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6 votes
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SpaceX launches fifty-eight Starlink satellites on ninth Starlink launch, including three Planet SkySats
11 votes -
We apologize for publishing Darkseid’s anti-life equation
11 votes -
Are there any good tools for "one-off" file encryption?
Sorry if this is a silly question, but I keep running into situations where a small CLI or GUI tool that could be handed a single file and hand me back an encrypted version would be useful. I've...
Sorry if this is a silly question, but I keep running into situations where a small CLI or GUI tool that could be handed a single file and hand me back an encrypted version would be useful. I've done some googling, but all I typically turn up is blogspam about random Windows-only tools that seem to be of dubious quality.
Anyone know of a good tool for this type of thing?
9 votes -
93rd Academy Awards ceremony delayed to April 25, 2021 (originally Feb. 28), with eligibility periods extended
5 votes -
Day traders might have fun saving Hertz from bankruptcy
6 votes -
Obscure Indian cyber firm spied on politicians, investors worldwide
5 votes -
An army of volunteers is taking on vaccine disinformation online
6 votes -
An oral history of Gremlins 2: The New Batch
6 votes -
I am a mother of a trans teen and here’s what you’re getting wrong about them
10 votes -
LGBTQ+ rights in Poland are in danger
17 votes -
Jurassic Park dinosaurs illustrated with modern science
9 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration pulls emergency use authorization of hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19
6 votes -
The great cheese emergency
6 votes -
Helping or harming? The effect of trigger warnings on individuals with trauma histories.
Publication: Helping or Harming? The Effect of Trigger Warnings on Individuals with Trauma Histories. Pre-print version (for people, like me, who don't have access to the published version):...
Publication: Helping or Harming? The Effect of Trigger Warnings on Individuals with Trauma Histories.
Pre-print version (for people, like me, who don't have access to the published version): https://www.researchgate.net/publication/334380654_Helping_or_Harming_The_Effect_of_Trigger_Warnings_on_Individuals_with_Trauma_Histories
11 votes -
George Floyd protest - Police brutality videos on Twitter
8 votes -
Don't ask to ask, just ask
21 votes -
Fox News runs digitally altered images in coverage of Seattle’s protests, Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone
41 votes -
Norway should add a number of restrictions to the kinds of weapons its $1 trillion wealth fund is allowed to invest in, a government-appointed commission said
6 votes -
YMS: Kimba the White Lion
6 votes -
Facebook and Google refuse to pay revenue to Australian media
10 votes -
Protest music of the Bush era
12 votes -
‘Duel’ Is David vs. Goliath on the Highway to Hell
3 votes -
What blogs/newsletters do you subscribe to and why?
Back in the day I was a hardcore Google Reader (RIP) user, and following that I continued to use https://feedly.com/ for many years, but eventually I found myself falling behind on all my feeds...
Back in the day I was a hardcore Google Reader (RIP) user, and following that I continued to use https://feedly.com/ for many years, but eventually I found myself falling behind on all my feeds and stopped checking it.
Recently, I signed for Inoreader and I've started reading more blogs again. It also has the nice feature of letting you subscribe to email newsletters too, which is quite nice since I find them annoying to deal with in my email inbox but convenient in the feed reader.
I'm wondering what blogs and newsletters folks on Tildes subscribe to.
Here are a few of my favorites:
Blogs:
- bellingcat: Independent investigative journalism often based on online "open source intelligence." e.g. The Boogaloo Movement is Not What You Think
- BLDGBLOG: Geoff Manaugh's blog about everything related to the space we inhabit, both built and natural. e.g. Underground Cathedrals of Radiation and Zones of Irreversible Strain
- Flowing Data: Nathan Yau's blog about data visualization. e.g. Racial Divide
- Idle Words: The blog of Maciej Cegłowski, creator of the Pinboard bookmarking service. Covers tech and lots of unrelated topics. e.g. Superintelligence: The Idea that Eats Smart People
Newsletters:
- BIG by Matt Stoller: A newsletter about economics and in particular the economics of monopolies and disruptive startups. e.g. The Slow Death of Hollywood
- Data is Plural: A weekly newsletter of fun/weird datasets.
- Normcore Tech: Vicki Boykis' newsletter about tech and tech-related things. e.g. The Reign of Big Recsys
- Uses This: Brief interviews with all sorts of creators about what tools they use to do what they do.
This is just a slice. I can share my entire list if people are interested. But I'm curious about what feeds others enjoy, on anything from film and furniture to "movie-set" urbanism. What are you reading?
