useful items, something which personally makes just as much (or more) sense to me.

    Finally, the suit is evidently Inupiat or Yup’ik in origin, made from seal or walrus intestine.

    @karlhungus42@lemmy.world
    @Headofthebored@lemmy.world

  • The Abu Simbel statues seem to be biggest in the world, about 2x the height of the one in the WP link.

    As for the ones in the OP pic, assuming it's not stretched horizontally, they certainly have the most unusual proportions I've ever seen in Egyptian statuary. That is-- squat, unusually thick front-to-back, and with disproportionally large heads. Interesting!

  • New Communities @lemmy.world

    European Graphic Novels+ is moving to PieFed.Social (link & info in post)