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6 votes
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Chinese researchers achieve stunning quantum-entanglement record
2 votes -
A talk about the Golang garbage collector from the International Symposium on Memory Management
4 votes -
On the future computer era modification of the American character and the role of the engineer, or, a little caution in the haste to number (1968)
7 votes -
The loneliness thread
There is a tendency nowadays for public officials to characterise loneliness as a public health crisis. I agree that it's a pervasive condition. However, the human condition is not fully...
There is a tendency nowadays for public officials to characterise loneliness as a public health crisis. I agree that it's a pervasive condition. However, the human condition is not fully medicalizable. I believe we can speak about it just as who we are, according to our full experience, in our capacity as first-person narrator, as witness, as who are the closest to their own struggles.
But it can be really hard to be open, and hence vulnerable, to difficult emotions. In times of distress, our own internal communication can get jammed, and it natural that opening up to the external world may feel as if an insurmountable difficulty.
Nevertheless, the great force of nature, evolution, has given us the ability to listen and be listened to. Its greatest strength may be manifest at the time of greatest need.
Which is why I'd like to have this thread. This thread is for you, if you're feeling lonely at the time, or if you want to share your experience with loneliness, or if you would like to give support to our community members, or just to speak up, or just to listen.
Let us tune in to each other's expressions in caring consideration. We don't have to be perfect in self-expression or empathy -- this is not a contest. This is a fireside chat, a place to rest, reflect, and understand, before moving on.
Are you willing to join the conversation?
38 votes -
Any game developers here? Share your projects and insights
I'm curious if we have any game devs on Tildes, either professional or amateur. If so, share your games, experiences, or advice for any aspiring developers. I briefly dabbled with game development...
I'm curious if we have any game devs on Tildes, either professional or amateur. If so, share your games, experiences, or advice for any aspiring developers.
I briefly dabbled with game development in the past, which amounted to a goofy helicopter combat game made from the Ogre framework. I've been trying to get it running again, and it's inspiring me to get back into hobbyist game development.
20 votes -
Redeye commenting on esports and the olympics
5 votes -
World's oldest bread found at prehistoric site in Jordan
3 votes -
Daily Tildes discussion - how can we maintain quality without drifting too far into "gatekeeping"?
The daily discussion from Friday about the site's activity level has been great, with a ton of solid insight, feedback and suggestions from many different people. Today I want to continue...
The daily discussion from Friday about the site's activity level has been great, with a ton of solid insight, feedback and suggestions from many different people. Today I want to continue discussing one particular theme that came up in there multiple times: a number of people seem to feel like they're not "worthy" of posting on the site, with it seemingly exacerbated by seeing complaints about the quality of other people's posts.
This is a bit of a tricky thing to balance: we want to try to keep the quality of content on Tildes up, but it can be unwelcoming and discouraging if people feel that they're likely to get berated for posting something that isn't "good enough". By its very nature, being more selective about content means that we have to discourage (or remove) some types of content, but how can we do it in a way that doesn't feel quite so antagonistic to the people submitting?
A good way of thinking about this is to try to consider it from the submitter's perspective. If you were to post something that wasn't really suitable, how would you like to be informed of that? And (just as importantly), how would you not like to be informed of it?
As always, all thoughts and suggestions are welcome. Tildes is still going to require a lot of growth, so it's important to figure out how we'll be able to integrate people into the site's culture over time without feeling overly hostile towards new users.
60 votes -
The World's Worst Industrial Disaster is Still Unfolding
13 votes -
Jupiter’s got twelve new moons — one is a bit of a problem child
8 votes -
Top Voting Machine Vendor Admits It Installed Remote-Access Software on Systems Sold to States
21 votes -
Deliveroo threatens to terminate workers after losing their contracts
1 vote -
The "macaroni" scandal of 1772: A gay trial a century before Oscar Wilde
7 votes -
How a group of romance writers cashed in on Amazon's Kindle Unlimited
3 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
6 votes -
Wood ash cement
14 votes -
PS4 5.05 BPF Double Free Kernel Exploit Writeup
7 votes -
Any D&D players around? How'd your last session go?
(First post on Tildes, feel free to blast me if I screwed something up posting this.) So, as the title says, I'd love to hear about how your game is going. Also, if there's a lot of D&D...
(First post on Tildes, feel free to blast me if I screwed something up posting this.)
So, as the title says, I'd love to hear about how your game is going. Also, if there's a lot of D&D discussion, we might talk the admins into going ahead and making us a ~games.dnd (wink, wink).
