-
7 votes
-
The anti-Amazon alliance
6 votes -
TF2 and CS:GO source code leaked
17 votes -
How to encourage clicks without the shady tricks
3 votes -
Amazon threatens to suspend French deliveries after court order
5 votes -
A very detailed Corona curriculum for your kids
5 votes -
Amazon warehouse warned staff not to touch shipments for twenty-four hours
9 votes -
Singapore: Most workplaces to close, schools will move to full home-based learning from next week
4 votes -
Amazon workers to strike at New York site on virus concerns
9 votes -
Don’t panic about shopping, getting delivery or accepting packages
9 votes -
PSA for parents/guardians of school-age kids: Many distance/online learning tools are currently available for free through your child's teacher
For anyone who's caring for school-age children, I want to let you know that nearly every single online education platform/tool is currently offering up their normally premium paid services for...
For anyone who's caring for school-age children, I want to let you know that nearly every single online education platform/tool is currently offering up their normally premium paid services for free on account of school closures. While some will offer these directly to parents/students, most of them require a teacher to sign up and then have the student account exist underneath them.
If there is a resource that you or your children would like to access, please email your child's teacher and ask if they'll sign up for it. It'll likely take only two minutes on their end (and they'll be happy to do it! trust me!), but it'll open up a ton of resources for you and your child.
7 votes -
Amazon Prime delivery delays are now as long as a month
11 votes -
Amazon raises overtime pay for warehouse workers
3 votes -
Amazon suspends all warehouse shipments except medical supplies and ‘high-demand’ products until April 5th
14 votes -
Amazon is suspending all shipments other than medical supplies and household staples to its warehouses
8 votes -
Amazon ramps hiring, opening 100,000 new roles to support people relying on Amazon’s service
7 votes -
Amazon glitch stymies Whole Foods, fresh grocery deliveries
7 votes -
CS:GO has set a new record of one million concurrent players, which makes it the third Steam game to do so
13 votes -
She wanted a 'freebirth' with no doctors. Online groups convinced her it would be OK.
23 votes -
Why Amazon knows so much about you
18 votes -
Morgan Stanley to acquire E*TRADE for $13 billion
8 votes -
Local bookstores have a new weapon in the fight with Amazon
22 votes -
A two-year investigation of the ties between a network of deceptive dating sites and Firefly Aerospace, a company selected by NASA for bidding on lunar payloads
9 votes -
Brandless shuts down operations, becoming SoftBank Vision Fund's first failure
8 votes -
Match on dating app Tinder helps rescue camper trapped in ice in northern Norway
7 votes -
A software engineer's advice for saving social media: keep it small
29 votes -
Don't trust online reviews (personal anecdote)
I recently bought a product online. I wasn't able to find it in a bricks-and-mortar shop, so I had to buy it online to even see it, let alone try it. I received it, and it wasn't right for me. I...
I recently bought a product online. I wasn't able to find it in a bricks-and-mortar shop, so I had to buy it online to even see it, let alone try it. I received it, and it wasn't right for me. I was able to exchange it for a different version, but even the different version wasn't right. So I returned the product and got a refund. All along, the customer service was excellent, but the product itself turned out not to be what I wanted.
The way the product failed for me was connected to the "headline" description of the product. It wasn't a minor failure. It did something that they explicitly said it wouldn't do, which was one of the main selling features of the product.
After the dust settled, I wrote a review of the product. I don't normally do this: I neither write nor read reviews. However, I know that other people do rely on reviews and, seeing as this product is only available online, and its failure was linked to a major selling feature of the product, I felt duty-bound to inform other prospective buyers that it might not suit some people. I gave it a 2-star (out of 5) rating, as well as writing up why it didn't suit me (while allowing that it might still suit other people).
Since I submitted the review, I have checked the website (I'm an egotist: I wanted to see my words being published!). Other reviews with more recent timestamps have appeared, but my review has not appeared. I've now noticed that the lowest rating in their reviews is a single 3-star rating, with some 4-star reviews and lots of 5-star reviews. There are no 2-star or 1-star reviews. My only conclusion is that the company selects which reviews to publish - and which ones not to publish.
