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5 votes
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The food timeline
12 votes -
One Million Screenshots
31 votes -
Which other sites do you visit?
The internet is starting to feel smaller and smaller, or at least the content I find is less interesting or created with the goal to be sponsored. Nowadays, I basically consume downloaded content,...
The internet is starting to feel smaller and smaller, or at least the content I find is less interesting or created with the goal to be sponsored.
Nowadays, I basically consume downloaded content, books, shows, mainly old stuff found on the internet archive
Which other sites do you find interesting and worth it?
71 votes -
Is someone using Filen?
11 votes -
Temple of the Great Spider
10 votes -
Play CS 1.6 in the browser
18 votes -
Turn any webpage into a 1990s GeoCities blink fest
24 votes -
Forums are still alive, active, and a treasure trove of information
83 votes -
EloShapes, a site for comparing computer mice and other gaming gear
14 votes -
Wikipedia loses challenge against UK Online Safety Act verification rules
51 votes -
Shout out to wikihow
33 votes -
Communal answering machine: please leave a message after the beep
24 votes -
Perplexity AI is using stealth, undeclared crawlers to evade website no-crawl directives
35 votes -
Slash pages: common root-level web pages
15 votes -
Draw a fish. Go on. Draw one.
106 votes -
Web3 is going great: tracking the financial damage of crypto
12 votes -
Digital Museum of Plugs and Sockets
13 votes -
Panama Playlists — Examining the listening habits of celebrities, journalists, and politicians by scraping their Spotify accounts
16 votes -
Double pendulum parameter space visualizer
18 votes -
Happily sharing that one of my all-time favorite sites, LooksLikeGoodDesign, is (partially) back online
7 votes -
Break your bubble: find book titles that you are unlikely to read
32 votes -
Stop Killing Games petitions hit the target for both UK and EU
66 votes -
Niels Matthijs' film log
17 votes -
Digital astrolabe — an interactive website explaining how the ancient astronomical device works
16 votes -
SpaceNews goes hard-core paywall
As of July 1st, all articles are behind a paywall. This includes all historical articles (going back decades, apparently), including any and all InternetArchive copies -- so RIP every Wikipedia...
As of July 1st, all articles are behind a paywall. This includes all historical articles (going back decades, apparently), including any and all InternetArchive copies -- so RIP every Wikipedia link that has ever referenced them as a source. A free-registration option gets you access to 3 articles per month. A proper subscription is $230/year.
A freelance journalist who has been published with them in the past had this to say about it, which I thought was enlightening and, well, thoughtful.
On SpaceNews going paywalled, and the broader disregard for archiving in journalism.
I reviewed his stuff a bit, and I like his writing, so I added his RSS link to my feed (while simultaneously deleting my SpaceNews link), and on a whim--because he has his email right there on his "About" page, I emailed him to tell him that I liked his article and I just replaced SpaceNews with him.
Like, an hour later, I received a response from him, reminding me that he focuses primarily on the Moon, and that he loves RSS and is happy to hear people still use it.
And it was so refreshing to connect--almost directly--with an actual human being writing news.
Just thought I'd share.
Oh, I also want to comment on that price ... $230/year is--IMHO--wildly overpriced. But almost immediately, it also occurred to me that they probably lost more readership going from $0/year to $1/year, than going from $1 to $230 so, you know, business-wise, I suppose it's not exactly a horrible decision.
But I'd like to hear other people's opinions on that price, too.
19 votes -
What do you think about Medium nowadays?
They aren't a startup anymore, but it seems the current CEO, Tony Stubblebine, got it right, according to his latest (long) blogpost. Although Medium is in a healthy path now, they burnt goodwill...
They aren't a startup anymore, but it seems the current CEO, Tony Stubblebine, got it right, according to his latest (long) blogpost.
Although Medium is in a healthy path now, they burnt goodwill so many times in the past that my trust on the business is absent. I wonder how other people perceive them…
24 votes -
JetStream - An online school for weather
23 votes -
[SOLVED] Anyone know of a site that tracks if a series is "done"?
