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13 votes
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Phil Spencer is leaving Microsoft/Xbox
34 votes -
Berlin winners list: Ilker Çatak’s ‘Yellow Letters’ wins Golden Bear
2 votes -
This video is six minutes long!
9 votes -
Tildes Minecraft Weekly
Server host: tildes.nore.gg (Running Java 1.21.11) Verification site: https://tildes.nore.gg BlueMap: https://tildes.nore.gg/map/ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TildesMC Plugins and Data Packs...
Server host:
tildes.nore.gg(Running Java 1.21.11)
Verification site: https://tildes.nore.gg
BlueMap: https://tildes.nore.gg/map/
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TildesMCPlugins and Data Packs
Data Packs:- Terralith - Overworld terrain upgrade
- Nullscape - End terrain upgrade
- Age Lock [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Armor Statues [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Bat Membranes [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Cauldron Concrete [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Cauldron Mud [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Custom Nether Portals [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Husks Drop Sand [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Mini Blocks [Vanilla Tweaks]
- More Mob Heads [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Player Head Drops [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Silence Mobs [Vanilla Tweaks]
- Wandering Trades [Vanilla Tweaks]
Plugins:
- BlueMap - Provides a live 3D rendering of the game world
- Clickable Links - Makes http URLs in chat clickable (only for registered players)
- CoreProtect - Records all block/container/mob changes (Anyone can look up changes with
/co inspect) - DebugStick - Gives the ability to craft debug sticks in survival
- DistantHorizons - Provides distant LOD map data to players running the client mod
- EasyArmorStands - GUI for editing armor stands
- Hexnicks - Enables Tildes usernames to be displayed
- hsrails - Allows for 4x speed rail travel
- LuckPerms - Locks down unregistered users
- Otherside - Fix for mob farms involving Nether portals
- Rapid Leaf Decay - Increases the speed of leaf decay by 10x
- WorldEdit - Used for occasional admin stuff
- WorldGuard - Prevents unregistered users from changing anything in the world
The server operates on a soft whitelist. Anyone can log in and walk around, but you need a Tildes account to gain build access.
We recommend you install our mod web-chat so that you can chat while in your web browser. It turns the server into an old-school chat room.
<- Previous Thread
16 votes -
Communities, relationships, and navigating the enshittification of absolutely everything
(I wasn't sure if I should post this in ~talk or ~tech. I went with ~talk because I feel like I'm about to spend a whole lot of this post rambling. Also, be warned: This is a long post.) A summary...
(I wasn't sure if I should post this in ~talk or ~tech. I went with ~talk because I feel like I'm about to spend a whole lot of this post rambling. Also, be warned: This is a long post.)
A summary of this post: My personal decision to try to preserve my own online privacy, the chaotic equilibrium that is me attempting to make sense of my feelings towards AI and the current zeitgeist, and the tiny concessions I've had to make in navigating all of this makes me feel, at best, tired, and at worst, a crazy person. I am tired of the direction the internet is going, I am tired of the endless discourse about AI, and my chronic tiredness is all marinating together into a tired admixture of tired chicken soup.
First of all, hi everyone. I don't post here as often as I maybe would like to. Randomly chiming in with a big ol' post like this a bit daunting. Participating in an online community isn't a muscle I flex very often nowadays, which is actually relevant to what I'm about to talk about.
Latelyfor a long fucking time now I've just been tired of the direction in which the internet, specifically the "corporate web", has been heading. This all started when I first joined Tildes; around that time was when the big Reddit API fiasco happened, leaving a bad taste in my mouth, and it was not long after when AI started to become A Big Thing. If you had asked me why these things had left a bad taste in my mouth back then, I wouldn't have been able to respond with anything articulate, just "big tech bad".In the three years that have passed, I've developed enough of an opinion and have gone through enough soul searching to give a more concrete answer to why I don't like how things are going:
- Everybody wants my data, and I'd rather not give it to them
- I am tired of finding figurative AI hairs in my figurative sandwich
- Every company wants infinite growth at the expense of everything that made that company good, if it was ever good
- It's really hard to find a third space on the internet these days
- Almost nobody I know cares about any of this
Among privacy-conscious folks and small internet communities like Tildes, none of the above are particularly novel thoughts. And yet I think about all of this frequently enough that I felt the need to post a topic here for discussion. In this post, I'm going to get on my little soapbox, recount how I got to this mind space, and attempt to explain why I find all of this both endlessly tiring and constantly present in my mind.