I've always wondered if companies would post negative reviews of their own products. Now I know for sure that at least one company does not.
18 votes -
People in Canada’s remote Arctic capital are obsessed with Amazon Prime
6 votes -
Running the numbers to figure out Amazon's market share: it has about 35% of US ecommerce, but closer to 6% of addressable retail overall
5 votes -
Match Group, which owns most major online dating services, screens for sexual predators on Match.com — but not on Tinder, OkCupid or PlentyofFish
10 votes -
Amazon doesn’t report its warehouse injury rates — but we have an inside look
13 votes -
IKEA's profits have fallen nearly 10% as the world's largest furniture retailer stepped up its spending on renewable energy and its growing online operation
14 votes -
Behind the Smiles - Amazon’s internal injury records expose the true toll of its relentless drive for speed
8 votes -
Profile of a fake Amazon reviewer, who has received over $15,000 of products for free in exchange for posting five-star reviews
17 votes -
Good challenges vs. bad challenges
5 votes -
We're rewarding the question askers
10 votes -
Holy shit, Contra said a thing! Well, guess I better singlehandedly solve BreadTube
10 votes -
Which games have great communities, and what do you like about them?
As an outsider some gaming communities can appear incredibly toxic. I'm sure some of that is a deserved reputation, but I'm also aware that maybe there's a bit of generalisation going on, and that...
As an outsider some gaming communities can appear incredibly toxic. I'm sure some of that is a deserved reputation, but I'm also aware that maybe there's a bit of generalisation going on, and that some communities are lovely but unrecognised.
So I thought I'd ask Tildes: which gaming communities do you like? And why?
(As always, feel free to interpret this question how you like. And, again, I suck at tagging so I'm grateful for any tagging edits. I do read those to try to learn.)
13 votes -
fornclake is developing an open source GBC Zelda clone with online multiplayer
17 votes -
Bethesda announces "Fallout 1st", a $13/month premium membership for Fallout 76 that allows you have to have a private world along with other benefits
20 votes -
Air ticket booking site uses Math.random for "38 people are looking at this right now" UX dark pattern
33 votes -
America’s Orthodox Jews are selling a ton of the products you buy on Amazon
11 votes -
Jeff Bezos’s master plan - What the Amazon founder and CEO wants for his empire and himself, and what that means for the rest of us
16 votes -
Digital transformation is occurring at varying rates and inadvertently creating a new kind of digital divide in cross-border e-commerce
3 votes -
Facebook's dating service is full of red flags
19 votes -
GTA Online is six years old today, a look at GTA Online over the years
8 votes -
What are some co-op games with full-controller-support that run flawlessly on Linux?
Just looking for games to play with girlfriend. Cheap is better.
7 votes -
'Ban kids from loot box gambling in games,' MPs say
11 votes -
Amazon changed its search system to boost more-profitable listings, including its own brands
19 votes -
How do you handle your different online identities versus your real life identity?
I've recently been trying to confront the fact that a lot of the things I want to do online work best if they've got some connection to my real life identity (or will eventually, almost by...
I've recently been trying to confront the fact that a lot of the things I want to do online work best if they've got some connection to my real life identity (or will eventually, almost by necessity, become connected). Things like working on open source software, writing, etc. almost always seem to lead back to other people knowing at the very least your real name and probably your email address.
I know that my threat model for people going after my identity is a lot different from someone with nation-state level adversaries like Ed Snowden or various activists, but I still find it hard to decide what gets to be connected to what. Do I put my real name on my GitHub account? Do I post things on my GitHub blog to here? Should I have my real name on my Twitter account? What about the fact that some of my usernames resemble each other?
I'm not necessarily looking for advice about my particular situation, but I would really like to hear how other people have dealt with such situations and what you generally think about things like identity compartmentalization.
37 votes