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50 votes
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Voyager Technologies CEO says space data center cooling problem still needs to be solved
48 votes -
A fluid can store solar energy and then release it as heat months later
22 votes -
Messy 2026 F1 cars leave a deeply disturbing impression
20 votes -
Why have so many travel vloggers been traveling to Middle East countries lately?
I occasionally watch some travel videos and lately I've been getting a lot of videos of middle east countries on YouTube, I'm just curious why. I know there have been some new developments like...
I occasionally watch some travel videos and lately I've been getting a lot of videos of middle east countries on YouTube, I'm just curious why. I know there have been some new developments like the shebara resort and Ain Dubai. but is that the only reason?
18 votes -
Swedes searching for their Colombian mothers forty years after their adoptions – government acknowledges processes were plagued with irregularities, from theft of babies to falsified documents
10 votes -
Finnish nuclear development group Steady Energy has begun building a pilot plant in Helsinki that aims to pave the way for Europe's first small nuclear heat reactor
13 votes -
Wojaks, soyjaks, and you. | Bad art history
5 votes -
Web API Changelog - February 2026 | Spotify for Developers
4 votes -
Spotify will soon sell hardcover and paperback books through its app, in partnership with Bookshop.org
24 votes -
Why Nigerians are choosing chatbots to give them advice and therapy
6 votes -
China showcases new Moon ship and reusable rocket in one extraordinary test
19 votes -
Why Google just issued a rare 100-year bond
25 votes -
US Federal Aviation Administration reopens El Paso airport hours after saying it was grounding flights for ten days
16 votes -
Airspace closure in the Texas border city of El Paso followed spat over drone-related tests and party balloon shoot-down, sources say
13 votes -
New Bay Area Rapid Transit fare gates generate $10 million annually
13 votes -
EU says TikTok faces large fine over "addictive design"
32 votes -
SpaceX is acquiring xAI
45 votes -
‘House burping’ is a cold reality in Germany. Americans are warming to it.
41 votes -
I'm annoyed with mundane revisionist history
Yesterday I did something stupid. I went to reddit and responded to a comment. The comment in question was talking about how popular the PS2 was because it also functioned as a DVD player. I...
Yesterday I did something stupid. I went to reddit and responded to a comment. The comment in question was talking about how popular the PS2 was because it also functioned as a DVD player. I pointed out that few people would have bought a PS2 because it was more expensive than a standalone device, and didn't come with a remote. People often get confused about this because the PS3 basically fit this description: it was one of the best and cheapest blu-ray players for quite a while. Naturally when I went back to look at reddit today I found a bunch of people saying "nuh-uh" and my response had negative karma.
There's a lot of revisionist history when it comes to video games. For the earlier generation, there seems to be this idea that the Sega Saturn couldn't do "real" 3D graphics and the Playstation couldn't do "real" sprites - in spite of a massive library of titles that directly prove that they both draw 2D and 3D graphics just fine - heck, there's a bunch of people out there who think Symphony of the Night on PSX is one of the best pixel art games of all time.
I don't really care much about these specific examples, because they're ultimately meaningless. It's not remotely likely that these "factoids" will make a difference to anyone's life. What I do care about, however, is what it says about society. We already know reddit is an echo chamber, but if we can't figure out what the actual truth of history was, we're doomed as a species.
40 votes -
Michigan anti-trust lawsuit alleges oil companies colluded to “capture and kill” clean-energy and electric-vehicle efforts
20 votes -
China to ban hidden door handles on cars starting 2027
46 votes -
Finland is leading the race to decarbonise industrial heat emissions, using sand to produce fossil-free steam
12 votes -
Suno, AI music, and the bad future
5 votes -
Anthropic faces new music publisher lawsuit over alleged piracy
5 votes -
Why there's no European Google?
38 votes -
Ideas for Arduino/microbits projects for my kids and me
What projects would you think would interest my daughters the most? The oldest is 11 years, super creative and builds the most intricate stuff out of plain paper, tape and cardboard. I have...
What projects would you think would interest my daughters the most? The oldest is 11 years, super creative and builds the most intricate stuff out of plain paper, tape and cardboard. I have learned programming from about her age, but feel like software would not catch her attention the same way hardware would. They already experiment with programming and microbits in school (what a truly lucky generation!!!).
I am looking for stuff that is not too complicated/expensive that it will just collect dust on a shelf because it took a lot of time to build. Specifically I would like to try something that could be dismantled and reused for other projects. Maybe a barcode scanner or something that has a connection with real life applications.
