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35 votes
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Original Mac calculator design came from letting Steve Jobs play with menus for ten minutes
27 votes -
Need pixel art software recommendations (it can be free or paid)
I've been learning Godot for the past few months and I'm happy to report that it's been going well. Little by little, things are clicking into place. (I hugely, highly, undoubtedly, recommend...
I've been learning Godot for the past few months and I'm happy to report that it's been going well. Little by little, things are clicking into place. (I hugely, highly, undoubtedly, recommend GDQuest courses)
I'm ready to start working on a small project to test out my skills, and it's going to be a top down pixel art game.
But to be completely honest, I suck at drawing. I suck at drawing as in, I can make stick figures at best. So forget any fancy software for drawing in general like gimp or photoshop.
What I'm looking for is a software meant for pixel art and that makes my life easy, in both drawing and animating. Bonus points if it allows me to trace (I'm not planning to copy/steal art, but I do need reference points, at least for now)
Do you guys have any recommendations? It can be free or paid. I don't mind paying as long the software is worth it.
15 votes -
For-profit (creative) software
7 votes -
PIGS, an opinionated unmarketable personal calculator
35 votes -
Meet the man who beat Microsoft Excel
10 votes -
Brian Eno - A talk on generative music, artists, and culture
8 votes -
Large US study finds memory decline surge in young people
27 votes -
AI stocks lost more than $820 billion this week
34 votes -
The future of technology makes it harder to solve fictional crimes
16 votes -
Netflix’s opposition to movie theaters cracks as pressure mounts from exhibitors and talent
11 votes -
Cataloging your home library
I have a decent sized library of probably around 2-300 books, and it has been on my list of projects to-do to make a catalog/database for my library to quickly reference what I have. Do any of you...
I have a decent sized library of probably around 2-300 books, and it has been on my list of projects to-do to make a catalog/database for my library to quickly reference what I have. Do any of you catalog your libraries and if so what do you use for it?
I know Libid and LibraryThing are two of the big website/app ones, and it could be done with a Google Sheet or similar, but I was wondering if anyone here has any experience before I really get started.
21 votes -
Danish government has reached an agreement to implement a minimum age requirement of fifteen years old on certain social media platforms
12 votes -
EU country grouping cleared to build sovereign digital infrastructure
33 votes -
Square Enix says it wants generative AI to be doing 70% of its QA and debugging by the end of 2027
17 votes -
Denmark eyes new law to protect citizens from AI deepfakes – if enacted, Danes would get the copyright over their own likeness
21 votes -
Donald Trump AI advisor David Sacks says ‘no federal bailout for AI’ after OpenAI CFO’s suggestion of US federal government backstop
31 votes -
As the US and the West races to break China's stranglehold over rare earths production, some firms are betting that Greenland will become a new mining frontier
6 votes -
Is 67 just brain rot?
48 votes -
Paris had a moving sidewalk in 1900, and a Edison film captured it in action
38 votes -
Microsoft, Google say their data centers create thousands of jobs. Their permit filings say otherwise.
20 votes -
World Population Counter
18 votes -
Norwegian public transport operator Ruter has shared the results of a comprehensive cybersecurity test of electric buses, conducted in an isolated mountain environment
10 votes -
In 1953, the Ford X-100 concept car had it all
14 votes -
How Casio made an indestructible watch (G-Shock)
12 votes -
AI generates surge in expense fraud
23 votes -
Find your flight seat map
21 votes -
Crunchyroll is destroying its subtitles for no good reason
44 votes -
DeckFilter: A Steam library companion app
27 votes -
OpenAI says hundreds of thousands of ChatGPT users may show signs of manic or psychotic crisis every week
35 votes -
Escaped monkeys and the post truth era
Its 2am and I should be asleep so I'm sorry if this is maybe just a weird midnight rant. Today I saw a news article on the other site about aggressive monkeys with covid and herpes escaping a...
Its 2am and I should be asleep so I'm sorry if this is maybe just a weird midnight rant.
Today I saw a news article on the other site about aggressive monkeys with covid and herpes escaping a crashed semi truck.
My first reaction was "is this headline a joke" and I couldn't tell. Then I looked at the source (action news 5 or channel 5 action news, or... something) and even opened the page to have a look for clues of it being fake and without digging deeper I just couldn't tell if it was a legitimate news site or not. So I read the (short) article and looked for clues and it sounded probably legitimate. There was a photo of the scene with a monkey at the rear of a trailer but af this point I can't instantly spot AI images and who knows if it isn't just an old photo. Then I go to the reddit comment and they're parroting additional "facts" but nothing that felt substantial.
I felt very struck by the feeling that I don't know if I can trust any information online unless it's REALLY from a trusted source, and I'm not really sure what sources I can trust anymore.
Is this just me? Have you felt a significant change in the last few months? AI is playing a big part in my distrust, but Im also seeing echo chambers somehow get even worse.
Also, it found out later that the monkeys weren't knfected with a bunch of viruses, it was some sort of miss-communication.
