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16 votes
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How sustainable is a solar powered website?
10 votes -
The Radiohead Public Library, an online resource launched today containing videos, music, artwork, websites, merchandise, and assorted ephemera
15 votes -
Old mobile websites?
Hey everyone, I'm currently looking for some web 1.0-esque websites, but with the twist of being designed for some ancient smartphones. An example of what I mean would be i.reddit.com , reddit's...
Hey everyone, I'm currently looking for some web 1.0-esque websites, but with the twist of being designed for some ancient smartphones. An example of what I mean would be i.reddit.com , reddit's original (and still fully functional) mobile implementation, or Twitter's site when you access it without a modern version of Javascript (which reverts to a clone of itself from around ~2012). I understand this is a super niche category and there's hardly any of them left, but if you happen to know of any or stumble upon one, please let me know! Thank you! :)
24 votes -
The New Far Side site is up!
10 votes -
GameRankings.com will shut down on December 9, replaced with a redirect to Metacritic
6 votes -
Looking for a domain name registrar and a hosting provider for Intergrid
I will be releasing a beta version of Intergrid in the near future, before New Year. The first thing I need is someone to buy a domain name from. I'm looking for a reasonable yearly price for the...
I will be releasing a beta version of Intergrid in the near future, before New Year.
The first thing I need is someone to buy a domain name from.
I'm looking for a reasonable yearly price for the common generic TLDs ($10~$20), combined with reliability of support.
The only previous experience I had was with GoDaddy, and I had no issues with them. I have, however, heard stories of terrible support service (which I never used, for lack of need), and I'd rather not support a company of that level of service. (Nevermind that I bear strong dislike for post-service spam.)
The second thing I need is someone to host it.
Ideally, I would host it on a personal server, which would probably be a Pi-like platform, because I like the idea of owning the host as far as personal projects are concerned. I have little idea of how viable it is, or whether it's a better option for me than renting server space at the moment.
Lacking that, I'd like to have a EU-based hosting provider with reasonably-cheap ($10~$15) basic-level plans. Since the beta of Intergrid is local-storage-only, having a database hosted or supplied is not an issue at the moment. Low time-to-connect is important.
12 votes -
Planetocopia!
6 votes -
Think you’re anonymous online? A third of popular websites are ‘fingerprinting’ you.
18 votes -
Air ticket booking site uses Math.random for "38 people are looking at this right now" UX dark pattern
33 votes -
An Illustrated Book of Bad Arguments
9 votes -
I think I finally found a replacement for ffffound.com in Are.na
7 votes -
Shared mobility principles for livable cities
8 votes -
If you don't find IMDB reviews useful you may like Cherry Picks instead
Here's the IMDB page for The Souvenir (distributed by A24). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6920356/ IMDB users give the score as 6.6, and the user reviews are stuffed full of people who hate it. The...
Here's the IMDB page for The Souvenir (distributed by A24). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6920356/
IMDB users give the score as 6.6, and the user reviews are stuffed full of people who hate it. The critic reviews are almost entirely positive though.
Here's the Cherry Picks page for The Souvenir. https://www.thecherrypicks.com/films/souvenir
They use reviews from "female-identifying and non-binary film critics", and as a result the film gets good reviews.
I find the reviews surfaced by Cherry Picks to be more thoughtful, more considered, and more useful to me than those surfaced by IMDB or MetaCritic (even though they all pull critic reviews from many of the same sources).
I've found some great films via Cherry Picks.
15 votes -
What's the best IMDB alternative?
Used to love reading the IMDB boards after checking out a flick. Up until, of course, Amazon's takeover and purging. Now I feel dirty using the site to check out info about films, and am trying to...
Used to love reading the IMDB boards after checking out a flick. Up until, of course, Amazon's takeover and purging. Now I feel dirty using the site to check out info about films, and am trying to break the habit of using it as my 'go-to' site.
Letterboxd and TheMovieDatabase seem to be the 2 most credible alternatives. Any other suggestions on the Web3.0 (or 2.5) solution to a great community to kick back, contribute and learn with others about film?
