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15 votes
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Postcards from St Kilda arrive ten years later after washing up in Norway – archaeologist Ian McHardy built a waterproof replica of the mail boats a decade ago
5 votes -
The golden age of computer user groups
13 votes -
An Icelandic ritual for wellbeing – when Iceland reopened its public swimming pools, the nation was so delighted that queues formed outside pools at midnight
4 votes -
The endgame of the Olympics: What if the Olympic Games never come back?
9 votes -
The Amish keep to themselves. And they’re hiding a horrifying secret: "A year of reporting by Cosmo and Type Investigations reveals a culture of incest, rape, and abuse."
23 votes -
QAF: A Chinese fan-forum that's grown into a hub for volunteers subtitling foreign LGBTIQ media and a support community
8 votes -
Samfundssind – A word buried in the history books helped Danes mobilise during the pandemic, flattening the curve and lifting community spirit
9 votes -
Thanks
Feedback here is honest, thoughtful, constructive. This is one of the few places that remind me of the constructive and supportive web I grew up with. I'm just happy projects like Tildes exist....
Feedback here is honest, thoughtful, constructive. This is one of the few places that remind me of the constructive and supportive web I grew up with. I'm just happy projects like Tildes exist. Thank you, Tildes community.
31 votes -
What level of conversation is Tildes aiming for?
One thing I'm uncertain about Tildes is how informative its posts are meant to be. I've been keeping myself from posting hype threads about upcoming movies (Dune, Ride Your Wave, etc.). What type...
One thing I'm uncertain about Tildes is how informative its posts are meant to be. I've been keeping myself from posting hype threads about upcoming movies (Dune, Ride Your Wave, etc.).
What type of balance is tildes trying to strike? I'm in favor of shitposting, but against images, since I think text encourages the type of discussion I'm looking for a community. So I'd like to see copypasta, but I'm not sure what the general consensus is.Edit: I'm looking less for general examples than some sort of hard and clear rule. I'm seeing comments which disagree somewhat and leave ambiguities, but I believe the criteria should be better laid out.
12 votes -
Dear user
16 votes -
“Representation matters!”: Adam Perez on the empowering feeling of seeing yourself in an image
6 votes -
Eugene, a town of 170,000 in Oregon, replaced some cops with medics and mental health workers. It's worked for over thirty years.
19 votes -
The true cost of dollar stores - discount chains are thriving, but fostering violence and neglect in poor communities
7 votes -
For Black Americans, wearing a mask comes with complicated anxieties
8 votes -
Parks vs. people: In Guatemala, communities take best care of the forest
4 votes -
Voguing for our lives. Again
3 votes -
Brazil’s favelas, neglected by the government, organize their own coronavirus fight
7 votes -
How a raccoon became an aardvark
7 votes -
Reddit's /r/history closed down for 24 hours in protest against Reddit's lack of anti-racist policies
25 votes -
Why this woman chooses to live in a ghost town
6 votes -
World of Warcraft's game director Ion Hazzikostas on how the game's culture has evolved with the internet
6 votes -
In Helsinki's climate plan, community comes before bureaucracy
5 votes -
Days of Night/Nights of Day
6 votes -
How the anti-vaccine community is responding to COVID-19
9 votes -
Ozark life - A photo essay of the intimate beauty of daily life in rural Arkansas
6 votes -
Coronavirus has upended our world. It's okay to grieve
10 votes -
A woman dies. How does her community pay tribute when they are social-distancing?
@buailtin: Yesterday we buried a lovely woman. Due to #Covid19 there was no wake & our community couldn't enter the church. But the entire parish came out & lined the 2km road to graveyard to say goodbye to Betty Ryan. Ar scáth a chéile a mhaireann na daoine #WestKerry https://t.co/Sns99qUSad
7 votes -
A growing number of Danes choose cold water swimming as a way to invigorate the senses and combat their winter blues
6 votes -
Why Detroit residents pushed back against tree-planting
12 votes -
She wanted a 'freebirth' with no doctors. Online groups convinced her it would be OK.
23 votes -
Talking to your neighbours is mandatory if you live in this block of flats – it's all part of a plan to help tackle loneliness
9 votes -
Iowa's 'Denmark on the Prairie' creates hygge away from home – the tiny town has imported a 19th-century windmill and starred in two Danish TV shows
4 votes -
Undone science: When research fails polluted communities
5 votes -
The internet of beefs
11 votes -
There's no such thing as a dangerous neighborhood
11 votes -
"Total" Discord integration for community participation in development
I've been discovering recently how convenient Discord can make developing with the feedback of your community, or of selected members of your community. This is assuming that you are already...
I've been discovering recently how convenient Discord can make developing with the feedback of your community, or of selected members of your community.
This is assuming that you are already talking with your dev team and community on Discord and have a server for that.
Create your game on the Discord platform (they do the same thing as Steam basically), and integrate an alpha-access store page right into your Discord server as a channel. This store page can be restricted to whomever you want via normal Discord permissions. Binaries can be distributed wonderfully simply this way, becuase if you're talking with the community in Discord already, you can just send them to that store page channel embedded directly in your server where they can simply click "install" to test your most recent binaries.
The agreement with Discord restricts only a few things that I wasn't interested in anyway: They don't want you to do an exclusive deal with another distribution service (duh), and anywhere you advertise your game you must mention that it's also available on Discord in addition to wherever else you're distributing it. That's pretty much fine with me.
Anyway, I'm having a lot more fun with this than I had previously trying to distribute pre-release alpha binaries, so I wanted to see what you all thought about it. And what criticisms there are to be had.
7 votes -
A software engineer's advice for saving social media: keep it small
29 votes -
When Minneapolis segregated
4 votes -
People in Canada’s remote Arctic capital are obsessed with Amazon Prime
6 votes -
The Christian withdrawal experiment
9 votes -
A rural South Australian council is asking a group of high school students for input on how to spend $1 million in drought relief
8 votes -
In fastest-growing Texas, rural population is still declining
5 votes -
Is it OK if someone wants to live for years on a bench?
6 votes -
Puolanka was in the news for all the wrong reasons, so locals decided to embrace being the worst
8 votes -
We're rewarding the question askers
10 votes -
Can tattoos make you healthier?
3 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 -
Nokia's collapse turned a sleepy town in Finland into an internet wonderland
5 votes -
How Airbnb is silently changing Himalayan villages
5 votes