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3 votes
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New study finds it’s harder to turn off a robot when it’s begging for its life.
21 votes -
Voltron: Legendary Defender - Shiro and Adam
I don't have a long write up for this or anything, mostly because I'm just confused... I have to admit, watching season 7, I don't remember Adam if he was ever brought in before, and his part was...
I don't have a long write up for this or anything, mostly because I'm just confused...
I have to admit, watching season 7, I don't remember Adam if he was ever brought in before, and his part was so short and seemingly inconsequential, I honestly have no strong feelings for it. Shiro is all about burying his feelings and putting the needs of others above his own, so it's not at all out of character for his personal life to basically never show up. Still, we're finally getting more of his backstory, and I can't help but feel it's lacking.
So, I guess my question is - why? Why bring in a character they're not going to develop and kill off screen? Would it be better just to have a random mention of Shiro being gay and just moving on, which I guess is pretty much all that happened anyways? Guess they could have done it as part of his backstory with Keith. Does this count as queer-baiting?
Thoughts?
Correction: guess he didn't die off screen. I just didn't recognize the random pilot as Adam...
7 votes -
Sekai Project Lays Off Marketing Staff
3 votes -
Discover Lands Unknown - Trailer
2 votes -
The world's most liveable cities in 2018
2 votes -
Why there’s no such thing as a civilisation
5 votes -
Nazi fan wins Republican Primary in Missouri
7 votes -
Why 'Some Like It Hot' is the greatest comedy ever made
4 votes -
How millennials killed mayonnaise
16 votes -
The Underpopulation Bomb
12 votes -
Buffy's Spike: Death as redemption
For most stories, when you have an evil or otherwise irredeemable character, death is the only form of satisfactory redemption. Anything less is simply not convincing for most audiences. I'm sure...
For most stories, when you have an evil or otherwise irredeemable character, death is the only form of satisfactory redemption. Anything less is simply not convincing for most audiences.
I'm sure a lot of people can write novels on Spike's character arcs, but I just wanted to discuss a little bit of his redemption arc.
Interestingly, his sacrifice at the end of Buffy season 7, is the beginning of his actual character. Sure, he's helped out Buffy before that, but he was far from "the greater good" until then. So death, and boom - character redeemed.
So how's the redemption arc when he's brought back in Angel. It's harder now because now he's up and walking and possibility doing things that negate his redemption. He now has to live the life he supposedly wanted to when he made his sacrifice.
Not saying that's what happened, but I think the writers went out of their way to show this.
(Going off memory now, so please feel free to correct me, if I get any details wrong...)
Not long after he's ghost-Spike, he starts feeling like he's pulled to "Hell", and develops a friendship with Fred, who ultimately saves him from that fate. This establishes his "goodness" for the rest of Angel.
Thoughts? Other characters that share something similar you want to talk about? How would Spike feel without this episode? Anyone just want to gush about Spike in general?
3 votes -
The death of the electric guitar
9 votes -
An Essential Guide to Image Compression
8 votes -
The simple change that could save patient lives
6 votes -
Born sexy yesterday
22 votes -
Shenzhen Tech Girl Naomi Wu: My experience with Sarah Jeong, Jason Koebler, and Vice Magazine
41 votes -
I saw the big dipper tonight
I live somewhere with relatively little light pollution, so on every clear night all the stars come out. I'm not a very good astronomer though, the big dipper is the only constellation I know. I...
I live somewhere with relatively little light pollution, so on every clear night all the stars come out. I'm not a very good astronomer though, the big dipper is the only constellation I know. I don't usually go out at night, so seeing it is still a pretty neat thing for me. I also saw the north star by following the tail(?) of the spoon, it's a bit dim and hard to see.
Any amateur or professional astronomers here? What do you like to look for at night?
20 votes -
The dehumanization of human resources
I realize that businesses want to draw talent from the largest pool possible, and to do so available positions are often advertised simultaneously across several job market websites with audiences...
I realize that businesses want to draw talent from the largest pool possible, and to do so available positions are often advertised simultaneously across several job market websites with audiences larger than what almost any company could reach on their own. Certainly some steps of the application process must be automated when dealing with, what I can only imagine, is a relatively high number of applicants. Websites like Indeed.com have even automated the phone interview process, having applicants take a robo-call and recording their responses to questions selected by the employer. The result, in my own experience, is an often bleak, one-sided, discouraging and depressing bout of dysfunctional online dating, except the relationship you're looking for is with your future employer.
