

@fell
> Turns out Honey Chicken is a purely Australian invention
Like butter chicken from Indian restaurants … in the anglophone world only, apparently. What is with us anglophones and our propensity for consuming jungle fowl in yellowish fluids?
Free human being of this Earth. Pākeha in Aotearoa.
Be excellent to each other!
BTW When I say Trained #MOLE, I mean generative models, what the hype bubble calls “AI”, see;
https://disintermedia.net.nz/invasion-of-the-mole-trainers/
Email: strypey @disintermedia.net.nz
Jabber: [email protected]
Matrix: @strypey:matrix.iridescent.nz
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@fell
> Turns out Honey Chicken is a purely Australian invention
Like butter chicken from Indian restaurants … in the anglophone world only, apparently. What is with us anglophones and our propensity for consuming jungle fowl in yellowish fluids?
@morrowind
"Duckquill has built in support for loading Mastodon comments see (the example on the theme site), given the link where you posted it. But I don’t much care for Mastodon …
I prefer Lemmy, where you don’t really care about followers, as long as your content is good and posted to right community(ies). So I made my own."
https://blog.coship.fyi/blog/lemmy-comments/
Well, I’m going to reply from a Mastodon account anyway. So there : P


Well that worked, I can see my reply as a comment on both Lemmy.nz (where I found the thread) and on https://lemmy.eco.br where @P4ulin_Kbana is posting.
Now someone reply, I want to see if this works.


@P4ulin_Kbana
> I’ve heard it’s (currently) impossible to post on Mastodon with a Lemmy account due to how both are differently built, unless you’re referring to seeing a Lemmy discussion from Mastodon
I’m trying to reply to this with a Mastodon account. I’ll be interested to see if it appears in the discussion on Lemmy instances, and if replies to it from Lemmy appear in my @mentions here.
@RecursiveParadox
> butter chicken is indigenous but tikka masala is the BIR style dish
Wikipedia agrees with you. I’m convinced. Who knew? I guess maybe the names confused the people who told me that. A name like “tikka masala” sounds traditional, while I can’t think of anything more anglophone sounding than “butter chicken” ; )