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18 votes
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EU shoots for €10B ‘industrial cloud’ to rival US
7 votes -
Inside the Icelandic facility where Bitcoin is mined—cryptocurrency mining now uses more of the Nordic island nation's electricity than its homes
7 votes -
Google performed the first quantum simulation of a chemical reaction
11 votes -
Five ways cloud-native application testing is different from testing on-premises software
4 votes -
How Sega hopes to use Japanese arcades as streaming data centers
5 votes -
Oracle wins cloud computing deal with Zoom as video calls surge
8 votes -
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 -
Corona-AI project asks DreamLab app users to help create ‘virtual supercomputer’ to assist in COVID-19 research efforts
5 votes -
Microsoft: Cloud services demand up 775 percent; prioritization rules in place
4 votes -
Are we ready for quantum computers?
3 votes -
Folding@Home is prioritizing users towards their Coronavirus projects
@foldingathome: Do you want to help us fight #COVIDー19 ? Download our client from https://t.co/55uKn0rJem -> Install -> Set category to "ANY" #COVID19 is prioritized. GPU and CPU projects are up. Connect with us if you want to do corp collab or donate your time.
23 votes -
Here's how you can help find a cure for COVID-19
3 votes -
Folding@home takes up the fight against COVID-19
21 votes -
Scientists just used a supercomputer to make a living organism from scratch
2 votes -
Google leadership set 2023 as deadline to beat Amazon and Microsoft in the cloud business
6 votes -
Prime leverage: How Amazon wields power in the technology world
5 votes -
The rise and fall of the PlayStation supercomputers: One PlayStation can play a game, but 100 PlayStations can peer into the secrets of the universe
10 votes -
When AWS, Azure, or GCP becomes the competition
7 votes -
Google demonstrating quantum supremacy
11 votes -
Quantum supremacy: The gloves are off
7 votes -
Scott Aaronson's Quantum Supremacy FAQ
10 votes -
What's your cloud/syncing setup for files, pics, mail, bookmarks, etc?
So I've spent the last few days trying to sync everything up between devices, with the following thoughts in mind: how fucked am I going to be if a device gets corrupted/stolen/lost? how can I...
So I've spent the last few days trying to sync everything up between devices, with the following thoughts in mind:
- how fucked am I going to be if a device gets corrupted/stolen/lost?
- how can I easily access everything I need from a mobile device/device not belonging to me?
- how can I avoid using services from the big tech companies, and keep things open source, as much as possible?
I'm by no means an expert in the field, and I'm hoping in this thread to get a discussion going as to the pros and cons of using different services/setups, to get a general idea as to what others are doing to keep their daily lives simpler and more secure, and to perhaps see what are the future steps for me to take when I feel like playing around again.
Servers & Storage
I span up a 25GB VPS with Vultr for 'active use data', and also took out some 'deep storage'(?) from Wasabi for things which I need to keep, but not really access that much.Mail
Protonmail with custom domain. Using the ProtonMail app for mobile, and Linux ProtonMail bridge with Evolution mail for desktop.Pics/Vids
Nextcloud autoupload feature on mobile automatically uploads my pics to an 'autoupload' folder on Nextcloud server. Here, I categorise pics into folders and share what needs sharing before deleting anything I don't need and wiping the pics on my phone.Passwords
Nothing yet. Looking at getting KeyPass synced across devices.Bookmarks
Again, nothing yet. Had Firefox Sync running to connect Fennec and Firefox, but am looking for a more open approach which involves Nextcloud somehow, and allows me to tag and order things more effectively as opposed to dragging things around in the sidebar.Calendar/Contacts
Evolution calendar on desktop, simple calendar on mobile, hooked up to Nextcloud and all synced using davx5Programs and General Setup
Here, I'd like to somehow take an image/backup of my Ubuntu configs of importance and experiment with getting my setup and customisaitons replicated on another machine quickly and without taking up too much space in storage (i.e. don't need to bakckup all my files as they're already on cloud).Also, I am very curious as to whether anybody is using Syncthing across their devices? And if so, how are they finding the experience?
22 votes -
The internet's old guard
20 votes -
The long-awaited upgrade to the US weather forecast model is here
7 votes -
Quantum computing is a marathon, not a sprint
5 votes -
The Google outage highlights the perils of a centralized internet
4 votes -
Quantum computing for the very curious
6 votes -
A new approach to multiplication opens the door to better quantum computers
7 votes -
Childhood's end — The digital revolution isn’t over but has turned into something else
8 votes -
Confusing machine vision systems
8 votes -
Amoeba finds approximate solutions to NP-hard problem in linear time
11 votes -
Live analysis by sesse supercomputer of the world chess championship match
9 votes -
Microsoft Azure: A ten-point IT maintenance plan
3 votes -
Chinese company says they are bringing Google Cloud to China, then swiftly denies the news
4 votes -
Google in potential cloud services talks in China, with Tencent and others
5 votes -
Chinese researchers achieve stunning quantum-entanglement record
2 votes -
Arm-based supercomputer prototype to be deployed at Sandia National Laboratories by US DoE
3 votes -
Should how to use computers effectively be taught in mainstream education?
Since computers and computer-like devices are prevalent in most modern societies shouldn't we be teaching people how to use them effectively and for purpose, rather than saying "oh, they'll pick...
Since computers and computer-like devices are prevalent in most modern societies shouldn't we be teaching people how to use them effectively and for purpose, rather than saying "oh, they'll pick it up" or "they grew up with it, they'll understand it just fine". Both of which, are clearly not the case.
What does tildes think of a mandatory computing class in early grades, and/or several years of classes to master the concepts, like the U.S. does with History, English literature, Math, and Sciences?
Should computers be necessary to learn as an academic subject?
Or is it fine that many people can't do very simple tasks on computers?
Is it fine that they do not understand basic computing concepts? e.g. keyboard shortcuts, searching, folder management32 votes -
Opinions on Kubernetes and Cloud-Native
I don't want to start a flame-war around this, but I am curious to hear about other peoples opinions. I've been working in 'the cloud' for a few years now and love how convenient and easy it is to...
I don't want to start a flame-war around this, but I am curious to hear about other peoples opinions.
I've been working in 'the cloud' for a few years now and love how convenient and easy it is to build on. My work is 100% cloud-based, and we host absolutely nothing. From internal tooling (slack, payroll, email) to what we sell (kubernetes, orchestration, some custom-tooling).
I'm not sure what side I stand as I still run all of my own tooling myself on a dedicated box. I love being able to have my own server to tinker with, and run my own websites/rss-aggregators/VPN servers/etc.
Having used AWS/GoogleCloud, I can see huge value in the automation and reduction in overhead that they provide when it comes to setting up and managing infrastructure.
I am genuinely interested in different opinions and viewpoints on the way computation and data are managed, especially with companies that deal with sensitive information.
As an aside, I would be interested in opposing ideas regarding containerisation (ie. Docker/Rkt).
Edit: I realise this probably should have been posted on ~comp
4 votes -
Nvidia’s mini supercomputer is the fastest single computer humanity has built
4 votes -
The mother of all demos - 1968 live demo introduction of the computer mouse, video conferencing, teleconferencing, hypertext, word processing, and more
10 votes -
Can the USA overtake China in the supercomputer race with her 200 petaflops Summit?
3 votes