Everybody wants my data, and I'd rather not give it to them (and almost nobody I know cares about any of this)
In the past few years I've taken the steps realistic for me in order to protect my online privacy. Why? Well, I hate being advertised to. I hate the idea of surveillance-as-a-service. I'm fortunate enough to be able to just pay for, or configure/self-host, things that do the thing they're supposed to do without knowing that I'm a 512 year old nonbinary alien from like, Nova Arrakis Prime the 2nd, Esq. or something (I am not that old, that is not how I identify, and I'm obviously not from there). I just don't buy the idea that everybody on the internet is a consumer who needs to accept this compromise in order to participate. Again, this might not be novel for a lot of you reading.
For me this has involved switching away from Gmail as an email provider, ditching Windows for Linux everywhere, cancelling my YouTube Premium subscription, deleting Facebook/most Meta stuff, browsing behind a VPN, etc. Some things I'm working on going further on; some things, like deleting Instagram, I don't want to do because that platform is how I connect with a lot of my friends. Essentially I've done what's realistic for me.
All of this has worked out fine for me. My quality of life has not measurably changed as a result, other than maybe the fact that it's slightly inconvenient to open up a new browser session and log in to my otherwise-abandoned Google account just to interact with a random Google Sheet someone sent me.
The first bit of mental friction stems from discussions I've had with my partner on this topic. She's also privacy-minded, and so isn't against the idea of taking very similar actions. But she's not in a place where she can just do so as easily as I did, either because it's massively inconvenient for her (all of her data is holed up in Google services), would require a very large mindset/workflow shift (She is not technical enough to switch to Linux without a ton of friction, for example), or would damage her relationships (It's completely unrealistic to get everybody she knows to switch to Signal tomorrow - hell, she doesn't even want to do it herself to message me). I want to be very clear that none of this is inherently bad or a stain on her character or whatnot. My point is that privacy looks different for everybody, especially over time.
Extrapolate that friction out to people who aren't as close to me though, and it feels somewhat like dying by a thousand cuts. Not in the sense of mental anguish, just general fatigue. Over 50% of my communication with my good friends takes the form of them sending me memes on Instagram. I react and reply because I'm not just going to ghost them because of muh privacy. But there's that like 1% of my brain that goes "yeah I wish you wouldn't do that". I have not bothered to ask them to stop, because I don't (yet) care to proselytize to them in the name of privacy at the risk of shutting down what is effectively one of their love languages.
The thing is, they either aren't aware of the degree of data collection going on on every major internet platform, or they don't care. I do not believe myself in the slightest to be superior to them because of this. I don't fault them for either, and I, again, don't care to intervene because I don't want to be the person that gatekeeps the entire internet from them in the name of rebelling against big corpo.
So yes, I would say the majority of my friends are not as opinionated on this as I am. Because of this, I sometimes feel I'm a little crazy whenever I propose to my partner the idea of self-hosting our own file storage, or when I happen to say "Yeah, I try not to use Google Maps really. Why? Oh, I just don't want them to know where I've been". But then I talk with those of my friends who share this mindset, or browse online communities which do, and I feel normal again. And then I bounce between these circles, and I feel, I dunno, weird.
Interlude: The AI bubble and my pride as a software engineer
Frankly, I don't know how to feel about AI. This is compounded by the fact that I am a software engineer both by trade and as a hobby.
As a cultural phenomenon, I am pretty sick of it. I cannot stand AI-generated ads, AI-generated media, AI-generated writing, AI-generated whatever. I also cannot stand ads about AI-generated ads, AI-generated media, AI-generated writing, or AI-generated whatever. The last time I was spoonfed information about a topic to a remotely comparable degree was back when crypto/NFTs were the monster of the week. This round of industry hype has felt orders of magnitude more prevalent and exhausting.
As a software development tool, it's... fine. I was pretty against AI-assisted coding at first, but after having learned how to properly utilize it (whatever "properly" means), I've found it pretty helpful as of late. I'll usually hand-write the code and patterns I want the LLM to use, tell it "ok, now do this everywhere", approve/reject its output, and it gets a lot right with an acceptable amount of post-fact correction from me. It's also been useful as a learning tool: These past few months I've been working on a project that involves data mining/parsing a proprietary encryption/encoding format for a reasonably popular video game. I was not comfortable working with binary formats to this extent before, but after several back and forths with Claude and an earnest effort to understand just what the fuck it was writing to my codebase, I feel somewhat more knowledgeable now.
The tension I've had to balance given my above stance: I work at an AI startup.
Everyone around me is AI-pilled out the wazoo. This isn't meant to be an insult. They're all great people whom I get along great with, and I like my company/don't hate our vision enough to jump ship (inhales copium). It's just that I constantly have to deal with stuff like:
- Vibecoded PRs, which I have the wherewithal to push back on when appropriate, but in so doing must balance maintainability vs. urgency (and all that other pragmatism crap that comes with being a software engineer)
- AI-flavored communications - I do a mean ChatGPT impression. "That's an excellent observation. The tension you're feeling isn't imagined. It's real. If you want, I can break down the reasons why people tend to pour the cereal before the milk—just say the word."
