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4 votes
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Grid News goes live with millions in funding and a team of more than twenty journalists
17 votes -
Where is James Webb Space Telescope?
31 votes -
Classic social networking in 2022: SpaceHey
12 votes -
High readability Wikipedia
9 votes -
(mac)OStalgia: 2021 meets Mac OS 9 (featuring designs for Spotify, Slack, Zoom)
7 votes -
Retiring Alexa.com on May 1, 2022
9 votes -
The 250kb Club
14 votes -
Webcams
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous...
There was a very brief period of time in the late 90s early 00s when the word “webcam” had just started existing and entering the popular discourse; and where that word was practically synonymous with “sex show”.
I think around the time I first heard that word, having a webcam usually meant you would use it to do nude shows with.
They weren’t integrated with computers back then (laptops were super expensive and not popular yet, and they weren’t a mainstream laptop accessory until way later). So if you had a webcam, you had to really seek it out and pay quite a bit of money for it. It made little sense for people to buy them just to use them for personal reasons and most jobs didn’t have a utility for them.
… except sex work. Live, paid access cam shows immediately caught on. And people would see those in ads (ads tended to be trashy with zero quality control back then, even automated. Worse than now, I swear), and associate “webcam” with “webcam show”.
There was no reason to otherwise hook up a camera to a computer if not to stream its contents to the web, anyway. The first webcam, that famous coffee pot, was just that: a web-connected camera. Web cam. Wikipedia talks about “Jenni cam” — I wasn’t on the anglosphere’s internet at the time so this escaped me, but it does seem to agree that the concept entered the mainstream not via videoconferencing, but via cam girls.
5 votes -
Type a song
5 votes -
Grazily - highly targeted jobs in your inbox
5 votes -
Interactive Double Pendulum Playground
4 votes -
Repeatedly clicking the first link on Wikipedia ends up at "Philosophy" 97% of the time
27 votes -
Simon Tatham's Portable Puzzle Pack
15 votes -
We are now Solar Powered
5 votes -
The rise and ruin of Couchsurfing.com
10 votes -
Musician Holly Herndon open sources her voice
14 votes -
Tech workers rebel against a lame-ass Internet by bringing back ‘GeoCities-style’ Webrings
26 votes -
Nestflix: The only platform for your favorite nested films and tv shows
16 votes -
The co-founder of Snopes wrote dozens of plagiarized articles for the fact-checking site
11 votes -
Peachesnstink: An interesting tildes/reddit-esque website
5 votes -
Olympic medal count (per capita)
9 votes -
PixelCraft: A pixel art editor
6 votes -
Photography of Lauren Tepfer
5 votes -
Why have web pages dropped the www?
I don't know where to put this question, if here or in ~tech, but I chose here due to I want a response for someone who doesn't know all about internet. So my question is: why there is a trend of...
I don't know where to put this question, if here or in ~tech, but I chose here due to I want a response for someone who doesn't know all about internet.
So my question is: why there is a trend of removing the www of every web address? why it was standard in the first place and not now?
There are a handful of popular web pages that don't use a triple w in their link and they have replaced it or removed it. Tildes, for example, doesn't need triple w. Why?
17 votes -
New ad-free search subscription service: Neeva
6 votes -
How should I make my personal website?
I am not a developer, but I do have interesting in learning. A while ago I asked a question similar to that. I did not take any concrete action since then, and now have some new information to...
I am not a developer, but I do have interesting in learning.
A while ago I asked a question similar to that. I did not take any concrete action since then, and now have some new information to add.
The website shall be called
myactualname.com, and will contain about/biography, and a few sections containing articles that I wish to write on different subjects.That can probably be done without coding on one of the many free blogging platforms currently available, such as Medium, Wordpress, and Substack, but the lack of control is unfortunate.
At the same time, I wish for this website to last a long time, and to be reasonably independent of maintenance. With the Brazilian Real valued at less than one-fifth of the US dollar, hosting prices skyrocketed. Besides, I cannot always rely on my own ability to stay on top of that kind of thing, so it would be beneficial for my web presence to be more resilient than my bank account and mental state. I figure that hosting it on Github Pages, Gitlab Pages (or both) would be a good way to avoid ever going down (it looks like duplicate content is bad for search engines, though, so I might keep one of those private, just for backup reasons). And I could reserve the domain for two or three years in advance.
I really like simple text-focused personal websites like this one. They load fast and are easy to read, but are generally not very pretty or responsive. I have basic notions of HTML and CSS and intend to learn more.
In the previous post, someone suggested using Hugo, which seems like a good option. On the other hand, for something that simple, I wonder what would be the downside of simply coding it from scratch. One thing I know for sure is that I want this website to be rather permanent: whatever changes I ever do to its design should not impact accessibility to previous content (link rot). How can I achieve that? No idea.
Since I write in English and Portuguese, the website must be bilingual. I'm not sure how to implement or manage that, especially in regards to search engines.
I resumed the course on Free Code Camp, which I expect will help in achieving all that.
With that in mind, I reiterate my question: should I make my personal website? Should I just use a free blogging platform? Should I use Hugo or something similar? Any particular free CMS? Or maybe just use what I learn to code it from scratch?
Thanks!
15 votes -
Built a satirical social network (ShlinkedIn)—would love to pick y'alls brains about social media and this project!
39 votes -
The internet feeds on its own dying dreams
4 votes -
Quit Social Media - An educational website that argues against proprietary social media and its risks
7 votes -
Stumbled, a collection of anything interesting, weird or astonishing; websites of exceptional quality, sites to kill time or learn something new
14 votes -
Twitch, Pinterest, Reddit and more go down in Fastly CDN outage
25 votes -
Uyghur tribunal
6 votes -
Doom running on an Archive of our Own webpage
4 votes -
The best apps for bicycle directions in 2020
4 votes -
Reuters puts its website behind a paywall
19 votes -
Am I FLoCed?
22 votes -
RIP SpaceJam.com, 1996-2021
16 votes -
Europeana contains over ten million digitalised artifacts from across Europe
8 votes -
Inside a viral website - An account of running istheshipstillstuck.com
10 votes -
LAVO hydrogen battery system
6 votes -
The Global Transgender Resources Registry
10 votes -
Lancer publisher Mastiff Press launches official website with hardcover core book available for purchase
7 votes -
Remora - Carbon capture for semi trucks
10 votes -
What are the single best resources for learning something new?
When learning something new, often available resources are lacking in some departments - whether they're missing information, poorly written, or tedious and dry. But occasionally, some content...
When learning something new, often available resources are lacking in some departments - whether they're missing information, poorly written, or tedious and dry. But occasionally, some content just stands out as above and beyond the rest, serving to not only make the learning process enjoyable but also to kindle interest in further exploration. What is that for you?
This could encompass everything from computer programming to literary criticism, and could be in the form of a website, book, video tutorial, or the like.
13 votes -
Why popular YouTubers are building their own sites
17 votes -
spaceprob.es - A catalog of every currently functioning probe beyond our planet
6 votes -
Queering the Map - Personal queer experiences mapped to physical space
13 votes -
The internet’s most beloved fanfiction site is undergoing a reckoning
15 votes -
I'm working on creating a new religion. You may read the beta version of our scripture at disciples.technoslug.org
29 votes