ThomasKole
No user record in our sample, but ThomasKole has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but ThomasKole has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
It's all CC-BY-4.0, so, yep.
Not at the moment, the problem is that the total project is quite large and would require me to write quite some documentation if you wanted to get started. Once I free up some time I might!
As far as I know, his family did speak it never passed it on, so he learn it afterwards. So semi-native, I guess. The variant is a central one, relatively close to the variant that would have been spoken by the Mexica.
Certainly not. Take a look at Blenders new Geometry Nodes system.
People have devoted their entire lives to studying this, but I can give a very short overview: First, there's early colonial maps, such as the Mapa de Uppsala, which give us a decent understanding of the city. Then…
No streetview level, the reconstruction is definitely "impressionistic" in that way. There's only illusion of detail, it does not hold up up close.
I can't really say why I got interested, it just happened. History in general is fascinating, and I find Meoamerican history extra special. I don't have any concrete plants for more, but who knows!
I don't know much about that, but one of the districts was called "Moyotlan", or "place of the mosquitos" or "place of the gnats".
The area is huge, to a point where you have to worry about floating-point imprecision. The sheer amount of stuff in the scene is pretty crazy. Perhaps I can bake it down to something like what you might see in Google…
A bit of artistic license, but the trees play a crucial role. They are Ahuejotes, and they keep together the plots of farmland called Chinampas. You can see some of this today in Xochimilco. We don't know if that was…
Hey all, author here! If you have any questions, feel free to ask. The question I always get from tech people - yes, all open source software. 90% Blender, 9% Gimp, 1% Darktable or so.