No, think about it, it makes a lot of sense. If you are covered in water, you are dripping wet. If you are covered in good clothes, you are covered in drip.
I'd also recommend EWW if you want something GTK based, it's much harder to configure IMO though, but it is very powerful. I find myself switching between Plasma' widgets, Conky, EWW every so often.
I am a furry on a furry instance, haven't seen any furry porn unless I actively seeked it out. I only did that because I didn't believe there wasn't any.
I have the same sentiment about my OpenSuse Tumbleweed & Windows 10 installs. I don't feel like this about my very simple Arch install. I think my issue is that I just don't understand how to fix either when there is an issue.
You've been getting dog dicks? If they're drawn and attached a human like beast, that's us and I'm sorry. If they're like, not that? That's not us, fuck those people.
I'm going have to entertain you for bit bit because this take is too crazy...
How do the options jump from acceptance to... the death penalty or castration?! Like I feel like there a gap there, what happened to everything in that gap?
All artists, the smaller ones especially. If you have a purely chronological feed (which is still an algorithm, just a very simple one) then your much more likely to only see the people who post the most and who posts right before you check the feed. With a more targeted algorithm, especially if it's being tuned to show the best content for you, not what'll get you addicted, can show you art you've missed from the artists that don't post very often. That tends to be people who don't do art full time or just take a long time on every piece. Statistics speaking, if you're following artists like me, who post just a bit more than once a month, you just won't ever see their work on a chronological timeline.
Lemmy's algo doesn't have the issue since post rank is based on votes & recent comments and you post to a specific community, but Mastodon does. I made the same post announcing a software project I'd spent ~3 days working on at that point. On mastodon, it stayed relavent for a few hours, but on Twitter the same post kept getting likes for ~3 days and it was mostly from people who'd actually be interested in the project, and not necessarily people who follow me.
So like.. not even like biking, gymnastics, programming, woodworking? Like all those in-depth hobbies are just like... off limits because they're resource intensive?
PHP is one hell of a drug.