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9 votes
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Anthropic rejects latest US Pentagon offer: ‘We cannot in good conscience accede to their request’
61 votes -
BMW Group to deploy humanoid robots in production in Germany for the first time
10 votes -
Is higher education still valuable?
Hi friends, Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to...
Hi friends,
Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to college?
I’m asking because I am enrolled in a masters program for statistics and have ~2 years left. I’m concerned that by the time I’m finished, the degree won’t be worth the paper it’s printed on. Like many of you, I work in software. Some days I think I should be learning an entirely different skill set in a non tech related field to diversify my value instead of doubling down on a potentially dying field.
I am not really interested in “you should pursue education for the sake of education”. While this is probably true, at the end of the day I need a way to make money to survive and education is the historical way of increasing one’s value in the job market. Furthermore, I can educate myself for far cheaper if education from a university is no longer considered valuable.
Anyone else in the same boat? Am I being dramatic? Would love to hear your thoughts.
33 votes -
Cassini, a spiritual successor to Microsoft Paint for the iPad
28 votes -
Opinion piece: I am a 15-year-old girl. Let me show you the vile misogyny that confronts me on social media every day.
66 votes -
How The New York Times uses a custom AI tool to track the “manosphere”
24 votes -
You are being misled about renewable energy technology
95 votes -
Orbital space race heats up in Arctic north – Europe lags far behind the US and China in orbital space launches, but new facilities are opening up
6 votes -
Request for help: Backing up NASA public databases
TL;DR: NASA's public Planetary Data System is at risk of being shut down. Anyone have any ideas for backing it up? Hi everyone, Bit of a long-shot here, but I wanted to try on high-quality tildes...
TL;DR: NASA's public Planetary Data System is at risk of being shut down. Anyone have any ideas for backing it up?
Hi everyone,
Bit of a long-shot here, but I wanted to try on high-quality tildes before jumping back into the cesspool of reddit. I'm posting it in ~science rather than ~space as I figure interest in backing up public data is broader than just the space community.
I work regularly with NASA's Planetary Data System, or PDS. It's a massive (~3.5petabytes!!) archive of off-world scientific data (largely but not all imaging data). PDS is integral for scientific research - public and private - around the world, and is maintained, for free, by NASA (with support of a number of Academic institutions).
The current state of affairs for NASA is grim:
- NASA Lays Off ISS Workers at Marshall Space Flight Center
- More layoffs at JPL
- NASA is sinking its flagship science center during the government shutdown — and may be breaking the law in the process, critics say
And as a result, I (and many of my industry friends) have become increasingly concerned that PDS will be taken down as NASA is increasingly torn down for spare parts and irreparably damaged. This administration seems bent on destroying all forms of recording-keeping and public science, so who knows how long PDS will be kept up. Once it's down, it'll be a nightmare to try and collect it all again from various sources. I suspect we'll permanently lose decades worth of data - PDS includes information going all the way back to the Apollo missions!
As such, we've been pushing to back-up as much of PDS as we can, but have absolutely no hope of downloading it all within the next year or two, nevermind in a few months if the current cuts impact us soon.
If you or someone you know would be interested in helping figure out how we can back-up PDS before it's too late, please let me know here or in a DM. I've already tried reaching out to the Internet Archive, but did not hear anything back from them.
Edit: to clarify, the larger problem is download speeds - we've topped out at 20mb/s with 8 connections.
61 votes -
goggle: A GoG Download CLI
21 votes -
Reddit fined £14m for 'concerning' child age check failings
21 votes -
Here are your choices for a self-hosted ebook server
42 votes -
UMD scientists create ‘smart underwear’ to measure human flatulence
21 votes -
The watchers: how OpenAI, the US government, and Persona built an identity surveillance machine that files reports on you to the feds
25 votes -
The mega-rich are turning their mansions into impenetrable fortresses
50 votes -
Voyager Technologies CEO says space data center cooling problem still needs to be solved
48 votes -
A fluid can store solar energy and then release it as heat months later
22 votes -
Messy 2026 F1 cars leave a deeply disturbing impression
20 votes -
Behind the curtain: Tildes architecture
Was there ever a write-up on why Tildes was architected the way it was? For example, why Pyramid instead of the usual suspects like Django or Flask? I'd be curious to read the reasoning from the...
Was there ever a write-up on why Tildes was architected the way it was? For example, why Pyramid instead of the usual suspects like Django or Flask? I'd be curious to read the reasoning from the developer(s) themselves.