Disclaimer: If anything cool happened, I may or may not steal the idea. =]
19 votes -
The making (and unmaking) of a Canadian brand: Tim Horton's
8 votes -
Health insurers are vacuuming up details about you — and it could raise your rates
10 votes -
NVIDIA, Oculus, Valve, AMD, and Microsoft form VirtualLink Consortium and introduce an open industry standard for connecting next-generation VR headsets
8 votes -
Suggestion: when clicking on an external link, open it in new tab
It would be nice to have that functionality (at least as an option), so that the thread doesn't close. I personally instinctively close the tab after I am done reading instead of going back, which...
It would be nice to have that functionality (at least as an option), so that the thread doesn't close. I personally instinctively close the tab after I am done reading instead of going back, which can be really frustrating after the realization I have nothing to read now (yeah, I know, CTRL+SHIFT+T, reopen last closed tab etc etc, but it's much more convenient to hit CTRL+W and be back where you stopped reading the thread).
30 votes -
Riot's approach to anti-cheat
10 votes -
Variable Fonts - A simple resource for finding and trying variable fonts
5 votes -
KOGNITIF - Soul Food
4 votes -
Deca - Flux (2018)
2 votes -
For a brief, glorious moment, camera-wielding pigeons spied from above
7 votes -
Github is currently experiencing service outages
14 votes -
ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct has been updated!
5 votes -
What was your "20 seconds of insane courage" moment that actually ended up working out?
What did you recently do (or maybe not recent but still memorable) to go out of your comfort zone and actually have it work out in the end?
17 votes -
Potential DNA damage from CRISPR has been ‘seriously underestimated,’ study finds
7 votes -
‘I broke the contract’: how Hannah Gadsby's trauma transformed comedy
5 votes -
The millions: The great second-half 2018 book preview
3 votes -
When you have a serious hereditary disease, who has a right to know?
4 votes -
Silent Planet - Vanity of Sleep (2018)
2 votes -
Talkback caller's heartfelt poem about violence against women resonates with listeners
2 votes -
The ugly scandal that cancelled the Nobel prize
6 votes -
Elon Musk calls British diver who helped rescue Thai schoolboys 'pedo guy' in Twitter outburst
40 votes -
What are some Blind Spots of your political compatriots?
There's lot of academia out there that suggests that everyone has blindspots, topics and issues that we take with so much certainty that we would not even think to question them, people who so...
There's lot of academia out there that suggests that everyone has blindspots, topics and issues that we take with so much certainty that we would not even think to question them, people who so rarely enter into our concerns that we do not think to consider their needs or concerns, etc.
It's hard to know exactly what our own blindspots are because by their very nature as soon as they are identified they lose some of their power. This sort of self-awareness is difficult even on the best day, but it allows us to more reasonably address people who don't hold our views, so I think the exercise is justified.
This topic is intended to be introspective. Wherever you identify politically (left, right, moderate, anarchist, libertarian, the works), what are some topics and groups that your political people tend to struggle to focus on?
13 votes -
How NASA’s mission to Pluto was nearly lost
6 votes -
Methane is giving noctilucent clouds a boost
3 votes -
Renewables will replace ageing coal plants at lowest cost, Australian Energy Market Operator says
5 votes -
Programming Challenge: Construct and traverse a binary tree.
It's that time of week again! For this week's programming challenge, I thought I would focus on data structures. Goal: Construct a binary tree data structure. It may handle any data type you...
It's that time of week again! For this week's programming challenge, I thought I would focus on data structures.
Goal: Construct a binary tree data structure. It may handle any data type you choose, but you must handle sorting correctly. You must also provide a print function that prints each value in the tree on a new line, and the values must be printed in strictly increasing order.
If you're unfamiliar with this data structure, it's a structure that starts with a single "root" node, and this root can have a left child, right child, both, or neither. Each of these child nodes is exactly the same as the root node, except the root has no parent. This branching structure is why it's called a tree. Furthermore, left descendants always have values smaller than the parent, and right descendants always have larger values.
12 votes -
Steven Universe Discussion - Season 5 ends and general feelings of show's current path
Spoilers Ahead! All topics and current plot arcs are free reign!
5 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 -
How is Prime Day going for everyone?
Anyone find any good deals on Buy-It-For-Life quality products? Let's talk about our hauls!
5 votes -
Chrome uses ten to thirteen percent more RAM due to Google's 'Site Isolation' protection for Spectre CPU flaws
14 votes -
The downfall of Theranos, from the journalist who made it happen
12 votes -
Liberapay is in trouble
5 votes