Parliament Interpretive Centre
The Parliament Interpretive Centre was an Ontario Heritage Trust museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was located at the site of the Upper Canada parliament buildings at Front Street and Berkeley Street.
The museum opened in February 2012.[1] Much of the museum's displays focused on the War of 1812, and the burning of the Upper Canada legislature during the brief American occupation of York. The museum remained open throughout 2012, 2013, 2014, and into mid-2015 -- 200 years after the War of 1812, which ran from 1812–1815.
The building is currently rented to a car dealership, although the property is publicly owned.[2] A final disposition for the site has not been made. Evidence of the parliament buildings was uncovered in 2000.[2]
External Pages
gollark: It also seemed like I did have to bind still, or it did slightly more nothing. Maybe the multicast APIs are just particularly accursed somehow.
gollark: > what's convoluted about that? that's IPHow is it IP? The internet is packet-switched, not circuit-switched.
gollark: Also, potato.
gollark: You have to `bind` and `connect` still, and there seem to be separate "receive from" and "send to" things anyway, and there's a special "join_multicast_v6" thing, and with multicast stuff you have to worry about different interfaces and somehow binding to different addresses than the one you actually want to listen on and it returns useless errors and is generally aææææææææææa.
gollark: UDP is not a stream-oriented protocol and yet you have to muck with sockets in convoluted ways.
References
- "Ontario Heritage Trust launches Heritage Week 2012 with opening of Parliament interpretive centre in Toronto". 2012-02-17. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
- "Remnants of Upper Canada's first Parliament site buried under a Toronto car wash". CBC Radio. June 30, 2017. Retrieved August 21, 2019.
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