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10 votes
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‘The Lion King’ review: Disney’s remake is a disastrous plunge into the uncanny valley
14 votes -
Microsoft capitulates and agrees to undo planned partner product licensing changes
4 votes -
The world's first automatic textile recycling facility will be built in Malmö
6 votes -
Black tech news coverage struggles to find a home in mainstream newsrooms
8 votes -
Researchers eliminated HIV from the genomes of living animals, for the first time
10 votes -
Would you eat a burger made out of CO2 captured from the air?
9 votes -
Ecosia - The search engine that plants trees
11 votes -
Researchers say they’re closer to finding cure for HIV after using CRISPR technology to eliminate disease in live mice for the first time
9 votes -
Boeing's 737 Max software outsourced to $9-an-hour engineers
24 votes -
The Soviet superplane that rattled America
6 votes -
G-20 leaders resolve to prevent exploitation of Internet for terrorism
G-20 leaders resolve to prevent exploitation of Internet for terrorism This statement was reportedly an initiative of the Australian Prime Minister.
9 votes -
Mobile phones to be banned in Victoria state schools from 'first to last bell
19 votes -
How 3D printing could help shape surgery
5 votes -
The LED traffic light and the danger of "but sometimes!"
7 votes -
Are there potential downsides of going to 100% renewable energy?
4 votes -
A look inside Eviation’s Alice, the all-electric plane headed to Cape Air
5 votes -
Why Mazda is purging touchscreens from its vehicles
18 votes -
Masks, cash and apps: How Hong Kong’s protesters find ways to outwit the surveillance state
10 votes -
Data bleeding everywhere: A story of period trackers
11 votes -
Forty online resources all women in tech careers should know about
7 votes -
Maine Governor signs strictest internet protections in the US
8 votes -
Uber names Melbourne as first non-US city for flying car program
6 votes -
Apollo’s brain: The computer that guided man to the Moon
5 votes -
Ditch the GPS. It’s ruining your brain.
19 votes -
How artificial intelligence will revolutionize the way video games are developed and played
8 votes -
The tech of ‘Terminator 2’ – an oral history
5 votes -
Transparency advocates are working to make police personnel records more accessible—and searchable—for the public. Can that go too far?
5 votes -
Quantum computing is a marathon, not a sprint
5 votes -
Metadata is the biggest little problem plaguing the music industry
7 votes -
Facebook's Zuckerberg and Sandberg will disregard subpoenas to appear in front of Canada-hosted International Grand Committee on Big Data, Privacy and Democracy
13 votes -
Arm staff told they must cut all ties with Huawei
7 votes -
Why shaky data security protocols for apps put LGBTQ people at risk
8 votes -
This genealogy database helped solve dozens of crimes. But its new privacy rules will restrict access by cops.
4 votes -
Timor-Leste aims to become world's first plastics-neutral country
6 votes -
Schools are using software to help pick who gets in. What could go wrong?
7 votes -
Why do people not like telemetry?
I often see people complaining about telemetry in things like Firefox and the like, but I've never understood why it was a big problem for your privacy. If it's anonymous and helps the developers...
I often see people complaining about telemetry in things like Firefox and the like, but I've never understood why it was a big problem for your privacy. If it's anonymous and helps the developers do their job, what's wrong with it?
26 votes -
Denuvo DRM cracks seem to be happening faster and faster
9 votes -
The first 3D colour x-rays
4 votes -
Electricity grid cybersecurity will be expensive – who will pay, and how much?
3 votes -
Any developers/designers interested in a helping build a proof-of-concept for a new type of data-centric app?
Wow it was hard to describe this in the title! I should have said "data-centric APP" not UI. Sorry! LOL I have had an idea for 25 years that I keep NOT pursuing because I was convinced that the...
Wow it was hard to describe this in the title! I should have said "data-centric APP" not UI. Sorry! LOL
I have had an idea for 25 years that I keep NOT pursuing because I was convinced that the next big version of Linux/Windows/etc would include a more civilized way to manage data. It just seems obvious in my strange mind, I guess that means intuitive. I've discussed the idea and worked on refining the concepts with about 20 people and they all agreed.My idea is based on a huge paradigm shift about managing all forms of data by the user. It's about how we manage data, not just file-system stuff or yet-another Windows/File Explorer or any of the numerous current Linux varieties. I'm honestly shocked that in 2019, the most original idea that's come about is to remove all the menus and toolbars (freeman) or add a bunch of tabs and hundreds of buttons (pretty much everything on Windows).
I am a software engineer and designer with 35 years experience - but with business class apps, not OS stuff. I am semi-retired and have a great deal of time to work on whatever interests me. And please note: Despite my advanced years ;-) LOL I am very current on the technologies I work with daily, which is mainly .net/c#. However, I just finished a year-long project that had a Java client running on a Raspberry Pi (which I love) paired with a WCF service running in IIS, along with an asp.net web client. Now I'm not an expert in any of that, but I'm not too shabby I don't think as I've made a good living and do mostly volunteer work right now.
I currently manage a massive amount of data, from files/dirs on Windows and Linux file-systems, to MSSQL and mySQL on both Windows and Linux, and of course some cloud data. And it takes several tools as you know, and it's incredibly inefficient and painful. And of course on Windows, Windows/File Explorer is - eh, I can't find a word strong enough. On Linux not much better. And I've spent the past two years searching, researching, testing, and praying.
