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5 votes
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Dolmas [how to legally roll your own weed leaves]
In a nutshell (TL;DR) Dolmas are stuffed grape leaves or vegetables (commonly peppers or zucchini) steamed for several minutes inside a pot with about an inch of salted water (or broth) brought to...
In a nutshell (TL;DR)
Dolmas are stuffed grape leaves or vegetables (commonly peppers or zucchini) steamed for several minutes inside a pot with about an inch of salted water (or broth) brought to a boil, then kept at a low simmer with a lid. The stuffing components vary and are easily tweaked for vegan/vegetarians or allergies, but often include a mixture of herbs and spices, rice (cooked or uncooked), eggs as a binder, and/or ground meat.
For my next trick, I'll show you how to make them using only 4 words in the next sentence. Here's the entire process.
Grocery list (ingredients in bold are suitable for vegans. Ingredients with a † are optional.)
Dolmas
- † 30 - 50 fresh grape leaves or brined leaves
- 4 bell peppers
- 1 - 2 tablespoons olive oil for drizzling
- † juice of half a lemon
- water or stock enough to cover an inch in the pot
Filling
- 500g [1 lb] ground meat (pork, beef, and lamb are most common)
- † 180g [1 cup] uncooked white rice
- 10g [1 TBSP] kosher salt
- † 1 whole egg
- † 1 diced medium onion
- 2 - 4 tablespoons ground cumin
- 2 - 4 tablespoons ground paprika
- † 2 - 4 tablespoons ground coriander
- † 1 - 2 tablespoons ground turmeric
- 2 tablespoons freshly ground black pepper
- † 1 tablespoon dried red chili flakes
Vegan prep
Double the uncooked white rice and cook as directed on the package in water or vegetable stock with the salt, pepper, and spices. Let cool, then mix in diced onion (if using) and proceed with assembly and cooking as directed below, but reduce the total simmering time to 15 - 20 minutes.
Step-by-step (with higher res photos)
- Trim the stems off your fresh grape leaves and cut the tops off the bell peppers (if using), removing the stem and seedy core. Retain the cut piece as a "lid" for each pepper.
- Add your stuffing ingredients to a large bowl and mix them all thoroughly with a spoon or clean wet hands.
- Hold a prepared leaf centered on your palm underside (veiny side) up and place a tablespoon of filling towards the center of the leaf.
- Fold the left bottom part of the leaf up horizontally and press onto the wet filling.
- Fold the remaining left half vertically over the filling and press gently to crease.
- Fold the right bottom part to cover the remaining exposed filling.
- Fold the remaining right half of the leaf over the left.
- Firmly roll the filled part of the wrapping up once. Press to shape into a rough cylinder.
- Continue rolling until the end point of the leaf can be tucked under on a flat surface.
- Repeat for the other leaves, but retain enough to cover each pepper lid.
- Stuff the bell peppers with the remaining filling and top with a lid and a leaf to cover the stem hole.
- Place the peppers upright in a large pot, leaning them against the sides if necessary.
- Layer the stuffed leaves on the bottom of the pot between the peppers, flap end facing down.
- Add cool water (or broth) just to cover the layer of wrapped leaves, or at least an inch. Don't worry if a few float up.
- Drizzle with olive oil, grind some black pepper on, and add a couple good pinches of salt to the water - if you're only using bell peppers, squeeze in the juice of half a lemon to mimic the flavor the grape leaves would've added during cooking.
- Bring to a boil over medium high heat, then add a lid and back the heat down just enough enough to simmer.
- Let simmer for at least 45 minutes (60+ if using bell peppers) or until the meat is cooked and the rice soft enough to eat.
Storage
Store with the broth in the cooking pot for under a day. For longer, refrigerate and reheat on the stove or microwave. You can experiment with freezing cooked grape leaf dolmas and steaming them to thaw and re-cook, but I've never tried - they don't last long enough in my house.
Sourcing grape leaves
To identify a potential vine, look for curly forked tendrils that climb and clusters of tiny immature green grapes. This source has good photos and background info.
Wild grapevines grow in many locations that are conducive to growing wine grapes. They often thrive in moist habitats located next to streams or riverbanks, but can also be found in forested areas, meadows, along roadsides and are especially fond of any kind of man-made fencing.
Or you can get them in a jar online or in the international section of your local large grocery store.
NB: Do your research and be careful when harvesting wild plants. The dangerous lookalikes to wild grapes are Canada moonseed (Menispermum canadense) and porcelain berry (Ampelopsis glandulosa var. brevipendunculata)
Storytime?