24 votes -
Why have so many travel vloggers been traveling to Middle East countries lately?
I occasionally watch some travel videos and lately I've been getting a lot of videos of middle east countries on YouTube, I'm just curious why. I know there have been some new developments like...
I occasionally watch some travel videos and lately I've been getting a lot of videos of middle east countries on YouTube, I'm just curious why. I know there have been some new developments like the shebara resort and Ain Dubai. but is that the only reason?
18 votes -
Swedes searching for their Colombian mothers forty years after their adoptions – government acknowledges processes were plagued with irregularities, from theft of babies to falsified documents
10 votes -
Air to bread
4 votes -
Finnish nuclear development group Steady Energy has begun building a pilot plant in Helsinki that aims to pave the way for Europe's first small nuclear heat reactor
13 votes -
Wojaks, soyjaks, and you. | Bad art history
5 votes -
Web API Changelog - February 2026 | Spotify for Developers
4 votes -
Spotify will soon sell hardcover and paperback books through its app, in partnership with Bookshop.org
24 votes -
Why Nigerians are choosing chatbots to give them advice and therapy
6 votes -
China showcases new Moon ship and reusable rocket in one extraordinary test
19 votes -
Why Google just issued a rare 100-year bond
25 votes -
US Federal Aviation Administration reopens El Paso airport hours after saying it was grounding flights for ten days
16 votes -
Airspace closure in the Texas border city of El Paso followed spat over drone-related tests and party balloon shoot-down, sources say
13 votes -
New Bay Area Rapid Transit fare gates generate $10 million annually
13 votes -
EU says TikTok faces large fine over "addictive design"
32 votes -
SpaceX is acquiring xAI
45 votes -
‘House burping’ is a cold reality in Germany. Americans are warming to it.
41 votes -
Michigan anti-trust lawsuit alleges oil companies colluded to “capture and kill” clean-energy and electric-vehicle efforts
20 votes -
China to ban hidden door handles on cars starting 2027
46 votes -
Finland is leading the race to decarbonise industrial heat emissions, using sand to produce fossil-free steam
12 votes -
Suno, AI music, and the bad future
5 votes -
Anthropic faces new music publisher lawsuit over alleged piracy
5 votes -
Why there's no European Google?
38 votes -
Ideas for Arduino/microbits projects for my kids and me
What projects would you think would interest my daughters the most? The oldest is 11 years, super creative and builds the most intricate stuff out of plain paper, tape and cardboard. I have...
What projects would you think would interest my daughters the most? The oldest is 11 years, super creative and builds the most intricate stuff out of plain paper, tape and cardboard. I have learned programming from about her age, but feel like software would not catch her attention the same way hardware would. They already experiment with programming and microbits in school (what a truly lucky generation!!!).
I am looking for stuff that is not too complicated/expensive that it will just collect dust on a shelf because it took a lot of time to build. Specifically I would like to try something that could be dismantled and reused for other projects. Maybe a barcode scanner or something that has a connection with real life applications.
11 votes -
Listing for GOG Galaxy developer cites Linux as “next major frontier”
54 votes -
Finland looks to end "uncontrolled human experiment" with Australia-style ban on social media
27 votes -
Alternative to Spotify?
I’ve been meaning to switch streaming platforms from Spotify for some time now, for many reasons. To me, it seems like good alternatives are challenging to find, so I figured I’d solicit some...
I’ve been meaning to switch streaming platforms from Spotify for some time now, for many reasons. To me, it seems like good alternatives are challenging to find, so I figured I’d solicit some discussion here on Tildes to see how people like other platforms.
My Only Requirement:
- Mobile App for iOS with Offline Capability
I Strongly Prefer:
- Good Search Functionality
- Niche Artist Availability
Alternatives I’m Considering:
- Apple Music
- Bandcamp
- Tidal
- Deezer
- Qobuz
If anyone has used any of these applications, I’d love a review of the pros and cons. I’m leaning towards Bandcamp right now, but am concerned that I will fail to discover new artists because of the need to pay for albums.
21 votes -
AI chatbots are becoming lifelines for China’s sick and lonely
8 votes -
Why I’m launching a feminist video games website in 2026
40 votes -
Matt Damon says Netflix wants movies to restate the 'plot three or four times in the dialogue' because viewers are on 'their phones while they're watching'
48 votes -
Local News TV offers YouTube feeds from 660 TV stations in America
17 votes