Are there any HR people on Tildes? If so, I'm curious what this whole process looks like on your side and how it differs from say, twenty years ago. Is the process better? Are the people you hire better? How, on your end, could this process be improved? And most importantly, do you have any advice for getting through this increasingly frustrating first step?
23 votes -
Google tracks your movements, like it or not
20 votes -
Google has kicked Ahoy! the anti-censorship app from the Chrome store
22 votes -
What have you been listening to this week?
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to give recs or dicuss anything about each others'...
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something!
Feel free to give recs or dicuss anything about each others' listening habits.
You can make a chart if you use last.fm:
25 votes -
Saudi fund in talks to invest in Tesla buyout deal
4 votes -
Antifa clashes with police and journalists in Charlottesville and DC
11 votes -
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has secured the support of an overwhelming majority of Liberal and Nationals MPs for his energy policy.
4 votes -
~music Listening Club 8 - Exuma
Hello all you good people, week 8 it is! Here we've got this week's user-voted record: Exuma by Exuma! Taking @leech's original pitch: I think it's probably one of the most legendary spiritual...
Hello all you good people, week 8 it is! Here we've got this week's user-voted record: Exuma by Exuma!
Taking @leech's original pitch:
I think it's probably one of the most legendary spiritual albums recorded, a look into some Junkanoo, Carnival, and Calypso music with a raw, ecstatic energy behind each song. His music is truly unique and nothing has quite reached it.
The story of Exuma's music is really captivating and later on in his career he toured with some big namesHere's the place to discuss your thoughts on the record, your history with it or the artist, and basically talk about whatever you want to that goes along with Exuma. Remember that this is intended to be a slow moving thing, feel free to take your time and comment at any point in the week!
If you'd like to stream or buy the album, it can be found on YouTube here or purchased physically here.
8 votes -
How UNH Turned A Quiet Benefactor Into A Football-Marketing Prop
4 votes -
Underwater fiber-optic cables could moonlight as earthquake sensors
6 votes -
Vanguard warns of worsening odds for the economy and markets
5 votes -
Parents break teen out of Mayo Clinic
12 votes -
Newsboat: a console-based RSS/Atom feed reader
6 votes -
Right after a period, women have better spatial awareness. Three weeks after, verbal skills peak. It turns out the monthly cycle does change the brain – but not in the ways you think.
10 votes -
NVIDIA SIGGRAPH 2018 Keynote Live Blog
2 votes -
Why American farmers are hacking their tractors with Ukrainian firmware
12 votes -
Elon Musk’s Tesla funding wasn’t quite ‘secured’ after all
9 votes -
"Dungeons & Dragons" and other TTRPGs are pretty misunderstood. What questions about the hobby would you like answered by those who play?
Since D&D gained prominence in the late-70s, it's been a game that outsiders to the hobby don't really understand. It has held the stereotype as that weird maths game where kids play as wizards in...
Since D&D gained prominence in the late-70s, it's been a game that outsiders to the hobby don't really understand. It has held the stereotype as that weird maths game where kids play as wizards in basements, or to some: a game that trains you in black magic to be devil worshippers.
D&D is experiencing a boom right now in popularity as the nerdy is becoming cool and many people who would never have dreamt of playing have found themselves with a new hobby. Whether you hold one of those views previously mentioned or are otherwise curious: What would you like to know about D&D and by extension - Tabletop Role-Playing Games?
-LTADnD
31 votes -
How do you tag comments?
I see in the documentation that we are supposed to be able to tag comments, but I see no way to do that. Is this feature yet to be implemented?
18 votes -
Working four-day weeks for five days’ pay? Research shows it pays off.
19 votes -
Where even Walmart won't go: How Dollar General took over rural America
13 votes -
One-Punch Man anime Season 2 unveils teaser, JAM Project's return, April premiere
17 votes -
Markdown for strikethrough and tables is now enabled
Previously, the only way to do strikethrough or tables on Tildes was by using HTML. I've updated the markdown parser now so that it supports the methods of doing them through markdown. The...
Previously, the only way to do strikethrough or tables on Tildes was by using HTML. I've updated the markdown parser now so that it supports the methods of doing them through markdown. The Formatting help page on the docs has been updated as well with info about how they work.