What? Does this look like a typically self-indulgent food blogger post florid with vapid musings only tangentially related to the recipe because longer word count pushes such entries to top SEO results? ...ok, just this once.
Used to work with an older Iraqi watchmaker who came to the country as a highly-skilled refugee. Sometimes I'd give him a ride to the shop from his apartment, and in limited English he'd insist on cooking us dinner before I left. When he visited another co-worker's place, he noticed wild grape leaves on several vines growing out of the property, and collected them. I saw the leaf pile on the counter and asked what he was going to do with them, and if he was sure they were edible. "Yes, yes! For dolmas. I'll show you," he said, removing a pack of ground pork and bell peppers from the fridge.
For the next couple summers, I made dolmas from the wild grapes in the neighborhood, and now I have good neighbors who allow me to prune and harvest excess leaves from their fruiting grapevines during the season.
9 votes -
Warren Buffet's public image is quite at odds with his investing habits.
6 votes -
Is there currently any way to query data from Tildes? (such as JSON, RSS) For those of us who would like to look into developing third-party apps for this site.
Basically what the title says. I might like to look into making a third party Android/iOS app.
11 votes -
[Heroes of the Storm] New Map: Alterac Pass - Explanation with Commentary by NotParadox
7 votes -
STUMPS - Piggyback (2018)
3 votes -
New game in the Diablo universe leaked through Blizzard job posting
https://careers.blizzard.com/en-us/openings/oNiH7fwD archive.is mirror We're working on a new, unannounced Diablo project. Are you a skilled Dungeon Artist? Come work with us, and together we will...
https://careers.blizzard.com/en-us/openings/oNiH7fwD archive.is mirror
We're working on a new, unannounced Diablo project. Are you a skilled Dungeon Artist? Come work with us, and together we will build something exceptional.
- Work directly with level design to build atmospheric dungeons with a focus on composition, detail and mood, while ensuring that the gameplay space is readable.
- Work with Lead Environment Artist and the Art Director to ensure all environments are meeting the high-quality bar Blizzard is known for.
- Experience working with a lead artist or art director in developing a unique and cohesive modeling and texturing style for environment assets
Definitely looks like a whole new game in the pipeline. Any other dungeon crawler fans on ~tildes so far? I think I've got 300+ hours in Diablo 3 alone, let alone 1 and 2.
What do you want in a new Diablo, what do you definitely not want?
8 votes -
Firefox 62 Nightlies: Improving DNS Privacy in Firefox
Firefox recently introduced DNS over HTTPS (DoH) and Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR) in nightly builds for Firefox 62. DoH and TRR are intended to help mitigate these potential privacy and...
Firefox recently introduced DNS over HTTPS (DoH) and Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR) in nightly builds for Firefox 62.
DoH and TRR are intended to help mitigate these potential privacy and security concerns:
- Untrustworthy DNS resolvers tracking your requests, or tampering with responses from DNS servers.
- On-path routers tracking or tampering in the same way.
- DNS servers tracking your DNS requests.
DNS over HTTPs (DoH) encrypts DNS requests and responses, protecting against on-path eavesdropping, tracking, and response tampering.
Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR) allows Firefox to use a DNS resolver that's different from your machines network settings. You can use any recursive resolver that is compatible with DoH, but it should be a trusted resolver (one that won't sell users’ data or trick users with spoofed DNS). Mozilla is partnering with Cloudflare (but not using the 1.1.1.1 address) as the initial default TRR, however it's possible to use another 3rd party TRR or run your own.
Cloudflare is providing a recursive resolution service with a pro-user privacy policy. They have committed to throwing away all personally identifiable data after 24 hours, and to never pass that data along to third-parties. And there will be regular audits to ensure that data is being cleared as expected.
Additionally, Cloudflare will be doing QNAME minimization where the DNS resolver no longer sends the full original QNAME (foo.bar.baz.example.com) to the upstream name server. Instead it will only include the label for the zone it's trying to resolve.
For example, let's assume the DNS resolver is trying to find foo.bar.baz.example.com, and already knows that ns1.nic.example.com is authoritative for .example.com, but does not know a more specific authoritative name server.
- It will send the query for just baz.example.com to ns1.nic.example.com which returns the authoritative name server for baz.example.com.
- The resolver then sends a query for bar.baz.example.com to the nameserver for baz.example.com, and gets a response with the authoritative nameserver for bar.baz.example.com
- Finally the resolver sends the query for foo.bar.baz.example.com to bar.baz.example.com's nameserver.
