Account Details | |
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SteamID64 | 76561198036273512 |
SteamID3 | [U:1:76007784] |
SteamID32 | STEAM_0:0:38003892 |
Country | Benin |
Signed Up | May 25, 2013 |
Last Posted | June 30, 2024 at 11:58 PM |
Posts | 297 (0.1 per day) |
Game Settings | |
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In-game Sensitivity | yes |
Windows Sensitivity | no |
Raw Input | 1 |
DPI |
1600 |
Resolution |
1920x1080 |
Refresh Rate |
239.940 |
Hardware Peripherals | |
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Mouse | Cooler Master MM720 |
Keyboard | a bed of nails |
Mousepad | lenovo charity handout |
Headphones | BLON BL-03 |
Monitor | Dell S2522HG |
1:17 AM - elliott: look at all these upvotes I got u
you need to try harder than this
Has anyone here tried using a desk bicycle?
I probably wouldn't use it while gaming (incompatible with foot pedal push-to-talk) But it seems like a desk bicycle would be even more healthy than a standing desk since, unlike a standing desk, you can actually move your body and do computer things at the same time.
toads_tfwhy do people even respond to elliot's posts
he's really easy to farm upvotes from tbh
edit: he's also one of the few people here who posts open-ended questions that have nothing to do with tf2. many posters come out of the woodwork when there's
1) a perception your reply will be noticed by someone
and 2) no prerequisite skill requirement
read what trippa said and rethink your life
eeelow motivation and a lack of competitive drive
i dont think id do well in academia because of the need to publish
Why is that only a problem for academia? Doesn't that same issue apply to basically any job that pays a living wage today, given the amount of competition for them?
(capitalism sucks haha)
8:13 PM - elliott: im a great arguer
8:13 PM - Iso: 8:13 PM - elliott: im a great arguer
8:13 PM - Iso: I am saving this
8:13 PM - elliott: go for it
8:13 PM - elliott: its true
8:13 PM - elliott: I only shitpost on tf.tv, u've never seen me actually try
It's ok guys he's only pretending
I played on 2 different teams with Viper, with a year in between them. I think he showed considerable improvement between that time in terms of both personality and skill. However, I'm not certain how much either of these were due to personal improvement on his part, and how much of them were just him getting carried by having a better team. Still, I think Viper is definitely worth a tryout on your high open team.
I received this product for free in exchange for my honest and unbiased review.
jimmijhttps://hugelolcdn.com/i/400418.jpg
but thats 4 pictures u dummy
Freight should be removed from the DM server rotation.
Attn: Quartz, ExtraCrispy, and Dinosawr
I have a very important question to ask of each of you.
What were the decisions in your life that led you to use the stock needlegun in an ESEA match?
I am very interested to hear each of your stories, as well as about what sort of lifestyle each of you leads.
Jeans are trousers, a type of garment, typically made from denim or dungaree cloth. Often the term "jeans" refers to a particular style of pants, called "blue jeans," which were invented by Jacob W. Davis in partnership with Levi Strauss & Co. in 1871 and patented by Jacob W. Davis and Levi Strauss on May 20, 1873. Prior to the Levi Strauss patented trousers, the term "blue jeans" had been long in use for various garments (including trousers, overalls, and coats), constructed from blue colored denim. Originally designed for cowboys and miners, jeans became popular in the 1950s among teenagers, especially members of the greaser subculture. Jeans were a common fashion item in the 1960s Hippie subculture and they continued to be popular in the 1970s and 1980s youth subcultures of punk rock and heavy metal. Historic brands include Levi's, Lee, and Wrangler. In the 2010's, jeans remain a popular fashion item, and they come in various fits, including skinny, tapered, slim, straight, boot cut, cigarette bottom, narrow bottom, bell bottom, low waist, anti-fit, and flare. "Distressed" (visibly aged and worn, but still intact and functional) jeans trousers have become increasingly fashionable, making pre-sale "factory distressing" a common feature in commercially sold jeans.
In the 2010s, jeans are a very popular article of casual dress around the world. They come in many styles and colors. However, blue jeans are particularly identified with American culture, especially the Old West. As well, although jeans are mostly known as a popular fashion garment for several decades, they are still worn as protective garments by some individuals, such as cattle ranch workers and motorcycle riders, due to their high durability as compared to other common fabrics.
Research on the trade of jean fabric shows that it emerged in the cities of Genoa, Italy, and Nimes, France. Gênes, the French word for Genoa, may be the origin of the word "jeans". In Nimes, weavers tried to reproduce jean but instead developed a similar twill fabric that became known as denim, from de Nimes, meaning "from Nimes". Genoa’s jean was a fustian textile of "medium quality and of reasonable cost", very similar to cotton corduroy for which Genoa was famous, and was "used for work clothes in general". Nimes’s "denim" was coarser, considered higher quality and was used "for over garments such as smocks or overalls". Nearly all Indigo, needed for dyeing, came from indigo bush plantations in India till the late 19th century. It was replaced by indigo synthesis methods developed in Germany.
Copper rivets for reinforcing pockets are a characteristic feature of blue jeans.
By the 17th century, jean was a crucial textile for working-class people in Northern Italy. This is seen in a series of genre paintings from around the 17th century attributed to an artist now named The Master of the Blue Jeans. The ten paintings depict impoverished scenes with lower-class figures wearing a fabric that looks like denim. The fabric would have been Genoese jean, which was cheaper. Genre painting came to prominence in late 16th century, and the low-life subject matter in all ten paintings places them among others that portray similar scenes.
Denim is not the only sturdy cotton fabric used for everything from working clothes to fashion items. There is also dungaree. Dungaree was mentioned for the first time in the 17th century, when it was referred to as cheap, coarse thick cotton cloth, often colored blue but sometimes white, worn by impoverished people in what was then a region of Bombay, India a dockside village called Dongri. This cloth was "dungri" in Hindi. Dungri was exported to England and used for manufacturing of cheap, robust working clothes. In English, the word "dungri" became pronounced as "dungaree".
The importance of jean is also shown by the history of textile trade. Genoese sailors used jean to cover and protect their goods on the docks from the weather. During the Republic of Genoa (17th, 18th centuries), sailors exported jeans throughout Europe.
The invention of the zipper, by Whitcomb L. Judson, helped as well.
Jean became popular in the United States when Levi Strauss & Co.'s introduced blue jean overalls in 1873.