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38 votes
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A Study In Scarlet & Blue
5 votes -
Development notes from xkcd's "Machine"
34 votes -
The Wednesday Pull - May 8, 2024
This is a weekly (?) thread about checking in with any comics of the issue, trade, web, or other varieties. As is tradition, it takes place on a Wednesday.
2 votes -
Vault Comics now available on GlobalComix
3 votes -
How do you accidentally run for President of Iceland?
30 votes -
The internet used to be ✨fun✨
44 votes -
For those involved / interested in Web3, what do you make of the near and long term future for it?
Added the qualifier to the title as web3 understandably earns a lot of eyerolls haha. At the same time, a lot of web3 focused places seem to have a specific mindset about what "should" be done so...
Added the qualifier to the title as web3 understandably earns a lot of eyerolls haha. At the same time, a lot of web3 focused places seem to have a specific mindset about what "should" be done so I wanted to ask here.
I worked in the space at startup (ironically making web2 services to assist in web3 so I’m still an extreme novice). But my time there was a constant push / pull between convention and money and innovation and the unknown. The company I was at would try to appeal to big companies in hopes of finding a product market fit, who looked to us for guidance on what to do in this new space where they hoped to make money. Trend after trend would pass and it would be entertained whether we’d jump on it because product market fit.
The most desirable companies were household names with non-web3 userbases because they meant unprecedented reach. But to make web3 approachable to them, you’d have to define a UX that didn’t exist and would be pulled in a tug of war between two forces. The first mindset optimises for the purest idea of giving the user power— UXs that were obvious about the concepts of transactions and transferrable assets. The other wanted to replicate web2 UXs in web3, to the degree that a user gives temporary control of their wallet to a developer so the developer performs transactions as them.
Then, there is the data and pseudonymity piece. Companies have been taught that data is valuable, and one of the values of a blockchain is an identity that exists outside of any one company. But if all of your assets are on a blockchain— either under your public key or perhaps under a few that might transfer assets only between each other— then your identity can be known (not so private) and also cannot be monopolized and sold (because your data is public).
In the background, as this all happens, is the decentralization argument. At the end of the day, my company used EVM nodes operated by another company (which themselves might be wrappers around something offered by AWS). What is meaningful decentralization alongside specialization of labor? What is decentralization in a world that has billionaires and enormous companies who has the means to buy resources and set up tons of nodes?
Being out of the space now, I do think a decentralized database with immutable scripts, user-managed transferrable assets, and transferrable identity has enormous value. But recently I’ve been wondering how much of that can be accomplished in the private sector. In my time there it felt like the startup needs (enterprise customers, increased ARR) constantly compromised the will for innovation efforts.
19 votes -
Write alternative text as if you’re describing the image to a friend
19 votes -
The Wednesday Pull - April 24, 2024
Trying something different, and making a discussion thread about Comics that one would want to highlight of the issue, trade, web or any variety. As is tradition, discussion starts on a Wednesday.
2 votes -
This month in Servo: tables, WOFF2, Outreachy, and more
13 votes -
Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ
7 votes -
Ffmpeg and AV1 for HTML5 streaming
I've been looking around online at compatibility for HTML5 browser streaming. It looks like straight up AV1 in a MP4 container is becoming absolutely fine for browser playback on devices. Is...
I've been looking around online at compatibility for HTML5 browser streaming. It looks like straight up AV1 in a MP4 container is becoming absolutely fine for browser playback on devices.
Is anyone using this on webpages yet? The sooner we move to AV1, the sooner we can have high quality video stored at smaller file sizes, which is a massive bonus.
Right now my company video hosting is purely in MP4 with H264, moov atom to the front as per the requirement, and it plays back on everything with no fallback in a straight HTML5 video container. What's the chance of switching to AV1 and not having to worry about the fallback for the most part?
Edit: I should have used a better title. I used FFMpeg for MP4 and AV1 creation/encoding. This is more about HTML5 video container code and direct AV1 file playback.
