-
12 votes
-
Home book cataloguing suggestions
So I have a have maybe a few hundred books at home and I think it's time I put together a collection of what I have. I'd love a database of author / title / publication year / physical location...
So I have a have maybe a few hundred books at home and I think it's time I put together a collection of what I have. I'd love a database of author / title / publication year / physical location that I could search through ideally.
Is there software that can help with this? I had a brief look at LibraryThing, but I think it costs money for the quantity of books I'm looking at. I briefly toyed with the concept of making my own app that could scan an ISBN to speed up the process (since most will have ISBNs). I wonder what the people of Tildes suggest? Has anyone here done something similar?
14 votes -
Norway's Olympic gold medallists Marius Lindvik and Johann André Forfang accept three-month suspensions for suit-tampering at the 2025 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships
6 votes -
Bluesky will block Mississippi IP addresses in response to its age assurance law
50 votes -
Google has released data on how much energy an AI prompt uses
36 votes -
No food, no water, and a broken leg – how American journalist Alec Luhn survived a harrowing week in the Norwegian wild
17 votes -
A Vietnamese murder has given the world its first real ‘Snuff’ movie
27 votes -
Tape Bowing Ensemble - Open Reel Ensemble (2025)
8 votes -
The Finnish capital Helsinki went a whole year without a traffic fatality. Data-driven city planning helped.
17 votes -
LinkedIn removes clear support for trans people
36 votes -
Norway eyes 200-250 MW floating nuclear reactors to power industry and cut emissions – expected to supply electricity to nearby offshore platforms and feed power into the onshore grid
13 votes -
Making your own MSP/payment processor (in response to Itch/Valve)
46 votes -
US Supreme Court allows Mississippi social media age verification law to go into effect
25 votes -
Meta appoints anti-LGBTQ+ conspiracy theorist Robby Starbuck as AI bias advisor
29 votes -
People who contribute to libre projects - how do you find time for this?
First of all, I want to say very big THANK YOU for all who contribute to various libre, open source etc. projects. I'm so happy that people love sharing knowledge, skills and fruits of their work....
First of all, I want to say very big THANK YOU for all who contribute to various libre, open source etc. projects. I'm so happy that people love sharing knowledge, skills and fruits of their work.
But to the topic - how do you find time for it?
Whenever I update my Debian or Axpos or any other libre software I see soooo many updates/changes made by (probably soooo many) people. And I always ask myself a question - when did they do that? Where have they found time for contributing? For me full time work makes me so tired that it's the last thing I think about after work hours. Especially in the office job, after x hours of sitting before my monitor I truly hate every next minute after work. I would love to contribute some code, I would realllly love to. Sometimes I find some bugs and try to report them and that's all I am able to do. What frustrates me the most is that I have abilities to code because it's my daily job, but I don't have energy to do that.So, could you tell me how do you find time and energy to contribute to libre projects?
30 votes -
Wikipedia loses challenge against UK Online Safety Act verification rules
51 votes -
Hulu app to be phased out; 'fully integrating' into Disney+
28 votes -
Nvidia, AMD agree to pay US government 15% of AI chip sales to China
21 votes -
Fitness tracker (2025 edition)
See device recommendation thread from 2019. It's been a few years: tech has further matured, and we've gotten more things enshittified. With that in mind, I am asking these questions : Edit: new...
See device recommendation thread from 2019.
It's been a few years: tech has further matured, and we've gotten more things enshittified. With that in mind, I am asking these questions :
Edit: new comments very welcome as well! I wasn't on this site yet in 2019
(0) Did you find the device worth the money, what was surprisingly helpful or unhelpful? What was the tipping point into getting one and did it fulfil its promise?
(1) If your existing one broke today, would you still buy a new fitness tracker today?
(2) If yes, which one?
(3) Else no, why not, or what lessons have you learned since owning one, or what technological considerations do you have today that you didn't before?
Bonus: for folks who never had one, did you ever wanted one and if so what stopped you?
16 votes -
Shout out to wikihow
33 votes -
Ørsted plans to raise $9bn in rights issue to shore up finances – world's biggest offshore wind developer has been battered by high interest rates and Donald Trump administration's opposition
6 votes -
Time to judge books by their covers
10 votes -
Early computer art in the '50s and '60s
8 votes -
Thousands of hotels in Europe to sue Booking.com over ‘abusive’ pricing practices
26 votes -
Dustin Ballard aka There I Ruined It: Is AI ruining music?