- Building the meta-inference layer through a combination of carefully curated ground truths, a robust evaluation pipeline, and a multi-step, quantized agent selection algorithm that's resilient to both external disturbances and continuous platform evolution (this is basically a real sentence I had to read in an engineering strategy document someone put out)
And so, similar to the privacy dilemma I spoke about earlier, I find myself constantly doing mental gymnastics while working here. I am one of a few cynics in a room full of zealots (Again, I'm not trying to paint myself as some pariah here - I'm in this situation by choice, I'm just trying to note the juxtaposition). It would be easier if I just flat out hated the idea of AI to its core - I could just leave and choose not to engage with AI anything - but no, I use it, and I find it useful. In fact I enjoy applying software engineering principles to AI, because it's an interesting set of problems to wrangle.
Again, death by a thousand cuts. Firstly, I hate the prevalence of AI in mainstream culture, and I hate how it's being pushed as a panacea in my industry. Secondly, I don't hate AI as a tool. Thirdly, I'm surrounded by the first thing. Fourth: I have to explain my job to my friends and family. Doing so usually results in them asking me surface-level questions about AI (which I don't mind entertaining), them relaying how AI is god/the devil because it made them look like a Disney character (which I am tired of dealing with), or them asking me what my opinion on AI is (if I were to give them the whole story, it would be this entire post, so I just go "eh, it's fine").
My point with this section: I feel I am constantly doing mental gymnastics to justify the attitude I have towards AI. My stance is somewhat neutral. I read a blog post absolutely glazing it, I roll my eyes. I read a blog post absolutely trashing it, I roll my eyes. I think about AI, I roll my eyes. It's all just so tiring.
And also, as is evident by now, I have an Opinion about all of this. Am I crazy? Wouldn't it be a lot easier if I could just roll over and accept AI for what it is?
Turbo capitalism has fucked up how I navigate internet communities (and almost nobody I know cares about any of this)
The most recent development that's caused me to think about the topics presented in this post is Discord's recent rollout of its identity verification system. There has been plenty of discourse on this topic as of late, so I won't go on about too long about it here.
I view this motion by Discord as the next step in the enshittification of that platform. Given my views I've shared on surveillance capitalism as well as AI's effects on the industry and the garbage shoveled into the world by its most annoying proponents, you won't be surprised that my reaction to this news is negative, and I am currently deciding on whether or not to divest myself from Discord completely.
This decision is a small dilemma for me. On the one hand, muh privacy. On the other hand, I am part of a server centered around that one video game for which I'm working on that side project, and leaving the platform means severely reducing my participation in that community, because there's no way in hell they're moving that server off Discord. I don't know which way I'm going to go. This is also the same dilemma that occurred when I decided to partially divest myself from Meta and the like: Do I care about my relationships with my friends/family more than I care about muh privacy? (Yes).
(I feel like I'm finally getting to the point of my own post here...)
I'm very tired of the fact that these small dilemmas and points of contention have been popping up for me fairly consistently over the past few years. If we all just held hands and prayed I'd have it my way, I wouldn't have to choose between being an outsider in X community and *~\muh privacy~*, and I'd be 6'3" and jacked. But the way the corporate web is developing towards the endless rat race of turbo enshittification, I feel the rate at which I'm going to have to make these kinds of choices is going to be as consistent as it is now, or it's going to go up. Probably until I die.
Epilogue: The side project I was working on
I mentioned I was working on a video game side project. I feel it encapsulates the gripes I describe within this post pretty well, because it contains the following elements:
- Parsing binary data of a proprietary encoding/encryption format (I previously didn't know shit about how to do this, so I used AI to help me do it/learn more about the topic)
- A website which acts as a game database/search tool for in-game entities (I wanted to contribute to a community I'm currently deciding whether or not to somewhat isolate myself from)
- A Discord bot as an alternative method of interacting with the application/a way to submit drop table information, all of which must be crowd-sourced (Discord Bad. I figured I'd just stand up an authenticated REST API and let others do a Discord integration if they want, but still, I wish I wasn't about to force myself to cut this out of my roadmap.)
If you managed to read through all of that, thanks. I've been writing for like an hour, and I feel my ramblings have become more nonsensical than usual.
