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24 votes
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A drive to Taco Bell
4 votes -
Teachers in Denmark are using apps to audit their students' moods – some experts are heavily skeptical of the approach
7 votes -
GM kills more than CarPlay support, it kills choice
14 votes -
AI vs. architects
1 vote -
The Bitcoin whitepaper is hidden in every modern copy of macOS
14 votes -
Adobe announces Firefly, generative AI tooling inside of Adobe Creative Suite products
11 votes -
People Make Games get their asses beat in Microsoft Excel eSports
9 votes -
Old, but Interesting programs
7 votes -
Tesla's squandered lead
10 votes -
Tesla recalls 362,758 vehicles in the US, says Full Self-Driving Beta software may cause crashes
14 votes -
UChicago scientists develop new tool to protect artists from AI mimicry
8 votes -
SolarWinds and market incentives
8 votes -
Shipping graphing calculator
3 votes -
Apple Maps privacy bug may have allowed apps to collect location data without permission
9 votes -
Project Code Rush - The Beginnings of Netscape (2000)
4 votes -
Tesla video promoting self-driving was staged, engineer testifies
9 votes -
How a single developer dropped AWS costs by 90%, then disappeared
16 votes -
What are some of the best blogs, journals, e-magazines, etc. about programming or software development in general?
I'm a solo freelance programmer who codes on small to medium sized projects, and I realize that I can upskill myself a lot by keeping up with the industry trends, by listening to what the best in...
I'm a solo freelance programmer who codes on small to medium sized projects, and I realize that I can upskill myself a lot by keeping up with the industry trends, by listening to what the best in this field have to say. The problem is that there is just so much information overload everywhere, just so many youtube videos and articles that it seems overwhelming to differentiate the wheat from the chaff!
Since reading is my preferred medium of instruction, I want to know what are the blogs, journals, etc. on this topic with some street cred? And preferably individual experts and blogs, not companies. Company or corporate sites and blogs seem to be more hype than substance these days.
Which ones do you refer for keeping up to date?
8 votes -
Best video editing apps for mobile in 2023
3 votes -
Every flight across US grounded due to computer system glitch
11 votes -
KmCaster – Screencasting software to display keyboard and mouse status
4 votes -
A crucial particle physics computer program risks obsolescence
12 votes -
A software glitch forced the Webb Space Telescope into safe mode. The $10 billion observatory didn’t collect many images in December, due to a now-resolved software issue.
16 votes -
Tesla: Our ‘failure’ to make actual self-driving cars ‘is not fraud’
9 votes -
Activision’s faulty anti-cheat software
10 votes -
Twitter turns its back on open-source development
9 votes -
US Navy forced to pay software company for piracy
5 votes -
Remote Access that's safe and not a scary nightmare
My child (who does not live with me) has a PC. He's pretty good at sorting problems out for himself, but he sometimes needs extra help. We've tried doing this over phone and video calls, and it's...
My child (who does not live with me) has a PC. He's pretty good at sorting problems out for himself, but he sometimes needs extra help. We've tried doing this over phone and video calls, and it's an unfun experience for both of us.
Is there a remote access software that would fit our needs? I want to be able to connect to his computer over the Internet and have some level of control when he's logged into his account. I'd need to be able to open files, I wouldn't have to be able to save them. He's using Windows 11. I think he's using the home version. I'm using Windows 10 Pro. We both have reasonably good Internet speed.
8 votes -
An idea how to monetize social software
I wrote the following as a Twitter thread first but I think this idea could work for Reddit/Tildes/Mastadon and would love to know what you folks think of it. Here is how I would monetize a social...
I wrote the following as a Twitter thread first but I think this idea could work for Reddit/Tildes/Mastadon and would love to know what you folks think of it.
Here is how I would monetize a social network that could work for Twitter.
First of all, don’t charge your most valuable users - the power users that create the content for you. Instead focus on the users that get more value from your system - the consumers of the content.
The idea is simple - introduce a small time delay before content gets seen from the time it is published. For example, on Twitter it could be 1 minute. On Reddit it could be 10 minutes.
