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5 votes
-
The practical value of semantic HTML
16 votes -
Google isn’t the company that we should have handed the Web over to
22 votes -
I Threw Away My Mouse - Results, recommendations, and observations from using the web for several weeks with only a keyboard
15 votes -
The Rise and Demise of RSS
35 votes -
The tale of a fake hitman, a kill list, a darknet vigilante... and a murder
7 votes -
Donations to the Internet Archive are currently being tripled by a generous supporter
17 votes -
Phoenix.LiveView: Interactive, Real-Time Apps. No Need to Write JavaScript.
8 votes -
The state of web browsers - 2019 edition
7 votes -
Anyone using the BRAVE web browser? Thoughts? Experiences?
I was reading about it here: https://www.cnet.com/news/brave-browser-matures-with-move-to-chromium-foundation/ First I heard of it and was curious if anyone has tried it. I love the idea of...
I was reading about it here:
https://www.cnet.com/news/brave-browser-matures-with-move-to-chromium-foundation/
First I heard of it and was curious if anyone has tried it. I love the idea of blocking ads and trackers by default.
19 votes -
Google Releases Security Updates for Chrome (Remote Code Execution?)
5 votes -
The community network manual: How to build the Internet yourself
13 votes -
The Web is still a DARPA weapon
12 votes -
Tunneling into a private network through JavaScript
7 votes -
SpeedReader: Fast and Private Reader Mode for the Web
8 votes -
I made a thoughtful-discussion-based subreddit to talk about web browsers
7 votes -
100 Websites That Shaped the Internet as We Know It
9 votes -
Phoenix Framework 1.4.0 release candidate
6 votes -
Batch-saving websites for offline viewing
Anybody here have a good setup for batch-downloading articles/news from several sites you specify, similar to youtube-dl but for general websites? I'm sure it could be scripted with not too much...
Anybody here have a good setup for batch-downloading articles/news from several sites you specify, similar to youtube-dl but for general websites? I'm sure it could be scripted with not too much effort but I'm interested what polished solutions there are.
The idea would be so people with rare internet access could go to a hotspot weekly or something and sync that week's worth of content.
12 votes -
DuckDuckGo usage is growing fast
63 votes -
Accurately measuring layout performance on the web
4 votes -
Powerlifting doesn't care what I look like
7 votes -
Dear Developer, The Web Isn't About You
39 votes -
Whatever happened to the semantic web?
15 votes -
The Bullshit Web
61 votes -
Feedbin goes private by default, explains design desicions to enhance user privacy
10 votes -
Why are newspaper websites so horrible?
23 votes -
Google and Certbot: Let's Encrypt not renewing certs for sites Google flags
17 votes -
Google wants websites to adopt AMP as the default approach to building webpages. Tell them no.
66 votes -
Brave browser gets Chrome's extensions starting Thursday with major new version
20 votes -
Is This The Beginning Of The End For Facebook?
18 votes -
‘Space Jam’ Forever: The Website That Wouldn’t Die [2015]
10 votes -
Conservative web development
29 votes -
Google Chrome’s biggest challenge at age 10 might just be its own success
18 votes -
Contrast Ratio: Easily calculate color contrast ratios. Passing WCAG was never this easy!
6 votes -
How to design for the modern web
41 votes -
The Cost of JavaScript in 2018
30 votes -
Observatory by Mozilla
28 votes -
What football will look like in the future
20 votes -
This Panda Is Dancing
10 votes -
js13k - a contest to make an HTML5 game in under 13 KB
9 votes -
An Essential Guide to Image Compression
8 votes -
Podcasting is not walled (yet)
6 votes -
Let's Encrypt Is Now Officially Trusted by All Major Root Programs
25 votes -
RSS/Atom feeds for groups?
Could we have RSS or Atom feeds that correspond to a given view? There could be two kinds of feeds, one that links to the comments page, and one that follows the link itself. The comments feed for...
Could we have RSS or Atom feeds that correspond to a given view?
There could be two kinds of feeds, one that links to the comments page, and one that follows the link itself. The comments feed for ~comp could be
https://tildes.net/~comp?rss=comments
, and the link feed could behttps://tildes.net/~comp?rss=link
, or something like that. Ideally this could apply to tags as well, so if I just wanted to see posts in ~comp taggedweb
, I could viewhttps://tildes.net/~comp?tag=web&rss=comments
.Several similar sites have this ability, so it's nice to be able to browse them all in one place. (On Reddit you can put
.rss
at the end of a subreddit for a feed, and on Hacker News and Lobsters it's just/rss
).What do you think?
15 votes -
The Bullshit Web
8 votes -
How the Blog Broke the Web
25 votes -
Intellectual dark web psyop [part 1]
5 votes -
Solid: From Tim Berners-Lee, a project to decentralize the web
20 votes -
Introducing Cat Hop! The mobile runner I made you can play now right in your browser!
9 votes