-
30 votes
-
Iran-backed hackers claim wiper attack on medtech firm Stryker
21 votes -
FK Bodø/Glimt's fairytale Champions League run continued as Sporting CP were swept aside in the first leg of their last-sixteen tie in Norway
6 votes -
English language music is losing its stranglehold on the charts – sixteen different languages appeared in Spotify's Global Top 50 last year, more than double the figure from 2020
24 votes -
A rant about how devices handle users with language backgrounds other than English
How is it possible that in the year of our Lord 2026 my devices STILL use my physical location to determine everything? As I'm writing this, I'm still reeling from the emotional rage I experienced...
How is it possible that in the year of our Lord 2026 my devices STILL use my physical location to determine everything?
As I'm writing this, I'm still reeling from the emotional rage I experienced during the past days. A little context: I got a fitness band (smart band? health watch? smart watch?) as a Christmas gift from a family member. It's a Huawei fitness band that was quite cheap, and I was going to connect it to my (Samsung) android phone. It's the end of February now, and what put me off from configuring it for this long was the fact that I was quite concerned with the privacy side of things; How can I know that my health data isn't indexed by some foreign corporation, sold, and subsequently used against me by my insurance company in 20 years? (further context: I live in Finland)
After doing some research I decided to at least try it out to see how the band works, and only then decide whether I want to keep using it or not. I connect it to my phone, begrudgingly set up yet another account for a service I will use only for a single purpose, sign over my soul and am finally able to establish a connection between the phone and the band. The band asks me to choose the language, and I choose English. I have all of my devices in English even though it's not my native language, mainly for two reasons:
- the translations I've found to be quite clumsy/unintelligible at times, even (read: especially) on Windows
- 99.9% of all tutorials, guides and manuals exist in English, therefore it's easier to troubleshoot/fix problems if I don't have to translate stuff all of the time
After choosing the language and finally getting the damn vampire to work, I notice it's displaying the weather in Fahrenheit. This is odd, because my phone as well as the health app on it are both configured to display units in Celsius, and no matter what I do, I can't get it to change. This shouldn't be a big problem because I don't care what weather/temperature it displays; I already get that information elsewhere.
Now, I'm definitely not an expert on electronic devices or computers in any capacity, but I do dual-boot Linux and Windows on my PC with my main usage being on Linux Mint, and I've also tinkered with some Raspberry Pi and for example Lua coding during the past years, just because learning is fun. Really, the only reason I use Windows at all anymore is because I never got my favorite game, Horizon: Zero Dawn, to work on my Linux distro. I've chosen English (and only English; there is no secondary language) both as the Windows language as well as for Steam, Firefox etc.
Nevertheless, every time I start up Windows, approximately a third of all notifications, error messages and buttons are in my country's most spoken language. Why? Because I'm located in my country. The same is true for my browser, about half of all software and so on. The system detects that I'm located in Finland (or perhaps that the OS was obtained here), and therefore it desperately tries to adjust to that fact, among other things by assuming what language I really speak. Some things in Windows just seem to adjust automatically depending on where it detects I am, and for many problems the only solution seems to be to change my time zone, the unacceptability of which should go without saying.
I understand Windows has been going downhill for quite a while, pushing content and services that the end user didn't ask for and doesn't want/need while removing functionality to bar the user from tinkering with their product too much. That being said, I can't for the life of me understand in what world this particular decision benefits anybody. Why not make separate settings for the time zone, the display language and the displayed units and then respect those settings? It's annoying for the user and it doesn't make anything on my device easier to do, and every time I want to configure Windows, my Android phone or for example my smart band, I feel like a child that gets babied by all the adults and never taken seriously. The child's name? Not Albert Einstein, at least as far as Microsoft is concerned, because of course I am a stupid and lazy average person who speaks the majority language in my country, who wants to do the same things everyone else does, and who understands the error message in English perfectly until the word "OK", which needs to be translated to my country's majority language for some reason.
Back to the smart band problem: After scrounging the internet for a while, I noticed quite a few Europeans have had the same issue with not being able to change the displayed units on their smart band. The solution?
Change the language to UK English.
Now, I understand that this problem had a relatively easy "solution", and in any other scenario I would have jumped to solve the problem and get on with using the device, but this was simply the straw that broke the camel's back. When configuring a device, the user cannot be required to play 5D-chess against the manufacturer's cultural ignorance in order to get basic things to work. In trying to make their product as foolproof as possible, they've made all the end users fools in the process. And this goes for computers, phones, smart bands, smart TVs, gaming consoles and even toasters that nowadays all require AI+remote control completely set up in order to function. Why not let the user first decide what they want, let the user ignore the settings they don't know about, and then have this state-of-the-art technology adjust to that?