Paid subscribers would have no delay. Importantly - lift the delay for the users that generate a lot of views.
You can do revenue share with your content creators in proportion to how much time paid subscribers spent on their content.
And you can also identify your most valuable audience - the paid subscribers. This will help prioritize content moderation decisions, identify abuse, and prioritize appeals.
The delay would allow you to prioritize which content needs to be indexed instantly (ie from creators that paid subscribers are following) and which you can process on a best effort basis - saving on production costs.
You can gift subscriptions to your friends and family.
7 votes -
I have to pirate colours now?
8 votes -
The Stack - permissively licensed code for large language models
6 votes -
What are the top five software apps you benefit the most from?
Can be mobile, desktop or web. Please exclude social media and web browsers themselves.
25 votes -
Does anyone know of alternative Spotify client options to reduce the algorithmic clutter
I've been slowly more frustrated by the Spotify client updates particularly on android and short of getting all my music offline which I'd like to do eventually I want an alternative client that...
I've been slowly more frustrated by the Spotify client updates particularly on android and short of getting all my music offline which I'd like to do eventually I want an alternative client that isn't going to change the layout constantly and make listening to the music I want to listen to any more difficult than it should be.
I'd also like to filter out podcasts if possible because I have my way of listening to podcasts and spotify filling my home screen with them isn't going to make me any more likely to use them.
Especially if they keep fucking pushing podcast episodes featuring deceased family members just to ruin my morning.7 votes -
So I got DOOM running inside of Notepad
8 votes -
What the Securing Open Source Software Act does and what it misses
6 votes -
What is SAP? (And why is it worth $163B USD)
6 votes -
AI won't take coders' jobs. Humans still rule for now.
4 votes -
Looking for advice for starting out as a freelance software engineer
Beginning of next year I am setting out as an independent software engineering consultant. As such I am interested in hearing from others who have already done something similar! I have been...
Beginning of next year I am setting out as an independent software engineering consultant. As such I am interested in hearing from others who have already done something similar! I have been working as a developer and team lead for more than 10 years of which the last 5 have been focused mostly on the .Net stack. Now I want to expand my horizons a bit more, preferably with a new domain or another tech stack.
What are some suggestions/advice you'd give someone just starting down this path? Anything I should avoid doing? Anything I should definitely do? I suppose the specifics will vary a bit by country, but are there some general things I should be thinking about?
Oh, if you happen to have a need for a senior developer/tech lead, give me a ping!
9 votes -
US tech workers are paying $75K for leg-lengthening surgery
20 votes -
Can software simplify the supply chain? Ryan Petersen thinks so
6 votes -
How to approach and evaluate programming languages for a project
2 votes -
Adobe in final talks to acquire Figma for $20B USD
17 votes -
EchoSVG: Pure Java SVG renderer with level 4 CSS selectors
2 votes -
The twisted life of Clippy
6 votes -
Plex breach exposes usernames, emails, and encrypted passwords
12 votes -
Does software piracy mitigate poverty?: Evidence from developing and Latin America countries
12 votes -
The philosophical guide to software piracy
14 votes -
How to edit a podcast on Linux?
Looking at the available options, I see many programs such as Ardour and Audacity that seems to focus on recording, mixing, streaming, etc. But what should use it to actually edit the thing? By...
Looking at the available options, I see many programs such as Ardour and Audacity that seems to focus on recording, mixing, streaming, etc. But what should use it to actually edit the thing?
By that I mean changing the order of things, removing silences, involuntary sounds, and noises, adding music and sound effects, as well as making what I'm saying more concise and intelligible.
I have a background in video editing, and I'm used to working in the "timeline paradigm" that is common to Adobe Premiere and older versions of Final Cut (I have no idea what Final Cut looks like now...). But I have no idea how to edit stuff using actual audio software, I've only used those to treat audio and then finish editing on other programs.
I'd use a video editor for that, but I currently don't own any machine powerful enough to use a video editor software comfortably.
7 votes -
Adobe plans to make Photoshop on the web free to everyone, beta in Canada
14 votes