A free fork is called FossifyOrg
Caller in the desert.
My alternative account @[email protected] moderates https://sh.itjust.works/c/neurodivergent.
A free fork is called FossifyOrg
Looks as if someone were training a trolling bot with this account.
Not OP but i just found an answer. Top loaders may have a center agitator which is there to … agitate more – which we don’t want to do.
Any machine that is without a center agitator will be more gentle on clothes and less likely to cause shrinking due to fiber damage and consolidation. If you have a top-loading washer with a center agitator, reduce its impact on your garments by opting for a gentle or hand-wash cycle.
(from the same link that i posted in another comment)
Why does it happen? My first answer, it’s dur to felting which happens mostly with sorts of wool that have a hairs with a scaled surface. Felting (when producing felt) is done by moisturing, heating and heavy agitation, so that the scales interlock at a compressed state and then stay that way.
Search turns up several ways of shrinkage though, for different types of fiber: felting, relaxation, consolidation, and contraction. Interesting to read --> Why Do Clothes Shrink in the Wash?
The whole of paleontology/paleo-anthropology has this problem because for remains of organisms to be preserved certain conditions must be met, which is not the case everywhere at any time.
If i would guess, something like: look up “native american dwellings” and “how to make permanent shelters from tree branches”.
I’d say that’s the difference between the house (the whole building) and the hall (dk if this is the corect term) inside of the building. In a usual theater/opera house you’d have the main entrance in the front (of the building), then the audience room, and the stage/backstage at the back of the building. So the audience is usually facing the back of the house.
Is this a kōan? If not, we could make it one.
My dry take would be, it’s commonly deemed the least significant one. Though, some cultures/languages might sort them somewhat arbitrarily. … And how much final are we talking, anyway?
“Boring” people often have a good time with other “boring” people. So it’s maybe just a case of looking in the wrong places?