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10 votes
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A scandal in Oxford: The curious case of the stolen gospel
7 votes -
The Dogma of Otherness (1986)
6 votes -
2020 Vision: The Witcher 2 - RED engine analysis and performance on modern PC hardware
4 votes -
Hackers are breaking directly into telecom companies to take over customer phone numbers
10 votes -
TV Tuesdays Free Talk
Have you watched any TV shows recently you want to discuss? Any shows you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here. Please just try to provide fair warning of...
Have you watched any TV shows recently you want to discuss? Any shows you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
7 votes -
Free-of-charge public transport isn't free, Finnish experts say
12 votes -
Echoes of the City by Lars Saabye Christensen review – sacrifice and strength in postwar Oslo
5 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?
11 votes -
Infinity Train - Book Two | Official trailer
4 votes -
How to render 3D fractals using ray marching
5 votes -
Norway opens its doors to six hundred people evacuated from Libya to Rwanda
9 votes -
IBM’s lithium-ion battery uses seawater materials instead of heavy metals, charges in just five minutes
12 votes -
Do we have any knife enthusiasts on here?
I’m a spyderco guy
11 votes -
Stable lithium-sulfur battery could see smartphones run for five days
6 votes -
LA-area residents flock to Taiwan to vote in ‘do or die’ presidential election
12 votes -
Can there be a 'new comments only' sort for people who toggled 'mark new comments' on?
As someone comes to this site a lot and has toggled this feature on, a sort that shows only the threads where new comments have been posted since I last left would be great so I don't need to...
As someone comes to this site a lot and has toggled this feature on, a sort that shows only the threads where new comments have been posted since I last left would be great so I don't need to scroll down the homepage anxiously looking for new comments on the topics I like.
8 votes -
MIT has released the results of the review of the university's interactions with Jeffrey Epstein
6 votes -
GM will resurrect the Hummer name on an all-electric pickup truck to be sold under the GMC brand
4 votes -
Suggestions for a Starter Synth?
I feel like I have gotten as far as I can playing around with my keyboard and LMMS, so I was wondering if anyone here has any recommendations for a synth that I could start out with. As much as I...
I feel like I have gotten as far as I can playing around with my keyboard and LMMS, so I was wondering if anyone here has any recommendations for a synth that I could start out with. As much as I really want to buy a OP-1 or OP-Z I don't think I can justify it just yet. I would like something in the style of the OP-1 or OP-Z, i.e. quite small, with they keys laid out like a piano, and controls for modifying the sound on the synth, although it doesn't need an included sequencer. I'm also pretty open to drum machine ideas, just have never really played around with them at all. My budget is like $200 max.
10 votes -
The ecological devastation of the Victorian bushfires has been laid bare in a leaked report which warns some species are likely to already be extinct
4 votes -
The invisible art of game titles
6 votes -
Mattress maker Casper files for IPO
6 votes -
Farmers are buying forty-year-old tractors because they're actually repairable
21 votes -
UK Ministry of Defence buildings lit up in rainbow colours
5 votes -
CES 2020 summary: Pork, driverless cars, new wearable sensors, folding computers, integrated tech
4 votes -
OldTimeyComputerShow: 24/7 of retro computer and gaming tv programs
14 votes -
Are there any historical events, periods, figures or concepts that you find underrated?
My personal picks would be the whole of Chinese history between the opium wars and communist rule (or the century of humiliation as it is called), and most especially the warlord era, given that...
My personal picks would be the whole of Chinese history between the opium wars and communist rule (or the century of humiliation as it is called), and most especially the warlord era, given that this was effectively how European powers, Japan and many internal revolutionaries managed to bring down the greatest economy in the world to civil war and then total warlordism for 40 years. For a vague concept, my pick would be the great divergence, the period where the US and European nations rose above the rest of the world and became the predominant world powers and colonized most of it, along with the many potential causes of this.
8 votes -
Wearable sleep trackers - recommendations?
Is there a good smartwatch/simile that monitors sleep and has excellent battery life (measured in weeks not hours)? I use the Withings (ex-Nokia) Steel HR, but it … kinda sucks. The bluetooth...
Is there a good smartwatch/simile that monitors sleep and has excellent battery life (measured in weeks not hours)?
I use the Withings (ex-Nokia) Steel HR, but it … kinda sucks. The bluetooth pairings very often lose sleep data, it's very inaccurate, the reporting sucks for non-24s, and the leather bracelet is of very poor quality, keeps breaking.
I really don't care for the fitness/step tracking which, as someone else here put it, thinks typing on a keyboard or eating is a step.
I also briefly tried an Oura (https://ouraring.com/), but I never got it to work and had to send it back.
