I totally get that! I think the specific answer they give in the episode is that he “played” at the edge of the universe by trying to hold off the Not Things with vampire rules. I’m not sure of the mechanics of it, but apparently playing at the edge of the universe lets in the Toymaker.
I don’t find this answer very satisfying myself, however, but I can’t seem to find a better one.
I’m not entirely sure the Doctor even knows for sure, or if he’s just guessing. I guess this is just one of those things where we have to suspend our disbelief and just accept it needed to happen for the episode to happen.
Definitely feels weird. I know it really doesn’t matter, being a time travel show and all, but the doctor splitting into two different people was definitely something I was not expecting. I hope they can wrap this up in a satisfying end, and that they don’t just leave 14 on earth never to be seen again.
Fun episode. I loved the puppetry scene, but the bi-generation feels a bit weird to me. Interesting if they want to keep 14 around, or if he’s gone after the Christmas special.
AFAIK Lemmy counts active users as users who “engage”, meaning they post, comment or vote. Falling DAU/MAUs could be due to users not feeling obligated to engage, and instead engaging when they feel like it.
How does this work? I’ve been considering using a Raspberry Pi for Pihole, but I’ve been discouraged as it wouldn’t work for YouTube anyways. How I understand it is that Pihole is DNS, which just blocks certain domains. Since Youtube ads and videos are indistinguishable from a networking POV, it won’t be able to block them. Am I wrong? Is there something I have misunderstood?
It seems like a lot of Lemmy users are slightly radical american “leftists”. This is an example of this on Lemmy.world. It seems that some users see Lemmy as a forum for politicly “left”-leaning americans, not a general purpose forum. Maybe some people prefer an echo chamber?
Can’t speak for Swedish or Norwegian cuisine, but I am having a hard time coming up with “traditional” Danish vegan dishes. Most of the vegetarian dishes I know of will at least use milk. But if plain, boiled, white potatoes is something for you, that would be as traditional as it gets.