and then you start nesting trees so deep that it's hard to distinguish between the different levels D:
halfway_neko
yeah, that's understandable. i'd never thought about it that way before.
personally i use enby as a way to say that i am in the middle / don't really care.
i think the issue comes from the fact that saying non-binary means specifically non-{man,woman}. whereas i've always interpreted it as just non-"specific gender".
to me it's the etc. of gender labels, but i realise that not everyone that i think it describes would want to identify with it.
(and that means it becomes it's own label, and now we have to figure out what to call everyone_else
all over again. (maybe the whole idea of gender labels was rigged from the start))
oh. i guess i'm using the wrong editors then :P
i'd probably use tabs if they weren't so massive by default.
do people actually use 8 space wide tabs? if so, what for?
please do not wear the cat.
source engine aesthetic was peak. i still love it, and nothing's been able to replicate it. some games have tried, but the source feel is just unique.
i always love stacking books in barney's interrogation room and trying to shove as many objects as i can in to kleiner's mini teleporter.
i also remember having to wait for headcrabs to finish their death animation before i could move forward in hl1,, so that's fun :P
real :(
yeah. you're right.
it's not like i blindly trust the votes to tell me what's right and wrong, but they still influence my thoughts. i could just sort by new, but i feel like that's almost as easy to manipulate.
i guess it comes back to the topic of the post. where and how i get my information is always going to affect me.
i'm sure other platforms are no better than lemmy with manipulating content, but maybe for different reasons. i just have to choose the right places to spend my time.
isn't that what the upvote/downvote buttons are for? although to be fair, i'd much rather the people of lemmy decide which things are good and interesting than some "algorithm"
the real Year of the Linux Desktop™ was the friends we made along the way.
the circle of ~~life~~ dungeon
space, ctrl, or sometimes the entire numpad at once. it's just one big button :P