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7 votes
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Sensory overload and annals of lying
3 votes -
Testing a new method (CSS custom properties) for the site themes - please report any issues you notice
In his never-ending quest to keep improving Tildes's theme system, @Bauke has reworked a major portion of it again, this time making it use CSS custom properties (instead of pre-generating a lot...
In his never-ending quest to keep improving Tildes's theme system, @Bauke has reworked a major portion of it again, this time making it use CSS custom properties (instead of pre-generating a lot of theme-specific rules using Sass).
This new method has a lot of benefits, including reducing the size of Tildes's CSS file to less than half of what it was before. It will also make it much simpler for people to override certain site colors or create their own themes using local CSS changes (e.g. through extensions like Stylus). (Note: please don't invest a lot of time into using it to customize yet, since it may still need to have further changes or even reverted)
This is a relatively modern CSS feature that should have good support at this point, but it's possible there will still be some issues, or things that were missed during the conversion. If you notice any colors being wrong or other appearance changes (even minor ones), please leave a comment (including which theme you're using) so that I can fix them up.
Thanks yet again, @Bauke!
And I haven't done it in a while now, but I've topped everyone back up to 10 invites, accessible on the invite page.
54 votes -
Minor bug: Can't collapse linked comments
The CSS selectors that determine whether or not to apply the display: none rule to comment text sections use the pseudo-class rule :not(:target). While this is great for keeping a comment in a...
The CSS selectors that determine whether or not to apply the
display: nonerule to comment text sections use the pseudo-class rule:not(:target). While this is great for keeping a comment in a non-collapsed state, it's a bit too effective as it prevents user-initiated collapsing of the comment. This can be problematic when you visit a direct link to a comment with an extensive reply tree beneath it and want to collapse it so that you can view the surrounding reply trees. As it stands, you can't do this without needing to either a) collapse the parent (prevents viewing sibling comments), b) collapse the children (requires collapsing potentially multiple child comments), or c) remove the fragment portion of the URL (requires reloading the page and possibly losing your place on the page).Reproducing should be as simple as clicking
Linkin a comment's header, then trying to collapse the comment after being redirected.9 votes -
Louisville grand jury indicts one of three officers in fatal Breonna Taylor police shooting
18 votes -
Amnesia: The Dark Descent and A Machine for Pigs are now open source
6 votes -
Posters of East Asia
3 votes -
How Reykjavik's sheet-metal homes beat the Icelandic winter – they may be unorthodox, but the innovative buildings have kept residents warm and dry for more than a century
13 votes -
President Trump is continuing his war on Section 230 and the right for the open internet to exist
8 votes -
What the photos of wildfires and smoke don’t show you
12 votes -
Palm oil labor abuses linked to world’s top brands, banks
9 votes -
Trump won’t commit to ‘peaceful’ post-election transfer of power
9 votes -
More than 600 free-to-watch films on YouTube Movies channel
8 votes -
Firefox usage is down 85% despite Mozilla's top exec pay going up 400%
30 votes -
Finland has deployed coronavirus-sniffing dogs at the Nordic country's main international airport – a four-month trial of an alternative testing method
9 votes -
Microsoft leaks 6.5TB in Bing search data via unsecured Elastic server
12 votes -
Do stories need conflict?
In school we teach kids that good stories have conflict and have them fill out plot diagrams, analyzing the different parts relative to the conflict of the story. Every time this comes up, I...
In school we teach kids that good stories have conflict and have them fill out plot diagrams, analyzing the different parts relative to the conflict of the story.
Every time this comes up, I always wonder about its universality. As it's taught to kids, this is "how stories are" and conflict itself is considered essential to storytelling. The conventional wisdom goes that a story without conflict is "boring".
Is this the case, though? It's always felt to me like a very limited way of looking at stories -- fine for children but something that doesn't necessarily scale up past the early stages of literary analysis -- but I don't have anything to back that up. I don't have enough in my repertoire/expertise to really go beyond it, and I'm left with just a sort of empty suspicion that may or may not be justified.
- Is conflict essential to storytelling?
- Are there examples of good stories without conflict?
- Is teaching narrative in this way effective, or limiting?
22 votes -
Please don't say just hello in chat
28 votes -
Can anyone help me narrow down the definition of "gaslighting" to better make sense of it as a concept?
