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9 votes
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US unemployment checks are being held up by a coding language almost nobody knows
21 votes -
The coronavirus pandemic turned Folding@Home into an exaFLOP supercomputer
14 votes -
All Watched Over By Machines Of Loving Grace
3 votes -
The ancient computers in the Boeing 737 Max are holding up a fix
10 votes -
What's a good way to learn how to maintain my own computer hardware?
I have two computers (a desktop and a laptop) that broke down just before my city entered a lockdown. Being able to assemble and fix my own computer hardware is something I have always wanted to...
I have two computers (a desktop and a laptop) that broke down just before my city entered a lockdown. Being able to assemble and fix my own computer hardware is something I have always wanted to do, and if I knew that I would probably not be using a borrowed Macbook Air right now.
I have no immediate need to provide any maintenance services, nor do I require a primer in electronics or anything too advanced. Just enough to know how to assemble and disassemble a machine, identify and fix the most obvious issues without breaking anything.
I tend to learn better from sequential and structure learning materials, preferably in text/images form. But videos are also welcomed. I know the names of the things and what they are, but I don't really know how to put things together in practice.
Suggestions? :)
13 votes -
Why doctors hate their computers
23 votes -
Are we ready for quantum computers?
3 votes -
Official Raspberry Pi 4 Desktop Kit - Is it worth the price?
6 votes -
What I want to see from 2020 ThinkPads
18 votes -
Which are your top five computer programs?
In terms of Utility: It is useful! Reliability: It will always work when you need it to! Uniqueness: It gives you the option of doing things that would never have been necessary before it came...
In terms of
- Utility: It is useful!
- Reliability: It will always work when you need it to!
- Uniqueness: It gives you the option of doing things that would never have been necessary before it came along.
- Aesthetic: It satisfies your sense of beauty: It gives you the same kind of feeling a painting or a poem would.
- Transcendence: It transcends the zeitgeist and is the simplest it can and thus ought to be.
Mine are:
32 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 CRT-based VR Headset
15 votes -
CES 2020 summary: Pork, driverless cars, new wearable sensors, folding computers, integrated tech
4 votes -
1996 talk by Cliff Stoll about the future of computers and the internet
9 votes -
Vintage Computer Festival Pacific Northwest 2020 looking for exhibitors, speakers, and volunteers
7 votes -
The Original IBM PC 5150 - The story of the world's most influential computer
4 votes -
Space-grade CPUs: How do you send more computing power into space?
8 votes -
What keyboard shortcut was a game changer for you?
...or just a useful lesser know keyboard shortcut.
35 votes -
How to build a desktop computer (tower) for Linux with pieces that are easily available worldwide (most especially South-America)?
This post is related and in some part a repetition of my other topic on how to buy a laptop for Linux. Because I'm in Brazil, many brands and stores that do not ship to my country are out of the...
This post is related and in some part a repetition of my other topic on how to buy a laptop for Linux.
Because I'm in Brazil, many brands and stores that do not ship to my country are out of the question, and even the ones that ship usually cost more than I can pay due to currency exchange rate and shipping costs themselves. What are some universal stores, brands and models that I can probably find on my location, that won't give me much trouble running Linux?
I don't require playing games or top performance (8GB RAM and i5 processor would be the minimum requirements). And SSD would be nice, but, for my budget, it's a plus.
I just need something that is durable and works reliably under Linux, especially when it comes to audio and HDMI output, video graphics adapter support, booting from USB, hibernating, sleeping and power management.
Thanks!
6 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 on sale now from $35 | USB3, Gigabit Ethernet, 1.5GHz Quad Core, Upto 4GB RAM
54 votes -
The experience of working on a thirty-year-old Macintosh SE
6 votes -
Apollo’s brain: The computer that guided man to the Moon
5 votes -
A new approach to multiplication opens the door to better quantum computers
7 votes -
Remote code execution on most Dell computers
6 votes -
Meet your iPhone’s grandparent
6 votes -
Light themes or Dark themes?
Traditionally I've used dark themes for everything I could on all of my devices, as I found it easier on the eyes when I'd usually use my computer (evening - night). Recently, I made the switch...
Traditionally I've used dark themes for everything I could on all of my devices, as I found it easier on the eyes when I'd usually use my computer (evening - night). Recently, I made the switch back to light stuff as I've been using my computer more for notes and assignments I'd normally hand-write, and I find I get drowsy less and have an easier time using the computer in a bright room than before - I just switched my theme on a whim one morning, so I wasn't expecting that at all!
So now I'm rethinking all my previous bias about dark themes being 'better' regardless of the situation, and I'm curious if anyone here had any thoughts and/or could point me to some reading on the subject (the subject being the effects of light/dark colours in work or concentration). It's something I realize now might be fairly important, as I'm looking at my screen for most of the day, but never really gave much thought before outside of tracking down the 'Dark' theme switch.
34 votes -
Office Depot and tech support firm Support.com will pay $35 million to settle FTC allegations that they tricked consumers into buying costly computer repair services
7 votes -
Hackers hijacked ASUS software updates to install backdoors on thousands of computers
10 votes -
The embroidered computer
10 votes -
Dvorak, Colemak and other alternative keyboard layouts
I wouldn't really consider it a hobby, but couldn't think of where else to try and have this discussion. How many of you have ever heard of, or even considered the idea of alternative keyboard...
I wouldn't really consider it a hobby, but couldn't think of where else to try and have this discussion.
How many of you have ever heard of, or even considered the idea of alternative keyboard layouts!? As unanimous as it is, why are the letters of the alphabet even placed that way on our keyboards anyway? Alternative keyboard layouts attempt to optimize the layout by placing letters in such a way as to make typing more ergonomic. Often ideas include focusing on the home row, rolling fingers, alternating hands, high frequency letters on index and middle etc.
Some examples to look into if you've never heard of the concept:
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Dvorak, the most well known alternative keyboard layout. Prioritizes alternating hands by separating vowels and consonants by hand.
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Colemak. As opposed to Dvorak, prioritizes rolling the fingers rather than alternating hands and attempts to limit same-finger bigrams.
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BÉPO, a layout optimized for the French language!
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Others include Carpalx, Workman, MTGAP, Norman and many, many more. Creating rather than using layouts has sort of become a hobby for some...
So what do you think? Supposed ergonomics vs standardization. Would you ever consider switching or do you think it's a bunch of hocus pocus? Perhaps you have switched or tried to switch and would like to share your experience.
20 votes -
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A short history of computers in the movies: Panel lights, spinning tapes, and lab coats
4 votes -
Porting Alpine Linux to RISC-V
11 votes -
Apple computers used to be built in the US. It was a mess
11 votes -
The cover of MAD magazine #258 from October 1985 announces a special computer section featuring the MAD Computer Program
7 votes -
Navy training video - Mechanical computers [1953]
6 votes -
Japan cybersecurity minister admits he has never used a computer
25 votes -
How the humble pocket calculator morphed into the smartphone
10 votes -
How the shared family computer protected us from our worst selves
11 votes -
How computers parse the ambiguity of everyday language
8 votes -
Does anyone have a homelab?
If you have one, what do you run on it? What is it’s specs?
12 votes -
A program from a thirty-five year old magazine for “BASIC Month” and a chat with its author
4 votes -
Favorite Laptop?
What kind of laptop does everyone here have? If you had to replace it today, what would you replace it with?
24 votes -
Nvidia’s mini supercomputer is the fastest single computer humanity has built
4 votes