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17 votes
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US biotech executive sentenced to seven years in jail for COVID test fraud
18 votes -
Here are thirteen other explanations for the adolescent mental health crisis. None of them work.
17 votes -
Setting up a 3d printing RTMP stream on YouTube
4 votes -
US aiming to ‘crack the code’ on deploying geothermal energy at scale
24 votes -
Riot’s Vanguard comes to League
19 votes -
5.25-inch floppy disks expected to help run San Francisco trains until 2030
22 votes -
Showtime app shutting down at the end of April
6 votes -
My 3D printer monitor livestream
2 votes -
Insurers use aerial photos to check out roofs or to spot yard debris and undeclared trampolines
32 votes -
German state ditches Microsoft for Linux and LibreOffice
56 votes -
Hard rock band Kiss sells brand and songs for $300m
14 votes -
Subaru cars phone home to 3G cellular network that no longer exists - drains battery
59 votes -
AI assists clinicians in responding to patient messages at Stanford Medicine
4 votes -
You're wrong about Aptera's car. It's ridiculously efficient (and solar powered).
24 votes -
Terraform Industries converts electricity and air into synthetic natural gas for the first time
25 votes -
GM sued for sale of OnStar driving data
54 votes -
Ferrari patents inverted I6 hydrogen engine with electric turbocharging
14 votes -
Britain’s vast network of abandoned nuclear bunkers | Cold War UK
8 votes -
Why crypto could be green power's unlikely new best friend
13 votes -
US police are using GPS tracking darts to avoid dangerous pursuits
34 votes -
Children predict the year 2000 (1966, video)
25 votes -
Florida latest to restrict social media for kids as legal battle looms
22 votes -
What is green software and why do we need it?
13 votes -
‘Resist this’: outrage as BBC replace voice actor with AI voiceover
10 votes -
America's first right-to-repair bill that bans parts pairing
40 votes -
Plans for regulator illustrate inherently political nature of football
4 votes -
Climate sustainability through a dynamic duo: Green hydrogen and crypto driving energy transition and decarbonization
5 votes -
Historic covered bridges in the US are under threat by truck drivers relying on GPS meant for cars
37 votes -
Ericsson will lay off about 1,200 employees in Sweden as the telecommunications company faces slowed demand for its 5G equipment
9 votes -
Cutting-edge tech made the Netherlands a major exporter of food (2022)
15 votes -
Denmark was the first to post an ambassador to Silicon Valley. Now, it is leading Europe's diplomats in putting Big Tech on the right side of history.
7 votes -
GM cuts ties with two data firms amid heated lawsuit over driver data
32 votes -
Want to automate my home with a privacy focus (but I'm a bit slow and need help)
Hey folks - I've been wanting to go whole hog on automating my home, I read through this smart home automation - tips and tricks thread started by @Merry and had a lot of useful information. Some...
Hey folks - I've been wanting to go whole hog on automating my home, I read through this smart home automation - tips and tricks thread started by @Merry and had a lot of useful information.
Some of the things I took away from it:
- Home assistant is pretty great (if you don't mind tinkering)
- Getting something that will boot back up after a power failure is great
- Use smart plugs / switches vs bulbs
- Maintain it's usefulness if there is an internet outage
Like I mentioned I'd really like for this to be privacy focused and mostly self contained. Sure I'd love to be able to control stuff from my phone while I'm home and also recognize that I'm home or away.
I just am a bit smooth brained when it comes to even seeing "would something like this work with the wiring / circuity that I have in my home already?"
If there are any good guides to follow or really specific advice / steps I could follow to begin this process I'd really appreciate it.
25 votes -
In the AI era, is translation already dead?
18 votes -
Investigating touchscreen ergonomics to improve tablet-based enrichment for parrots
19 votes -
100,000 years and counting – how do we tell future generations about highly radioactive nuclear waste repositories?
20 votes -
HIV in cell culture can be completely eliminated using CRISPR-Cas gene editing technology, increasing hopes of cure
18 votes -
Johan Röhr's 2,700 songs have been streamed 15bn times – Swedish composer becomes Spotify's most-famous musician you've never heard of
8 votes -
Job boards are still rife with 'ghost jobs'. What's the point?
32 votes -
Tell US Congress: Stop the TikTok ban
32 votes -
Industrial-scale thermal storage unit in Pornainen, southern Finland, will be the world's biggest sand battery when it comes online within a couple of years
23 votes -
US libraries struggle to afford the demand for e-books and seek new state laws in fight with publishers
46 votes -
IronLev has demonstrated the first-ever magnetic levitation test on regular train tracks
22 votes -
How a solar revolution in farming is depleting world’s groundwater
16 votes -
How TV went from bad to great
9 votes -
Once more with feeling: Banning TikTok is unconstitutional and won’t do shit to deal with any actual threats
24 votes -
How can I best keep my room cool in summer?
I’m looking for advice about what sort of portable room cooling devices to look at and what pitfalls to avoid. Some context: Over the past few years I’ve noticed that I do pretty badly in the...
I’m looking for advice about what sort of portable room cooling devices to look at and what pitfalls to avoid. Some context:
Over the past few years I’ve noticed that I do pretty badly in the heat, especially at night. I live in Zürich, the concept of air conditioning has not yet arrived in this place. The prevailing wisdom for how to survive summer is to just make sure your house doesn’t get too warm in the first place, but my apartment is pretty badly insulated and during the worst weeks it doesn’t cool down that much at night either, so it’s been pretty bad the last few years. I’ve mostly just avoided being in my room whenever possible, but I do have to sleep somehow.
The obvious solution to me is to buy some sort of air conditioning device, a topic I know basically nothing about. My flatmate has one for his room, of the “dangle a tube out of the window” kind, which seems to do an okay job, but it is extremely loud and quite bulky - neither of those are dealbreakers per se, but I’d happily pay a bit more money if that gets me something quieter. In addition, our windows are not sliding windows but ones that open like a door, so any device that requires me to poke something out of the window would probably need a solution for this as well. Any sort of permanent modification to the house such as putting a hole through the wall or the window glass are not allowed.
So my questions are: What types of coolers should I look into, what types are best avoided? Any specific brand or model recommendations would also be appreciated. I looked at one electronics vendor’s website and found a huge range in prices from below 100 to over 1000; I don’t have a specific budget in mind per se, but unless it makes a big difference (e.g. in noise levels) I would rather stay below 500 dollars.
31 votes -
Automakers are sharing consumers’ driving behavior with insurance companies
58 votes -
House passes bill that could ban TikTok in the US, sending it to the Senate
45 votes