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9 votes
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Why don't Americans care about Formula 1? A statistical analysis.
3 votes -
Apple Maps privacy bug may have allowed apps to collect location data without permission
9 votes -
Getty Images is suing the creators of AI art tool Stable Diffusion for scraping its content
14 votes -
No, you can’t get a 16TB SSD for a hundred bucks
5 votes -
Has Erling Haaland made Manchester City worse?
3 votes -
Roomba testers feel misled after intimate images ended up on Facebook
7 votes -
A bit of math around Cloudflare's R2 pricing model
11 votes -
Meta prohibited from use of personal data for advertisement in Europe
22 votes -
LastPass recent security incident
7 votes -
How does the Finnish railway system differ from others?
3 votes -
The world generates so much data that new unit measurements were created to keep up
7 votes -
The REAL reason ships go missing in the Bermuda Triangle!!!
9 votes -
How to stop Erling Haaland
3 votes -
US Federal law now requires distribution of complete healthcare records to patients in digital formats
11 votes -
Grab – Asia's Uber – knows customers and drivers so well it can vet them for loans
6 votes -
A Danish city built Google into its schools – then banned it
12 votes -
Revealed: US Military bought mass monitoring tool that includes internet browsing, email data
11 votes -
Investigating toxicity changes of cross-community Redditors from two billion posts and comments
9 votes -
We spoke with the last person standing in the floppy disk business
11 votes -
Smoking in the United States has reached its lowest levels ever, with just 11% of people saying they now smoke cigarettes
17 votes -
Help me decide what technology should I use for this project
I’m a solo freelance programmer and want to write an app for internal project management, somewhere I can add projects, milestones, tasks, etc. and track them as I work on them, occasionally...
I’m a solo freelance programmer and want to write an app for internal project management, somewhere I can add projects, milestones, tasks, etc. and track them as I work on them, occasionally remind me of things like take a break, lunch time, etc. and over time I can track on which category I worked how many hours, etc.
I’m actually confused between whether to build this as a Web or Windows Desktop app. I’m considering latter because it can run efficiently on my laptop in the system tray using least memory and resources, web-based on the other hand will force me keep running an apache server too which will be an overhead (unless I host it on Google Cloud or someplace which might be an option?)
The only reason for considering web-based is that eventually I’m planning to make this tool open source and with web-based, many others can find this useful too (including OSX/Linux users). At that point, I may consider expanding its schema to include multi-user connectivity, client login, etc. but that’s going too far at this point!
The idea is that this tool should be useful not just for me but other freelancers, students, etc. who might be in my shoes. From that perspective, what do you think is the right technology to use? Web based or Windows based?
(I’ve extensively worked on C#/WinForms projects before and I’m thinking Visual Studio Express for desktop development. If web-based, it’ll be php/mysql based)
5 votes -
Norway wants Facebook fined for illegal data transfers – European regulators are finalizing a decision blocking Meta from transferring data to the US
6 votes -
The American family that mined the Pentagon’s data for profit
5 votes -
Facebook helped arrest a 17-year-old for having an abortion
13 votes -
Denmark bans Chromebooks and Google Workspace in schools over data transfer risks
25 votes -
How traceable are you? - Experiment results & analysis
11 votes -
The golden age of the aging actor
7 votes -
Coinbase is selling US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) a suite of features used to track and identify cryptocurrency users
11 votes -
‘A mass invasion of privacy’ but no penalties for Tim Hortons
8 votes -
Most football stars of the Bundesliga fail to reach the same highs when they play in the Premier League – this drop off is known as the Bundesliga Tax
4 votes -
Powerful ‘machine scientists’ distill the laws of physics from raw data
19 votes -
American phone-tracking firm demo’d surveillance powers by spying on CIA and NSA
11 votes -
How Native Americans are trying to debug AI’s biases
4 votes -
Macho cyberwarfare and the long game
2 votes -
Analysis by computer science professor shows that "Google Phone" and "Google Messages" send data to Google servers without being asked and without the user's knowledge, continuously
11 votes -
Three weeks of Steam Deck game compatibility data
I've been checking in each Friday since the release of the Steam Deck to see the number of games that have been added to the Deck's different compatibility categories. I felt like it was a bit...
I've been checking in each Friday since the release of the Steam Deck to see the number of games that have been added to the Deck's different compatibility categories. I felt like it was a bit past time to keep bumping the release thread, so I went with a new topic.
Here's where we're at currently:
2022-02-25 2022-03-04 2022-03-11 2022-03-18 Week 1 Change Week 2 Change Week 3 Change Deck Verified 433 535 721 798 +102 +186 +77 Deck Playable 398 471 580 678 +73 +109 +98 Deck Unsupported 389 711 775 837 +313 +64 +62 Steam Total Games N/A 67,165 67,399 67,627 N/A +234 +228 15 votes -
Mozilla Rally - Data collection for research about data collection
9 votes -
Suicide hotline shares data with for-profit spinoff
25 votes -
Analysis of PINs
12 votes -
Help needed: slow external hard drive
I've got a 2TB Toshiba drive (formatted as NTFS) that has become very slow and I was wondering if anyone here as any ideas what the problem could be and how I could fix it. All the data I'd need...
I've got a 2TB Toshiba drive (formatted as NTFS) that has become very slow and I was wondering if anyone here as any ideas what the problem could be and how I could fix it. All the data I'd need off the drive is backed up, but I would at least like a drive to put it back on to!
In short, it became slow after I had to force power-off the system it was connected to (Pop OS installed on another external drive which I unplugged by mistake) and I haven't bothered to try to fix it in the six months since.
I've tested it on Pop and it takes about 10-20 minutes to mount, and 2 minutes to unmount and safely remove. The data itself seems fine but performance is slow, accessing a 20MB image takes several seconds and selecting the drive in GNOME Disks caused it to freeze.
The drive sounded louder than normal, especially after plugging in.
On Windows, the drive was recognised and browsable immediately, but browsing through folders was very slow - opening some folders causes Windows Explorer to freeze for a while. Some of my double-clicks were mis-recognised as click-to-rename, which took several seconds to activate and during which time Task Manager reported the average response time between 5000 and 11000 ms.
Attempting to load an audio file resulted in lots of buffering. Task Manager reports an active time of 100% (even when not loading files or folders) and the activity never exceeded 100 KB/s (and doesn't sustain it for more than a second). Ejecting the drive takes forever - after ejecting it using the tray icon, the tray icon is not removed (even though there are no other drives connected or listed) and the active time is still 100% with the indicator LED blinking non-stop. The system did not enter sleep right away after me asking it to either.
All of that to say, does anyone know what the issue could be, or how I could find and fix it? Thanks!
Edit: fixed and normal functionality restored (at least so I can check the drive a bit easier) using Scan & Repair in Windows (see my comment).
4 votes -
Electric cars are less green to make than petrol but make up for it in less than a year, new analysis reveals
21 votes -
University loses 77TB of research data due to backup error
17 votes -
The hubris of big data
4 votes -
Norway's data privacy watchdog fines Grindr $7.16 million for sending sensitive personal data to hundreds of potential advertising partners without users' consent
7 votes -
‘Big’ data can be 99.98% smaller than it appears
11 votes -
Crime prediction software promised to be free of biases. New data shows it perpetuates them.
15 votes -
Former Ubiquiti employee charged for data theft and attemtping to extort his employer
8 votes -
Vizio’s profit on ads, subscriptions, and data is double the money it makes selling TVs
22 votes -
Name don'ts
14 votes