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20 votes
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Interview with Craigslist founder Craig Newmark highlights large gift to counter harms of artificial intelligence, other philanthropic initiatives
16 votes -
Small US cities experiment with grant funded Uber-like microtransit
16 votes -
Alan Moore interview: ‘I’m giving all my screen royalties to Black Lives Matter’
20 votes -
US President Joe Biden strongly defends auto workers in first remarks after strike
29 votes -
UK government vows action after man dies in latest dog attack
27 votes -
Which board games have you been playing this week? (to 13 September)
Time to share your weekly board gaming. For me it consisted of a game of Aquanauts at a monthly gathering I've only attended for the second time. The host of the group posted about his new group...
Time to share your weekly board gaming.
For me it consisted of a game of Aquanauts at a monthly gathering I've only attended for the second time. The host of the group posted about his new group in a village hall in the middle of nowhere (UK) over on Reddit. Well the middle of nowhere turned out to be not far from where I live so I've been trying to make it when I can ever since.
Aquanauts was published by a UK publisher Inside the Box Games (best known for Sub Terra) but they went bust recently and another company stepped in and fulfilled the Kickstarter. The game is a basic worker placement, where you're sending your robotic submersibles (workers) out to collect or convert resources. What makes it interesting is that the worker spots are linked, and playing a spot linked to another that has a player worker on it scores you both a bonus resource. You can also build tiles on your player board to similarly receive or convert goods during the income phase. Other than that, you're trying to load up a submarine with the correct resources to score contract cards, and there's a degree of hedging your bets as the person who takes the final slot on the submarine gets to choose the order in which the players claim contracts. It's a fairly good game, fun enough on first play but largely unmemorable.
Tonight I got in a game of Carnegie. This is a great game that sees you building up your office with departments, staffing them and sending your workers on missions to build buildings across the map of the USA, linking cities. I royally screwed up my first turn and spent several rounds trying to recover which left me way behind on points. Great game with a lot to think about but which neither takes too long to teach or play.
What have you all been playing?
7 votes -
Eight in ten women married to men still take husband’s last name, survey finds
34 votes -
Human alteration of the global floodplains 1992-2019
9 votes -
What did you do this week (and weekend)?
As part of a weekly series, these topics are a place for users to casually discuss the things they did — or didn't do — during their week. Did you accomplish any goals? Suffer a failure? Do...
As part of a weekly series, these topics are a place for users to casually discuss the things they did — or didn't do — during their week. Did you accomplish any goals? Suffer a failure? Do nothing at all? Tell us about it!
14 votes -
TikTok fined record £300m for putting children’s privacy at risk
28 votes -
Russell Brand: In Plain Sight: Dispatches (sexual abuse allegations against Russell Brand)
19 votes -
We're all living on r/MadeMeSmile's Internet Now
77 votes -
An oral history of Bank Python
15 votes -
Offbeat Fridays – The thread where offbeat headlines become front page news
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like unity, elon musk and tortillas. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was curious....
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like unity, elon musk and tortillas. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was curious.
But one of my favourite tags happens to be offbeat! Taking its original inspiration from Sir Nils Olav III, this thread is looking for any far-fetched
offbeat
stories lurking in the newspapers. It may not deserve its own post, but it deserves a wider audience!24 votes -
Experts link LastPass security breach to a string of crypto heists
48 votes -
Vulture Lists: Eleven recommended books on hip hop music or artists
4 votes -
Big SUVs become most sold new vehicles in Europe. "Customers feel more safe, they feel more powerful" says car industry executive.
22 votes -
The world’s first 3D-printed salmon is hitting store shelves
23 votes -
What is something someone has said that stuck with you?
One time I asked someone what they thought about the phrase "people are temporary" and it ended with them telling me: I don't like saying goodbye to people because I don't know if it's going to be...
One time I asked someone what they thought about the phrase "people are temporary" and it ended with them telling me:
I don't like saying goodbye to people because I don't know if it's going to be the last time.
That just stuck with me and really got me thinking how precious our time is.
54 votes -
Final Fantasy VII Rebirth | Release date trailer
21 votes -
Lead poisoning could be killing more people than HIV, malaria, and car accidents combined
18 votes -
Teen’s death after eating a single chip highlights risks of ultra-spicy foods
62 votes -
Nintendo Direct 9.14.2023
25 votes -
Confirming very bright galaxies in the early universe, while also disproving the identification of what would have been the most distant galaxy ever found
9 votes -
How do you get "back on track"? Could use advice.
I have a very long history of mental illness from age 10, and though I've cycled through a lot of explanations the diagnoses that best match my symptoms currently are currently ADHD and CPTSD. I...
I have a very long history of mental illness from age 10, and though I've cycled through a lot of explanations the diagnoses that best match my symptoms currently are currently ADHD and CPTSD. I am medicated for both, and although I am not in active therapy I have also done therapy. I consider my mental health relatively well-managed currently: at least, I am not in any urgent danger of hurting myself and it has been a very long time since I have been. Certainly things could be better but I'm usually functional.