A summary of this post (copied from the beginning): My personal decision to try to preserve my own online privacy, the chaotic equilibrium that is me attempting to make sense of my feelings towards AI and the current zeitgeist, and the tiny concessions I've had to make in navigating all of this makes me feel, at best, tired, and at worst, a crazy person. I am tired of the direction the internet is going, I am tired of the endless discourse about AI, and my chronic tiredness is all marinating together into a tired admixture of tired chicken soup.
70 votes -
Weekly thread for casual chat and photos of pets
This is the place for casual discussion about our pets. Photos are welcome, show us your pet(s) and tell us about them!
0 votes -
Nine dead after shooter opens fire at Canadian high school
49 votes -
Ian's Shoelace Site is still the best site for tying your shoes
76 votes -
Save Point: A game deal roundup for the week of February 15
Add awesome game deals to this topic as they come up over the course of the week! Alternately, ask about a given game deal if you want the community’s opinions: e.g. “What games from this bundle...
Add awesome game deals to this topic as they come up over the course of the week!
Alternately, ask about a given game deal if you want the community’s opinions: e.g. “What games from this bundle are most worth my attention?”
Rules:
- No grey market sales
- No affiliate links
If posting a sale, it is strongly encouraged that you share why you think the available game/games are worthwhile.
All previous Save Point topics
If you don’t want to see threads in this series, add
save pointto your personal tag filters.9 votes -
The complicated origin of the expression ‘peanut gallery’
5 votes -
Hold on to your hardware
37 votes -
Slay the Spire 2 | Early Access trailer
31 votes -
The AI disruption has arrived, and it sure is fun (gifted link)
29 votes -
Minecraft Java Edition is switching from OpenGL to Vulkan rendering
27 votes -
AI is coming for culture
8 votes -
The Cut invited musicians, artists, and tastemakers to ask Robyn anything. Absolutely anything.
4 votes -
CGA-2026-02 🕹️🚗 REMOVE CARTRIDGE ⏏️ Racing Lagoon
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
____----------- _____ \~~~~~~~~~~/~_--~~~------~~~~~ \ `---`\ _-~ | \ _-~ <_ | \[] / ___ ~~--[""] | ________-------'_ > /~` \ |-. `\~~.~~~~~ _ ~ - _ ~| ||\% | | ~ ._ ~ _ ~ ._ `_//|_% \ | ~ . ~-_ /\ `--__ | _-____ /\ ~-_ \/. ~--_ / ,/ -~-_ \ \/ _______---~/ ~~-/._< \ \`~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ##--~/ \ ) |`------##---~~~~-~ ) ) ~-_/_/ ~~ ~~Yokohama
1999
You've got big shoulders and big dreams
Headlights flash
I challenge you to a race
You Me START START | | | | | | | | \ \ \ \ \ \ ---- ----CRASH | | | | FINISHDrat! It's always those hard turns, isn't it?!
You and your big shoulders win
Take your prize from my loser car
Prize
______ ______ __ / \ / \ | \ ______ ____ __ __ | $$$$$$\| $$$$$$\| $$ ______ ______ | \ \ | \ | \| $$_ \$$| $$_ \$$| $$ / \ / \ | $$$$$$\$$$$\| $$ | $$| $$ \ | $$ \ | $$| $$$$$$\| $$$$$$\ | $$ | $$ | $$| $$ | $$| $$$$ | $$$$ | $$| $$ $$| $$ \$$ | $$ | $$ | $$| $$__/ $$| $$ | $$ | $$| $$$$$$$$| $$ | $$ | $$ | $$ \$$ $$| $$ | $$ | $$ \$$ \| $$ \$$ \$$ \$$ \$$$$$$ \$$ \$$ \$$ \$$$$$$$ \$$
For those that didn't play the game, that's basically Racing Lagoon in a nutshell! Except, well, the plot gets more involved (and... weird), and there's a city map you get to cruise on, and you can save at a gas station, etc.
But the key points are all there:
- Racing
- Getting new parts
- Big shoulders
Anyway, let us know what you thought of the game!
Next month will be hosted by the inimitable and incredible @J-Chiptunator and we'll be playing Kaeru no Tame ni Kane wa Naru (The Frog for Whom the Bell Tolls).
Month Game Host March 2026 Kaeru no Tame ni Kane wa Naru
(The Frog for Whom the Bell Tolls)u/J-Chiptunator Source for the ASCII art car
Source for the prize text
Source for the race art (It's me, I drew that. Art is my passion.)10 votes -
Colossal Game Adventure: February 2026 Nominations Topic
We are up for another round of nominations for Colossal Game Adventure, Tildes' very own retro video game club! These nominations will form the ballot for the next round of voting, in which will...
We are up for another round of nominations for Colossal Game Adventure, Tildes' very own retro video game club!
These nominations will form the ballot for the next round of voting, in which will we choose the next SIX games to play after March's Kaeru no Tame ni Kane wa Naru (The Frog for Whom the Bell Tolls).
