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4 votes
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I set out on a journey to the high north of Greenland to meet the Inuit communities that brave the harshest winters in the world
3 votes -
Driven around the bend
6 votes -
Communities or hubs for people doing/making things and tackling problems
So I browse Tildes, Hacker News, and Reddit, but I'm wondering if there are online communities or hubs out there where entrepreneurial folks discuss actionable business problems and projects,...
So I browse Tildes, Hacker News, and Reddit, but I'm wondering if there are online communities or hubs out there where entrepreneurial folks discuss actionable business problems and projects, instead of news or memes.
I notice that people will spend endless time online discussing the minutiae of their personal lives, celebrity lives, politics, and son, which are fine. But I want to read about how people are working out the kinks of drone delivery, improving access to and availability of mental healthcare, making municipal permitting more streamlined, and other processes.
9 votes -
Trendy neighbourhood in Copenhagen bracing for major protests over anti-ghetto law – critics say it's racist and pushing out remaining social housing
5 votes -
Welcome to America’s most elite girls boarding school. Let the hazing begin.
11 votes -
Life in Ny-Ålesund, the world's northern-most research station – in pictures
7 votes -
A peer reviewed paper on walkable neighbourhoods finds that walkability improves residents' happiness
9 votes -
Europe's indigenous Sámi people have taken their fight for improved rights to the United Nations
8 votes -
Study finds trash, household crowding increase risk for three dangerous, mosquito-borne illnesses in Kenya
3 votes -
Playing on the edge – football in Greenland
2 votes -
Tulare lake is re-emerging in California, and farms and communities are going underwater
7 votes -
Cold, remote and short of women – a portrait of life on the Faroe Islands
1 vote -
How two people spent twenty years creating gaming’s most complex simulation system
5 votes -
What’s the real cost of mezcal?
9 votes -
Íslensku – A delve into the surf culture island of Iceland and the people that define it
2 votes -
Electric bikes overtake buggies for some Amish
11 votes -
Isolation combined with an inhospitable environment can be a cause of stress on Greenland – but locals have found a way to deal with it: tuning into nature
3 votes -
r/antiwork seems to be back (was it really gone?)
tl;dr IDK what happened before, but r/antiwork is public now (again?). I just stumbled across this tildes thread from 2 weeks ago [EDIT: crap ... 1 year and 2 weeks ago; mixed up my "current year"...
tl;dr IDK what happened before, but r/antiwork is public now (again?).
I just stumbled across this tildes thread from 2 weeks ago [EDIT: crap ... 1 year and 2 weeks ago; mixed up my "current year" setting] ... which is right on the border between "keep posting in that thread" and "it's too old, start a new one" ... so here we are.
I'm familiar with the ideas, but never heard of that specific subreddit before. Looking through the Fox interview, I must be missing something, because I don't understand what all the fuss was about. What "mistake" did the mod make in the interview? Why did everyone suddenly hate her? etc. Seemed perfectly innocuous to me (apart from, why even bother with Fox).
But that aside, the previous thread indicates that r/antiwork was effectively bullied into going private. Looking at it this morning, it is not private. I am assuming that they just recently de-privatized it?
On a side-note, top comment on the thread is about not supporting r/cringetopia ... which ... that subreddit is private. Is that also new? It had me confused for quite awhile this morning, trying to figure out which subreddit was actually under controversy and forced to go private.
4 votes -
Our pride, our joy: An intersectional constructivist grounded theory analysis of resources that promote resilience in SGM communities
2 votes -
A Swedish town is on the move, one building at a time – subsidence from the world's biggest iron ore mine threatens to swallow up the Arctic town of Kiruna
6 votes -
Gaytopia: Fed up with the horrific discrimination and violence against his community, Don Jackson had a plan to turn a remote spot in Northern California into the world's first gay-majority county
7 votes -
A shared celebration of Orthodox Christmas deep in the Arctic, undimmed by war and the round-the-clock polar night
6 votes -
A photographer's journey through the Scandinavian ballroom scene – Chai Saeidi spent years capturing the most intimate, diverse and exciting queer functions
4 votes -
AI: Markets for Lemons, and the Great Logging Off
6 votes -
The superheroes of beautiful Kinshasa
3 votes -
In Sweden reindeer herders say their animals are being affected by wind farms and other industry
4 votes -
Two pro wrestlers developed ‘The Progressive Liberal’ to be the bad guy at matches. Then the atmosphere turned far darker.
