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How much is 1 point on Snapchat?

Snapchat says your score is the combined number of Snaps you've sent and received. You get one point for every Snap you send and a point for every Snap you receive. You don't get points for your Snapchat Stories.

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Snapchat's app is full of nuances and hidden features. Some say this makes Snapchat hard to use, so last week we put together a guide to help you navigate the app. One Snapchat feature that isn't immediately apparent is your Snapchat score. Here's how to find it. When you're looking at your received Snaps page, the header will say "snapchat." Tap on that.

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Two numbers come up. The first is the number of Snaps you've sent. The second is the number of Snaps you've received.

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Snapchat says your score is the combined number of Snaps you've sent and received. You get one point for every Snap you send and a point for every Snap you receive. You don't get points for your Snapchat Stories.

Screenshot

But! This system is pretty confusing — if you add up the number of my sent and received Snaps (3,159 + 4,223), you don't get my Snapchat score (7,582). Instead, you come up 200 points short, with 7,382. Power users have cooked up some theories for the widely noted discrepancy. Tech blog SnappTips has pontificated on this very topic: There is a theory doing the rounds in forums and discussion boards that you get 12 points for each snap you send out to the first 3 people and 20 points for each snap thereafter. This seems like a plausible explanation given that some users reportedly have Snapchat scores of 90,000 and more, some as high as 700,000. Another theory, and the most widely accepted one, is that you receive 1 point for each snap you send out and another 1 point for each snap you open. If you send a snap to multiple recipients, you still only get 1 point. With some discrepancy, Snapchat scores are based on your usage. So if you want to crank up your Snapchat score, start sending more Snaps.

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Why didn't most pioneers ride in their wagon?

People didn't ride in the wagons often, because they didn't want to wear out their animals. Instead they walked alongside them, getting just as dusty as the animals. The long journey was hard on both people and animals. It was even hard on the wagons, which usually had to be repaired several times during the trip.

End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, 1996

End of the Oregon Trail

A Local Legacy

Why are those three covered wagons surrounded by a fence? If you look closer you'll see that they aren't the kind of covered wagons you can ride in. They are being used as a canopy for the End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, a museum devoted to the history of the Oregon Trail. The Oregon Trail was a route used by people who traveled to Oregon Country, which is what Oregon was called before it became a state in 1859. The Oregon Trail was the most popular way to get to Oregon Country from about 1843 through the 1870s. The trail started in Missouri and covered 2,000 miles before ending in Oregon City. Most people moving west traveled in covered wagons, which were large enough for all their belongings as well as the food they needed for a journey that could take months. The wagons also provided shelter from the weather. Teams of oxen or mules pulled the wagons along the dusty trail. People didn't ride in the wagons often, because they didn't want to wear out their animals. Instead they walked alongside them, getting just as dusty as the animals. The long journey was hard on both people and animals. It was even hard on the wagons, which usually had to be repaired several times during the trip. To help remember the hardships these pioneers faced, Oregon City constructed this museum so others could learn about the lives and experiences of these pioneers.

page 1 of 1 About Local Legacies

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