Nominations for CGA do not start fresh each time. We rollover the top 50% of nominations from the previous round, and we decay their vote totals by 30%. So, many of the previously nominated games are still eligible to win in the upcoming voting.
Procedural Details
Nominations will be open for 96 hours (4 days) from the time of this posting.
Anyone can nominate. You do not have to have previously taken part in CGA in order to participate.
Anyone nominating in this topic will be added to the CGA notification list if they're not already on there (unless you request otherwise).
There is no hard definition for "retro." Choose whatever you feel fits that label.
Games that have been nominated in the past but were cut are still eligible for nomination again. They do not get "locked out" of CGA.
Voting will follow in a separate topic, and I will also be trying out a "lobbying" topic this time around to see how that goes. More on that in the comments.
Nomination Process
Everyone has the ability to take one (and ONLY one) official action for the nominations topic.
EITHER: Boost a rolled-over title.
This will add 3 points to the title's rollover points from the previous round.
You will also be able to add points to the game during the voting round.
The purpose of this is to limit new nominations if there are games already in the list that strongly interest you.OR: Nominate a new title.
This will add a new game/arcade special to the ballot.
An arcade special is a group of shorter/smaller games meant to be played together.
Any new title starts at 0 points.
Nomination Formatting
Please do the following:
Bold your action (boosting/nominating).
If nominating, please link to your title on MobyGames. (You do not need to do this for boosting since the links are already in the list.)
Examples:
Boosting a game:
- Boost: Lode Runner
Nominating a game:
- Nomination: Portal 2
Nominating an Arcade Special:
- Nomination: Windows in the 90s
Minesweeper
Chip's Challenge
JezzBall
It is recommended (but not required) that you share why you are nominating/boosting a particular game as well.
Rollover Titles
Game Rollover Votes Arcade Special: Back in a Flash
Bloons Tower Defense
Line Rider
Motherload
QWOP
Stick RPG22 Sid Meier’s Pirates 21 Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow 20 Another World 19 Metroid Prime 19 Descent 18 Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals 17 StarTropics 15 Arcade Special: Behind the Wheel
Lego Island
Rally-X
Sega Rally Championship15 Crystalis 15 The Colonel’s Bequest 15 Threads of Fate 15 Beneath a Steel Sky 15 Metroid 14 Arcade Special: Scroll Lock-on
Einhander
Ikaruga
Paradroid
Raid on Bungeling Bay
Thunder Force IV14 Tetris 13 Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist 13 Tony Hawk’s Pro-Skater 2 13 JSRF: Jet Set Radio Future 12 Lode Runner 12 Arcade Special: The Grue That Binds
Border Zone
Twisted!
Zork12 The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past 12 11 votes -
What is the framework being used for these types of websites (fmhy.pages.dev)?
14 votes -
Single vaccine could protect against all coughs, colds and flus, researchers say
40 votes -
Keenadu – a multifaceted Android malware that can come preinstalled on new devices
10 votes -
Palantir was allegedly hacked, exposing CIA collusion and deep-rooted global surveillance/meddling
45 votes -
Pokémon FireRed and Pokémon LeafGreen releasing February 27th on Nintendo Switch
25 votes -
NASA chief classifies Starliner flight as “Type A” mishap, says agency made mistakes
31 votes -
Giving away three copies of my friend's recently-released game
A good friend of mine recently released his latest game, Social Caterpillar. I will choose 3 random people who commented on this post by February 25, 2026, 06:00 UTC (unless you say in your...
A good friend of mine recently released his latest game, Social Caterpillar.
I will choose 3 random people who commented on this post by February 25, 2026, 06:00 UTC (unless you say in your comment that you don't want to join the giveaway)
This is the first time I've done a giveaway like this, but from what I saw online, if you win, I'll have to add you as a friend on Steam and wait a few days until Steam lets me send you a gift (unless someone tells me there's a different way of doing this!). I have no issues - and even expect - that you'll unfriend me once this is done. No hard feelings.
I will either edit this post or make a comment with the winners when they're selected. Will send a private message with my steam username for the friend thing.
Why I'm doing this giveaway?
I just really liked this game (and I enjoy his games overall). It hooked me for way more hours than I thought it would, and I loved the puzzles.
I told him I'd do a giveaway on Tildes, but I didn't know back then that I'd need an invite to join (I was - still mostly am - a lurker). So now that I have an account here, it's time to do it!
This game has a lot more to it than it seems at first glance. If you're still unsure whether the game is for you, but you like what you see on the store page and you like puzzles, click below for a tiny bit more about it. I hid it for those who don't want to read anything more than what's in the store page.