I read the Wikipedia article about "gaslighting" and know it comes from a 1944 film of the same name in which an abusive husband gradually dims the gaslights at home – while denying doing so – to...
I read the Wikipedia article about "gaslighting" and know it comes from a 1944 film of the same name in which an abusive husband gradually dims the gaslights at home – while denying doing so – to drive his wife mad.
Yet whenever I see the term used (which happens a lot, lately) I can't make the connection. It seems people use it for the simple act of lying or denying something, which to me is mostly just... lying, not "gaslighting". Any kind of stupid, misguided act is getting the sinister "gaslighting" stamp as if it some 5d chess move when it simply looks like incompetence. The core principle of it seems to revolve around having a plan to psychologically manipulate someone but I mostly don't see the plan nor the actual goal. If anything untruthful you say about an important topic is "gaslighting", then the term doesn't seem to have a lot of value on its own. Wikipedia actually mentions "unconscious" gaslighting which seems to contradict its purpose of actually wanting to manipulate someone.
So, given its popularity, I'm curious if there might be a (succinct) definition of the term that helps me understand it properly? Do you think it's just a trendy term to throw at politicians doing shit you don't like? Am I missing an important detail?
17 votes -
Looking for programming/software book recommendations
I'm not looking to gain any practical skills from these recommendations (ex: not "Clean Code", "The Pragmatic Programmer"). Last year I read through the two books in Fabien Sanglard's Game Engine...
I'm not looking to gain any practical skills from these recommendations (ex: not "Clean Code", "The Pragmatic Programmer"). Last year I read through the two books in Fabien Sanglard's Game Engine Black Book series and would love to get my hands on more books like them. Books that focus on history, arcane details and secrets once thought lost to time. Sadly it appears I've already worked through Sanglard's entire bibliography. But I'm sure there's more stuff out there like it.
10 votes -
Viral hate, election interference, and hacked accounts: Inside the tech industry’s decades-long failure to reckon with risk
8 votes -
What are your thoughts on the next gen consoles from Xbox and Playstation?
We are almost in a new generation of consoles and was just wondering what everyone's thoughts are on each offering. Some questions to prompt (but feel free to just share what's at the top of your...
We are almost in a new generation of consoles and was just wondering what everyone's thoughts are on each offering. Some questions to prompt (but feel free to just share what's at the top of your mind):
Have you preordered a system?
Which system do you think looks best to you and why?
How will these systems impact gaming on PC?
Would you get the digital or disc version?
Will these consoles affect Nintendo's plans?
Has Microsoft re-claimed any of their lost momentum from the Xbox One launch?
What features are most important to you?
If you aren't planning on buying at launch, is there something you are waiting for?
16 votes -
Archie Comics titles to release day-and-date on comiXology Unlimited
4 votes -
Edge-like vertical tabs in Vivaldi browser
5 votes -
What are your “Flowerbox Indicators”?
About 15 years ago, I was impressed by a TV commercial. In a Bank of America ad about their investments in crappy neighborhoods (they didn’t phrase it that way), the spokesperson said the bank...
About 15 years ago, I was impressed by a TV commercial. In a Bank of America ad about their investments in crappy neighborhoods (they didn’t phrase it that way), the spokesperson said the bank knew they’d succeeded, “when the flowerboxes begin showing up on front porches.”
Teams have the same sort of indirect indications, too, for good or ill. I’m writing an article about such non-obvious metrics that managers can use to judge whether a team is healthy.
One example is self-organizing get-togethers. It’s one thing for a manager to create team-building exercises. But when the team members arrange for such gatherings themselves — and it includes the whole team, not merely a clique — you know you have an actual team, not a bunch of employees working on the same tasks. (A negative “flower box indicator” of a project cancellation is when the company no longer refills the snack bar; but in this article I want to keep things positive.)
For managers and other leaders: What have you recognized as “flowerbox indicator”? I want to give examples that managers can use to recognize and celebrate success.
(We can have a great conversation here, but I do need to quote people by name, company, title if I use the input in the article.)
18 votes -
Mike Morhaime founds new games company, Dreamhaven
7 votes -
What programming/technical projects have you been working on?
This is a recurring post to discuss programming or other technical projects that we've been working on. Tell us about one of your recent projects, either at work or personal projects. What's...