26 votes -
Travel essentials: eight items to pack for your next trip – and what to leave at home
34 votes -
LOADMORE - Creative mobile websites
8 votes -
Microsoft's ambitious new Xbox: Your entire Xbox console library, the full power of Windows PC gaming, and no multiplayer paywall
16 votes -
Supermarket rewards card- yes or no?
I have held out for years from getting a loyalty/membership card from supermarkets as I hate the tracking that they do. But here in the UK so many prices are now locked behind it in most...
I have held out for years from getting a loyalty/membership card from supermarkets as I hate the tracking that they do. But here in the UK so many prices are now locked behind it in most supermarkets, it feels like I’m just giving them so much extra money it’s getting ridiculous. I end up spending more money to shop where they don’t do this, but most of the major players are now adding these member only prices it’s hard to keep the status quo.
For other privacy minded people, how do you manage this?37 votes -
Suggestions for a new Steam Deck user looking to make Desktop mode pleasant to use?
I've had my Steam Deck a few months so I'm comfortable getting around. That said, it could do a lot that it isn't. Partly because the default desktop experience is so barebones and has kinda bad...
I've had my Steam Deck a few months so I'm comfortable getting around. That said, it could do a lot that it isn't. Partly because the default desktop experience is so barebones and has kinda bad ergonomics.
I know there's emulation and such that I'd be interested in. I'm a linux nerd so don't be shy. I'd say the main thing I'm looking for is for the Desktop mode to be more of like a "default to Couch Mode: unlocked, but can go to a (nice) desktop if need be". I really like the idea of playing my GOG games, emulators, etc all in one menu that's ergonomic to controller. I have a file server handy as well, anything good to do with that in conjunction?
Besides that, what good/cool uses have you found?
23 votes -
Construction firms across the Nordic region have made a high stakes bet on the world's largest green steel project in Sweden
11 votes -
There’s a reason US electricity prices are rising. And it’s not data centers.
24 votes -
The dazzling aerial photos honored by the 2025 Siena awards offer "new ways of seeing familiar places," as one judge puts it
15 votes -
Doom in space
15 votes -
'This is definitely my last TwitchCon': High-profile streamer Emiru was assaulted at the event, even as streamers have been sounding the alarm about stalkers and harassment
82 votes -
Subnautica 2 publisher Krafton will be an "AI-first" company, with AI HR, AI R&D, in-game AI services
30 votes -
Talking to the Bank of England about systemic risk and systems engineering
10 votes -
A new eye implant proves remarkably effective in restoring sight for people with age-related macular degeneration
26 votes -
Disney decides it hasn’t angered people enough, announces Disney+ price hikes
93 votes -
Is there a service that a regular joe can use to provide subs or dubbing for a movie?
there is 2 pieces of media I want to get subbed and dubbed in different languages. problem is, whenever I try to look into this, I get results of places that offer their services to companies...
there is 2 pieces of media I want to get subbed and dubbed in different languages.
problem is, whenever I try to look into this, I get results of places that offer their services to companies only.
Are there no places that offer subs and dubbing for tv shows and movies?
17 votes -
Eq
11 votes -
If AI can diagnose patients, what are doctors for?
19 votes -
This site is fast
I have decent internet at home. I have great internet at work. Despite the speeds of those though, seemingly every website out there feels laggy and heavy. You click, you wait, you get a skeleton...
I have decent internet at home.
I have great internet at work.
Despite the speeds of those though, seemingly every website out there feels laggy and heavy. You click, you wait, you get a skeleton of the page, with different elements that rapidly pop in until you're staring at the full site. You see the little loading animation on the tab for one, two, three seconds. It isn't exactly "slow" by any means, but it's far from instantaneous either.
Clicking around the web these days feels like I'm playing a game with unignorable input lag.
And I get it. The modern web is complex. It's genuinely a miracle that this is possible in the first place, so I really shouldn't be complaining that the bits traveling through the internet from dozens of servers thousands of miles away aren't getting here immediately.
I get that high resolution screens require large images, and the ubiquity of video these days adds even more weight. I get that many websites are closer to applications than they are static pages.
I'm not trying to take away from the awesome magic that is our modern miracle of connectivity in the slightest, and I'm appreciative to all the people here who spend their livelihoods working on it. Y'all are awesome.
I'm just trying to say that, well, sometimes moving around on the web can drag. And when you've been using it for a long time, the dragging can get under your skin a little bit.
However, my real point lies not in the rest of the internet, but here. I'm talking about this "heavy web" baseline as a contrast for one of the things I love about Tildes:
it. is. so. snappy.
I click, and BAM, the page is there. Immediately.
It's sharp. It's crisp. It's no-nonsense. No waiting for elements to pop in. No subconsciously watching for the loading animation to stop so that I know I can start to interact with site.
For general design reasons, I've always loved that Tildes is text-only, but more and more I appreciate that aspect simply because Tildes feels good to use because it is so quick and responsive. I don't know how much of that is due to the text-only part of things and how much of it is Deimos being a genius code wizard who made an amazing platform, but I'm happy about it regardless.
This site has got zero input lag.
And that feels great.
97 votes -
Spotify, the world's biggest music streaming service, has announced it is working with major labels on using artificial intelligence in a "responsible" way
17 votes