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23 votes
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US judge temporarily blocks sports streaming service Venu, siding with Fubo on antitrust concerns
12 votes -
Darknet Diaries, Ep 148: Dubsnatch
6 votes -
The US government wants to make it easier for you to click the 'unsubscribe' button
58 votes -
Danish wind power giant Ørsted delays major US offshore project – news follows scrapping of two other Atlantic windfarms and axing of hundreds of jobs as costs surge
7 votes -
Museum of Failure, a physical and digital exhibition of business ideas that failed
25 votes -
Heidelberg Materials' cement plant in Norway will be the first of a handful around the world to capture carbon in the production of cement
16 votes -
Europe train timetable app
Hi Tilerinos! Is there an app that has most or all of the train timetables across Europe? When I was in the UK on my last trip, I found Train Times. It looks like the app was entirely redesigned...
Hi Tilerinos!
Is there an app that has most or all of the train timetables across Europe? When I was in the UK on my last trip, I found Train Times. It looks like the app was entirely redesigned since I used it, but at first glance it seems similar. I would like a similar app for Europe:
- Simple with no bloat (I don’t need the app to buy tickets, in fact, I would prefer if it couldn’t)
- Be able to look up a station and view all departing and arriving trains, no matter the destination
- Have live updates for delays and cancellations
- Reasonably priced subscription is fine (and expected because of the delay and cancellation info)
- Preferably not associated with any particular train company
- Covers most of Europe (although an app for just France, or specific countries, would also be appreciated)
Anyone here know of an app like that? I know it’s a big ask, but I am hoping some indie developer has made a nice app like this. Thanks!
5 votes -
India elephant app: Hopes new tech can reduce human and animal deaths
7 votes -
What websites do you visit for your niche interests?
These could be blogs, forums, any online space where you visit semi-frequently at least. Here are some based off my interests: A Year in the Country - Blog on folk horror music Gwern.net - blog...
These could be blogs, forums, any online space where you visit semi-frequently at least.
Here are some based off my interests:
A Year in the Country - Blog on folk horror music
60 votes -
Voting for the Tiny Awards 2024 is now open! Creativity and experimentation through the small web.
15 votes -
This innovative device allows South American paleontologists to share fossils with the world
11 votes -
Amid regulatory gaps, US telehealth prescribers flourish
5 votes -
Tell San Mateo County: Stop for-profit tech companies denying mail to incarcerated people
23 votes -
Making games for Apple platforms "like an abusive relationship", say developers
42 votes -
Airlines are running out of flight numbers, and they don’t know what to do about it
18 votes -
Not sure where to ask this - early 2000's email printing layout samples
Unless I'm missing something in my search queries, Google ain't coming up with anything. I'm trying to look for samples of printouts from emails (hosts are irrelevant) made in the early 2000's....
Unless I'm missing something in my search queries, Google ain't coming up with anything. I'm trying to look for samples of printouts from emails (hosts are irrelevant) made in the early 2000's. It's for a novel project. While I have a vague idea of what kind of layout is needed, it's one thing to guess, and another to actually see it. Any leads?
17 votes -
The race for next generation submarines - ageing fleets, innovation, and undersea dominance
16 votes -
GameStop kills Game Informer magazine and takes website offline
11 votes -
More popular than Netflix in Finland, YLE's approach to digital transformation may hold lessons for public broadcasters everywhere
12 votes -
We tried and failed to find performance differences in our twenty-six microwaves
58 votes -
Anger mounts over environmental cost of Google datacentre in Uruguay
19 votes -
Fed up, singles are DIYing their own dating apps
48 votes -
Google to charge new fee on ads in response to Canada’s digital services tax
12 votes -
Generative AI requires massive amounts of power and water, and the aging US grid can't handle the load
27 votes -
Doomscrolling evokes existential anxiety and fosters pessimism about human nature? Evidence from Iran and the United States.
22 votes -
Maglev titanium heart now whirs inside the chest of a live patient
24 votes -
Delta cancels more flights as it struggles to recover from tech outage
39 votes -
What GoFundMe conceals: The campaigns that fail
17 votes -
Climate hero or villain? As it rapidly adopts clean technologies while drilling furiously for oil and gas, Norway is a paradox.