20 votes -
xkcd: Machine
83 votes -
How web bloat impacts users with slow devices
41 votes -
Fighting cookie theft using device bound sessions
14 votes -
Adventures in depression
36 votes -
I created a massive global treasure hunt
5 votes -
How to make your website available over Tor: A complete guide to EOTK, the Enterprise Onion Toolkit
9 votes -
Indexing the information age - Over a weekend in 1995, a small group gathered in Ohio to unleash the power of the internet by making it navigable
13 votes -
JavaScript bloat in 2024
51 votes -
Resources for starting your own small website
23 votes -
Build your own web server from scratch In Node.JS
6 votes -
Apple on course to break all Web Apps in EU within twenty days
37 votes -
The decline of username and password on the same page
Web devs: what's up with this trend? For enterprise apps, I get it…single sign-on needs to detect what your email domain is to send you to your identity provider. For consumers, I feel like it's...
Web devs: what's up with this trend? For enterprise apps, I get it…single sign-on needs to detect what your email domain is to send you to your identity provider. For consumers, I feel like it's gotta be one of these reasons:
- Users don't know about the tab key being able to move to other fields on a page
- Mobile users don't really have a tab key, despite there being "previous/next field" arrows on the stock iOS keyboard since its inception (Android users, help me out please)
- Users tend to hit Enter after typing in their username, leading to a form submission with a blank password
- Security, maybe? In the past I have sent a link and a password in separate emails or separate communication methods entirely. Are you hashing/salting these separately for better MITM mitigation?
Did your UX team make a decision? Are my password managers forever doomed to need a "keyboard combo" value for every entry from now on?
Non-devs: do you prefer one method over the other? If so, why?
Tildes maintainers: selfishly, thanks for keeping these together :)
71 votes -
Criminals are getting increasingly adept at crafting malicious AI prompts to get data out of ChatGPT
22 votes -
Mousetrapped
23 votes -
Resources and help for setting up a Tildes dev environment
I've been trying to set up a dev enviornment for Tildes, mainly so that I can actually test my MR (!136), and I've been running into a few issues. However, since we also have a new influx of...
I've been trying to set up a dev enviornment for Tildes, mainly so that I can actually test my MR (!136), and I've been running into a few issues.
However, since we also have a new influx of people who might be interested in contributing to Tildes, it seems like a good time to collect resources on setting up the dev environment, as well as helping anyone running into issues.
So, if you have issues or advice, post them here! I'll be adding my questions in a comment shortly.
Relevant wiki pages:
Edit: A more recent post on setting up the dev environment on Apple Silicon / M1 Macs
36 votes -
stranger video
9 votes -
The history of emoticons
3 votes -
After hack, personally identifiable information records of a large percentage of citizens of India for sale on the dark web. The hack includes biometric data.
22 votes -
The secret life of Jimmy Zhong, who stole – and lost – more than $3 billion
13 votes -
Comics beyond sight
12 votes -
See You Next Year
11 votes -
Android 14 adds native support for using smartphones as a webcams
15 votes -
Elan.School has finished
73 votes -
Wikipedia:Dark mode
20 votes -
With Focus you can search the web you want
21 votes -
Mullvad on Tailscale: Privately browse the web
21 votes -
Kagi Small Web
34 votes -
Molly Holzschlag, known as 'the fairy godmother of the web,' dead at 60
18 votes -
Bringing back the minimal web
112 votes -
Punch Punch Forever!
14 votes -
Make the web your sketchbook
24 votes -
The cloud is a prison. Can the local-first software movement set us free?
35 votes -
The Block Protocol
10 votes -
Where is everyone hosting their email these days?
This is more focused towards those that use custom domains for their email. My current plan is up at Zoho for my team in a month, and even though I've used them for the past few years its been...
This is more focused towards those that use custom domains for their email. My current plan is up at Zoho for my team in a month, and even though I've used them for the past few years its been hit-or-miss (especially when using third-party apps or programs).
Who do you use? Who do you not trust? Who would you never go back to?
Sidenote: I hope this might eventually kick off a ~privacy group, one day.
72 votes -
What would the internet of people look like now?
39 votes -
On attestation on the web and why this could threaten the open web
13 votes -
Unpacking Google’s new “dangerous” Web-Environment-Integrity specification
45 votes