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17 votes
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United Launch Alliance to launch final Delta Heavy IV rocket today (in less than an hour, 1315 ET)
10 votes -
Astronomers unveil strong magnetic fields spiraling at the edge of Milky Way’s central black hole
10 votes -
America's first right-to-repair bill that bans parts pairing
40 votes -
Lego requests California police department stop using their toy heads to cover suspect mugshots on social media
40 votes -
Norway unveiled plans to remove a loophole used by the Nordic nation's richest – government attempts to drag more tax revenue out of the fleeing billionaires
15 votes -
The true cost of offshore wind (and its crisis): what can we learn?
6 votes -
An interview with Arizona Diamondbacks ace Zac Gallen
5 votes -
Daniel Kahneman, renowned psychologist and Nobel prize winner, dies at 90
19 votes -
Analysis of Ludwig van Beethoven’s DNA revealed that he had a low genetic predisposition for musical ability
10 votes -
The Ladoga was the Soviet Union’s plush nuclear-war command vehicle. A drone just blew one up in Eastern Ukraine.
18 votes -
Cargo ship hits major bridge in Baltimore, triggering collapse (gifted link)
93 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
27 votes -
Picotron is a Fantasy Workstation
23 votes -
There is no evidence that CBD products reduce chronic pain, and taking them is a waste of money and potentially harmful to health, new research finds
58 votes -
Riot's League of Legends MMO is being 'reset,' likely going dark for 'several years'
28 votes -
Bad Boys: Ride or Die | Official trailer
7 votes -
Cowboy launches all-road electric bike to attract riders beyond European city centers
6 votes -
How do you - or, how did you - leverage your hobbies into careers?
Hey there! I'm an office monkey doing IT stuff. I've mercenary'd my way across multiple teams for the last decade (level 1 support to basically DevOps for payment systems) with no formal training...
Hey there! I'm an office monkey doing IT stuff. I've mercenary'd my way across multiple teams for the last decade (level 1 support to basically DevOps for payment systems) with no formal training or certification at a fairly large company. It's nice that my bosses all seem to appreciate that I'm flexible, but my work kinda swells and relaxes every couple months, and sometimes it feels unstable since I've never actually put any of this knowledge into an accepted certification. I look into certifications but nothing jumps out; recently I gave AWS a shot in a self-guided course and realized I was pretty bored by it. Something that popped into my mind as I noticed that I don't really have a "portfolio" is that I have tons of car work, audio editing, off-the-cuff writing about games, etc things that have to do with my hobbies in gaming, cars, music, shitposting on the internet, etc that I'm happy to make without feeling pressured. I feel like if someone asked me to pick up something like this for pay and give me a deadline - a program to edit, a car to work on, an image or audio to manipulate, something analyzing a piece of art - I'd happily do it without even thinking about it, and they're the kinds of things I could do for hours losing track of time.
Being a breadwinner right now with a kid I don't have the risk factor to jump careers right now, but if I lost my job I feel like I'd want to give some different industry a shot. Problem is I just don't get how people... weasel into these things? Is that how this happens? Or do they just eat a ton of time/money making these laterals? Where do they get the experience, where do people find the connections? I'm curious - has anyone ever turned a hobby into a career? Did it work out?
22 votes -
Plans for regulator illustrate inherently political nature of football
4 votes -
Brawls, rivalries and superstars: how women’s college basketball became the main event
3 votes -
2021 Rust movie set shooting tragedy: The product of low-budget, cost-cutting filmmaking
17 votes -
Larian Studios won't make Baldur's Gate 3 DLC, expansions, or Baldur's Gate 4
63 votes -
All the ways car dependency is wrecking us – car harm: a global review of automobility's harm to people and the environment
15 votes -
Metal: Hellsinger VR | Announcement trailer
7 votes -
Natural gas is scamming America
25 votes -
Visa, Mastercard settle long-running antitrust suit over swipe fees with merchants
20 votes -
Earth system impacts of the European arrival and Great Dying in the Americas after 1492
9 votes -
Climate sustainability through a dynamic duo: Green hydrogen and crypto driving energy transition and decarbonization
5 votes -
I have a bit of trouble figuring out the stages in pencil drawing
I drew a LOT in my childhood and youth, but later forgot about it. My skills and my patience is pretty much gone. I look at my old drawing and wonder, did I really make that? Damn. But I'm slowly...
I drew a LOT in my childhood and youth, but later forgot about it. My skills and my patience is pretty much gone. I look at my old drawing and wonder, did I really make that? Damn. But I'm slowly trying to get back in the game.
I know how to get the outlines in place first, but I'm unsure how to go about the shades of grey. Some instruction online suggest that you concentrate at one area at the time. Others seems more like you're supposed to start out with the brightest shadows and slowly move towards softer leads.
Does any of you have some kind of structure here?
14 votes -
Water isn't normal
24 votes -
They grow your berries and peaches, but often lack one item: insurance
9 votes -
Hobo Johnson & The LoveMakers - Dad's Bed (2024)
3 votes -
"Debunking Davos and the global elite": The World Economic Forum and its annual meeting
18 votes -
“But the ancient Greeks didn’t *sound* Irish…” On capturing voice in historical fiction
12 votes -
Researchers show that introduced tardigrade proteins can slow metabolism in human cells
11 votes -
Some NATO countries ‘don’t understand urgency of stopping Russia,’ says Swedish FM
16 votes -
The Abilene Paradox
26 votes -
Have my ear for a day
Send me a list of things to listen to for a day. Probably best if it's 4-8 hours, but if you want to recommend less (like an album or two) I'll listen and then use the "radio" feature to stream...
Send me a list of things to listen to for a day. Probably best if it's 4-8 hours, but if you want to recommend less (like an album or two) I'll listen and then use the "radio" feature to stream similar music afterwards.
Alternatively or additionally, feel free to get out of your comfort zone and join in on the listening.
Context:
I have a lot of time to listen to music while working. Recently I've been getting bored with my go-to catalog. About 5 years ago I posted out like this on a different platform and had a pretty good experience.
This doesn't need to be specific/catered to me, since that's part of the experience. But if it helps, I tend to listen to pop, electronic, alt rock, R&B, and funk. I also enjoy jazz and 40's music. Here's my last.fm if you want more specifics, though the all-time stats are skewed towards my heavy listening a decade ago.
Edit:
Feel free to post links to whatever you use to listen or no links at all. I don't mind doing some leg work to get it playing on my streaming service.
14 votes -
Marvel Rivals | Official announcement trailer
4 votes -
Tiny undervalued hardware companions
37 votes -
Jacques - Porte s'ouvre (2022)
3 votes -
The Spider Within: A Spiderverse story
12 votes -
VHEMT: the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement
31 votes -
Recent ‘MFA bombing’ attacks targeting Apple users
8 votes -
How the entire country of Denmark became a company town – economists warn of "Nokia-style" overdependence on a single sector with Ozempic boom
4 votes -
What libraries risk when they go entirely digital
6 votes -
Kinds of Kindness | Official teaser trailer
2 votes -
Transit study recommends new express bus service to Kansas City International Airport
5 votes -
How to escape from the Iron Age? We cannot lower carbon emissions if we keep producing steel with fossil fuels.
27 votes