20 votes -
The US federal government will now allow health care providers to deny care to anyone they perceive as trans or gay
38 votes -
Mermaids writes an open letter to JK Rowling
18 votes -
Lee Carvallo's Putting Challenge game from The Simpsons is now playable in browser
8 votes -
How do we support Black Philosophers in our field?
9 votes -
What are some examples of "unrelated siblings"?
This question isn't about people so much as it is about anything else. It's hard to explain outright, so I'll use an example: A few months ago I read Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven. I just...
This question isn't about people so much as it is about anything else. It's hard to explain outright, so I'll use an example:
A few months ago I read Emily St. John Mandel's Station Eleven. I just finished with Ling Ma's Severance. The two books are completely unrelated but feel very, very close to one another. There are a lot of topical similarities: both portray a global pandemic, a lead female character, and narrative shifts between pre- and post-societal collapse, etc. However, more than that, both feel very tonally similar. I couldn't read Severance without constantly thinking of and comparing it to Station Eleven, and I think I liked both books better together than I did either of them on their own. Even though they're clearly different and written by different people, they very much feel like they come from the same family -- like they're unrelated siblings.
I'm curious as to what other examples people can come up with, in whatever category you consider: media, historical events, languages, etc. Anything goes as long as they have a familial resemblance.
9 votes -
Voters happy with how Australian governments have dealt with pandemic
4 votes -
British farmers need all the help science can offer. Time to allow gene editing
12 votes -
An ancient Roman city has been fully mapped using ground-penetrating radar
8 votes -
Death and surrender to power in the clothing of men
10 votes -
The elevator arises as the latest logjam in getting back to work
9 votes -
Daily thread for news/updates/discussion of George Floyd protests - June 14
This thread is posted daily - please try to post relevant content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Especially significant updates may warrant a separate topic, but most...
This thread is posted daily - please try to post relevant content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Especially significant updates may warrant a separate topic, but most should be posted here.
12 votes -
Scientists create exotic, fifth state of matter on space station to explore the quantum world
4 votes -
What have you been watching / reading this week? (Anime/Manga)
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was...
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was cool, something that was bad, ask for recommendations, or anything else you can think of.
If you want to, feel free to find the thing you're talking about and link to its pages on Anilist, MAL, or any other database you use!
8 votes -
Type A blood converted to universal donor blood with help from bacterial enzymes
10 votes -
Waldy and Bendy’s adventures in art
3 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?
7 votes -
Cynicism is a tired trope
Cynicism is the bastard cousin of skepticism. While optimists look for the silver lining, cynics can't fail to see the fly in the ointment and true skeptics are somewhere in the middle. Cynicism...
Cynicism is the bastard cousin of skepticism. While optimists look for the silver lining, cynics can't fail to see
the fly in the ointment and true skeptics are somewhere in the middle. Cynicism is an overwhelming trend in internet forums. The most upvoted reactions are usually the more pessimistic (regardless of factuality), and seemingly virtuous attitudes are immediately met with assumptions of bad faith.Cynicism is tiresome and can very well lead to false conclusions.
This may be unlikely, but paradigms can be improved, governments can adopt better policies, corporations can act for the good of society, billionaires can be virtuous philanthropists, assholes can learn to be nice, and bigots can learn to respect diversity. We should be absolutely skeptical of sudden changes of attitude, but indiscriminate cynicism creates an environment that does not reward positive changes, and I don't think that's in the best interest of a community.
EDIT: I feel I need to clarify that cynicism is not equal to skepticism. Skeptics refrain from conviction in face of insufficient evidence, while cynics assume bad faith even without sufficient evidence. I am not advocating for naïveté, but for healthy skepticism.
40 votes -
Are There Problems That Computers Can't Solve?
10 votes -
WarnerMedia says goodbye to HBO Go amid streaming rebrand
5 votes -
The cutest little philosophers you’ve ever seen
4 votes -
I recently started donating blood regularly. A fellow donor mentioned that I can build up scar tissue in my veins. Is this an actual concern?
So far I've been going every 8 weeks and just recently added a mid-cycle platelet donation. Should I be worried about damage to my veins?
12 votes -
Search only forums and find actually useful information with BoardReader
15 votes -
A pair of new studies chart a dramatic increase in stress, anxiety, depression and overall poor mental wellbeing in Australia linked to the COVID-19 lockdown
5 votes -
Coronaviruses are extremely widespread in wild animals bred for food in Vietnam, with the wildlife supply chain quickly spreading those viruses to uninfected animals, preliminary research shows
6 votes -
US naval buildup in Indo-Pacific seen as warning to China
7 votes -
Slay the Spire is coming to iOS this month, with an Android version in the works
14 votes