I also don't care much for any of those "sleep quality" trackers that try to detect if I snore and what not. I can do sleep studies in my own time, I just want to have accurate stats on whether and when I am asleep.
6 votes -
In The Tall Grass (2019) is…
… essentially Cube 2: Hypercube. It's even written and directed by Vincenzo Natali, the man behind Cube. I didn't dislike it, in fact I liked it. But seriously, am I the only one who noticed that?...
… essentially Cube 2: Hypercube. It's even written and directed by Vincenzo Natali, the man behind Cube. I didn't dislike it, in fact I liked it. But seriously, am I the only one who noticed that?
Also, Harrison Gilbertson has big Aaron Paul energy. Especially in the voice.
3 votes -
Jonathan Hultén - The Mountain (2020)
3 votes -
Apparently Samsung just put a removable battery in one of it's new phones
6 votes -
Which books had a major influence in your formative years?
Following on from this post
14 votes -
2020 Scottsdale Collectible Car Auction Preview: The million-dollar cars
4 votes -
Indie game VVVVVV's source code is now public
22 votes -
The Clash - Rock The Casbah (1982)
8 votes -
His Dark Materials s01e01 - "Lyra's Jordan" discussion thread
The first episode of the BBC/HBO adaptation of His Dark Materials, by Phillip Pullman. Synopsis: Orphan Lyra Belacqua's world is turned upside-down by her long-absent uncle's return from the...
The first episode of the BBC/HBO adaptation of His Dark Materials, by Phillip Pullman.
Synopsis: Orphan Lyra Belacqua's world is turned upside-down by her long-absent uncle's return from the north, while the glamorous Mrs Coulter visits Jordan College with a proposition.
12 votes -
That time the Mediterranean Sea disappeared
9 votes -
The Good Place S04E10 - "You've Changed, Man" discussion thread
We're back, and we have three episodes (one double length) to go.
6 votes -
The Elephant Chart and how statistics made three of them
3 votes -
A News Corp employee has accused the organisation of a "misinformation campaign" filled with "irresponsible" and "dangerous" coverage of the national bushfire crisis
14 votes -
Sweden's PM Stefan Löfven wants swift and complete probe into Iran plane crash
8 votes -
Copenhagen-based firm Henning Larsen Architects has proposed a low-rise neighborhood south of central Copenhagen using all-timber construction
4 votes -
Magnus Carlsen: ‘You need to be very fortunate to be number one in fantasy football’
8 votes -
CES2020: Cyrcle Phone is round and has two headphone jacks
8 votes -
What are your favorite Instant Pot/pressure cooker recipes?
My husband and I are looking to do more with our Instant Pot in the coming year. The last thread we had on this topic was from 2018, so I figure we could use an update. What are your favorite...
My husband and I are looking to do more with our Instant Pot in the coming year. The last thread we had on this topic was from 2018, so I figure we could use an update.
- What are your favorite Instant Pot/pressure cooker recipes?
Please link to the full recipe if possible!
12 votes -
Scott Derrickson steps down from director's position on "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness," citing creative differences.
3 votes -
Air filters create educational gains
14 votes -
"This airplane is designed by clowns who in turn are supervised by monkeys."—Boeing employees mocked FAA in internal messages before 737 Max disasters
14 votes -
Are there any personalized recommendation engines/sites that you trust?
In the 2000s I used to use a service called last.fm (originally called Audioscrobbler) that would track the music I listened to and give me recommendations based on that. It was able to give me...
In the 2000s I used to use a service called last.fm (originally called Audioscrobbler) that would track the music I listened to and give me recommendations based on that. It was able to give me some really great personalized suggestions, but that came at the expense of me handing over significant amounts of personal data.
In prioritizing privacy, I feel like I've stepped away from a lot of the big recommendation engines because they're tied to data-hungry companies I am in the process of disengaging with (e.g. Goodreads is owned by Amazon). I can still find stuff I like, but it's often the result of manual searching that turns up popular recommendations that work for me, rather than less well-known or acutely relevant things. last.fm was good at giving me less "obvious" recommendations and would find music I was unlikely to find on my own. I want that, but for all of my media: books, movies, etc.
There's a second concern in that I also feel like I can't trust platforms like Netflix, who seem to prioritize their content over that of other studios. Their recommendations feel weighted in their favor, not mine.
What I want is an impartial recommendation engine that gives me high quality personalized suggestions without a huge privacy cost.1 Is this a pipe dream, or are there examples of this kind of thing out there?
1. I don't mind handing over some of my specific interest data in order to get good recommendations for myself and help a site's algorithms cater to others, as I get that's how these things work. I just don't like the idea of my interests being even more data for a company that already has thousands of intimate data points on me.
18 votes