Posted on 07/27/2009 9:13:03 AM PDT by skimbell
Anybody know what happened to the view counter that used to be included in the header for each new post. Haven't seen it for a couple of days
Are you logged on? -— sorry
Im logged on but havent seen the counter in days.
Jim Thompson took that with him when we banned him.
If he posted, then he’s logged on.
I haven’t seen it in a few days, either.
Oh no you didn't...
I saw it walking down the street smoking a cigar yesterday
I saw the “—views” yesterday(may have been very early yesterday) but am not seeing it now.
I’ve been wondering the same thing ... thanks for asking
It works in the popular articles.
If you check the section that shows your posts the counter is on those.
Hope it comes back - love the counter.
John,
Thanks for all your efforts.
I assume the counter has been causing problems?
Hope they are solved quickly and easily.
I assume you’ll be manning the fort in Fresno during the Sept DC gig?
Prayers for you guys. Things are heating up a lot more and a lot faster than I’d ever want them to. Between now and 1 Jan sounds like it’s going to be a very traumatic time for our Republic, if not the planet.
Please take care of yourselves and each other. We count on you SOOO MUCH FOR SOOOO MUCH.
LUB
HUGS AND PRAYERS,
John,
FWIW,
When I clicked post . . . on my last to you, I got a blank screen back. If that’s of any help to you. LOL.
I've been banned?
and why do some threads have more replies than views???
Many people choose to reply with their eyes closed.
Business Models in Antiquity
Monday, July 27, 2009 11:47:42 AM · by SunkenCiv · 5 replies · 111+ views
The Globalist ^ | Tuesday, July 21, 2009 | Karl Moore and David C. Lewis
The Phoenicians were not the first ancient people to sponsor long-distance seaborne trade, but they and their Carthaginian children were the first to perfect it. They are the real pioneers of what we will call maritime capitalism. How did they do it? By taking advantage of a unique window of opportunity. During the Middle Bronze Age (traditionally dated to the first half of the second millennium BCE), first Babylon and then Egypt dominated the Middle East. As their power faded, no single power dominated. In this climate of peace and stability, trade took the place of war. Babylonia tried to...
When and wear: the prehistory of clothing
Monday, July 27, 2009 11:30:16 AM · by SunkenCiv · 16 replies · 186+ views
ScienceAlert (Australia) ^ | Monday, September 1, 2008 | Simon Couper
The doctoral researcher from the School of Archaeology and Anthropology at ANU is simply making it clear that he’s not concerned with the vicissitudes of fashion... Instead, he’s fascinated by how humans came to develop clothing, and how that innovation might have in turn given our species an evolutionary edge over other hominids... He has credentials in medicine, psychology, prehistoric archaeology, and is completing a thesis in biological anthropology. This complicated curriculum vitae makes sense in light of Gilligan’s project: his drive to understand the physiological, psychological and prehistoric aspects of clothing... “Modern humans have been around 200,000 years, and...
Free Republic technical question
Monday, July 27, 2009 11:13:03 AM · by skimbell · 18 replies · 315+ views vanity | 7-27-09 | skimbell
Anybody know what happened to the view counter that used to be included in the header for each new post. Haven’t seen it for a couple of days
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