22:5522:55, 18 September 2022diffhist−20
m
Tabby cat
→Orange tabby: While I am not usually very good at being concise, it jumped out at me that the sentence <i>“While most orange tabby cats are male, about 20% are female.”</i> was a lot more words than were needed to say what it said. Much more clear and concise to say that 80% are male.
08:3008:30, 14 November 2021diffhist+2
Spahn Ranch
Corrected coordinates per Google Maps. The coordinates that were here pointed to someone's private house, about 2,000 feet west and slightly north of what appears to be the correct location.
05:1405:14, 9 November 2020diffhist0
Activia
The numbered ticks in my two contributed images are at eleven (11) micron intervals, not ten (10). I know that's kind of an odd interval, but it's how it is with my microscope. The scale is built in into my 15× eyepiece, and when used with my 100× objective, that's how the scale works out—eleven (11) microns per numbered tick.Tag: Manual revert
14:4714:47, 17 January 2020diffhist+22
Fantasy Island
I've just been binge-watching old episodes on
Sony Crackle. The line is definitely •NOT• spoken by Mr. Villechaize as “Ze plane!” After seeing the opening sequence a dozen times, I can say that he definitely does not start the word “the” with a Z sound. My ears seem to be a bit ambiguous as to whether he's pronouncing it with the correct TH sound, or something between that and a D sound, but it's not the Z sound.
00:1800:18, 2 December 2019diffhist−1
Cockchafer
As the insect in question is not a true bug, the common name <i>“maybug”</i> needs to be written as one word,not two. It is only correct to write <i>“bug”</i> as a separate word, when describing an insect that is a true bug.
20:5720:57, 10 August 2019diffhist−1
m
Skywalker family
→History: Fixed an instanceof Han Solo being referred to with the feminine pronoun <i>“she”. A long time ago,in a galaxy far, far away, they were clear about the differences between men and women, and which pronoun to use. Sadly, not so much true here, today.
13:4513:45, 29 April 2019diffhist−19
Nikon Z-mount
Removed “full-frame digital” from the sentence “Nikon full-frame digital SLR cameras have used the Nikon F-mount, with its 44mm diameter, since 1959.” Digital cameras have not existed nearly that long. Though used in film-based SLRs since 1959, the F-mount did not appear in a digital camera until the
Kodak DCS 100 in 1991.