Jaredlong
Jaredlong t1_j94crgk wrote
Reply to Weekly History Questions Thread. by AutoModerator
Maybe this is way too broad, but how did hereditary monarchs actually hold on to power? It was always presented to me as "Well, he's the son of the previous king, and everyone just agrees that's how kings work, so everyone just goes along with it." But the older I get, the more skeptical I am that the social class just below the monarch would blindly subject themselves to the monarch's authority for the sake of upholding tradition. Yet, many hereditary monarchies managed to hold onto power for centuries. How? How did they keep the other nobles complacent? Money? Violence? Or did the other nobles see themselves as equals with the monarchical family and didn't care that some guy was calling himself a king?
Jaredlong t1_j877bf7 wrote
Reply to comment by tyeishing in I am Tye Abbott, the solo developer of Yuma Will Burn- An interactive moral thriller where choices have long-lasting story and mechanical consequences. Ask me anything! by tyeishing
If desicions affect future events, then all those possible branches create a multiverse of timelines the player could experience.
Jaredlong t1_j205b1q wrote
Reply to comment by bad_at_hearthstone in Publicnote.com - a notepad website where you enter any title to access a note. You are free to modify any note you find. by unchikuso
Jfc, I didn't mean it's literal actual encryption. In terms of the difficulty of someone unintentionally finding the note it's LIKE encryption because they'd need the specific key to find it.
Has your middle school English class not covered similes yet?
Jaredlong t1_j1zldlp wrote
Reply to comment by bad_at_hearthstone in Publicnote.com - a notepad website where you enter any title to access a note. You are free to modify any note you find. by unchikuso
Yeah, create a long enough random string of letters for the note name and it'd act like a type of key encryption. security through obscurity
Edit: To make the literalist pedants happy.
Jaredlong t1_j9765gr wrote
Reply to Pharmacological vitamin C inhibits mTOR signaling and tumor growth by degrading Rictor and inducing HMOX1 expression (Feb 2023) by basmwklz
Let's revise the adage to "An orange a day, keeps the doctor away."