‹text› method allows anyone to change the font as well as to translate the text.
‹path› method is “embedded” (if you will), and thus, not translatable and the font design is fixed.
It's licensed under #CreativeCommons#BySA 4.0 because the source file, in PNG format, is under the same license. I actually prefer to release it under CC0/CCzero (a.k.a. Public Domain). Although in some jurisdictions, it can only be Public Domain because there's nothing artistic about an ISO-based keyboard layout.
Le 5 mars 1535, les représentants de la Ville de Lyon prennent une #délibération consulaire dans laquelle ils décident de remplacer François #Rabelais dans ses fonctions de #médecin à l'Hôtel-Dieu de #Lyon, du fait de ses absences répétées.
Voici donc sous vos yeux ébahis la lettre de #licenciement
de Rabelais, conservée aux #ArchivesDeLyon sous la cote BB 55 (abîmée par un dégât des eaux ancien).
Cette décision fait partie d'un registre de délibérations consulaires, l'ancêtre des registres de délibérations municipales : il s'agit des documents les plus importants du pouvoir municipal.
Vous avez donc raison @CharlesNepote : il y a un soin particulier apporté à l'écriture dans ces registres.
le bon côté d'avoir beaucoup de documents à concevoir est que ça permet de parcourir la médiathèque #WikiCommons. Voilà le High Trestle Trail Bridge du coté de Madrid (ne le cherchez pas en Espagne, c'est dans l'Iowa) Tony Webster, CC0 https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:High_Trestle_Trail_Bridge,_Madrid,_Iowa,_United_States_(Unsplash_F9o7u-CnDJk).jpg
Hello, I'm Wikimedian in residence at Toulouse University, France: I train academics on #Wikipédia, #Wikidata, #Wikicommons, #Lingualibre, #OpenScience for better information flow and free education. I created the Graphic workshops, periodically write on conflicts, humans rights, and Chinese culture, topped the Covid Task Force. Since 2012 I fight for #languages conservation via Lingualibre, currently focus on signed languages and Occitan whistle speech. Follow me for more :3 :tireless_barnstar:
Searching for images on Wikimedia Commons has not been easy. The text-based search we use on Wikipedia is very good at finding relevant documents in a corpus of text, but not so good at finding relevant images in a collection of sparsely labeled media files. Here's a blog post on our innovative approach to refining search capabilities for a more remarkable image-finding experience: https://diff.wikimedia.org/2023/08/04/improving-image-search-on-wikimedia-commons/
This is Bronislaw Debski (1874-1927), a Polish botanist/entomologist. After his collections and library were destroyed during the retreat of Russian troops in WWI he moved to Egypt, as one does.
I've met many a botanist and entomologist, and not one of them looked as dashing and svelte as this - who else could pull off flowers in the hat like this?!
"… Monaghan and Hermann determined that the mound was built around 2,100–2,300 years ago (300-100 BCE) during the Adena period. It was subsequently rebuilt (or repaired) about 900 years ago (1100 CE) during the Fort Ancient period …"
#WikiCommons image of Ohio Historical Marker with raised text: Serpent Mound, dated 2003. Photo by Stepshep, 2007. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Serpent_Mound_Plaque.jpg #WikiCommons image of Serpent Mound in South-West Ohio. Harper's New Monthly Magazine Volume 104 December 1901 to May 1902. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Harper%27s_New_Monthly_Magazine_Volume_104_December_1901_to_May_1902_(1902)_(14803170263).jpg
Annie here! My favorite site to show new Wikimedia contributors is https://wikishootme.toolforge.org which shows nearby landmarks that need photos. Gonna snap a pic of this park in Brooklyn next time I'm nearby! Created by the incredible @magnusmanske (whose many, many Wikimedia achievements include creating the first article on German Wikipedia)