Click if you think you might like the game but want a bit more to be convinced about it
It is full of secrets to find, things that sometimes might be hiding in plain sight until you know how to see them, mini-games and secret areas to unlock. You'll have to solve lots of great puzzles to do these things, and it's very pleasing when you figure them out.37 votes -
At The Gates – The Fever Mask (2026)
5 votes -
What are important historical books lost to time?
Not just books from the 1800s or 1900s, but even older. 1400s, 800s, 100s, books from BCE, etc. It can be fiction or non-fiction. If a small blurb about the book could be provided and its...
Not just books from the 1800s or 1900s, but even older. 1400s, 800s, 100s, books from BCE, etc. It can be fiction or non-fiction.
If a small blurb about the book could be provided and its significance that would be great.
Additionally, if you could help direct me or provide guidance on where I can get a hold of the book (digitally or physically), that’d be appreciated.
18 votes -
The Funny Men
1 We are the funny men The laughter men Leaning together Headpiece filled with mirth. Alas! Our wavering voices, when We giggle together Are loud and senseless As hyenas in dry grass Or gales...
1
We are the funny men
The laughter men
Leaning together
Headpiece filled with mirth. Alas!
Our wavering voices, whenWe giggle together
Are loud and senseless
As hyenas in dry grass
Or gales stirring shards of glass
In our dry cellarForm of clay, color of slick.
Fictitious force, turbulent motion;
Those who have crossed
With eyes darting to and fro,To death's other kingdom
Remember us -- if at all --
Not as grasping, violent souls
But only as
The funny men
2
Eyes I dare not meet in ads
In death's advertisement kingdom
These do not appear:
There, the eyes are
Blinding light on a broken column
There, is a tube man swinging
And voices are
In the wind's singing
More shrill and more booming
Than a cancelled star.Let me be no nearer
In death's advertisement kingdom
Let me also wear
Such deliberate disguises
(Thinnest phone, cleanest drip, slickest rizz)
On the grass
Behaving as the wind behaves
No nearer--Not that final meeting
In the Find Out kingdom
Here you go! I’ve rewritten the text to avoid direct reference to the theme:
III
This is the slop land
This is swamp land
Here, the seed rounds
Are raised, here they receive
The supplication of a gilded man's hand
Under the twinkle of a parasite star.Is it like this
In death's other kingdom
Waking alone
At the hour when we are
Trembling with tenderness
Fully sure that
We and our money are soon parted.
4
The eyes are not here
There are no eyes here
In this valley of choking stars
In this hollow valley
The worms atop our kingdoms' bones.In this last of meeting places
We wail together
A barbaric yawp
Gathered on this beach of the sunken riverSightless, unless
The flames reappear
As the perpetual star
Tetraethyllead rose
Of death's Find Out kingdom
The hope only
Of unserious men.
5
Baby shark
Mommy shark
Daddy shark
Grandma shark
Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the ComedyDon’t want to meet your daddy
Between the conception
And the creation
Between the emotion
And the response
Falls the ComedyJust want you in my Caddy
Between the desire
And the spasm
Between the potency
And the existence
Between the essence
And the descent
Falls the ComedyDon’t want to meet your mama
Just want to
I’m just
Just want to make you
Grandpa shark
Where’d they go
No one’s here
Sleep again14 votes -
Photos of Londoners in costume sprinting with frying pans on Pancake Day
6 votes -
Wikipedia blacklists archive.today, starts removing 695,000 archive links
71 votes -
In Neovim, C-y and C-e insert the same character as the column above or below the cursor in Insert mode
Thought this was neat. Wanted to share. https://neovim.io/doc/user/insert.html#i_CTRL-E https://neovim.io/doc/user/insert.html#i_CTRL-Y
12 votes -
Ponderings on unicode support on the site, re: punycode, tags, etc
So here's a dilemma I'm not sure what to do about. It's really minor, and in the long run who cares, but here's the thing: Today a link was posted whose link is a URL in Japanese katakana...
So here's a dilemma I'm not sure what to do about. It's really minor, and in the long run who cares, but here's the thing:
Today a link was posted whose link is a URL in Japanese katakana characters. Since DNS only supports ASCII characters, those URLs get encoded as punycode. So, the site's URL gets translated from
https://マリウス.com/hold-on-to-your-hardware/intohttps://xn--gckvb8fzb.com/hold-on-to-your-hardware/.This is a hacky solution from 20 years ago. It works, but nowadays browsers automatically translate "マリウス" into "xn--gckvb8fzb" transparently, so you never really see the "xn--gckvb8fzb". Unfortunately, Tildes' tag system is one of the parts of the site that only accepts roman characters, so there's no way to tag something with like
source.マリウス.So what do we do here? Tagging something with
source.xn_gckvb8fzbis obviously not ideal.In this case, Japanese in particular has a neat and tidy solution. Romanji. Every katakana character is a syllable, and each syllable has another character or pair or characters using English glyphs. So, マ, リ, ウ, ス is: Ma, Ri, U, Su, or "mariusu", the Japanese pronunciation of the Roman name Marius.
