Since my first time seeing those EV suits (which was in the 1080p remaster of TOS), I have wondered about the visor portion of the costume, which is obviously made of a very fine mesh instead of a solid sheet of plastic or something. Was that just for production reasons (making breathing easier for the actors, less glare for the cameras, better sound quality of the actors dialog, things like that), and the only reason I can even tell in the first place that it is actually mesh is just because I am watching it fifty years later in a quality that was unheard of at the time of filming? Or is it actually supposed to be a fancy futuristic mesh-like material that just has properties far beyond what we have now (like the mesh masks worn by surgeons in Babylon 5)?
Did they ever have any more contact with the Pegasus galaxy after they made it back to Earth? I know Stargate Universe definitely had some direct ties to events/characters from Stargate SG-1, but I can't remember if they ever even alluded to the adventures in Stargate Atlantis.
Hmm, I think this is an Mbin vs Lemmy issue. There are two differences in the URL:
The broken URL has %2C instead of ,. This part does not make a difference, because that resolves to a comma anyway
The broken URL has = at the very end for some reason. This is what breaks it. Remove that character, and the URL works fine
The weird thing here is that the broken URL only ever shows up on Mbin. Below are a few different links to the comment in which you shared the broken URL. If you view the comment on your Mbin instance, it is indeed broken. But if you view it on this community's Lemmy instance or my home instance, your same comment actually has the working URL. Something about how the post/comment were federated must have messed things up.
Are you just referring to how Python uses the English and/or instead of the more common &&/||? I think what the user above you was talking about was Lua's strange ternary syntax using and/or.
But it’s trivial to use an external tool to see who voted on what regardless of whose account it is
Is there a tool made for this out there? As far as I'm aware, the simplest way for the average user to do that is to run their own instance and then manually query its database directly, which is far from trivial.
One might look at this combined name as simply "Data, but with a Y". But if one were to instead consider the letters of this combined name to be equally taken from each character, then "YA" comes from Yar and "TA" comes from Data. Thus, my logical conclusion is that it should be pronounced "Yah-ta".
Since my first time seeing those EV suits (which was in the 1080p remaster of TOS), I have wondered about the visor portion of the costume, which is obviously made of a very fine mesh instead of a solid sheet of plastic or something. Was that just for production reasons (making breathing easier for the actors, less glare for the cameras, better sound quality of the actors dialog, things like that), and the only reason I can even tell in the first place that it is actually mesh is just because I am watching it fifty years later in a quality that was unheard of at the time of filming? Or is it actually supposed to be a fancy futuristic mesh-like material that just has properties far beyond what we have now (like the mesh masks worn by surgeons in Babylon 5)?