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36 votes
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Harvard physicists working to develop game-changing tech demonstrate 3,000 quantum-bit system capable of continuous operation
22 votes -
Medicine’s AI knowledge war heats up
10 votes -
Will an AI actress really become ‘the next Scarlett Johansson’?
27 votes -
Spotify founder Daniel Ek is planning to officially step down from the role of chief executive after two decades at the helm of the music streaming giant
17 votes -
The rise of 'conspiracy physics'
27 votes -
Mjällby AIF, a football team from a remote Swedish fishing village of 800 people, are on the brink of a fairytale league title in Allsvenskan
10 votes -
Spotify removed 75m spam tracks over the past year as artificial intelligence tools increase the ability of fraudsters to create fake music
29 votes -
Tesla influencers tried Elon Musk’s coast-to-coast self-driving, crashed before sixty miles
63 votes -
1988 - Welcome to the wild world of computer animation
10 votes -
A massive telecom threat was stopped right as world leaders gathered at UN headquarters in New York City
28 votes -
Amazon to end commingling program after years of complaints from brands and sellers
74 votes -
Increasing trust in automated driving
6 votes -
The perfect lighting
39 votes -
I want to learn to draw on my iPad
I have recently found myself wanting to learn to draw. I have very minimal visual arts skills, and feel much more comfortable with a musical instrument than a sketchbook. I would like to change...
I have recently found myself wanting to learn to draw. I have very minimal visual arts skills, and feel much more comfortable with a musical instrument than a sketchbook. I would like to change that, not to become some exceptional artist or anything, but because I like the idea of being able to just sketch and draw and doodle in my spare time.
I have an iPad, Apple Pencil, and ProCreate, but I don't really know where to begin. I would be most likely learning to use ProCreate at the same time as learning to draw, although I don't know if that's a bad idea or not.
Are there books, online courses, YouTube videos that you would recommend for a complete beginner?
25 votes -
How Denmark plans to roll out the world's first cow burp tax – government is investing billions in technologies to help farmers cut livestock emissions
10 votes -
Are touchscreens in cars dangerous?
35 votes -
Under Construction
11 votes -
Inside the DSEI arms exhibition and European rearmament - tech, trends and highlights at DSEI 2025
8 votes -
Porter Robinson's angelangelangelangelangel.com (seizure warning)
28 votes -
Massive Attack remove music from Spotify to protest against CEO Daniel Ek's investment in AI military
32 votes -
Text My Mom for Me
13 votes -
Waymo has received their permit to operate at San Francisco International Airport
23 votes -
Oracle, Silver Lake consortium to control 80% stake in TikTok in US
25 votes -
I made a tool to generate AI powered recaps of TTRPG sessions
My party recently finished Descent into Avernus, which we played over Discord and FoundryVTT given how scattered across the country we all are. A regular party of the campaign was the DM poking...
My party recently finished Descent into Avernus, which we played over Discord and FoundryVTT given how scattered across the country we all are. A regular party of the campaign was the DM poking and prodding players for "someone write up a recap of last session", helping keep us all in the loop, players who were absent in particular.
A few weeks ago it occurred to me that this could be automated, and Scribble was born.
Scribble is just a bash script wrapper that will:
- Take a
.zipof FLAC files from the Craig discord bot, recordings of each player present for the session - Use the tool
whisperxto transcribe those audio files to text - Compile a transcript of the session and send it off to Gemini to come up with the recap
- Parse the recap and send it along to Discord via webhook
After some trial and errors and tweaking, I've got it in a pretty good place, it's working very well for our campaign. So I docker-ized it and published it to share with
the worldanyone else who might get use from it. I'm not sure where else I could put the word out about this for anyone who might want to use it, so here it is. If you might find this useful, please, enjoy!23 votes - Take a
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Your phone already has social credit. We just lie about it.
35 votes -
AI content warning label
Edit: my post has been deemed malformed, and I’d like to apologize and clarify to the community. The concept of a digital watermark signifying that the artist didn’t use any image generation, LLM,...
