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3 votes
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Grammarly's predatory model and cultural biases
10 votes -
No, its not cyberpunk
8 votes -
Girl and computer
12 votes -
Big Tech critic Tim Wu joins Joe Biden administration to work on US competition policy
9 votes -
How Big Tech helps India target climate activists: Companies such as Google and Facebook appear to be aiding and abetting a vicious government campaign against Indian environmental campaigners
6 votes -
spaceprob.es - A catalog of every currently functioning probe beyond our planet
6 votes -
NASA’s latest Mars rover has the same processor as an iMac from 1998
6 votes -
Arctic island finds green power can be a curse – Greenland's rare-earth elements are attracting superpowers riding a green revolution
11 votes -
Visualizing cyber harassment
5 votes -
Candy love hearts, designed by AI
7 votes -
Lessons from a year of Covid
9 votes -
The battery invented 120 years before its time
8 votes -
The last cassette player standing
2 votes -
At some point, many people will return to office life, at least part time. How do you think that'll affect work behavior and the tools for it (Slack, Zoom, etc.)?
What product features would you hope the vendors would add in preparation for that eventuality? For example... For the last year, we all have had “one connection, one face on screen.” That’s given...
What product features would you hope the vendors would add in preparation for that eventuality?
For example... For the last year, we all have had “one connection, one face on screen.” That’s given everyone a kind of equality, where we each have an equal seat at the table. (With or without cat filters.) Now we have to contemplate returning to an environment where SOME people are in the office, and thus huddled around a conference table, and the rest of the team is working from home. It was like that in the Before Times, but now everybody is more cognizant of the disadvantages… not the least of which is the poor video organization in conference rooms. Few companies are smart enough to install a camera that’s pointed at the people around the conference table, for instance, however simple/cheap an option that is.
14 votes -
The lost history of socialism’s DIY computer
23 votes -
Why wind turbines in New York keep working in bitter cold weather unlike the ones in Texas
10 votes -
Billionaires see VR as a way to avoid radical social change
14 votes -
Indian government restricts foreign mapping services to one metre accuracy
5 votes -
Is social media hijacking our minds?
6 votes -
CT scan catches 70% of lung cancers at early stage, NHS study finds
10 votes -
How Covid brought the future back
6 votes -
An eight part series on venture capital and technological innovation
4 votes -
None of our technologies have managed to destroy humanity – yet
5 votes -
First patients to get CRISPR gene-editing treatment continue to thrive
21 votes -
Science fiction hasn’t prepared us to imagine machine learning
11 votes -
The paradox of progress
7 votes -
Joe Manchin's bid to pierce US tech's shield
4 votes -
Cost Plus Drug Company: Low cost versions of high cost generic drugs
4 votes -
Where to get music in a downloadable format (other than iTunes)?
So currently I get most of my music from soundtracks ripped from games and from Bandicamp. However, quite a few artists that go through traditional publishers are not on Bandicamp. Now, while I...
So currently I get most of my music from soundtracks ripped from games and from Bandicamp. However, quite a few artists that go through traditional publishers are not on Bandicamp.
Now, while I could go through the hassle of installing iTunes on Linux through WINE, I dont want to because:
- WINE can be a hassle, especially if the app does some strange things.
- Id rather not support apple in any way if I can
So, are there any major platforms that allow downloading .mp3 or better yet, .flac files, especially for artists going through bigger publishers?
13 votes -
The machine that erases what it creates
7 votes -
Technological stagnation
6 votes -
Italy takes action against TikTok following girl’s death
5 votes -
US President Joe Biden's Federal Communications Commission appointment is a big step toward net neutrality's return
10 votes -
The missing link in renewables
4 votes -
Tiny high-tech probes reveal how information flows across the brain
6 votes -
Digital transformation at the edges of business: New careers, organizations, and means of communication
2 votes -
Razer has created a concept N95 mask with RGB and voice projection
12 votes -
Six Boeing-supplied 20kW solar arrays to augment existing International Space Station power system
8 votes -
Goodreads is dead. What now?
8 votes -
Open-source developer and manager David Recordon named White House Director of Technology
14 votes -
Ticketmaster admits it hacked rival company before it went out of business
17 votes -
Some educated guesses about the companies, products, and services that are facing down a terrible 2021
9 votes -
A monster wind turbine is upending an industry
30 votes -
Iceland's innovations to reach net-zero – in pictures
16 votes -
Nanotechnology for plant genetic engineering
6 votes -
Two acre vertical farm run by AI and robots out-produces 720-acre flat farm
21 votes -
The steampunk rover concept that could help explore Venus
8 votes -
Smartwatches monitor your health: An overview of what you get for the money
5 votes -
Apple targets car production by 2024 and eyes 'next level' battery technology
14 votes