It's a pretty nifty design. Is it traditional?
should know this already. :)
What in the gosh darn condescending non sequitur is that? I have a special kind of dislike for people who, instead of trying to promote learning for anyone and everyone at any stage, instead choose to ridicule people for having missed some trivial detail that has about as much in common with Bash as does COBOL (basically nothing). Web scripting is, unsurprisingly, its own skill, and it's very, surpassingly, extremely, stupendously, and obviously conceivable that someone could have years of Bash experience but only recently started putting around with scripting for things like API access or HTML parsing. But you should know this already. :)
It's a road on a man-made land bridge before and after this aqueduct. In this shot here, it's a bit hard to see, but the road is actually on a slight angle to make more room for the aqueduct. The walls around the road are only for this section, as out of frame the road is almost certainly on top of your bog standard land bridge.
I never remember this happening. Unless the Kazon make a return in S6/S7 (as I haven't finished those yet), the closest thing was the Silver Blood Harry™ (died with the rest of the duplicate ship) or the Deadlock Duplicate Harry™ that replaced the Harry that was killed when attempting to repair a hull breach.
Everyone knows the old rhyme, "Step in a cargo hold, break your back."
I did a reverse image search, and I guess it's by someone named Moosoppart.
Isn't that a stylistic constraint of all Memory Alpha wiki submissions?
I'm just glad that I can resell microphone windscreens as Tribble plushies if I ever need another source of income.
I've been meaning to watch more of the show, since I really love the Handyman Corner segments.
The traditional jumping frog is a very addicting model to fold. It works pretty well, too.