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10 votes
-
What do you do to become better at your craft?
How do you get better at your hobby/job/both/neither?
21 votes -
An open letter about female coaches
7 votes -
Successful treatment of a rare genetic disorder in the womb
5 votes -
Game Thread: Washington Capitals at Tampa Bay Lightning
Post your hockey discussion here on the game boys!
9 votes -
Leprous - Mirage (2017)
7 votes -
How Reddit killed science AMAs
43 votes -
Glenn Snoddy, Nashville engineer and inventor of the fuzz pedal, dies at 96
5 votes -
"Be it resolved, what you call political correctness, I call progress…"
11 votes -
JRE MMA Show #28 with Georges St-Pierre
4 votes -
Celery sorbet
5 votes -
The ice stupa: An artificial glacier growing in the desert
3 votes -
Tom Holland performs Rihanna's Umbrella (rain included)
3 votes -
Colin Benders - Steam Vent (Eurorack modular synth performance) (2016)
3 votes -
Timecop1983 - Back to You (feat. The Bad Dreamers) (2018)
4 votes -
Donald Trump lawyer 'paid by Ukraine' to arrange White House talks
5 votes -
Microsoft extending EU's GDPR rights worldwide
9 votes -
Steam store school-shooting game 'appalling'
8 votes -
White House Sinkhole
5 votes -
Capitals, Lightning set for Game 7 in Eastern Conference Final
5 votes -
Promoted or featured links above regular link list (with a different sort/filter)
Posted about this earlier (I think in the thread about default sort order) and it came up in the ~science thread on what killed Reddit AMAs:...
Posted about this earlier (I think in the thread about default sort order) and it came up in the ~science thread on what killed Reddit AMAs: https://tildes.net/~science/py/how_reddit_killed_science_amas#comment-3e1
Basically having a "featured" or "promoted" set of links above the usual links that are:
- limited to a small number of posts
- use a different sort order than whatever the user has selected
- filtered by tag
This would make it possible for ~science (as an example) to always have the latest 3 AMAs (posts tagged with AMA) show up above the other set of links and would solve the problem that r/science AMAs had on reddit where they had to compete in the regular list of links.
4 votes -
Reggie Lucas dead at 65: Eleven of his essential cuts as a jazz sideman
5 votes -
What book do you recommend and why?
.
31 votes -
US military funding effort to catch deepfakes and AI trickery
5 votes -
Security vulnerabilities on some BMWs could allow remote access
6 votes -
A guide for how to talk to a developer
4 votes -
Digital/Surveillance capitalism's war on leisure
3 votes -
Unreal is free to celebrate its 20th birthday
8 votes -
Steam store school-shooting game 'appalling'
3 votes -
A collection of Linux profiling tools and guides
9 votes -
RSoC: Porting tokio to Redox
5 votes -
Maximum width of comments on wide screens
When posting a comment, the width of the text seems limited. When I removed the max-width from the p and li element, it filled the box as I expected it to. (Source) To me, the second one looks...
When posting a comment, the width of the text seems limited. When I removed the
max-width
from thep
andli
element, it filled the box as I expected it to. (Source)To me, the second one looks better. Some padding left and right could be added, but I certainly wouldn't use a fixed maximum width there (A percentage would be fine, I guess).
Edit The seems seems to apply for posts as well.
8 votes -
What small thing did you do that made a major change in your life?
Sometimes we make what seems like a small, insignificant decision and it ends up snowballing into something much bigger, whether positive or negative. I want to hear what that was for you.
15 votes -
Vulfpeck - Mr. Finish Line (feat. Christine Hucal & Theo Katzman)
11 votes -
Free Ebook - Distributed Systems Observability
Haven't read this book on Distributed Systems Observability, but it seems like it might be interesting. You'll need to fill in a form to get the eBook.
5 votes -
Blaze Foley — Officer Norris
5 votes -
Unai Emery named new Arsenal manager. First press conference.
3 votes -
Quin Kirchner -- The Ritual (2018)
7 votes -
Computer History Museum makes the Eudora email client source code available to the public
6 votes -
Chelsea win FA Cup
5 votes -
NES Screen Saver
8 votes -
Lupe Fiasco - Mural from Tetsuo & Youth
7 votes -
Kno - Rhythm of the Rain
6 votes -
An Analysis of Cloudflare's Email Address Obfuscation
5 votes -
Default sorting for topic lists changed to "activity"
As discussed yesterday, since everyone seemed supportive, I've updated the default sorting for topic lists to "activity". I think we'll probably need to reconsider this as the site's traffic and...
As discussed yesterday, since everyone seemed supportive, I've updated the default sorting for topic lists to "activity". I think we'll probably need to reconsider this as the site's traffic and posting volume continues increasing, but I think it's working really well as a default for now.
Hopefully the default will also be customizable on a per-group basis in the future (and/or allow people to set up their own "shortcuts" to certain groups with specific sortings).
23 votes -
Suggestion: "Mark as Read" should not fade out the box
Instead of fading the replies after clicking on "Mark as Read", it should just remove it immediately. It's really, really time consuming to have to mark 40 something replies as read. I know this...
Instead of fading the replies after clicking on "Mark as Read", it should just remove it immediately. It's really, really time consuming to have to mark 40 something replies as read. I know this can be solved with a "mark all as read" button, but I do actually want to go through and read all of them.
10 votes -
Judge orders boy who started Oregon wildfire to pay $36 million in restitution
8 votes -
A woman has been named as NYSE president. It only took 226 years.
5 votes -
Daily Tildes discussion - move comment vote counts to the bottom?
We've had a few discussions already related to the voting mechanics (mostly about whether we should change the name, which is still definitely a possibility). Something that came up in one of...
We've had a few discussions already related to the voting mechanics (mostly about whether we should change the name, which is still definitely a possibility). Something that came up in one of those that I think is an interesting idea is moving a comment's current "score" to the bottom of the comment instead of the top. I'm a little uncertain about this, so I wanted to see what other people think.
Some thoughts:
- I do think that having the vote button at the bottom of the comment is the correct placement. People shouldn't be voting before they've read the comment, and (especially if you're on mobile), needing to scroll back up to the top of the comment to vote after reading it is strange.
- Because of that, if we move the score to the bottom it could even just be on the vote button itself, similar to how it already is for topics.
- I do also think that having the comment tags at the top of the comment is correct. They're generally meant to be informational, and it's useful to get that information before reading the comment. For example, if I can see that a string of jokes is coming up, I may just want to collapse the thread and skip it, instead of needing to read them to recognize that they're jokes.
- Comment scores are useful information overall and I don't think we should totally hide them, but some other sites have tried to de-emphasize or hide them in various ways (some of that is also related to the possibility of negative scores, which can't happen here). For example, Hacker News doesn't show comment scores at all except to the comment's author, and many subreddits on reddit hide the comment scores initially for a few hours to try to reduce biased voting from seeing them.
Let me know what you think. This is a pretty minor decision overall, but even little things like this can have significant effects, so I'm interested in other opinions about it.
25 votes -
Drawing of a Room - One Point Perspective
11 votes