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24 votes
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Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
56 votes -
I assure you, an AI didn't write a terrible "George Carlin" routine
30 votes -
I got a spam call and the automated voice that requests their reasoning for calling was my voice AI generated
13 votes -
Extreme metal guitar skills linked to intrasexual competition, but not mating success
28 votes -
'Smoking gun proof': fossil fuel industry knew of climate danger as early as 1954, documents show
28 votes -
Popular AI chatbots found to give error-ridden legal answers
19 votes -
How to build an origami computer
7 votes -
Florida official letter: "Misrepresenting" gender on drivers licenses is fraud, changes now banned
40 votes -
Teach me about biryani
I was watching this video. The auto-translated subtitles are not great, but I followed along a bit. We tried 15 types of Biryani It made me realise that in the UK I have access to a very limited...
I was watching this video. The auto-translated subtitles are not great, but I followed along a bit.
It made me realise that in the UK I have access to a very limited selection of biryani. From a supermarket it will look like this: https://www.iceland.co.uk/p/iceland-chicken-biryani-375g/87458.html. I'm missing so much knowledge about an enormous region that covers over a billion people.
I'd be really interested to hear about biryani, especially regional variations with different ingredients. What things are essential and often missed? What makes a biryani great?
I'd also love to hear more about delivery - those "handi" ceramic dum cooked to order pots look amazing. There's another video here of an "unboxing" - https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Q5OA4XiGl34 , and the makers have a video here too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6nE1Nla3u0
20 votes -
ChatGPT is leaking passwords from private conversations of its users, Ars reader says
17 votes -
Tildes Book Club - Spring schedule (Updated Feb 2, 2:19 UTC)
The results are in, and Dispossessed was the clear favorite with many strong contenders. It looks like quite a few people are interested in participating. There was a tie for third place so we...
The results are in, and Dispossessed was the clear favorite with many strong contenders. It looks like quite a few people are interested in participating.
There was a tie for third place so we will start with four books.
Edit
We will discuss Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell in early March,
Piranesi by Susanna Clarke in Mid April,
The Dispossessed by Ursula le Guin in Late May
And Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir at the end of June.We will discuss Project Hail Mary in early March
Cloud Atlas in mid April
The Dispossessed in late May
and Piranesi at the end of JuneAt that point I plan to hold a voting thread for fiction and a voting thread for nonfiction and discuss/vote on how frequently to read nonfiction. Please feel free to renominate your favorites that didn't get chosen.
I'm looking forward to this. Thanks for participating.
26 votes -
TV Tuesdays Free Talk
Have you watched any TV shows recently you want to discuss? Any shows you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here. Please just try to provide fair warning of...
Have you watched any TV shows recently you want to discuss? Any shows you want to recommend or are hyped about? Feel free to discuss anything here.
Please just try to provide fair warning of spoilers if you can.
7 votes -
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare | Official trailer
20 votes -
Brentford's deal to sign teenage Norwegian winger Antonio Nusa from Club Brugge is stalling
5 votes -
Elon Musk's Neuralink implants brain chip in first human
35 votes -
How a huge rainfall simulator helps Japan study and prevent landslides
8 votes -
For the sixth year in a row, Denmark heads the Corruption Perceptions Index, with a score of ninety – Finland and New Zealand follow closely behind
7 votes -
Can a chef turn KFC into a completely different dish?
16 votes -
Any other developers also strongly resistant to adding secondary data stores to their software?
I'm currently building an MVP for a startup, solo. We've got Postgres pulling triple duty as the go-to database for all normal relational data, a vector database with pgvector, and a job queue...
I'm currently building an MVP for a startup, solo. We've got Postgres pulling triple duty as the go-to database for all normal relational data, a vector database with pgvector, and a job queue (With the magic of
SELECT ... FROM "Jobs" WHERE ... FOR UPDATE SKIP LOCKED LIMIT 1). Every time I go out looking for solutions to problems it feels like the world really wants me to get a dedicated vector store or to use Redis as a job queue.Back when I was a Rails developer a good majority of the
ActiveJobimplementers used Redis. Now that I'm doing NodeJS the go-to is Bull which can only serialize jobs to Redis. They back this with claims that I can scale to thousands of jobs per second! I have to assume this theoretical throughput benefit from using Redis is utilized by 0.01% of apps running Bull.So I ended up implementing a very simple system. Bull wouldn't have been a good fit anyway as we have both Python and Typescript async workers, so a simple system that I fully understand is more useful at the moment. I'm curious who else shares my philosophy.
Edit: I'll try to remember to update everyone in a year with the real world consequences of my design choices.
