I was about to berate you for trying to claim that you made the PolyKybd, but then I looked at the username.
I was about to berate you for trying to claim that you made the PolyKybd, but then I looked at the username.
This doesn’t look ergonomic at all. It looks like instead of potential wrist issues, you get thumb issues.
Yet, you only streamed because you needed to pay rent, or didn’t you?
It’s pretty fun to having guys go on and on about how big/suckable your dick is and how much they want you to fuck them. If I was single I’d probably do it again, even without being paid.
Also, I did not propose immediately anything that would threaten the activity in the way you practiced it
When you responded to @SlothMama@lemmy.world, you said that you were against all porn.
To be clear, I’m reading your response as against porn in all forms and for all audiences based on your wording, is that what you mean?
Yes.
I was showing one of the many examples of being in the sex industry, without any abuse and without it being “paid rape” as you put it. You didn’t say “some”, “a lot”, or even “most”. You simply generalized all sex work as harmful to the worker/performer.
My problem with pornography is the reality of it as well as the reality of prostitution in general. The porn industry is the home of abuse, in every sense. First in the rawest sense, the physical and mental abuse that actresses go through; second in the reproduction and propagation of the culture of abuse, considering that it is the most recurrent theme in porn films; third in the economic sense, pornography, like prostitution in general, is the sale of consent: the actress or prostitute receives money to have sex with someone she would not have sex with under other circumstances, in short: paid rape.
I paid rent using a webcam years ago, and I am not sure that your points really apply to all porn/sex-work. I am not denying that it doesn’t apply to some of it though.
Men paid me to chat with them, let them watch me jerk off, and sometimes watch them watch me jerk off. I was probably going to jerk off anyway, and knowing what I was so attractive that people would pay me to see me do it was a turn on.
I don’t unless a website requires that I talk to one as a poor excuse for customer service.
So, less than once a year.
It doesn’t have to be!
“?” in a URL often means “Delete from the ‘?’ until the end to avoid garbage”
Lemmy.ca defaults to: https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/d751342c-5d83-4a5e-9b6b-9817e03db780.jpeg
But if you’re on .world, you can do a little snip and things still work:
https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/5441af5c-19cd-4ffb-aad8-94da9ea361a9.jpeg
OP really only counts for OC. You posted a picture of someone else’s post, they are OP.
Not since I was kicked out at 15 for being gay.
Happy Pride month!
Have you looked into Mint?
The linux mint forums make it seem like it works out of the box. I know that it worked out of the box for my Thinkpad x380, even the touchscreen, pen, and screen rotation.
by “client” do you mean “just use a browser”?
This is “ask Lemmy”, what is the question?
Before Markus starting saying racist shit, or Q-anon shit, or anti-trans shit.
you missed the “!”, so browsers parse that as an email address
Some games/software expected/relied on a certain CPU speed to run correctly. If your computer was faster than that, the software would run too fast. The turbo button let you toggle between the maximum speed your computer could go, and the speed that the software needed/expected in order to run normally.
Basically, there was an actual reason for the turbo button, it wasn’t just marketing on computers.
This seems like an issue with Backblaze, I think?
https://www.backblaze.com/docs/cloud-storage-create-and-manage-caps-and-alerts
It’s the correct move. I know a few Phd pro Ph who went this route in their 30s.
Instead of just listening to U1 students with the same bad takes/logic, they now help people with actual tangible problems in the real world.
They also went from “maybe I can afford name brand beans” to “maybe I shouldn’t eat out every day this week”.
I can’t complete the survey because of the questions.
Some questions are single choice but should allow for multiple, like 29.
Some questions are too broad, like question 17, “why?”.
x380 for the 2 in 1 gimmick!
Mint doesn’t ask for you to pay
Steam can’t tell if something is a “game” or not, so you do it the same way as playing a non-steam game through the launcher
https://www.pcmag.com/how-to/how-to-add-non-steam-games-to-your-steam-library