• 1 Post
  • 39 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: July 3rd, 2023

help-circle



  • Depends on what you want out of it, the level if automation etc.

    Installing a system ruleset, adding a few modules and other things on that level is easy. If you can use an app store you are set. Writing custom things I have no clue about.

    Finally using it. I’ve found it smoother than roll20 and fantasy grounds. Just not having to deal with roll20’s technical baggare is truly awesome.

    In the end my impression is that on a technical level it is much easier to handle. Less figuring out how not to have the platform work against you and actually work with it.

    You, depending on your ISP, may have troubles self hosting. There is the biggest technical hurdle.
















  • From where I live in my small Swedish town (about 8k inhabitants), so pretty much the whole town

    2 grocery stores

    2 convenience stores

    2 bus stops (5 lines)

    At least 10 resturants including a burger joint, a thai and a chinese. Most pizza places though

    1 hardware/home appliance store

    1 hardware/gardening store

    2 home appliance stores

    3 clothing stores, of which one for babies and one for sports

    4 (?) Hairdresser

    2 pharmacies

    3 second hand stores

    3 gyms, one of which at the sport centre

    A sport centre with swimming hall, general sport hall, bowling alleys, gym and fields for outdoor sports

    Two large schools and a couple of daycares

    Church

    2 graveyards

    Police station

    Municipal services

    2 Opticians

    1 library

    Think that may be it


  • Water levels were lower during the glacial periods because of all the water in those frozen glaciers. The brittish islands were connected to mainland Europe for example. So there really isn’t that much of a suggestion that sea levels were lower, established science that.

    The original commentator probably got dates (or zeroes) mixed up. More than ten thousand years ago definitely doesn’t put anything on the other side of the last glacial period (one hundred and twenty thousand tears ago).

    An interesting side note is that due to the sea level rise many of the first human settlements of the Americas are now well under water and possibly lost forever. This makes dating the human arrival very difficult as we only have later very much inland settlements to go by.