In doing this the full queried name (foo.bar.baz.example.com) is not exposed to intermediate name servers (bar.baz.example.com, baz.example.com, example.com, or even the .com root nameservers)
Collectively DNS over HTTPs (DoH), Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR), and QNAME Minimization are a step in the right direction, this does not fix DNS related data leaks entirely:
After you do the DNS lookup to find the IP address, you still need to connect to the web server at that address. To do this, you send an initial request. This request includes a server name indication, which says which site on the server you want to connect to. And this request is unencrypted.
That means that your ISP can still figure out which sites you’re visiting, because it’s right there in the server name indication. Plus, the routers that pass that initial request from your browser to the web server can see that info too.So How do I enable it?
DoH and TRR can be enabled in Firefox 62 or newer by going to about:config:- Set network.trr.mode to 2
- Here's the possible network.trr.mode settings:
- 0 - Off (default): Use standard native resolving only (don't use TRR at all)
- 1 - Race: Native vs. TRR. Do them both in parallel and go with the one that returns a result first.
- 2 - First: Use TRR first, and only if the name resolve fails use the native resolver as a fallback.
- 3 - Only: Only use TRR. Never use the native (after the initial setup).
- 4 - Shadow: Runs the TRR resolves in parallel with the native for timing and measurements but uses only the native resolver results.
- 5 - Off by choice: This is the same as 0 but marks it as done by choice and not done by default.
- Here's the possible network.trr.mode settings:
- Set network.trr.uri to your DoH Server:
- Cloudflare’s is https://mozilla.cloudflare-dns.com/dns-query
(but you can use any DoH compliant endpoint)
- Cloudflare’s is https://mozilla.cloudflare-dns.com/dns-query
- The DNS Tab on about:networking will show which names were resolved using TRR via DoH.
Links:
A cartoon intro to DNS over HTTPS
Improving DNS Privacy in Firefox
DNS Query Name Minimization to Improve Privacy
TRR PreferencesI'm not affiliated with Mozilla or Firefox, I just thought ~ would find this interesting.
13 votes -
Just another first impressions/suggestions post
TL;DR: First impressions and suggestions: infinite scrolling; comment box position; collapse comment button too small; comment previews; vote button position; search function; expandable...
TL;DR: First impressions and suggestions: infinite scrolling; comment box position; collapse comment button too small; comment previews; vote button position; search function; expandable images/videos; remembering collapsed comments; spoiler tags; saving comments/posts; ninja edit; and keyboard hotkeys. Really enjoying my time here! Tildes has been growing on me.
Been browsing the website for a couple of days now and wanted to give my first impressions. To begin with I wanna say I'm enjoying Tildes a lot. At first I thought it was a cool idea, but thought I wouldn't really get into it too much since I'm quite fond of mindlessly browsing Reddit for simple funny content. This being more discussion oriented didn't really fit my usage. Turns out I was wrong lol Of course I had to force myself to use the website initially, but I quickly started browsing Tildes naturally and participating in threads and discussions. While I still browse Reddit, I've been coming over to Tildes whenever I can pay a little bit more attention to what I'm reading. Anyways, without further ado, here are my observations as far as features go:
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First thing I noticed was the lack of infinite scrolling (having to click "next" to go to the next page).
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As I found my way to the introductions post, I came across the comment box position problem, which has been discussed at length.
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Browsing through the comments, I found that the button to collapse comments is too small. I think extending it vertically so that you can click anywhere on the left side of the comment to hide it would be ideal. Many subreddits have done that and it works great. Here's an example from /r/Overwatch (you can click anywhere on the yellow area to hide the first comment).
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I also think a comment preview would be really useful and I've seen some other posts about it too.
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Here's a potentially controversial one: a more obvious vote button. As I browsed more, I got to read more about the intentions behind Tildes and where its efforts are, so I can see how this would go against the general mindset of not turning this into a high score game. That said, this is a first impressions post and so it deserves mentioning.
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Obligatory search function mention. I know everyone is aware of this, I'm just going through my list.
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Another controversial one: expandable images/videos. I've read the discussions about it and I'm aware of the Reddit-ifying potential. With that said, I wanna play the devil's advocate here and say that images/videos are not necessarily low quality shitposts (case in point, the image I linked above to illustrate a suggestion). They are bound to be used and linked anywhere on the internet and I think this is a reasonable feature to have. In my mind, it's not the use of silly images that make a community low-effort, but the other way around. With the mindset we have here, I'd argue that images and videos would probably be used "appropriately".
