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13 votes
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Looking Glass Portrait: Kickstarter campaign
5 votes -
Xbox Series S dev mode breakdown
3 votes -
Apple MacBook iFixit teardowns: something old, something new
13 votes -
Suggestions for no-display laptop
This is more specific than ~talk would normally have , but tildes doesn't have anything for shopping yet, so... I'm using my laptop right now, but I've found that for a lot of the stuff on my...
This is more specific than ~talk would normally have
, but tildes doesn't have anything for shopping yet, so...I'm using my laptop right now, but I've found that for a lot of the stuff on my computer,
I don't really need a screen. I like using the terminal, and can get a lot done just typing:
no mouse or display. I think this would be great, as I already do a lot of my casual writing
and note taking my eyes closed, leaning back in a chair.What's the best machine that meets these qualifications? Basically, I just need a way to read memory
out to another drive. Battery would be a must as well.Thanks
12 votes -
What keyboard do you use?
I have been using a "Pok3r"-style 60% board I assembled with MX Browns for years. As time goes on, I'm growing increasingly tired of the limitations, like pressing three different keys to get a ~....
I have been using a "Pok3r"-style 60% board I assembled with MX Browns for years. As time goes on, I'm growing increasingly tired of the limitations, like pressing three different keys to get a ~. I use my keyboard for writing code, writing reports, and playing RTS games like Homeworld, which a 60% board is simply inadequate for doing. While I initially used VIM as my default text editor, I've moved to using VS Code, where using a function key to access arrow keys is simply absurd. So I'd love to get your set up:
What keyboard do you use?
What is your keyboard? What kind of switches? 60%, TKL, 100%? What brand do you use? Do you use a default keyboard with your system, a laptop keyboard, a gaming board, or some sort of ergonomic monstrosity?
What do you use your keyboard for?
Are you a developer? Are you a gamer? Do you write? What are your primary use cases?
26 votes -
Microsoft reveals Pluton, a custom security chip to be built into Intel, AMD and Qualcomm processors
9 votes -
M1 MacBook Pro and Air review: Apple delivers
14 votes -
The old way of handing out corporate hardware doesn’t work anymore
9 votes -
Introducing the next generation of Mac - A new MacBook Air, 13-inch MacBook Pro, and Mac mini powered by M1, Apple’s chip designed specifically for the Mac
31 votes -
Stadia offering a free Premiere Edition bundle for US YouTube Premium members
7 votes -
How to switch an old Windows laptop to Linux
19 votes -
GPD Win 3 announcement
4 votes -
Apple announces ‘One More Thing’ event for November 10th
16 votes -
Raspberry Pi 400: The $70 desktop PC
46 votes -
Testing quad GeForce RTX 3090s in a desktop
6 votes -
Engelbart's Violin
5 votes -
8K Gaming - Nvidia RTX 3090 on a LG ZX 88" OLED TV
12 votes -
Does the Xbox Series X overheat?
4 votes -
Steam Machines: Was it all in vain?
12 votes -
PS5 Teardown: An up-close and personal look at the console hardware
9 votes -
Why Java VM crashes are often caused by bad memory
10 votes -
Microsoft announces new Surface Laptop Go and Surface Pro X
I couldn’t find a good roundup that covered both of these and didn’t want to add clutter to the front page with two posts. From The Verge: Microsoft’s new $549 Surface Laptop Go aims to compete...
I couldn’t find a good roundup that covered both of these and didn’t want to add clutter to the front page with two posts.
From The Verge:
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Microsoft’s new $549 Surface Laptop Go aims to compete with Chromebooks
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Microsoft’s updated Surface Pro X has a faster processor and new platinum color option
The Surface Pro X seems like just a spec bump, so there isn’t too much interesting there. But the Surface Laptop Go is interesting. The base model is absolute garbage (4 GB of RAM and 64 GB of EMMC storage) but the other models are somewhat decent.
The overall design of the Surface products is really striking. I honestly think they look much more modern and clean than Apple’s laptops. I also really love that they are offering colors. I wish Apple would offer more colors than just gray, silver and pink/gold on their laptops.
9 votes -
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LG Wing hands on
4 votes -
Oculus’ new Quest 2 VR headset starts at $299 and ships October 13th
12 votes -
Apple unveils new iPad and Apple Watch models; a new Fitness+ service; and Apple One, which bundles its key services for one monthly price
16 votes -
ThinkPad X1 Carbon with Fedora preloaded available for purchase
22 votes -
4K screen on 15" laptop - worth it?
Pricing up my next Thinkpad (I'm a lifer for Thinkpads I think now) and I keep hovering over the 4K screen option. I'm looking at a 15.6" screen. The FHD 14" screen I currently have is lovely and...
Pricing up my next Thinkpad (I'm a lifer for Thinkpads I think now) and I keep hovering over the 4K screen option. I'm looking at a 15.6" screen. The FHD 14" screen I currently have is lovely and sharp with a decent colour gamut, and I don't think I can see pixels, even now when the machine is literally on my lap. I'd guess the screen is maybe 35cm from my eyes at the moment.
