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17 votes
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Capitalism’s addiction problem
6 votes -
Baseball card apps bring a classic hobby into the digital age
4 votes -
Folding@home takes up the fight against COVID-19
21 votes -
Suckers list: How Allstate’s secret auto insurance algorithm squeezes big spenders in the US
7 votes -
The 5th-generation Waymo Driver
7 votes -
Alphabet launches Tidal, a moonshot to save the world's oceans
15 votes -
Netflix will now let you disable its awful autoplaying feature
45 votes -
Radical hydrogen-boron reactor could leapfrog current nuclear fusion tech
11 votes -
Hacking diabetes - A network of amateur programmers is transforming the illness with a DIY app
6 votes -
Giant phages have been found in French lakes, baboons from Kenya, and the human mouth
10 votes -
It’s okay to leave your headphones at home
23 votes -
An overview of the technology behind self-driving cars and some of the issues and concerns that are slowing down their development
6 votes -
Feeding an ebook addiction
I read a lot (my wife gets mad at me because I read so much faster than her), and these days I do most of my reading on Kindle. Fortunately there are ways to do this for little or no money. If...
I read a lot (my wife gets mad at me because I read so much faster than her), and these days I do most of my reading on Kindle. Fortunately there are ways to do this for little or no money. If you're interested here are some ways to get more ebooks without spending a lot of money:
- Project Gutenberg is the grandparent of free book sites, with 60K+ public domain works.
- MobileRead has an entire forum for fresh uploads of public domain works in Kindle format (they have other formats too).
- The Libby app (iOS/Android) makes it trivially easy to borrow ebooks from your local library.
- The Hoopla app (iOS/Android) is another way to borrow from your local library.
- The Library Extension browser add-on (Chrome/Firefox) will alert you when a book that you're looking at online (say, on an Amazon product page) is available at your local library. (This covers print as well as ebooks)
- BookBub will send you a daily email with books that are currently on sale at the major ebook stores.
- I'm not sure how I got into this one; I think it was when I registered a new Kindle for Christmas. But in any case, Amazon is currently in the mode of offering me a $1 ebook credit on every order I have shipped, as long as I'm willing to take non-prime shipping and wait a few days. As far as I can tell this option is available on every Prime order, so I shamelessly take advantage. Need a $4 USB-C cable to replace one that's fraying? Hey, I can get it a few days later and add $1 to my credits. Until they stop this, I'll keep breaking every order up into individual single-item orders. It's not even worse for the planet, because their warehouse software recombines everything into as few boxes as it can anyhow.
17 votes -
The golden quarter—Some of our greatest cultural and technological achievements took place between 1945 and 1971. Why has progress stalled?
12 votes -
The downside of diagnosis by smartphone
6 votes -
Tesla remotely disables Autopilot on used Model S after it was sold
30 votes -
Varo Money receives FDIC approval, enabling it to become America's first standalone national digital bank
5 votes -
POTS: protective optimization technologies
5 votes -
The dot-com bubble - Five minute history lesson
8 votes -
Wind turbine blades can’t be recycled, so they’re piling up in landfills - Companies are searching for ways to deal with the tens of thousands of blades that have reached the end of their lives
26 votes -
Requesting an export of personal data from Amazon shows how extensively they track your reading habits
11 votes -
How technology (yes, technology!) can help you de-stress | No Sweat Tech
16 votes -
How sustainable is a solar powered website?
10 votes -
Match on dating app Tinder helps rescue camper trapped in ice in northern Norway
7 votes -
DirecTV fears explosion risk from satellite with damaged battery
7 votes -
The case for making low-tech 'dumb' cities instead of 'smart' ones
15 votes -
The economic effects of automation aren’t what you think they are
13 votes -
Heathrow Airport installs anti-drone system to detect threats
8 votes -
Oslo to introduce electric ferries from next year – five newly-built electric boats will ply their way around the Inner Oslofjord
4 votes -
SpaceX tests black satellite to reduce ‘megaconstellation’ threat to astronomy
15 votes -
When Minneapolis segregated
4 votes -
From their balloons, the first aeronauts transformed our view of the world
5 votes -
Too lazy to work out? Machines that exercise for you, from Victorian era to now.
7 votes -
IBM’s lithium-ion battery uses seawater materials instead of heavy metals, charges in just five minutes
12 votes -
Our neophobic, conservative AI overlords want everything to stay the same
11 votes -
Denmark sources record 47% of power from wind in 2019 – boosted by steep cost reductions and improved offshore technology
5 votes -
What's one thing you HAVEN'T been able to find online, no matter how hard you tried?
It could be the final piece to your prized collection, a person you talked to before they seemingly disappeared, a story you read that has since been deleted, etc. In my case, I really wanted to...
It could be the final piece to your prized collection, a person you talked to before they seemingly disappeared, a story you read that has since been deleted, etc.
In my case, I really wanted to find a website called notebookinhand.com, a forum I came across while I was a teenager in the early 2010s. It was solely dedicated to people describing their hobbies, and the community seemed very nice and welcoming, and I also like how the site was designed. It looks like it's been shut down but I can't stop thinking about it!
So, tell me what's your internet "unicorn", so to speak.
44 votes -
China convicts three researchers involved in gene-edited babies
11 votes -
Speedrunning is plagued with cheating, and technological advances are making it more and more difficult to detect
11 votes -
What happened to giant Ekranoplans?
12 votes -
How to escape a supernova: Stellar engines
7 votes -
Apple has secret team working on satellites to beam data to devices
5 votes -
When the USS John S. McCain crashed in the Pacific, the Navy blamed the destroyer’s crew for the loss of ten sailors. The truth is the Navy’s flawed technology set the McCain up for disaster.
9 votes -
Why I'm possessive about apostrophes
13 votes -
China's quest to catch up with the West
5 votes -
The universal Lego sorter is an AI-powered machine that sorts every type of block
7 votes -
What makes NASA's Artemis suit the best space suit yet?
3 votes -
Thieves are using Bluetooth to target vehicle break-ins
4 votes -
China’s CRISPR babies: Read exclusive excerpts from the unseen original research
16 votes