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Eventually, when I went back to threads I had already visited, I noticed the comments were all expanded again. Remembering hidden comments is something I consider really important, even more on a discussion focused board where you often go back to old threads to keep the conversation going.
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I might have missed this one, but spoiler tags are definitely needed. I tried poking around to see if Markdown had built in spoiler tags, but I didn't find anything. If this already exists and I just overlooked it, I'm sorry.
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Another important feature for me is saving posts and comments for future reference.
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Pretty minor, but having a "ninja edit" feature would be nice. A grace period after submitting a post/comment where you can edit it without it being tagged as edited. This is useful for correcting typos or when you immediately change your mind about the wording of your post.
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Another minor one would be keyboard hotkeys. I use RES hotkeys all the time to browse Reddit. Voting (which might not be particularly desirable here), hiding comments, expanding images (not very relevant unless this gets implemented), saving posts/comments (damn, none of these are relevant with the website as is) are all great to have mapped to the keyboard.
This ended up being a longer post than I expected. To finish things off, I'd like to say I'm really glad someone is willing to put time and effort into this. I like the ideals behind Tildes, the privacy concerns and the non-profit choice. If this takes half as much of my free time as Reddit used to, I'll definitely drop a donation!
11 votes -
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Tetris Effect | Announce trailer
11 votes -
Star Wars actress Kelly Marie Tran deletes Instagram posts after abuse
18 votes -
Probably my best Genji ult against a row full of tanks (Overwatch)
7 votes -
You can now set a (global) default sort/period for topic listings + initial default changed to "activity, last 24 hours"
As we talked about in the daily discussion yesterday (which was great, thanks for all the feedback), I've got a few changes coming soon that will help people customize what they're seeing. The...
As we talked about in the daily discussion yesterday (which was great, thanks for all the feedback), I've got a few changes coming soon that will help people customize what they're seeing.
The first piece of these is out now—changes to the way topic listings are sorted:
- I've changed the default sort for the site from "activity, all time" to "activity, last 24 hours". This will mean that the same older threads aren't constantly getting bumped back up to the top of the site, but you can still easily change the time period drop down back to "all time" if you want to see if any older ones are active too.
- You can now set your own default sort and period, which (currently) applies to both your home page and individual groups. To do this, change the options on the home page (not inside a group) to whatever you want to use as your default, and a "Set as default" button will appear after the time period dropdown.
I'll be adding the ability to set separate defaults for each group before too much longer as well, and I'll also make a daily discussion post a little later.
61 votes -
The flying car backed by Google's cofounder just got a big update, and people can pilot it with less than an hour's training
5 votes -
"Most Voted Topics" ordering time limit
I browse by activity, like most of us, but every couple days I give a look to the most voted topics to see how the community is shaping the consolidated content because once we are at a more...
I browse by activity, like most of us, but every couple days I give a look to the most voted topics to see how the community is shaping the consolidated content because once we are at a more finalized code (trust, tags, etc) I think that the most voted content should reflect the most high quality as well.
I just realize that the default timing is 24h timespan. This means that the list show the most voted, created in the last 24h.
It is my opinion that on tildes we should give content more time to be consumed. We don't need the frenetic feeding of Reddit. Some people could just not open tildes today but maybe tomorrow, and lose good content with this default timespan.
I suppose registered users will be able to customise their home page default filtering but as "soon" we should open for reading without login, we should think about who just come by to read and is not registered (yet).
What's your opinion on this?
7 votes -
America may soon face its biggest labor strike in decades
18 votes -
What's your favorite Spongebob episode?
There are so many unique episodes in the series and a lot humor in my life originated from Spongebob. I'd love to hear what others see as their favorite episode and how that humor carries over...
There are so many unique episodes in the series and a lot humor in my life originated from Spongebob. I'd love to hear what others see as their favorite episode and how that humor carries over into your everyday humor.
My favorite episode is Shanghaied, there are so many subtle jokes in the episode that will always make me laugh. Easily my favorite line is the interaction between Squidward and Spongebob as Squidward is climbing the anchor rope up to the Dutchman's Ship; "Well, I'm gonna get to the bottom of this thing. Wouldn't that be the top?".
11 votes -
Here's what Symmetra's rework looks like right now in Overwatch
10 votes -
Tildes effect
For the past few months I felt less and less inclined to engage in conversation on Reddit and other discussions platforms. The risk of any expression being met with a (severely) negative response...