I don't really game, I do edit photos, video (HD, not 4K) and do a little 3D work with Blender/FreeCAD/etc. I usually run Debian/Gnome, occasionally dropping into Windows because my 3D printer's preferred slicing software is Windows only (grrrr).
The other bonus to 4K is HDR400 and twice as many nits of brightness but again, I'm not sure that's worth an extra £250. I'd probably turn the brightness down anyway. The HDR is potentially interesting but as I don't watch TV/movies on this machine and my camera doesn't output HDR, that's likely not very useful despite sounding good. I could buy quite a lot more compute power and ram with that money instead..
I would go and look at one in person but I have no idea where the nearest 4K Thinkpad is, in person, and even if I did, I don't really want to go into shops right now.
Any thoughts, experiences, advice, etc would be much appreciated.
9 votes -
NVIDIA announces Ampere-based RTX 30 series GPUs
19 votes -
Do you own a VR headset?
I recently got my significant other into Eurotruck Simulator 2 and was given the go-ahead to purchase a VR headset so that we can better experience the various sim games out there. Unfortunately,...
I recently got my significant other into Eurotruck Simulator 2 and was given the go-ahead to purchase a VR headset so that we can better experience the various sim games out there. Unfortunately, the complete Valve Index package is back-ordered about 8 weeks so it will be a while before I can take the plunge and buy one.
Was just curious though if anyone here also has a VR headset and what their experience has been with it. I had a 1st generation Oculus Rift a long time ago but ended up selling it since I felt the software wasn't there (2016) and I could really only play the seated experiences with a 360 controller so I felt I was behind the curve even on my 1st purchase.
Some prompts to help spur discussion, but feel free to share what you would like to share:
- How often do you play on your headset?
- What games/experiences would you recommend?
- What games/experiences do you not recommend?
- What headset do you own/have you tried any others?
- Are there any accessories or peripherals that are worth checking out?
13 votes -
G-Boy: Wii / GameCube Portable DIY Kit
9 votes -
PiBoy DMG Raspberry Pi 4 Kit
3 votes -
What's your computer/PC like?
(I'd be surprised if this hasn't been asked before.) A few questions that come to my mind are: What are your computers' specs? How are your computer parts/cabling organized? (Are they?) What is...
(I'd be surprised if this hasn't been asked before.)
A few questions that come to my mind are:
What are your computers' specs?
How are your computer parts/cabling organized? (Are they?)
What is the resolution of your monitor(s?)
What OS is it?
I'm not really knowledgeable when it comes to technology, so you can add you own questions as you please.
Edit: In hindsight, my knowledge of specs is even poorer that I thought it was and I can barely read the answers. Ah well "^~^
21 votes -
A new Nintendo Switch model will be announced next year, a new report claims
13 votes -
Onyx Boox Nova 2: Gizmodo review
5 votes -
Achilles: Over 400 vulnerabilities found in Qualcomm’s Snapdragon DSP chip, threatening the security of hundreds of millions of Android devices
17 votes -
Trying to build the ultimate Raspberry Pi computer (Zero Terminal v3) - Node
8 votes -
20GB of Intel's internal source code, schematics, specs, and documents released, allegedly found on an unsecured CDN server
20 votes -
Google announces Pixel 5, Pixel 4A 5G and Pixel 4A all at once
16 votes -
Time killers: The strange history of wrist gaming
3 votes -
27-inch iMac gets a major update
3 votes -
ARM is for sale and Nvidia’s interested, Apple isn’t
7 votes -
Hands-on: The $300 Kano PC, a “build-it-yourself” Chromebook competitor
7 votes -
The Intel 8086 processor's registers: from chip to transistors
6 votes -
Hackable/moddable electronics?
I recently came across a cool video on youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dxj8JwdQ7Lk&feature=youtu.be - The guy added a 4g connector to his rc plane and I think some extra batteries and...
I recently came across a cool video on youtube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dxj8JwdQ7Lk&feature=youtu.be - The guy added a 4g connector to his rc plane and I think some extra batteries and managed to fly to the next island over.
I love stuff like this. Do you guys know any other current electronics that can be modded like this? Sadly it seems like most new consumer electronics come with their own small walled garden and often enough stuff just stops working once the seller goes bankrupt.
Other things that come to mind are:
Raspberry Pi
Arduino
ESP
But do you guys know whole systems that are moddable like this?
The Ryze Tello is a programmable drone, which is pretty cool as well.
I also saw some people modding 3d printers to laser cutters7 votes -
The five most over-hyped tech devices
6 votes -
Apple switches to its own chips for Mac computers as it adds features, privacy controls
25 votes -
Rainbow – An attempt to display colour on a B&W monitor
14 votes -
Playing full PC games on a Raspberry Pi 4
6 votes -
How the Nintendo Switch prevents downgrades by irreparably blowing its own fuses
17 votes