I have no interest in wearing this kind of "smart" device on me because it makes me feel stupid.
42 votes -
Survey reveals almost 50% of California teachers may quit teaching soon
44 votes -
Fitness Weekly Discussion
What have you been doing lately for your own fitness? Try out any new programs or exercises? Have any questions for others about your training? Want to vent about poor behavior in the gym? Started...
What have you been doing lately for your own fitness? Try out any new programs or exercises? Have any questions for others about your training? Want to vent about poor behavior in the gym? Started a new diet or have a new recipe you want to share? Anything else health and wellness related?
4 votes -
Cave Creeps - my first Itch game!
27 votes -
Why do I almost never catch colds anymore?
Something I'm wondering about: since COVID, I just don't seem to get colds anymore. Before COVID, I recall that I very regularly had some kind of minor cold – it felt like it was about 50% of the...
Something I'm wondering about: since COVID, I just don't seem to get colds anymore.
Before COVID, I recall that I very regularly had some kind of minor cold – it felt like it was about 50% of the time, realistically let's say maybe 20%? But of course that's just my recollection.
I then caught the original strain of COVID in March 2020, and suffered fairly badly from it for 3 weeks – definitely the worst illness of my life, though I was very lucky not to need to go into hospital. Since then I've had 3 doses of the COVID vaccine, and had COVID at least twice more, both times very mildly.
Since then though, I've noticed that I almost never have any sort of cold any more. I think my partner and I had some kind of brief minor flu back in September, but I've not had anything since, and I remember thinking that it had been a long time since I'd had anything like that.
For reference, I don't wear a mask nowadays, or otherwise do anything much different to my life before COVID.
Does anyone have any thoughts on why this might be?
Uneducated theories on my part:
- Somehow having COVID made me less likely to catch colds
- Somehow having the COVID vaccine made me less likely to catch colds
- During COVID I got used to holding my breath around people coughing, and that's surprisingly effective towards not catching colds
- I'm now mostly around people less likely to pass on colds for some reason
I would love to hear your thoughts on this, especially those who have some actual knowledge about this topic!
31 votes -
The secretive company filling video game sites with gambling and AI
37 votes -
Hi, how are you? Mental health support and discussion thread (March 2026)
This is a monthly thread for those who need it. Vent, share your experiences, ask for advice, talk about how you are doing. Let's make this a compassionate space for all who may need one.
25 votes -
The Dear Hunter - Marauders (2026)
3 votes -
Determinism and Back To The Future
I've had a thought bouncing in my head today and I want to give it some air and let you folks at it to see where it takes on water. The theory is that there's a contradiction, or misalignment...
I've had a thought bouncing in my head today and I want to give it some air and let you folks at it to see where it takes on water.
The theory is that there's a contradiction, or misalignment maybe, between how most people feel about the philosophical concept of free will and how time travel and time loops are portrayed in media. Here's the premises I've landed on to arrive at that:
(1) The vast majority of people believe in some form of free will. (Fairly non contentious, I hope. A lot of resources back this up.)
(2) For free will to exist, if a person is repeatedly prompted to make some sort of decision under the exact same circumstances (time, place, people, etc) there must be a non-zero amount of times that they will arrive at a decision different from their initial one. For example... lets suppose you walk into the room and ask me what I want for dinner. I chew on some options for a moment then decide "chicken and rice". Then my memory is wiped and we repeat this over and over. After a few repeats of this I end up settling on a steak burrito instead. This is the only way free will could work imo because the opposite result, if given the same input you always arrive at the same output, is no different than determinism. Plus it implies, much like the time loop/travel media show, that from the start of the day we can know exactly where we will end up at the end if nothing is changed- which leaves no wiggle room for free will.
(3) The people in time travel / time loop media who are not your faithful protagonist or otherwise aware of the time based shenanigans going on always do the exact same thing every time (at least, in the ones I've seen). It's only the ones who are aware of how events have already unfolded who can make new decisions, everyone and everything else plays out the same.
Thus, virtually all media portray time travel/loops in a way that doesn't jive with how the vast majority of people perceive free will.
So, what do you think- Do you agree with the conclusion? Do you disagree on the definition of free will? Should I have gone with my alternate title? (12 Deterministic Monkeys starring Bruce Free Willis)
24 votes -
TOMORA (Tom Rowlands + Aurora) - Somewhere Else (2026)
6 votes -
Eighty million galaxies: Gigantic astronomical catalog viewable online
18 votes -
Antony Szmierek — The Heron (2026)
4 votes -
Long lost George Michael film and live album set for release later this year
5 votes -
Valve details new game verification system for upcoming Steam Frame and Steam Machine — 30 FPS at 720p for Steam Frame Verified, same as Steam Deck
20 votes -
Ghostty 1.3.0 has been released
28 votes -
Offbeat Fridays – The thread where offbeat headlines become front page news
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like grapheneos, ali khamenei and english. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was...