I don't think there should be any conflicts between strikethrough and linking to groups, but it's possible that there are some weird edge cases, so please let me know if you notice anything. Generally, strikethrough requires you to have two tildes both before and after the text you want to strike out, whereas group links will only have one before. So something like
This ~~should work~~ doesn't workwill result inshould workinstead of a link to a group named ~should.69 votes -
Need advice about Tomboy notes and note apps in general
I'm looking for some advice on what note programs people recommend. Not a basic text editor, but something capable of doing some basic categorizing, chronological sorting, that sort of thing. I've...
I'm looking for some advice on what note programs people recommend. Not a basic text editor, but something capable of doing some basic categorizing, chronological sorting, that sort of thing. I've used Evernote most recently, but I'm becoming less and less of a fan. I don't need cloud sync necessarily, although device sync could be handy. A pleasant UI (not fettered with extraneous crap) would be nice, but aesthetic appeal takes a backseat to navigation and stability. Target OS is mostly likely going to be windows 10.
What are you experiences with note apps, what are your favorites?
(A bit of context for anyone interested)
Years ago, I used tomboy notes in Ubuntu for keeping track of timesheets/daily logs. It seemed like a good program to set up for my step dad to use as well. A few years later, Tomboy notes petered out without much fanfare. I've kept his laptop running with that setup for as long as I could, but the hardware is just getting worn out (it's about 10 years old now).So! Time to get him an upgrade. This time around, I don't think I'm gonna set up up with Linux. He isn't really up to the task of doing his own troubleshooting in linux (i.e. when an automatic update breaks something), and I haven't even been keeping up on Linux for the past few years myself. So I'm probably going to set him up on a Windows machine.
I should be able to export the tomboy notes database fairly easy, but it would be a huge load off my mind if I could settle on a decent program to migrate to first.
Thanks in advance for any input!
11 votes -
The Fictional Foods We Wish Were Real
7 votes -
What are peoples thoughts on NPR giving equal platforms to everyone?
18 votes -
Words to use instead of "said"
11 votes -
Gris | Reveal trailer
7 votes -
Sunshine - 2007 - Sci-fi thriller
Today NASA launched the Parker Solar Probe which will dive closer to the sun than any other man made object in history. In celebration of this event I watched Sunshine, a really well cast sci fi...
Today NASA launched the Parker Solar Probe which will dive closer to the sun than any other man made object in history.
In celebration of this event I watched Sunshine, a really well cast sci fi thriller. It was pretty darn good. I would highly recommend a watch if you are into this sort of thing, I had entirely missed it somehow. Casting is great, visuals are great, story is good, pacing is excellent. Don't be put off by the age of the movie, I don't think vfx would be any better today.
50 years into the future, the Sun begins to die, and Earth is dying as a result. A team of astronauts is sent to revive the Sun - but the mission fails. Seven years later, a new team is sent to finish the mission as mankind's last hope.
It may not be on US Netflix but it is on Amazon.
15 votes -
Learning to pentest
Hi, I need your help to learn pentesting. I'm programming for several years. I'm really good in C# and can write moderately complex apps in Dart, Python and JavaScript. I'm in highschool and work...
Hi, I need your help to learn pentesting.
I'm programming for several years. I'm really good in C# and can write moderately complex apps in Dart, Python and JavaScript. I'm in highschool and work for software development company as backend developer. But general programming starts to feel so boring...
I've started to watch LiveOverflow on youtube (no link, there is no wifi here and I don't want youtube to drain my data) and it was so interesting - so I tried it. I've tried few CTFs, read many writeups, and now I've discovered CTF hack the box.
When I know what to do, I have no problem googling and researching and later applying my knowledge. But I often discover, that I just don't know what I don't know.
There is one CTF challenge that I haven't completed yet. It's 20 line html page, no javascript, nothing suspicous. No cookies. It has just form with password input, which sends post request to server. Here's the problem - how do I get the flag (the password)? I can bruteforce it, but it clearly isn't the correct way. I know that the php runs on apache, debian. I've tried getting some files, I've tried going up (
../), sql injection, nothing works.And here's the general problem - what am I missing? What to learn? What should I google? I don't want ideas what I'm missing on this one example - Instead I need some sources where I learn generally about vulnerabilities I can exploit. Some blog, some website, something like this.
Could someone here recommend me some sources where I learn about this? How did you start and what things do you generally check when you face something you have to break into?
Thank you
16 votes -
Heat: the next big inequality issue
9 votes -
Apple is making a comedy set in a video game development studio with Rob McElhenny and Charlie Day from "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia"
8 votes