16 votes -
noclip.website - A website that lets you view famous levels from all kinds of games in 3D
33 votes -
When can I retire? Early retirement calculator.
7 votes -
Helsinki has revealed a first-of-its kind website meant to empower citizens, businesses and tourists to make more sustainable choices
3 votes -
Certified mess: Even Rotten Tomatoes admits that movie-review aggregation is biased and broken. Is anyone ready to fix it?
14 votes -
There's an underground economy selling links from The New York Times, BBC, CNN, and other big news sites
12 votes -
Russian LGBTQ+ activist found dead after being named on ‘gay-hunting’ website
18 votes -
How Pornhub and Girls Do Porn are enabling doxing and harassment
20 votes -
Apollo 11 in real time
6 votes -
Burial at sea: The fall of Maddox, the internet’s first “outsider” celebrity
21 votes -
Ecosia - The search engine that plants trees
11 votes -
Grubhub is using thousands of fake websites to upcharge commission fees from real businesses
21 votes -
Open Place Reviews, an open data review site developed by osmand and maps.me
8 votes -
Hacking thousands of websites via third-party JavaScript libraries
5 votes -
ThinkGeek is shutting down
19 votes -
Penrose, a platform to create diagrams just by typing mathematical notation in plain text
6 votes -
The world of online dating for socialists
9 votes -
What news sources or other websites do you use on a daily basis?
I’m down to just Hacker News and Tildes for my daily digest. I think using link aggregators is a great way to gain exposure to outside perspectives. Occasionally, I check the Wikipedia main page...
I’m down to just Hacker News and Tildes for my daily digest. I think using link aggregators is a great way to gain exposure to outside perspectives.
Occasionally, I check the Wikipedia main page for juicy world news and featured articles.
28 votes -
I made a web app to show your recent top twenty-five Spotify tracks
12 votes -
Eradicating ecocide
4 votes -
Newsroom Transparency Tracker
7 votes -
Starlink - Low latency satellite internet
20 votes -
Soon you may not even have to click on a website contract to be bound by its terms
7 votes -
Learn German with an interactive fantasy adventure story
3 votes -
Spotify are asking the European Commission to stop Apple's anti-competitive behaviour
9 votes -
The Intercept shuts down access to Snowden trove
9 votes -
lib.reviews An open source, open data review website for high quality reviews on any topic
8 votes -
What are some genuinely good places online?
With a lot of websites going down the shitter in an attempt to monetize (looking at you, Reddit), I'm wondering where some nice places are online. Nice whether in UI, the community, or really just...
With a lot of websites going down the shitter in an attempt to monetize (looking at you, Reddit), I'm wondering where some nice places are online. Nice whether in UI, the community, or really just in general. Below is a small list off the top of my head.
Tildes, because of high quality discussion.
Disroot. It's a slew of useful tools, available for free, while respecting privacy. Genuinely really useful, lots of utilities, good documentation, and a really nice community.
Wikipedia. It's Wikipedia, end of.
Mastodon. This one wholly depends on your instance, but on most(?) the people are nice, and the environment is a lot less argumentative.
Hacker News, high quality discussion over a fair few topics. Very active, too.
47 votes -
What are reliable sites for thoughtful content from a non-American perspective?
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful...
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful articles, essays, discussion, etc. and aren't part of the American internet scene.
I don't care what language it's in, what it's about, what country specifically it's centered on, if it's community-centric or not. If you have a suggestion, let's hear it.
Edit: An example I have is The Blizzard. It's really a subscription-model digital magazine (about soccer) but you can read various articles online.
21 votes -
Astronaut (YouTube Toy)
12 votes -
Fairfax to return with investigative news website
4 votes -
Stuff In Space
17 votes -
Alan Alda has a podcast about communication... and its excellent!
4 votes -
Microsoft Edge browser flags Daily Mail Online as untrustworthy
24 votes -
These are all the federal HTTPS websites that’ll expire soon because of the US government shutdown
8 votes -
Start with a website, not a mobile app
20 votes