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like grapheneos, ali khamenei and english. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was asking.
But one of my favourite tags happens to be offbeat! Taking its original inspiration from Sir Nils Olav III, this thread is looking for any far-fetched
offbeatstories lurking in the newspapers. It may not deserve its own post, but it deserves a wider audience!16 votes -
Steam Machine and Frame verification slides from their GDC 2026 presentation
20 votes -
Save Point: A game deal roundup for the week of March 8
Add awesome game deals to this topic as they come up over the course of the week! Alternately, ask about a given game deal if you want the community’s opinions: e.g. “What games from this bundle...
Add awesome game deals to this topic as they come up over the course of the week!
Alternately, ask about a given game deal if you want the community’s opinions: e.g. “What games from this bundle are most worth my attention?”
Rules:
- No grey market sales
- No affiliate links
If posting a sale, it is strongly encouraged that you share why you think the available game/games are worthwhile.
All previous Save Point topics
If you don’t want to see threads in this series, add
save pointto your personal tag filters.7 votes -
Channel Surfer - Watch YouTube like it's cable tv
8 votes -
X1Box: Xbox emulator for Android
12 votes -
Elon Musk says SpaceX will prioritize a city on the moon instead of a colony on Mars
38 votes -
The first multi-behavior brain upload
33 votes -
Billie Eilish in talks to make movie acting debut in adaptation of Sylvia Plath’s ‘The Bell Jar’ for director Sarah Polley, Plan B and Studiocanal; Focus Features landing red hot package
7 votes -
Harvey Weinstein: The Rikers interview
11 votes -
Gameboy Camera Adapter
11 votes -
Using procedural generation to create the 10,000 landscapes in The Sentinel
19 votes -
Shadow fleet dominates Hormuz crossings as Iran ramps up bypass loadings
13 votes -
Apple announces Macbook Neo, a new budget Mac
54 votes -
US government announces pilot program for eVTOLS and ultralight aerial vehicles even without FAA certification
13 votes -
Crusher - Like a Shooting Star ft. Hatsune Miku V6 (2026)
8 votes -
Norwegian influencer buys failed property development in Spain to build ‘self-sufficient’ eco-community – Modern Eco Village plans to erect 500 homes, schools and shops
22 votes -
Yorushika (ヨルシカ) - Plover (2026)
7 votes -
Gluttony – Eulogy To Blasphemy (2026)
3 votes -
Pace of global warming has doubled since 2015
45 votes -
Untangling the connection between dopamine and ADHD
31 votes -
Ig Nobel prizes moving to Europe because US 'unsafe' to visit
44 votes -
YouTube lays claim to another crown: the world’s largest media company
12 votes -
Dice Tower West 2026
11 votes -
Tony Hoare (1934-2026)
11 votes -
Saw. On games, and wanting to play them.
9 votes -
Alternative news source recommendations
I have a specific focus in mind here. Not sure if it even exists, but let's ask. So, we all know there's a news cycle, and everyone follows it. That's my "alternative" focus here ... I want that...
I have a specific focus in mind here. Not sure if it even exists, but let's ask.
So, we all know there's a news cycle, and everyone follows it. That's my "alternative" focus here ... I want that news outlet that explicitly, assertively, goes out of its way, to not follow it. Whatever everyone else is reporting on, those Top 10 stories on every other front page, these guys skip right over those.
I'm looking for that news agency that does those "hey, remember that thing in the news 6 months ago? Whatever happened with that?" stories. The agency that says, "So, have you heard enough about the war in Iran yet? Well, guess what's going on in Honduras today".
Things that don't count ...
- Not looking for extremist, or conspiracy theorist sites.
- Not looking for sites that focus on a particular region or subject matter (mostly Ukraine, mostly financial news, mostly Green/Climate news, etc).
- Not looking for highly opinionated or partisan sites -- everyone leans one way or another, I know, but looking for sites that aim to be objective.
- Not looking for deep dives into the same news cycle ("Who is Mojtaba Khamenei, Really?").
So ... any tips?
30 votes -
The Metropolitan Museum of Art releases three-dimensional renderings of dozens of holdings
11 votes -
Meet the UK's Eurovision entrant: 'The BBC is taking a risk on me'
26 votes -
Researchers in Copenhagen are actively monitoring bat activity and traffic conditions along a road to evaluate how red-spectrum LEDs from street lights affect local wildlife
10 votes -
Sturgill Simpson's new album released early on YouTube (Johnny Blue Skies & The Dark Clouds - Mutiny After Midnight) (2026)
5 votes -
Dox with Grok
38 votes