-
26 votes
-
Death by a thousand slops
36 votes -
Why is the right so fascinated with fantasy literature?
24 votes -
The US Internal Revenue Service is building a system to share records including home addresses with Immigration and Customs Enforcement to facilitate deportations
27 votes -
Festival goers north of the Arctic circle in Finland have been treated to a line-up of rap artists – including Indigenous artists performing in their native language, Sámi
12 votes -
Emmy nominations 2025: ‘Severance’ leads all shows with twenty-seven nods, ‘The Penguin,’ ‘The Studio’ and ‘White Lotus’ close behind
18 votes -
TV Tuesdays Free Talk
Warning: this post may contain spoilers
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 -
Why US anti-trans campaigns keep returning to the politics of meat
21 votes -
I Am Your God – Death Row (2025)
4 votes -
Data manipulation within the US Federal government
21 votes -
Swiss embassy radio
8 votes -
What are your AI-generated guilty pleasures?
Most people here dislike AI, more specifically LLM generated content, for reasons such as environmental impact, stealing people's work, etc. Despite that, is there anything that you enjoy? I've...
Most people here dislike AI, more specifically LLM generated content, for reasons such as environmental impact, stealing people's work, etc. Despite that, is there anything that you enjoy?
I've been listening to this artist's music for a while. It's mostly video game music "re-imagined by AI" into City Pop and other styles. Artist says they use AI to generate samples, then do the rest of the work like any producer would. I have no idea if it's true or not, but I gotta admit that most of it is really good.
Today I also watched some "AI ASMR" videos out of curiosity. It's stupid, I know. But watching a knife cut glass can be so damn satisfying. I'm sorry, planet.
45 votes -
Barcelona have completed the signing of FC Copenhagen winger Roony Bardghji for an initial fee of around €2 million
5 votes -
Desmos: The game engine that no one talks about
8 votes -
Tildes now supports Unicode 16.0 emoji
65 votes -
Spragga Benz - Hallelujah (2025)
4 votes -
Delta strips engines off new Airbus jets to overcome US shortage
19 votes -
A company tried to put real estate on the Blockchain and now it's facing a lawsuit from the city of Detroit
21 votes -
About 1,500 tarantulas were found hidden in cake boxes at a German airport
21 votes -
Username has changed from @drannex to @macleod
Hey tilderinos, Self-described resident roboticist here, Not really sure if this is needed, but as people tend to quote/@ me on threads semi-regularly, you might notice @drannex has disappeared,...
Hey tilderinos,
Self-described resident roboticist here, Not really sure if this is needed, but as people tend to quote/@ me on threads semi-regularly, you might notice @drannex has disappeared, but you can find me at @macleod now. Thanks @Deimos for the change!
Drannex is a really old username that I've never really enjoyed since I stopped being twelve a rather long time ago, much longer than joining here. So it's dead now.
I'm most known online as tumblr user @macleod anyway, and my website is macleod.ee to match. Homeowner has a meow in it? Glitter coffee? the dress meme? yeah, that was me (or partially). I'm sorry. Plus, it's my irl name anyway and I rather like it (muh-kloud).
Anyways, consider this a reintroduction or notice that my username has changed.
cheers, and remember, there can be only one ⚔️.
63 votes -
A company called Inventwood is starting to mass-produce "superwood"
34 votes -
How Donald Trump plans to dismantle the Education Department after US Supreme Court ruling
22 votes -
‘The Odyssey’ 70mm IMAX tickets are going on sale a year in advance — This Thursday, July 17
9 votes -
In a small Texas town, Pride grows loud and joyful
15 votes -
What do you think about Medium nowadays?
They aren't a startup anymore, but it seems the current CEO, Tony Stubblebine, got it right, according to his latest (long) blogpost. Although Medium is in a healthy path now, they burnt goodwill...
They aren't a startup anymore, but it seems the current CEO, Tony Stubblebine, got it right, according to his latest (long) blogpost.
Although Medium is in a healthy path now, they burnt goodwill so many times in the past that my trust on the business is absent. I wonder how other people perceive them…
24 votes -
Don’t publish your podcast only on Spotify
31 votes -
How I make personalised mini magazines at home
16 votes -
No, of course I can! Refusal mechanisms can be exploited using harmless fine-tuning data.
9 votes -
Are a few people ruining the internet for the rest of us?
27 votes -
Beware of the “lasagna cell”: The danger of food and metals
31 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!
10 votes -
China is hoovering up market share in electric vehicle-friendly Norway, posing significant competition to Tesla and other Western auto giants
13 votes -
Locke & Key | WEBTOON
7 votes -
The rise of video game doomerism
13 votes -
Weekly US politics news and updates thread - week of July 14
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 -
Is a career change towards cybersecurity viable for someone with an accountancy background?