16 votes -
Beatriz Flamini, the woman who spent five hundred days in a cave
17 votes -
Beyond Utopia | The gripping story of families who risk everything escaping North Korea | PBS
11 votes -
Celeste 64: Fragments of the Mountain
36 votes -
Prediction markets have an elections problem
9 votes -
"The Algorithm" does not exist
10 votes -
Weird and creepy indie games
6 votes -
Why Walmart pays its US truck drivers six figures
16 votes -
Amber Glenn becomes first LGBTQ+ woman to win US Women's Figure Skating Championship
12 votes -
73% of the top 1000 games on Steam run on the Steam Deck
48 votes -
Has anyone else noticed a difference in their winters?
I moved to a place with an "actual" winter just over a decade ago -- snow, freezing temperatures, etc. In the first couple of years, I got what felt like a genuinely solid winter. Lots of...
I moved to a place with an "actual" winter just over a decade ago -- snow, freezing temperatures, etc. In the first couple of years, I got what felt like a genuinely solid winter. Lots of blisteringly cold days. Snow that fell in large amounts and stuck around for most of the season. I love winter, so this was great for me.
In recent years, however, the winters have been milder and milder. When we do get snow, it's only around for a bit because days above freezing are now frequent enough that it's able to melt between snowfalls. Also, the snowfalls themselves are more intermittent. This year specifically we've actually had more rain than snow. I don't remember getting rain in January when I first moved here.
It irks me a bit because the shift has been so stark and noticeable in such a short period of time. There's a part of me that thinks that it's not a big deal and maybe my first years here were unnaturally cold and snowy for the area, so what I'm seeing now is simply the other side of the mean, but then there's another part of me that feels like that's simply a comforting lie I can tell myself in the face of the obvious effects of climate change.
Is there anyone else here that feels like they're missing their winters?
56 votes -
Scientists document first-ever transmitted Alzheimer’s cases, tied to no-longer-used medical procedure
28 votes -
Tiny ant species disrupts lion's hunting behavior
11 votes -
What's a recent queer milestone you've reached?
Inspired by this amazing post and the subsequent discussion about the need for more queer joy: What's a recent queer milestone you've reached/experienced in your life? It can be something big, but...
Inspired by this amazing post and the subsequent discussion about the need for more queer joy:
What's a recent queer milestone you've reached/experienced in your life?
It can be something big, but it can also be something small but still meaningful. It can be an event (coming out!), a realization (oh so THAT'S who I am!), a feeling (dress go spinny!), a moment (holding hands!), a recognition (they used male pronouns!), or anything else that is distinctly queer and noteworthy.
Share what it is, what you think about it, and why it's meaningful.
41 votes -
‘Fish Bandit’ arrested for taping fish to ATMs
37 votes -
Science sleuths are using technology to find fakery and plagiarism in published research
16 votes -
Prisoners in the US are part of a hidden workforce linked to hundreds of popular food brands
65 votes -
‘It’s insane’: New viruslike entities found in human gut microbes
30 votes -
What prevents and what drives gendered ideological polarisation?
11 votes -
The parliament of Imperial Austria
6 votes -
A wolf killed EU president Ursula von der Leyen’s family pony, it ignited a high-stakes battle
27 votes -
George Carlin estate sues creators of AI-generated comedy special in key lawsuit over stars’ likenesses
37 votes -
Greta Thunberg marched with activists to protest against Farnborough Airport expansion, which mainly serves private jets – planned increase from 50,000 to 70,000 flights per year
20 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
30 votes -
What have you been eating, drinking, and cooking?
What food and drinks have you been enjoying (or not enjoying) recently? Have you cooked or created anything interesting? Tell us about it!
8 votes -
Interaction Isn't Explicit。| Announcement trailer
11 votes -
Norway defends deep-sea mining, says it may help to break China and Russia's rare earths stronghold
9 votes -
Weekly Israel-Hamas war megathread - week of January 29
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant Israel-Hamas war content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate...
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant Israel-Hamas war content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate topic, but almost all should be posted in here.
Please try to avoid antagonistic arguments and bickering matches. Comment threads that devolve into unproductive arguments may be removed so that the overall topic is able to continue.
16 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of January 29
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate...
This thread is posted weekly - please try to post all relevant US political content in here, such as news, updates, opinion articles, etc. Extremely significant events may warrant a separate topic, but almost all should be posted in here.
This is an inherently political thread; please try to avoid antagonistic arguments and bickering matches. Comment threads that devolve into unproductive arguments may be removed so that the overall topic is able to continue.
13 votes -
Movie of the Week #14 - The Iron Giant
Final movie for January is Brad Bird's animated The Iron Giant from 1999. IMDb Letterboxd Wikipedia Feel free to add any thoughts, opinions, reflections, analysis or whatever comments related to...
Final movie for January is Brad Bird's animated The Iron Giant from 1999.
Feel free to add any thoughts, opinions, reflections, analysis or whatever comments related to this film.
The schedule for February is:
- 5th: Spiderman: Into the Spiderverse
- 12th: The Aviator
- 19th: Batman Begins
- 26th: Gangs of New York
21 votes -
Alexander Stubb won the first round of Finland's presidential election and will face runner-up Pekka Haavisto in a runoff next month
6 votes