But sometimes I go through these phases, generally 1-3 months long, where my ability to function on a normal level slips dramatically. It never gets to the nightmarish state I was in when I was a teenager, but it becomes hard to... oh, make appointments, do the dishes, walk the dog, just generally deal with the obligations of being an adult. My house is never in GREAT shape but it becomes a disaster. Work performance suffers a lot, my relationships suffer. I also start experiencing emotional PMS symptoms (or perhaps I just lose the ability to suppress them), and while I'm not the type to have "emotional outbursts" I do experience deep and irrational sadness or anger on those days. I also tend to end up dealing with insomnia, which is like a force multiplier on feeling overwhelmed.
It sucks especially because it's like I'm watching myself do it, and I feel as though I don't have enough control over myself to nip it in the bud, and sometimes the damage I do during these times is not fixable at all. It's almost like an unplaceable craving, like there's some thing I'm missing and my subconscious and my body are trying to send me signals, and I just can't interpret them right and figure out what I need.
How I generally get out of these phases is -- well, it's a bit chicken-egg, because the turmoil makes it difficult for me to reach out for help or even do anything to help myself, so to me it seems like sometimes the wave just passes. I'll say, "ok, this time I'll get my shit together", download some new app or whatever, organize my time or tasks via some new fascinating system, and that'll work... but it feels like it's only because I'm "ready" for it to work.
I think it's unlikely I'll find a solution that will work indefinitely to prevent these slips (hooray, novelty-obsessed brain). And anyway - as though it even needs to be said - I'm sulking in the midst of one now, so prevention or reduction tips might be helpful later, but for this moment I'm mostly concerned with getting out once I'm in.
If you have "swingy" mental health, or phases, or waves - what do YOU do about it, if anything? Therapy? Do you change your medication? Do you take a vacation? Commiserate on your favourite internet forums? What works for you?
45 votes -
For the first time in the United States, research with cephalopods might require approval by an ethics committee
21 votes -
Two deaths attributed to Nipah virus in Kerala India, fourth outbreak since 2018
12 votes -
Haitian scholar was early path-breaking anthropologist
7 votes -
Study of multiple species shows birds with more complex vocal skills are better problem-solvers
11 votes -
Norway's former prime minister Erna Solberg said she should have recused herself from several matters when in government due to her husband's trading activities
9 votes -
A literary history of fake texts in Apple’s marketing materials
27 votes -
Bill Willingham sends Fables into the public domain
39 votes -
How Sam Bankman-Fried’s elite parents enabled his crypto empire
9 votes -
It's not Dragon Fruit, it's Peruvian Apple Cactus | Weird Fruit Explorer
18 votes -
Hasan Minhaj’s “Emotional Truths”
20 votes -
Norway remembers its wartime debt to Dumfries – special relationship being marked with the unveiling of a one-and-a-half tonne stone of friendship
3 votes -
Nigerian power grid in ‘total system collapse’. Generation falls to zero, with blackouts across most of Africa’s largest economy
20 votes -
Hunter Biden indicted on US federal gun charges
23 votes -
Should I use third party firewall or antivirus on Windows (or elsewhere)? Which one?
It's seems to have been common sense for a while now that Windows has good-enough security software that you don't need 3rd party tools but is it actually the case now? Is there anything to lose...
It's seems to have been common sense for a while now that Windows has good-enough security software that you don't need 3rd party tools but is it actually the case now? Is there anything to lose or gain from trusting 3rd party with this stuff?
20 votes -
American Library Association report: Texas led the nation in book ban attempts in 2022
14 votes -
Healthier alternative to Better Than Bouillon?
I'm constantly using the Better Than Bouillon vegetable base when I need vegetable broth, because it's so convenient, space efficient, and it keeps longer than those cartons of vegetable broth....
I'm constantly using the Better Than Bouillon vegetable base when I need vegetable broth, because it's so convenient, space efficient, and it keeps longer than those cartons of vegetable broth.
But, I recently looked at the ingredients and was a bit put off, as I've been trying to eat healthier (less salt, sugar, and processed ingredients.)
Does anyone have any recommendations for something with a similar level of convenience and shelf life?
19 votes -
Drew Barrymore takes down apology video as Alyssa Milano, Bradley Whitford, Debra Messing & more have strong reactions to actress’ decision to return to work amid strikes
25 votes -
Humanity's current space behavior 'unsustainable,' due to satellite and space junk congestion, European Space Agency report warns
49 votes -
Resident Evil 4 Remake | DLC reveal trailer
11 votes -
This "perpetual motion" device is really clever
18 votes -
Oregon launches legal psilocybin access amid high demand and hopes for improved mental health care
33 votes -
Little Shop of Horrors | re:View
19 votes -
Art restoration fail
15 votes -
Polygon review: Palia is an early access utopia that relies on its regular patches
14 votes