Sorry if this isn't the best place to ask. IT and cybersecurity-focused communities over on Reddit aren't exactly the most welcoming places for such questions, and reading the r/ITCareerQuestions...
Sorry if this isn't the best place to ask. IT and cybersecurity-focused communities over on Reddit aren't exactly the most welcoming places for such questions, and reading the r/ITCareerQuestions wiki has made me seriously question if I'm being sold false promises of working in a sector that actually has a low demand for workers. Then again, that wiki page seems more geared towards the US job market.
Two weeks ago, I responded to an Instagram ad advertising cybersecurity courses, because the job market is horrible here in the UK right now, and after some setbacks with my ACCA studies, I am seriously considering just giving up on trying to get into chartered accountancy because that path is closing many more doors for me. A course advisor rang me asking about the reasons I showed interest in the ad, then we had a long discussion about any questions I had, what the sector is apparently like, etc.
Some of the claims seem too good to be true, i.e. that it's an industry where you can afford to be picky, jobs outnumber people by almost 3 to 1, most jobs are remote, the provider boasts a 90%+ employment rate, I don't need programming experience, the most complex thing I'd be doing is running command prompt/powershell commands and scripts.
The firm itself seems legitimate. They offer CompTIA, Microsoft, Cisco, AWS and EC-Council certifications, have good review scores on Trustpilot, are a registered training provider and limited company in the UK, and are supposedly an assured service provider with the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC.) The courses they mentioned to me in their syllabus supposedly come to £4k and would take about six months.
- Am I right to be wary about what this training provider are offering?
- Do you require extensive programming knowledge or a computer science background to work in cybersecurity in any capacity? A friend with an IT background has told me that Python is useful in his field.
- Is the reality of IT and cybersecurity jobs in the UK (or in the West) far different from what has been painted to me?
24 votes -
Iceland has no armed forces, but that could change – the NATO member is reconsidering its defences in the age of Donald Trump
6 votes -
Fangbanger - Nobody (2025)
3 votes -
Interview with Google's Android leader Sameer Samat
6 votes -
Happy Bastille Day!
9 votes -
US aerospace company Beta Technologies' electric plane, ALIA CTOL, has completed a 200 kilometre journey between Sønderborg and Copenhagen airports
14 votes -
India's solar boom keeps coal use in check so far in 2025
13 votes -
Pebble Flow review - A towable RV made for electric vehicles - Fully integrated battery, motor, solar, and software
13 votes -
D&D - Involving the Gods; Boons and Banes
I'm in the planning stages of a custom setting for a new campaign I'm aiming to start next year with my current table. We're doing PF2's Kingmaker and AD&D's Temple of Elemental Evil in the...
I'm in the planning stages of a custom setting for a new campaign I'm aiming to start next year with my current table. We're doing PF2's Kingmaker and AD&D's Temple of Elemental Evil in the meantime.
The game is to be Viking themed, in that the starting locale and civilization will be structured in similar ways to the coastal Scandinavian settlements and there will be an on/off season. During the on season, they will board boats and sail many hundreds of miles across water to distant lands to find dungeons and ruins to loot, with a clock they have to keep an eye on; the expedition can only afford to be out for so long, and they need to ultimately make a profit. During the off season, they will be home and can spend time locally engaging in low-tier politics, explore the untamed parts of the continent, or both.
I'm intending for gods to play a more concrete and available part in this game and have been chewing on how best to represent that mechanically. I discovered that one of D&D 5e's supplements for a Magic: The Gathering setting, Mythic Odysseys of Theros, does something similar and has mechanics for tracking Piety with a given deity, which comes with boons at specific breakpoints. I liked the idea, though I'd be making my own boons for my pantheon rather than use these as-is, especially since I wouldn't be running this game in 5e, but rather in AD&D 1e.
I have a group chat with a few of my players that I can trust for this kind of thing to bounce ideas off of for various things, so I put this forth to them and got their thoughts. They universally thought the example boons from 5e were too personal and individual for the kind of stuff Norse gods would get up to, and there wasn't really a way to track a given deity's disdain of you in a similar manner. They also didn't like that you could track the Piety with a discrete score and could reliably measure when your next boon would be.
What we settled on doing is utilizing my custom tarot effects we're already doing in my regular AD&D campaign, but having it apply in certain regions or during certain stretches of adventure. This would allow for randomly coming across an avatar of a god and earning a minor boon or bane for assisting or denying them.
11 votes -
Múm – Mild At Heart (2025)
8 votes -
Calva Louise - IMPECCABLE (2025)
3 votes -
Learning to Be Me (1990)
23 votes -
The robot sculptors of Italy
12 votes -
Deep Rock Galactic: Survivor is gearing up for launch – adding a fully-fledged gear system when it hits 1.0 in September
23 votes