6 votes -
How online mobs act like flocks of birds
4 votes -
Soft reminder to read linked article when commenting
I don't think this has been much of an issue so far with this community, but I expect that with time people will be more and more likely to not read the linked article before commenting. We've...
I don't think this has been much of an issue so far with this community, but I expect that with time people will be more and more likely to not read the linked article before commenting. We've become so primed in general to consume information on the Internet in a way that makes us feel overconfident in our understanding based on just a few details, that I think it would be useful to have a soft reminder to actually read and engage with the things you're responding to instead of offering a "hot take".
10 votes -
AI-generated art sparks furious backlash from Japan’s anime community
10 votes -
World's northernmost permanent settlement, Longyearbyen, is estimated to be heating at six times the global average – so what is being done to save it?
8 votes -
I'm trying to find a blog about online communities and the paradox of tolerance
I remember I came across it here, probably posted by @Deimos in the course of a thread about Tildes' philosophy. The essence of the blog was that the truly nice, sweet people among us that make...
I remember I came across it here, probably posted by @Deimos in the course of a thread about Tildes' philosophy. The essence of the blog was that the truly nice, sweet people among us that make online forums a better place with their positive interactions are more sensitive to tensions and negative interactions than the average person, so they'd be likely to leave at a lower level of trolling than most of us would, resulting in a net negative for everyone on the site. Could have sworn I bookmarked it...
7 votes -
Minneapolis church still holds services in Norwegian – congregation was founded in 1922 at the tail end of a decades-long migration of Norwegians to Minnesota
6 votes -
Temperatures have risen faster in the Arctic region than elsewhere on earth – the impact of climate change is being felt on Greenland's local way of life
6 votes -
A ragtag community is keeping this aughts Wikipedia gadget alive
7 votes -
Any Tilde Town members here?
A few years ago when I was new to tildes a typed tildes.com directly in the URL bar. I realized I'd forgotten the correct domain extension and did a web search for "tildes community" or something...
A few years ago when I was new to tildes a typed tildes.com directly in the URL bar. I realized I'd forgotten the correct domain extension and did a web search for "tildes community" or something similar.
One of the results was for tilde town . At the time I glanced over it and thought about joining but I never got around to it. Last July I somehow stumbled over it again and this time I applied to join.
It's a pretty cool place.
The idea is that it's a Linux server that each user gets an account on. You then ssh into it - and that's where the community lives!
They have a chat system, a forum system, microblogging that's private to that community, command line games (some of which are multi-player) and a bunch of other really neat features. Each user even gets a folder in their home directory that let's them serve up public web pages.
Technically they have about 2,000 registered users, but the number of actual active users seems to be similar to our community here.
The vibe reminds me a lot of what we have here except that tilde town is casual "slice of life" only and doesn't do news articals at all. Some of their forum posts are similar to our own, with posts for what people are reading and watching and what projects they are working on.
Ive enjoyed my time there so far and I'd encourage any one who's interested to check it out. My username over there is grendel84, stop by and say hi!
17 votes -
This 100% solar community endured Hurricane Ian with no loss of power and minimal damage
12 votes -
Catching up with new Norwegians, twenty-five years on – in 1996, a group of young people living in Norway were interviewed about what it meant to be Norwegian
4 votes -
Metros with the most unoccupied homes in America
9 votes -
Investigating toxicity changes of cross-community Redditors from two billion posts and comments
9 votes -
Closed for maintenance – how the Faroe Islands shook up the voluntourism game
4 votes -
People don't want to hear about it – how the pandemic shaped Sweden's politics and left many feeling hopeless and disenfranchised
5 votes -
Visiting Canada’s $50 million 1980s ghost town
12 votes -
How “dementia villages” work
6 votes -
Instead of a field, hundreds of Danish growers now share patches of the ocean, growing mussels, sea kelp and more
6 votes -
Why a gang of Spanish grannies covered an entire street in woolly blankets
4 votes -
Indigenous reindeer herders fear the drive towards a more sustainable economy is destroying their traditional way of life and identity in Sweden
11 votes -
Finland is building the world's first permanent disposal site for nuclear waste, with no shortage of people wanting to be its neighbours
13 votes -
A mom’s campaign to ban library books divided a Texas town — and her own family
7 votes