This is a recurring post to discuss programming or other technical projects that we've been working on. Tell us about one of your recent projects, either at work or personal projects. What's interesting about it? Are you having trouble with anything?
8 votes -
You're going to be using confidential computing sooner rather than later
8 votes -
Judith Butler on the culture wars, JK Rowling and living in “anti-intellectual times”
5 votes -
Twitter to investigate apparent racial bias in photo previews
8 votes -
Should we talk about voting again?
Based on replies to this comment there seems to be a decent amount of interest around the topic of reworking voting, so I thought I would start a thread to get some more input. We already had...
Based on replies to this comment there seems to be a decent amount of interest around the topic of reworking voting, so I thought I would start a thread to get some more input. We already had similar discussions about a year ago but it looks like some people's opinions may have shifted somewhat? and as was noted in the comment thread, 1 week wasn't really enough to accurately assess the value of something like making vote counts invisible.
Things to consider:
- Do you think how voting works changes your/other's behavior on this site? and if it does, is this change positive or negative?
- Would you support reworking/modifying voting? If so, how?
- How long should we test said modifications if they are made?
- anything else you consider relevant
21 votes -
Environmentalists have held protests outside a court that is deciding on a tunnel link between Germany and Denmark – they say the project is flawed on many levels
6 votes -
Vintage bicycle repair
I love bicycles. I really love the aesthetic of vintage bicycles and the easy-ish to repair nature of them. They are mostly standard off-the-shelf parts, nuts, bolts and washers etc. Look for...
I love bicycles. I really love the aesthetic of vintage bicycles and the easy-ish to repair nature of them. They are mostly standard off-the-shelf parts, nuts, bolts and washers etc.
Look for opportunities to give old things new life, a quote that inspired me from a YouTube channel titled Old Shovel. He repairs old tools and recently bicycles.
Since then, I have been restoring a 1974 Canadian Tire branded Japanese Bridgestone Youngway.
Any advice for a newbie hobby vintage bicycle restorer?
9 votes -
Adobe’s "Liquid Mode" uses AI to automatically redesign PDFs for mobile devices
5 votes -
Norway will finance two-thirds of a large-scale project to capture and store carbon dioxide – carbon capture has long been highlighted as a way to reduce CO2 emissions
8 votes -
Carole King - It's Too Late (1971)
7 votes -
The Digital Antiquarian: X-Com
6 votes -
Nozomi Entertainment
3 votes -
UN weather agency calls a new record low temperature in the Northern Hemisphere – -69.6°C (-93°F) was recorded almost three decades ago in Klinck, Greenland
5 votes -
The largest Star in the Universe – size comparison
5 votes -
If you come from a historically/actively oppressed racial/ethnic group, how has that affected you?
Admittedly this would be better under the panel setting of Kfwyre here but alas, I'm asking this question because I don't know about what happens to people under racism and organizing a discussion...
Admittedly this would be better under the panel setting of Kfwyre here but alas, I'm asking this question because I don't know about what happens to people under racism and organizing a discussion for people grouped by a plight you don't know about and have never experienced is probably a bad idea. Also IIRC "race" isn't really scientific. And please, correct me if needed. I know nothing about this.
Either way, this is a pretty open-ended thread, the only 2 requirements I can imagine are the one in the title and that you state what 'race'/ethnicity you are and where you are (i.e black, US or Black, South Africa or Roma, most European countries and especially Balkan ones).
21 votes -
Rediscovering the enormous social and spiritual legacy of Black Jazz Records
7 votes -
Woman's photoshoot of her dogs goes hilariously wrong
8 votes -
Swift on Windows
5 votes -
Ludwig Göransson has won the 2020 Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Original Dramatic Score) on The Mandalorian – the composer's first Emmy
10 votes -
Why are we in the West so weird? A theory
6 votes -
A mathematician's lament
8 votes -
All Them Witches - Rats in Ruin (2020)
5 votes -
What are some good informative or educational shows?
I'm interested in anything that's basically non-fiction television that isn't news or news commentary. They don't have to be documentaries but certainly can be, and I'm open to stuff available on...
I'm interested in anything that's basically non-fiction television that isn't news or news commentary. They don't have to be documentaries but certainly can be, and I'm open to stuff available on any streaming service.
17 votes -
Fleet Foxes - Wading In Waist-High Water (2020)
7 votes