Count to ten thousand! (Part 1)

2 Likes

Thirteen forty-five

O.K. 1
So how do I post an image?

You should be able to. The tiny hard drive icon with an up arrow.

@TobinL dude, what?

just drag and drop the file into the composer window (or whatever you call the place where you type the replies.)

Or, if you’re posting something hosted on the internet already, just copy-paste the URL into the composer window on it’s own line (make sure the image URL ends in a common picture file extension i.e. .jpg etc. If it doesn’t have it from the host site, you can type it into the end and the Discourse software should recognize it.

in other words:
www.internet/here's-a-pic-relevant-to-the-thread.png

will work since it’s on it’s own line. I think you may have to hit return again for it to show up. but putting it here www.internet/here's-a-pic-relevant-to-the-thread.png will not work.

d’oh yeah that too. durrr i do the stupid today.

1 Like

i did the stupid at work all day, but now I’m on my own time :^)

1 Like
1 Like

1 Like

4 Likes

1 Like

1 Like

The Combat of the Thirty (26 March 1351[1]) (French: Combat des Trente) was an episode in the Breton War of Succession, a war fought to determine who would rule the Duchy of Brittany. It was an arranged fight between picked combatants from both sides of the conflict.

It was fought at a site midway between the Breton castles of Josselin and Ploërmel between thirty champions, knights and squires on each side, in a challenge issued by Jean de Beaumanoir, a captain of Charles of Blois supported by the King of France, to Robert Bemborough, a captain of Jean de Montfort supported by the King of England.

After a hard-fought battle, the Franco-Breton Blois faction emerged victorious. The combat was later celebrated by medieval chroniclers and balladeers as a noble display of the ideals of chivalry. In the words of Jean Froissart, the warriors “held themselves as valiantly on both sides as if they had been all Rolands and Olivers.”[2] This idealised account conflicts with a version according to which the combat arose from the mistreatment of the local population by Bemborough.

From wikipedia

4 Likes

Heh.

Joystick for a Commodore 16
Mouse for a Commodore PC-III

Commodore gets no love…

5 Likes

2 Likes

2 Likes