My idea is to build an app that allows users - not just developers like me - but mostly aimed at business users - to manage data from various sources/technologies in a single unified and intuitive manner. The physical aspect is divorced from the UI which is divorced from the management engine. And it's grouped the way the user THINKS and WORKS with it. For example, let's say for PROJECT-A (and Client-1) I have various source code locations on 2 local hard drives, but also documents (technical specs, or maybe letters to the client, spreadsheets or timelines), and of course likely a database or two, some web-site links. How many places and how many apps would I have to use today to keep them all close by so I could get to them? Well, there'd be a couple of drive letters probably, maybe a few sub-folder levels deep, maybe documents on a network share, some collaborative docs in the cloud, and some web-site links in whatever-browser-you-use. You get the idea.
No file manager on any OS can give you much more than "Places" or file-system - drive letters on Windows or some mount points on Linux. Things like MyDocuments, MyMusic, MyInsanity - that stuff makes no sense because it's not how people work. What I want is a "work-space" where I can have any number of what I call "Data Sources" - and it doesn't matter what physical technology is underneath it - local hard drive, local sub-folder, mapped drive, unc mount, cloud, ftp - don't care - don't need to. I create a work-space, add data sources, order them however I want, name them whatever I want, and each "Data Source" has a manager or provider. A filesystem provider would make your data source look like Windows Explorer. But a database provider could look like MS SQL Server Manager or other db admin tool. And you put that workspace in a tab if you want, and have as many others in other tabs - or you put them on a menu, or on a popup that a middle-click brings up - doesn't matter. And everything I've just written, plus it's settings, is represented by Viewer objects. A hierarchical - tree-view or the likes - a flat view - a list-view - a preview pane, or editor pane - navigation tool (path/breadcrumbs) - a command line shell pane - drag/dock wherever in the tab you want. A main menu/toolbar + status-bar would be global and shared. And all THAT is bundled into a PARENT object - which contains the work-spaces, which contains the tabs, which contains the data sources + provider views/panes. And you can have as many of THOSE - parent objects - as you need, easily accessible in the custom titlebar at the top, or bottom, etc..
The point is - when I am working on PROJECT-A I manage it in a tab that contains ONLY the drive letters, or mount points, that are relevant (and named what I choose, meaning no drive letters forced on me even if that is the underlying reality nor any full paths or full URLs - just logical names I assign). This will NOT be some massive file manager with every folder on the system or 18 drive letters I'll never use. It will have all the web-site bookmarks I need, as well as databases I'm working with. This won't be an ALL-IN-ONE type of thing - you will STILL use your external apps, web browser, IDE or editor, mail app - but it will be a SINGLE place where ALL those data items get represented and where you can manage them in exactly the same way. I can copy/paste an email message to a file on my workstation, or copy a file from a network share to some machine remotely using ftp or http.
I hope this makes some kinda sense and doesn't just sound like the ramblings of yet-another aging geek who thinks he's got a great new idea. My usage scenarios are literally based on things I do every day, and are the result of observing myself as I work to see what my mind is doing. I do realize that we all work in our own way, and I've taken that into account. But there are basic things we all do concerning data management. And as I have hired, trained, and worked with a huge number of fellow programmers over my 35 years - without exception this was the most common soft point for them all. Keeping track of data. The same applies to all my clients. I've written software for accountants and attorneys, and a wide variety of business types - and without exception - every one of them had trouble with managing their data. One look at their Desktop or MyDocuments - or just watching them trying to find a letter in MS-Word - tells the whole story.
Ok there's my pitch - I'm looking for anyone who has interest, no matter what your skill level or how much time you can or cannot devote. We need people who can contribute only opinion and advice, as well as hardcore keyboard jocks like me who love to code for 36 hours at a clip ;-) LOL
12 votes -
What is the most creative app or website you know of?
HELLO TILDES USERS. IT IS I, FELLOW HUMAN, BISHOP. As you may have read in an earlier post of mine (ok probably not it was a one-off comment, not like I reinforced the thought anywhere.) I do...
HELLO TILDES USERS. IT IS I, FELLOW HUMAN, BISHOP.
As you may have read in an earlier post of mine (ok probably not it was a one-off comment, not like I reinforced the thought anywhere.)
I do indeed hold the belief that code can be, itself, art, in the right context.
Or, rather, that code can be used for artistic purposes.
I dunno.
That's why I'm posting.
What would you say is the most artistic or, at least, creatively designed website or mobile app that you've seen?
I've got some creativity a-stewin' away in my head, and I need a new excuse to kill some time on frontend.
So, fellow humans, hit me with your best shot duh-nuh-nuh-nuh fire away.
What ya got?
(@mods fix my tags please. Not sure what to put, but you might have a good idea. Ya boy's had a few.)
18 votes -
One out of every 11,600 people in San Francisco is a billionaire
5 votes -
This company says the future of nuclear energy is smaller, cheaper and safer
5 votes -
Quantum computing for the very curious
6 votes -
How the news took over reality: Is engagement with current affairs key to being a good citizen? Or could an endless torrent of notifications be harming democracy as well as our wellbeing?
10 votes -
Everything is a subscription now
8 votes -
"Looping" has created an underground market for old Medtronic insulin pumps with a security flaw
10 votes -
Is it OK to scrape Tildes?
I wanted to keep the title---and the question, for that matter---generic, but my use case is that I want to make a backup of my posts on Tildes, and I'd fancy automating that with a script that...
I wanted to keep the title---and the question, for that matter---generic, but my use case is that I want to make a backup of my posts on Tildes, and I'd fancy automating that with a script that curls up my user page and downloads fresh stuff from there periodically. So for my personal case, the question is that is this allowed / welcome practice?
The generic question is that is it welcome to scrape Tildes' public pages, in general?
19 votes -
As more and more of our words are tapped out on keyboards, writing by hand has become an endangered species
8 votes