So, if we want to transliterate the word phonetically (ie: in Japanese at least, converting the katakana glyphs directly into their romanji equivalents), we should tag it
source.mariusu, or if we want to translate it, it should besource.marius.A lot of other languages with non-roman letters are not going to be as clean since they don't have a clear transliteration of their character set into ASCII, but in the case of Japanese, I dunno, it seems like it's begging to be converted into romanji. I really just don't know though. It's a dilly of a pickle.
ANYTHING must be better than linking to
source.xn_gckvb8fzbsince that's literally encoded gibberish not meant to be read by humans. Not quite sure what the alternative should be though.Anyway, thank you for coming to my TED talk.
16 votes -
Silent Planet - Elegy of a Dying World | Trailer
4 votes -
What are you reading these days?
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction or poetry, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk about it a bit.
11 votes -
Group chat solutions for small groups?
I have been in a group chat with 2 of my closet friends for more than 10 years now, and we have been using Facebook messenger for that entire time. However, there has always been interest in...
I have been in a group chat with 2 of my closet friends for more than 10 years now, and we have been using Facebook messenger for that entire time. However, there has always been interest in migrating to a different platform, but so far we have not been able to land on a good alternative. We have gotten very used to some of the messenger features and have disliked alternatives for lacking these features. I was wondering if anyone could suggest some solutions here, up to and including a DIY (maybe IRC?) approach.
The features we really liked from messenger:
- Nicknames, and ability to tag by nickname
- Emoji hotkey (where you have quick access to a selected emoji, we use this for a lot of in-jokes)
- Chat theme and customization
- easy cross-platform or browser based (we are a mix of mac/pc, and iphone/android users)
Features we really do not need and in fact get in the way:
- Different channels or rooms
- voice/video
- screen sharing
Features that aren't necessary but could be nice:
- bots
Does anyone have suggestions for alternatives to messenger that hit these points? We have tried Discord, but found it was way too feature heavy for how we use it, and lacked some really basic features we liked from messenger. Whatsapp was a decent replacement, but lack of themes and emoji hotkey made it less enjoyable for us than messenger, plus it is also a Meta platform which eliminated one of the main reasons we wanted to switch.
I have half a mind to set up an IRC channel for us, but it's been many years at this point since I've used IRC, so I don't know what that ecosystem is like these days, and how easy it would be to get my non-tech-savvy friends on board.
(perhaps this is better suited to ~tech, but I am posting here with an eye towards DIY solutions, although to reiterate I would also be happy with an out-of-the-box alternative)
13 votes -
Godot beginners: Here's how to fade in a 3D mesh
I'm still a beginner at Godot. I've been playing with Godot and 3D scenes. It's great finally feeling comfortable enough to navigate the UI from watching the tutorials from Zenva/Humble Bundle....
I'm still a beginner at Godot. I've been playing with Godot and 3D scenes. It's great finally feeling comfortable enough to navigate the UI from watching the tutorials from Zenva/Humble Bundle.
Recently something that sounds straightforward took a long time for me to figure out: Fading in a 3D mesh. The solution is simple:
@onready var mesh: MeshInstance3D = find_child("body-mesh") func _ready() -> void: _set_material_alpha(0) SomeSingleton.some_signal.connect(_fade_in) func _set_material_alpha(alpha: float) -> void: var material: Material = mesh.get_active_material(0) if material is StandardMaterial3D: material.transparency = BaseMaterial3D.TRANSPARENCY_ALPHA_DEPTH_PRE_PASS material.depth_draw_mode = BaseMaterial3D.DEPTH_DRAW_ALWAYS material.albedo_color.a = alpha func _fade_in() -> void: var tween = create_tween() tween.set_ease(Tween.EASE_IN) tween.tween_method(_set_material_alpha, 0.0, 1.0, fade_in_duration_seconds)The key being setting the material properties and using its albedo color to update transparency. The depth draw mode is needed, otherwise the result is ugly with jagged pixels during the tween.
Getting to the solution was the hard part. Searching forum posts I was led down some rabbit holes like using shaders—overkill for this situation. (There is a cool site though, for when I do end up needing custom shaders: https://godotshaders.com/.) Asking an LLM also didn't help much, probably because my prompt was wrong. I tried again just now and it gave me something closer to a correct solution, but missing some parts like the depth draw mode, which (by trial-and-error and reading the docs) I found is necessary for a good quality render, when using transparency.