11 votes -
Listing for GOG Galaxy developer cites Linux as “next major frontier”
54 votes -
Finland looks to end "uncontrolled human experiment" with Australia-style ban on social media
27 votes -
Alternative to Spotify?
I’ve been meaning to switch streaming platforms from Spotify for some time now, for many reasons. To me, it seems like good alternatives are challenging to find, so I figured I’d solicit some...
I’ve been meaning to switch streaming platforms from Spotify for some time now, for many reasons. To me, it seems like good alternatives are challenging to find, so I figured I’d solicit some discussion here on Tildes to see how people like other platforms.
My Only Requirement:
- Mobile App for iOS with Offline Capability
I Strongly Prefer:
- Good Search Functionality
- Niche Artist Availability
Alternatives I’m Considering:
- Apple Music
- Bandcamp
- Tidal
- Deezer
- Qobuz
If anyone has used any of these applications, I’d love a review of the pros and cons. I’m leaning towards Bandcamp right now, but am concerned that I will fail to discover new artists because of the need to pay for albums.
21 votes -
AI chatbots are becoming lifelines for China’s sick and lonely
8 votes -
Why I’m launching a feminist video games website in 2026
40 votes -
Matt Damon says Netflix wants movies to restate the 'plot three or four times in the dialogue' because viewers are on 'their phones while they're watching'
48 votes -
Local News TV offers YouTube feeds from 660 TV stations in America
17 votes -
Feeling weird about my career with respect to AI
I’m a software engineer. I graduated in 2021 so I’ve only been one for around 4.5 years and definitely still feel fairly entry-level (at least, any time I look at jobs, the number of years of...
I’m a software engineer. I graduated in 2021 so I’ve only been one for around 4.5 years and definitely still feel fairly entry-level (at least, any time I look at jobs, the number of years of experience required for “senior” positions seems to have increased by one) and it feels like companies don’t particularly want anyone without a lot of experience anymore (and every time I do look at new jobs, the number of years required for “senior” positions seems to have increased by one). Meanwhile, I think it has its uses but I don’t actually enjoy using it. I want to solve problems and think and write code, not talk to an AI and become a full-time code-reviewer. My company is rebranding to have AI in the name shortly and, since early December, have been forcing us into 2+ hour long AI trainings once or twice a week. A lot of my coworkers seem like they’ve drank the Kool-Aid and are talking about new models and shit all the time and I just don’t get it.
I guess I’m kind of rambling but I just feel weird about all of it. I want to program but I don’t just want to use (or be forced to use) LLMs for everything, yet it seems like companies are just trying to get rid of actually human software engineers as fast as they can. I’ll even admit, Claude is way better than I expected, but I don’t actually enjoy sitting there typing “do this for me” and then having to just spend time reviewing code. I don’t know. I don’t think this is really even me asking for advice, just a rant, but yeah, just felt like I had to get something out there, I guess.
54 votes -
Show HN: I wrapped the Zorks with an LLM
16 votes -
The hidden history of women game designers
22 votes -
Finland is the undisputed world leader when it comes to icebreakers – Finnish companies have designed 80% of all those currently in operation, and 60% were built at shipyards there
26 votes -
Where to buy mp3s legally?
Recently I bought a mp3 player and I want to know the best place to buy mp3s (or similar). Biggest priority is things that are in Swedish and stories for kids . Maybe the things I want there...
Recently I bought a mp3 player and I want to know the best place to buy mp3s (or similar). Biggest priority is things that are in Swedish and stories for kids . Maybe the things I want there counts as audio books, some of it, but not all I think? All input is good :).
22 votes -
New California law means big changes for real estate listing photos
16 votes -
The hidden engineering of runways
12 votes -
Opta removes all advanced statistical data from fbref.com
7 votes -
Scott A. on Scott A. on Scott A.
25 votes -
Why London’s chimney sweeps are enjoying a resurgence
19 votes -
Netflix, but for public domain movies
47 votes -
A faceless hacker stole my therapy notes – Meri-Tuuli was one of 33,000 Vastaamo patients held to ransom in October 2020 by a Finnish hacker
16 votes -
More than 100 traditional Moravian folk shawls preserved in new digital collection
12 votes -
Song streamed millions of times in Sweden has been banned from the country's music charts because it was created by AI
13 votes -
YouTube is now the largest digital library of Sesame Street content
25 votes -
Rx Inspector: ProPublica’s new tool provides drug info the US Food and Drug Administration won’t
27 votes