Edit: my post has been deemed malformed, and I’d like to apologize and clarify to the community. The concept of a digital watermark signifying that the artist didn’t use any image generation, LLM, GPT, etc is the proposition. I do understand it’s tough to identify the term AI in use, since most of our tech uses some form of code to modify our work without our knowledge. More-so, I mean to identify work, art, or content that did not specifically use tools to create. Again apologies!
Post: I’m wondering the world of Tildenisian thoughts on this. Say I make a piece of art, no matter the content, and it’s completely of my own hand. Should there be some kind of digital watermark to signify that accomplishment? Maybe accomplishment isn’t the right word.
I must be looking for validation, because I’ve made art recently where folks have asked the question, “What tool did you use?” and immediately felt dread and disappointment.
Perhaps it’s not even feasible to signify since “AI” is eventually impossible to circumvent when sharing your art over these series of tubes. Oh well.
What do you fine folks think?
19 votes -
Throwback Thursday: Let's talk old flash and memes!
Inspired by some conversations I had over Discord where I realized that a lot of memes and videos from the early days of the Internet which were common knowledge are now just totally unknown. So,...
Inspired by some conversations I had over Discord where I realized that a lot of memes and videos from the early days of the Internet which were common knowledge are now just totally unknown. So, let's have a proper Throwback Thursday and reminisce over purer times.
45 votes -
California's next energy experiment is happening above aqueducts, reducing evaporation and increasing solar panel efficiency
12 votes -
Sweden's health minister has urged the EU to push ahead with social media restrictions for kids while insisting it be treated as a pressing matter
28 votes -
Samification of the current Web
Hello I hope you all have a good [insert time of Day] !!! Maybe a bit of background about me: (25 Age idk if that is relevant, but it could be interesting how other age groups see that) I really...
Hello I hope you all have a good [insert time of Day] !!!
Maybe a bit of background about me:
(25 Age idk if that is relevant, but it could be interesting how other age groups see that)
I really like unique stuff. If it's design or clothes or web design or whatever you might think of. I have been working privately on my own website, and I built it almost from scratch. I really like unique-looking websites, and I also like the 2000s era style of design (not only limited to web-design).I have been noticing a lot of websites that they look more and more the same. The same structure, design, similar colors, similar pictures etc, etc...
And I think this is just very boring and it just feels like more and more the web isn't made for us humans. It feels everything is being more and more optimized either for SEO (Search Engine Optimization) or for AI scrapping. And I feel like being alienated from using the internet (Yes, also sadly that's the case in many other areas).
And I asked some people and what they basically told me is that they like that everything looks the same and everything feels the same. Since they can go on every website and understand the layout and know how to navigate every website.
So I wanted to ask what is your opinion about this topic?
Do you care what the Internet looks like? Do you mind that everything looks same~ier?24 votes -
In a concerted effort to improve previously poor cancer survival rates, Denmark's success story has caught the attention of UK policymakers
9 votes -
Amiga ASCII text art (2015)
6 votes -
Can AI rescue us from the mess of prior auth?
24 votes -
How Lofi Girl became a chill beats empire
41 votes -
“First of its kind” AI settlement: Anthropic to pay authors $1.5 billion
45 votes -
The color of the future - A history of blue
8 votes -
Bluesky will comply with age verification laws in South Dakota and Wyoming after exiting Mississippi
18 votes -
Swedish Performing Rights Society signs licensing agreement with Songfox – Stockholm-based start-up lets fans and creators legally produce AI-generated compositions
4 votes -
Alt Text Study Club
9 votes -
Storyteller v2 is now available!
23 votes -
Waymo approved to operate at San Jose airport
22 votes -
We risk a deluge of AI-written ‘science’ pushing corporate interests
22 votes -
The Internet Archive’s microfiche digitization livestream
15 votes -
The case for cultured meat has changed
29 votes -
EU hits Google with €2.95bn antitrust fine despite trade tensions with US
41 votes -
Bland, easy to follow, for fans of everything: what has the Netflix algorithm done to our films?
24 votes -
Epic Systems’ mythical and sprawling campus
18 votes -
Nepal blocks Facebook, X, YouTube and others for failing to register with the government
15 votes -
Sweden has accused Russia of being behind a significant rise in instances of GPS signal jamming recorded over the Baltic Sea
16 votes