11 votes -
Top-flight match in Norway abandoned when fans staged protest against the use of Video Assistant Referees by throwing fishcakes, tennis balls and smoke bombs on the pitch
7 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission targets Mastercard in major investigation into AI-based surveillance pricing
17 votes -
Tech giants should be made subject to a global tax for their use of people's personal data, according to Norway's Finance Minister Trygve Slagsvold Vedum
30 votes -
Ireland’s datacentres overtake electricity use of all urban homes combined
19 votes -
Are smartphones driving our teens to depression?
13 votes -
Delta's CrowdStrike related flight delays and cancellations prompt Department of Transportation investigation
19 votes -
CrowdStrike chaos leads to grounded aircraft — and maybe an unusual weather effect
12 votes -
We’re building nuclear spaceships again—this time for real
20 votes -
The critical window of shadow libraries
16 votes -
The underwater 'kites' generating electricity as they move beneath the waters of the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic
11 votes -
Six distinct types of depression identified in Stanford Medicine-led study
51 votes -
‘Dolphin skin’ propeller boosts fuel efficiency of cargo ships
12 votes -
IVF alone can’t save us from a looming fertility crisis
20 votes -
Cutting-edge technology could reduce the amount of energy used for air conditioning
24 votes -
Tabletop game forumite achieves posting godhood, emerging from the void after 100,000 hour eleven year ban to continue the same argument from 2013
51 votes -
Escape from the box: new technology and old tactics have made buying a car a death march of deception
51 votes -
Inside the tiny chip that powers Montreal subway tickets
14 votes -
Mastermind speedrunner bakes twelve actual cookies in under four minutes, forces site mods to make a whole new category
65 votes -
u/RNG investigates bitcoin town
EDIT: Album available here Note: I'm writing this post as I go through my day, taking note of anything interesting. I try to do this with my diary, however for once I'll actually share my thoughts...
EDIT: Album available here
Note: I'm writing this post as I go through my day, taking note of anything interesting. I try to do this with my diary, however for once I'll actually share my thoughts with strangers.
This was inspired by u/arqalite's post on the topic.
I'm not a journalist. I didn't even take a class on journalism in college. I'm also not a writer, but at least my text is human generated. I have an audiobook I need to catch up on and a day to spare, so I'm going to bitcoin town.
I'm not a crypto guy, but I'm not going because I think Bitcoin is bad (even though it is). I'm going because I'm curious: how loud is this bitcoin mine really? When I read the initial post I wondered about the nocebo effect, Havana Syndrome, sociogenic illness, etc. Most of the reports are anecdotes of locals, and the null hypothesis doesn't make for a sharable news article.
I'm using this app "Sound Meter" to see how loud it is in my small suburban house. It peaks at 40dB. If you, like me, don't think in decibels, Google says that's as loud as a refrigerator hum. I'm skeptical about the accuracy of a phone app, but it's what I have.
Outside my house there are some birds loudly chirping. I would have missed their song if I wasn't writing this. I decide that I should take a measurement. The app reads 55dB. Google says it's the loudness of a residential street. Spot on.
I'm entering Granbury, TX and a massive American flag hanging from a crane greets me along with a pro-Trump billboard. There's a large lake running through the town. Seems like every house has a dock. Lot's of folks on boats and jet skis are visible.
Downtown is an old court building with a clock tower. The streets are lined with mom-and-pop shops for furniture, clothing, and trinkets. To my surprise, there are a lot of shoppers here with arms full of bags. They seem cheerful. They are all white.
The GPS takes me outside the city limits. I stop at a gas station a half-mile from the mine. I ask a couple of people about the mine while I grab a water. They've never heard of a bitcoin mine, and didn't know there was one around here.
As I approach the destination, the bitcoin mine looms over the horizon. The sheer size of the facility cannot be overstated. This facility looks like it should be pursuing some massive scientific endeavor. I wouldn't guess in a million years that all of this infrastructure exists to mine bitcoin. My car reads 98°F (what I expected based on forecast.) I imagine cooling systems will be as loud as one can expect on a day like today. And yes, it is loud.
Across the way, I see signs saying "Bitcoin sux" and "Bitcoin Noisehood". I take a lot of photos. I pull out "Sound Meter" and take measurements. It consistently reads 81-83dB, peaking at 88dB. Google says 85dB is the limit of safe hearing, and is comparable to the sound of a snowblower. This seems perfectly accurate to me. I'd be pissed if I lived across from this place.
I'll be in Granbury for the next hour or so, if anyone has a specific question about the mine I'll see if I can answer it. I took a lot of photos if there is interest.
121 votes -
World’s first larynx transplant restores voice of a cancer patient
12 votes