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4 votes
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Newsroom Transparency Tracker
7 votes -
Starlink - Low latency satellite internet
20 votes -
Soon you may not even have to click on a website contract to be bound by its terms
7 votes -
Learn German with an interactive fantasy adventure story
3 votes -
Spotify are asking the European Commission to stop Apple's anti-competitive behaviour
9 votes -
The Intercept shuts down access to Snowden trove
9 votes -
lib.reviews An open source, open data review website for high quality reviews on any topic
8 votes -
What are some genuinely good places online?
With a lot of websites going down the shitter in an attempt to monetize (looking at you, Reddit), I'm wondering where some nice places are online. Nice whether in UI, the community, or really just...
With a lot of websites going down the shitter in an attempt to monetize (looking at you, Reddit), I'm wondering where some nice places are online. Nice whether in UI, the community, or really just in general. Below is a small list off the top of my head.
Tildes, because of high quality discussion.
Disroot. It's a slew of useful tools, available for free, while respecting privacy. Genuinely really useful, lots of utilities, good documentation, and a really nice community.
Wikipedia. It's Wikipedia, end of.
Mastodon. This one wholly depends on your instance, but on most(?) the people are nice, and the environment is a lot less argumentative.
Hacker News, high quality discussion over a fair few topics. Very active, too.
47 votes -
What are reliable sites for thoughtful content from a non-American perspective?
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful...
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful articles, essays, discussion, etc. and aren't part of the American internet scene.
I don't care what language it's in, what it's about, what country specifically it's centered on, if it's community-centric or not. If you have a suggestion, let's hear it.
Edit: An example I have is The Blizzard. It's really a subscription-model digital magazine (about soccer) but you can read various articles online.
21 votes -
Astronaut (YouTube Toy)
12 votes -
Fairfax to return with investigative news website
4 votes -
Stuff In Space
17 votes -
Alan Alda has a podcast about communication... and its excellent!
4 votes -
Microsoft Edge browser flags Daily Mail Online as untrustworthy
24 votes -
These are all the federal HTTPS websites that’ll expire soon because of the US government shutdown
8 votes -
Start with a website, not a mobile app
20 votes -
How rich am I?
9 votes -
Patreon, Kickstarter and the new patrons of the arts
10 votes -
A site that shows the most popular boards on 4chan right now
14 votes -
How to build a low-tech website
20 votes -
Live analysis by sesse supercomputer of the world chess championship match
9 votes -
China blocks website that revealed spyware and "re-education" camp monitoring
9 votes -
How an unlikely family history website transformed cold case investigations
6 votes -
Watch full episodes of 'Mister Rogers Neighborhood' on new website
13 votes -
Panopticlick: How unique is your browser?
29 votes -
The NY Times has an option in their store to pick out favorite recipes that have been posted on the site (and in the paper) and print them in a cookbook
5 votes -
How to build a low-tech website
31 votes -
Shapix
2 votes -
Watch Your Hack
6 votes -
Why are newspaper websites so horrible?
23 votes -
Interested in Linux Gaming? I run a website just for that.
45 votes -
This tool generates spammy tech recruiter messages to send on LinkedIn
16 votes -
China officially bans ABC website, claims internet is 'fully open'
9 votes -
Introducing Nuka Dark Rum. Made by Bethesda.
8 votes -
Here's why your static website needs HTTPS
30 votes -
Reddit experiencing a site outage
10 votes -
Bandai-Namco just unveiled a teaser site for a new Japanese horror game, Domas
3 votes -
I made this website for people interested in learning about Origami, as well as showcase my models. What do users of ~Tildes think of it?
17 votes -
The ten best sites to learn about art history
4 votes -
This Buddhist Foundation prints and distributes Dharma books free of charge. If you know someone (or a library!) who would enjoy access to those books, feel free to take a look at the website.
4 votes -
Advice on how to make a personal website
Hi, I want to make a personal website, as basic as possible (I don't even want SEO or stuff like that). This is totally a personal project, I don't want to generate revenue from it or anything...
Hi,
I want to make a personal website, as basic as possible (I don't even want SEO or stuff like that).
This is totally a personal project, I don't want to generate revenue from it or anything like that (at least for now), I just want an old school website to link it to possible employers and contacts. I have about 12 years of coding experience but mostly low-level (DSP, ASM, C, C++) and scientific code (Python, R, Julia). So I'm not scared of doing it from scratch (even though it will be much uglier in the beginning than pre-generated websites) or using some basic lightweight libraries.
Until now I have been using github pages but I want to put some projects that require server side work, so I'll probably have to host somewhere else. I really like tildes' technical goals, but I don't know if the stack it uses is overkill for a personal website (I know I will need some database for some of the projects though).
My questions are:
- Is Pyramid a good choice or is it more appropriate for huge multiuser platforms? I do need some level of interaction between users (some of my more artsy projects are related to NLP) as well as interaction between user-server (some projects include simulations with parameters etc.).
- How does hosting/DNS work? How much should I expect to spend per year? I know there exist hosting services and also places like Heroku, I don't really know the difference between them or what should I be looking for.
- How much should I worry about security? In other words, what is the threat level? I don't plan to have confidential info in the website, or information about the users (other than a hash value). But should I be worried about other kind of threats?
- Is making a website as basic as possible and then keep on improving it as time goes a sound plan for a long-term personal project? With this I mean, will it be fun or will it be 100% frustrating and I should just go to (whatever hosting service that has premade web applications) and make my website there even though it will be bloated with scripts and stuff?
- Is there something I'm not asking that I should be asking? As I said I know how to code but it feels like web development is a completely different beast sometimes.
- Is there any compelling reason for me to use google analytics, SEO, all that stuff that big websites use? I have never understood the point for it in, for example, github pages.
Thanks for your help! Feel free to correct me on any stupid thing I may have said, I definitely speak from ignorance.
Edit: My biggest issue with this kind of format for conversations is that I cannot thank everybody at the same time, and responding to everyone with a thanks is definitely not contributing anything to the conversation. So I'll put it in an edit. Thanks for all your help! I'll probably be coming for more advice soon...
22 votes -
Codingame.com lets you write programs to play games.
2 votes -
Variable Fonts - A simple resource for finding and trying variable fonts
5 votes -
Github is currently experiencing service outages
14 votes -
What are some of your favorite lightweight websites?
By lightweight, I mean sites that are compact, that load quickly, that aren’t loaded with tons of scripts. Personally, I’m a fan of lite.cnn.io. No ads, very minimalistic. Edit: Oh, look, I found...
By lightweight, I mean sites that are compact, that load quickly, that aren’t loaded with tons of scripts.
Personally, I’m a fan of lite.cnn.io. No ads, very minimalistic.
29 votes -
Despite Chrome’s pending “mark of shame,” three major news sites aren’t HTTPS
18 votes -
rave.dj | Choose two songs and automatically generate a mashup
10 votes -
Ocarina of Time randomizer
9 votes -
500px will no longer allow photographers to license their photos under Creative Commons, and closes 500px Marketplace
27 votes