Another small pitfall I found was that trying to change the
material.transparencycaused stutter. I was trying to disable transparency when the mesh was at 100% alpha, since I figured opaque rendering is cheaper. However I speculate the engine recompiles the shader when I turn off transparency, which causes the stutter. So I don't modify thematerial.transparencybeyond that initial setting.Also thought I'd mention, I'm using free placeholder art assets from https://kenney.nl/ - an amazing resource.
Aside: Shaders
During this I learned that adding shaders to an imported 3D model in Godot is somewhat convoluted:
- Import the .glb model
- Clone the auto-created scene to an inherited scene, because I'm not allowed to directly edit that auto-created scene
- Extract the material (UV colormap image) from the .glb by double-clicking it in the FileSystem tab
- Apply the extracted material to the mesh under Surface Material Override
- Add a "Next Pass" material, a ShaderMaterial, to that surface material override
- Create the shader script
- Pass in parameter values from the GDScript to the shader script using code like:
shader_material.set_shader_parameter("color", Color(1.0, 1.0, 1.0, alpha))
This didn't work so well for me though, because the shader I was using was changing the
ALBEDOand turning things white. If I knew anything about 3D programming I'd probably find a way to update the existing color value at each pixel, instead of setting albedo white everywhere. The end result of the shader I was using was that the models were turning too white. So that was a dead end.Anyway mainly leaving this here as reference for posterity. Feel free to share a story or constructive feedback if there's anything.
17 votes -
Taskmaster NZ Season 6, Episode 1 - 'It’s like a Make A Wish' | Full episode
15 votes -
Stam1na – Käärmeennyrkki (2026)
5 votes -
Denshattack! | Official demo trailer - Indie Fan Fest 2026
8 votes -
Babylon 5 S01E1: "The Gathering" - Episode Discussion
18 votes -
Offbeat Fridays – The thread where offbeat headlines become front page news
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like privacy, andrew mountbatten windsor and audiophiles. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days,...
Tildes is a very serious site, where we discuss very serious matters like privacy, andrew mountbatten windsor and audiophiles. Tags culled from the highest voted topics from the last seven days, if anyone was out of the loop.
But one of my favourite tags happens to be offbeat! Taking its original inspiration from Sir Nils Olav III, this thread is looking for any far-fetched
offbeatstories lurking in the newspapers. It may not deserve its own post, but it deserves a wider audience!7 votes -
Eric Dane, ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ star and ALS awareness advocate, dies at 53
10 votes -
What have you been listening to this week?
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as...
What have you been listening to this week? You don't need to do a 6000 word review if you don't want to, but please write something! If you've just picked up some music, please update on that as well, we'd love to see your hauls :)
Feel free to give recs or discuss anything about each others' listening habits.
You can make a chart if you use last.fm:
http://www.tapmusic.net/lastfm/
Remember that linking directly to your image will update with your future listening, make sure to reupload to somewhere like imgur if you'd like it to remain what you have at the time of posting.
2 votes -
How to take a photo with scotch tape (lensless imaging)
5 votes -
Sony is shutting down the PlayStation studio Bluepoint (gifted link)
22 votes -
What did you do this week (and weekend)?
As part of a weekly series, these topics are a place for users to casually discuss the things they did — or didn't do — during their week. Did you accomplish any goals? Suffer a failure? Do...
As part of a weekly series, these topics are a place for users to casually discuss the things they did — or didn't do — during their week. Did you accomplish any goals? Suffer a failure? Do nothing at all? Tell us about it!
3 votes -
Leaked email suggests Ring plans to expand ‘search party’ surveillance beyond dogs
59 votes -
Humble Bundle Books: (Almost) the entirety of Discworld for $16
35 votes -
E-ink tablet recommendations for note taking
Does anyone here use a tablet for note taking? I've always used pen and paper for note taking when working or in/around the house. At one point when phones got bigger I did try moving to notes...
Does anyone here use a tablet for note taking?
I've always used pen and paper for note taking when working or in/around the house. At one point when phones got bigger I did try moving to notes apps but they never clicked. Something about the glossy screen and the levels of fuss to take a note just didn't work.
I recently found out that there's e-ink tablets which try to emulate real note taking, like the Supernote which runs a custom firmware to make note taking as easy as possible. Or the Boox which is Android based, so it has way more apps, but it's got amazing reviews.
There's quite a lot, I'm curious if anyone here has actually used anything like this and what their thoughts are?
Looking at reviews, I'm drawn to the Supernote. But I'd love to hear some real use cases!27 votes