Done in quotes because sometimes shows get cancelled or otherwise abandoned and other times it has a final season or only had one season and was properly finished. Either way, same result. I don't...
Done in quotes because sometimes shows get cancelled or otherwise abandoned and other times it has a final season or only had one season and was properly finished. Either way, same result.
I don't have the patience or time to keep track of what series is having what new season come out at what point. I prefer to just wait for it all to be done and then watch in my own time. Even if it is one of the very few series I watch that isn't "done" I still don't do the weekly episode thing. I just wait for it all to come out and then watch as I please.
That said, I have a backlog of series that are on my to-watch list, either suggested by friends or I saw a trailer that looked good, but they sit there at present because there's so much utter shit SEO spam websites that you can't get a clear answer if a new season is coming or a series is done or not.
11 votes -
I've always found the common approach that websites take to changing the email associated with an account iffy but I am not sure if I am wrong
I have changed my email more than once, just as part of customizing my online identity and all that. and that obviously required me to login into any accounts I had and updating the email...
I have changed my email more than once, just as part of customizing my online identity and all that.
and that obviously required me to login into any accounts I had and updating the email associated with them.
the most common workflow I have found is
login -> navigate to settings page -> edit the email field to the new email -> go to the inbox for the new email -> click confirm on confirmation emailthen you can go to that website and do the
forgot password, provide your email and change the password and get complete control.I have always found that workflow weird cause it's the most prevalent one I have come across and seems so susceptible to tampering.
if someone leaves their laptop unattended for 3-4 minutes in public while visiting a bathroom (which happened often in the library of my university), there was nothing preventing me from going to their Facebook or whatever account they had open on their computer, changing the email to my own email and then clicking confirm on my inbox once I am back at my desk.
and most people don't have 2FA so that would effectively give me control of their account.
Hell, my university once had a potential data breach and they were 99.999% sure the data was not actually accessed by a malicious actor but still sent a mass email saying that they were advising everyone to change their passwords. a classmate of mine in the software systems program's attitude was basically "oh well, who cares?" and I just facepalmed internally.there are maybe 3 websites I have come across that instead first send a confirmation email to your current inbox and after you confirm on that, then you get a confirmation email on the new email inbox. which isn't perfect but I feel like it's a bit more sensical and the best you can do without involving 2FA.
even then, that's also susceptible to the situation I described above if the user is always logged into their email.
I find it odd that websites don't prompt for a password as part of the email update process (or better yet 2FA with an app as even prompting for a password isn't a guarantee if the user has the password manager as an extension in their browser and they recently unlocked it before leaving their session unattended) to ensure that email changes are always done by the account owner.
16 votes -
Give footnotes the boot
16 votes -
Poole Suite FM
14 votes -
CareerBuilder + Monster, which once dominated online job boards, file for bankruptcy
18 votes -
1940s New York City streetview
36 votes -
New law in Sweden that makes it illegal to buy custom adult content will take effect on July 1 – content creators say it makes their profession more dangerous
26 votes -
Address bar shows hp.com. Browser displays scammers’ malicious text anyway.
31 votes -
Trains.FYI is a real-time map of passenger trains in North America
18 votes -
Hiding metrics from the web
14 votes -
A literature clock
18 votes -
Atlas of Space
14 votes -
Protect your site with a DOOM CAPTCHA
36 votes -
Google is using AI to censor thousands of independent websites like mine (and to control the flow of information online)
55 votes -
Typewriter simulator
13 votes -
Mixtela Precision Clock MkIV
8 votes -
End of 10: Replace Windows 10 with Linux
98 votes -
What's the deal with sites that ask if you want to sign in with your password or an emailed code and then after you use your password, they still email you a code?
I'm all for two-factor authentication, but what's the point of asking?
20 votes -
Decomp.dev
22 votes -
Not content to just be the highest-rated game of 2025, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 has seemingly broken a Metacritic record
54 votes -
Can It Run Doom? An archive of all known ports.
28 votes -
Covered California state insurance website sent personal health data to LinkedIn
21 votes