10 votes -
Norway's Northern Lights project is seen as a model for efforts to pump carbon dioxide deep into wells, but high costs remain an obstacle
6 votes -
The analog life: Fifty ways to unplug and feel human again
18 votes -
MotoGP confirms C14 test for 100% non-fossil fuel
7 votes -
California farmers are installing solar, providing financial stability and saving water
12 votes -
The hater's guide to the AI bubble
66 votes -
Meta violated privacy law, jury says in menstrual data fight
40 votes -
Spotify announces 9% price hike for individual plan subscribers starting from September
10 votes -
Less rain, more wheat: How Australian farmers defied climate doom
15 votes -
Organizing graphic design files
hey there tildes— the job i’ve had for the past year has included heavy graphic design. i’ve never really done graphic design before so i’ve just been winging it and learning as i go. as time has...
hey there tildes—
the job i’ve had for the past year has included heavy graphic design. i’ve never really done graphic design before so i’ve just been winging it and learning as i go. as time has gone on and the projects have become more complicated, i wonder if there’s a standardized way of organizing complex (or complex to me at least) projects in Illustrator (or for me, Affinity Designer).
one example— i create labels with 3-9 slight variations to be printed and attached to physical items (jars, in my case). these variations of the same design are roughly 75% the same, with the 25% being the “flavor” and associated text/colors. i also have to export as a layered pdf for the printing company since we don’t have the necessary equipment in-house.
another example (more related to InDesign or in my case Affinity Publisher)— a product catalogue. there are something like 30 pages and it’s just a huge click-fest of layers and nested groups.
are there any graphic designers here that have any insight on best practices when organizing large files or even practical ways to split up files?
5 votes -
Miami jury orders Tesla to pay hundreds of millions in damages in Autopilot crash case
42 votes -
My classroom will be AI-free this fall
63 votes -
Full-body scans of 100,000 people could change way diseases are detected and treated
26 votes -
From printing presses to Facebook feeds: What yesterday’s witch hunts have in common with today’s misinformation crisis
9 votes -
Audible changing the revenue share per credit in favor of major authors
13 votes -
Christian missionaries are using secret audio devices to evangelise Brazil’s isolated peoples
40 votes -
Sight of someone potentially infectious causes immune response, research suggests
19 votes -
Fast food pricing games are ridiculous
This morning I found a receipt in my kitchen. It was from my roommate, who had ordered pizza from Dominoes the night before. When I looked at it, I was shocked. There was a single line item on the...
This morning I found a receipt in my kitchen. It was from my roommate, who had ordered pizza from Dominoes the night before. When I looked at it, I was shocked. There was a single line item on the order, two large pizzas for the sum of $75.98 USD. I thought, "what the hell is this? How is he spending so much on pizza? And the junk they sell at Dominos? They don't even make the crust there!"
But then I looked down to the actual amount paid and it had a discount: $54.00 off the price for buying two of them. So the effective price was a much more reasonable $10.99 each. That's less than a third of the sticker price. After tax and an in-house delivery fee, it was still under half of that price.
I don't eat out that often, and fast food is especially rare for me, so I've been fairly insulated from this, but it seems that this kind of thing is happening everywhere. One pizza place I do get food from occasionally is Pieology. Their pizzas were roughly $10 not too long ago, but in recent years those prices have ballooned, with some locations asking for $15 for the same pizza order. But the secret is that they are actually still selling pizzas for those prices if you use their app - it's just that instead of giving you the real price, you get free "perks", which is your choice of a drink, cookie, and things to that effect. I never go to McDonalds, but I've heard endless complaining about how expensive it is. The retort I hear is, "you better get the app". The app is a privacy nightmare that requires practically every permission it could ask for in order to function, so rather than actually getting deals you're just subsidizing the cost of your food with the sale of your personal data.
There's almost no way to definitively prove this, but one argument that I find compelling as to why restaurants are doing this is because of delivery apps. Delivery apps take omission from the purchase price, and people really don't like seeing that they're paying more for things on the apps than they would be in the stores, so shops are raising the base price of their food in order to make things seem more fair, while offering in-store discounts so that they don't lose out on revenue from lower-income people who wouldn't order from delivery apps. If that's the case, that would mean that people ordering from those delivery apps are not only paying more for the privilege, but they are actively pushing up the prices for everyone else as well. And that's just ridiculous.
22 votes -
Smartphone gambling is a disaster
22 votes -
The mysteries of Roman inscriptions are being solved with a new AI tool
14 votes -
Your favorite YouTube channel is (probably) owned by private equity
45 votes -
Made a free VTT prototype
13 votes -
Swarms of tiny nose robots could clear infected sinuses, researchers say
14 votes -
UK government seeks way out of clash with US over Apple encryption
15 votes -
Break your bubble: find book titles that you are unlikely to read
32 votes -
Edible microlasers made from food-safe materials can serve as barcodes and biosensors
24 votes