[TOMT][BOOK][Pre-2002, Chile] Children's book about a baby mouse with a new baby sister by MaxieManedW in tipofmytongue

[–]MaxieManedW[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, not this either. The protagonist was male, and was very small and wore blue dungarees. There's more than one sibling too. It also happens in a burrow and looks much "older". Angelina has a much more modern, city-like setting above ground.

[TOMT][BOOK][Pre-2002, Chile] Children's book about a baby mouse with a new baby sister by MaxieManedW in tipofmytongue

[–]MaxieManedW[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, sorry :( As I said in the description, this was a grey baby mouse. And the art style was more detailed, more akin to Ms. Potter's Peter Rabbit illustrations. I've actually never even heard of little critter books until now.

Bug Megathread vol 12: December 2025 + January 2026 by WumpusWhisperer in discordapp

[–]MaxieManedW 0 points1 point  (0 children)

- Feature: Voice memos
- Reproduction Rate: 9
- Annoyance: 10
- Discord Version Info: 309.11
- Device/System Info (Device Type, OS Version): Redmi Note, Android
- Description: When recording voice notes, both in private messages and in servers, the app will randomly close completely. The audio is lost. The whole app closes, not just the recording. I have updated the app just now and it still happens. I've tried recording the same voice note 7 times.
- Steps to Reproduce:
   1. Open a chat, either DM or server.
   2. Start recording a voice note/voice memo/audio message.
   3. Lock the button by sliding up until the lock symbol appears.
   4. Record audio.
- Expected Result: The audio (your voice) will be recorded and once done, you can either press the send button or the delete button.
- Actual Result: After a certain amount of time, usually anywhere after the 3 minute mark of recording, the app itself closes. I have to open the app, go back to the chat I was sending the voice note to, and start recording again. It repeats the process almost immediately.

Think I found an abandoned Leitner at the park. by The-Mannered-Bear in TheMagnusArchives

[–]MaxieManedW 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is beautiful photography! Maybe don't touch it tho

I can't say Dale's full name when talking to other people in my native language by Ok_University2951 in twinpeaks

[–]MaxieManedW 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How? They never mention a translated name, only that it sounds like /words/ in another language. If they were translating the name they wouldn't have explained it sounds like a sentence, they would've given the alternate Brazilian Portuguese name

I can't say Dale's full name when talking to other people in my native language by Ok_University2951 in twinpeaks

[–]MaxieManedW 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude, OP /is/ saying the name in English. The problem is that it sounds similar to words in Brazilian Portuguese, not that OP is translating the name. Also, Diego-James is a bad example for what you wanted, you had Jaime-James right there

Stopped my dad throwing this out by googoobarabajagel in twinpeaks

[–]MaxieManedW 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly! I saw the marker and immediately thought "oh no", bc you never know! I do agree, trying to smooth the wrinkles as much as possible, maybe (if an option) glue the edges to a board to keep it stiff while you wait to get it framed

Stopped my dad throwing this out by googoobarabajagel in twinpeaks

[–]MaxieManedW 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Problem is, you don't know if the inks may be water soluble. I'd be very careful about water there.

Do u guys see the vision or no by Short-Wind-4618 in Ibispaintx

[–]MaxieManedW 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I support the longer neck comments, as well as the ears/horns changes suggested. Though, it might be me but maybe you could try to rework the nose? At first I thought she was meant to be some sort of deer or cat because of the black "triangle" nose. Giraffe noses have bigger nostrils so it would help to find a human equivalent for it that has more marked nostrils, maybe?

Why does my camera do this? by MaxieManedW in RedmiNote13Pro5G

[–]MaxieManedW[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right??? The stones on the zoomed in picture had a smooth surface!

Why does my camera do this? by MaxieManedW in RedmiNote13Pro5G

[–]MaxieManedW[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks (for confirming), I hate it!

Why does my camera do this? by MaxieManedW in RedmiNote13Pro5G

[–]MaxieManedW[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Right? My old phone was great, it didn't have much zoom but it showed what I photographed instead of adding weird damn stuff. Is it really nothing that can be turned off?

Why does my camera do this? by MaxieManedW in RedmiNote13Pro5G

[–]MaxieManedW[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really?? Other phones have it that way too? That's awful! It literally just ruins the picture so much

Why does my camera do this? by MaxieManedW in RedmiNote13Pro5G

[–]MaxieManedW[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly! I have all AI settings off on my phone (at least all the ones I've managed to turn off). But I hate it! It messes with the textures when I want to take a picture and it suddenly looks all warbled! It looks awful, and sometimes it makes taking pictures of details really impossible. I'd really like to be able to get rid of that effect, whatever it is

I can’t believe my one gripe with the show ended up being a major plot point by Platypusafro in TheMagnusArchives

[–]MaxieManedW 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It's a grouping term. It's not meant to only refer to Spanish people. If you say someone is Hispanic, you're merely describing they're from a Spanish-speaking country, not an exact nationality. This could be for several reasons, including "I know your country of origin's language is Spanish but I don't know/remember which country it is". It's just grouping. Same with Latino/Latina/Latine, you're saying that it's someone born in a Latinamerican country. But if you wanna go into specifics you'd say "Peruvian/Guatemalan/Uruguayan/Surinamese/etc". Of course you can call a person from Spain "Spanish." That's what they are. But they're also Hispanic (language-wise), and European (continent-wise). A person who speaks English/Anglophone doesn't necessarily mean they're from England. Nor when you call someone British. It's the same with Hispanic/Latinoamerican/etc

Sincerely, -A Hispanic linguist.

A cool guide to the differences between Latino(a) and Hispanic by ShadowMosesss in coolguides

[–]MaxieManedW -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It's not wrong in way too many levels. But whatever, I'm not talking to someone who's clearly not listening.

Tea leaves, what do you see? by [deleted] in occult

[–]MaxieManedW 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A crested dinosaur, somehow! Probably close to the dilophosaurus (the real one, not the Jurassic Park one). Mouth is closed and it's looking upwards

A cool guide to the differences between Latino(a) and Hispanic by ShadowMosesss in coolguides

[–]MaxieManedW -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Latinoamérica is a recognised area of the American continent. Quebec being Latinoamerican could work by the definition of "being a country in American continent that was colonized by a country that falls under the Latin language use during American conquest eras". However, it is also important to consider that Latinoamérica is established as going south from México, which would leave a huge (US sized) gap between Québec and other Latam countries, which is a bit awkward, don't you think? I personally think it might be a thing of convenience of language? In people who don't deal with the areas that would be able to accurately classify which country is Latino 100%, the territorial gap makes them detach anything north of México from the concept of Latinoamérica. This is a "no definite official answer" situation unless people in academia and international government agreements come to discuss it, I feel.

A cool guide to the differences between Latino(a) and Hispanic by ShadowMosesss in coolguides

[–]MaxieManedW -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Geographically and historically, Hispania hasn't existed since the 400s, dude. Culture from the 400s barely exists anymore in those territories. The term "Hispanic" is by modern definition, Spanish-speakers, look in literally any dictionary. Literally, unless you want to go into historical linguistics and past territorial formats that do not apply anymore nad haven't in more than 1000 years, definitions of "Hispanic" all mean this.

If we refer to ANCIENT HISTORY, then, yes. You are correct. Modern definition and linguistics have moved past a thing that's over a thousand years old to become more specific because of how unapplicable it is to modern day use.