For the past few months I felt less and less inclined to engage in conversation on Reddit and other discussions platforms. The risk of any expression being met with a (severely) negative response is just too great. I don't know if it was always like this and that I just don't find it worth it any more or if there is an actual trend of people being more of an asshole more of the time to each other online.
I've only joined Tildes a couple of days ago, and enjoy most of my time here. I've also noticed that I'm now more active again on other platforms. It's made me want to express myself again. I put more effort in my contributions. I'm not necessarily getting more pleasant responses, but there are fewer negative ones, I think.
Does this sound familiar to any of you?
50 votes -
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’s new trailer looks incredible
11 votes -
Musk promises manufacturing, self-driving, battery breakthroughs—and profits
5 votes -
The malicious use of artificial intelligence
5 votes -
Brainstorming Trust System Ideas
I'm sure this thread exists somewhere already but in my searching I couldn't find it. My hope is that we can brainstorm some good ideas in addition to what deimos has already proposed. The recent...
I'm sure this thread exists somewhere already but in my searching I couldn't find it. My hope is that we can brainstorm some good ideas in addition to what deimos has already proposed.
The recent discussion about lobste.rs reminded me of the fact that they use an invite system to limit the effectiveness of spammers and manage an invite tree to see the relationship of user accounts. A modified invite tree system would go a long way to help the trust system be more effective while not being stifling.
While it (unmodified strict invite system) would definitely make it more difficult for people to join the site the benefits of such a system cannot be overlook. Even a naive system where we would limit new accounts to require current users to "vouch" for new ones would have noticable benefits later on down the line. The main benefit of this is that users who are a source of consistently inviting troublesome accounts could be held responsible. The added benefit is that you would be a little more conscientious of the people you invite as it would affect your reputation as well.
The naive approach to this system would be a strict invite tree-based site. The only way you could get an new account on tildes is to get an invite from a current user of tildes. Like lobste.rs this woud be a very good deterrent but also (possibly unnecessarily) stifle growth. Such a system is a good starting point but I believe since a lot of effort will be put into making the trust system effective, we can do better if we put in some creative brainpower and work.
Possible ideas/tweaks for an invite tree-based system :
Parent account = person who invited user
Child account = person who was invited- Users could create new accounts without an invite but would be severly limited in the rate they could post content (1 post a day), make comments (5 comments a day), etc. At any point they could be "vouched" for by a parent account with reputation (become child account) and those limitations would be lifted as though they had an invite from the beginning.
- User reputation would be impacted by child accounts (invite more, more likely to be punished as a result of children's bad behavior) to discourage individuals from becoming invite mills without repercussions.
- If a parent account is banned all child accounts would be demoted to "uninvited" status, child accounts would be encouraged to build up reputation to lose child status and become an independent (reputation-wise) parent account. Accounts would still be historically linked to parent accounts to pinpoint bad behavior down the line if it occurs.
Obviously a lot of effort has already been made by people a lot smarter than me to make such systems work and I think we can draw on that for tildes as well. I tried to look for some peer-reviewed papers and graduate level work about creating such a system but didn't come up with anything useful, perhaps you'll have better luck.
11 votes -
Two Arguments About The Goldfinch - Article
3 votes -
On the rise and fall of Delicious, the online bookmarking service
Online/digital bookmarking and excerpting is something that really interests me because I think most if not all existing options for it fall very short of the functionality I wish existed, and...
Online/digital bookmarking and excerpting is something that really interests me because I think most if not all existing options for it fall very short of the functionality I wish existed, and that I think could exist.
One of the first online bookmarking services I used was Delicious, and for a few years it was irreplaceable for me. However it languished after it was bought by Yahoo and then resold, and since then I’ve observed its slow and steady decline from afar.
The purpose of this post is twofold:
- I want to know the current state of online bookmarking for you. I’m curious to know if it’s as much of an unmet need in anyone else’s life as it seems to be in mine.
- Were you once a bookmarker and gave up due to the seeming futility of it?
- Have you never been interested in bookmarking and/or don’t see the point of it?
- Are you an active bookmarker, and if so what tools or workflows do you use, and what kinds of content do you bookmark?
- I thought I would share some of the research I did into Delicious’ various design iterations over the years via the Internet Archive. It’s a cool birds-eye survey of how the service’s ethos, goals and design changed over time. Beyond the value it provides as a case study, I think there are greater lessons and insights that can be gained from observing the rise and fall of what was once such a beloved online service.
- del.icio.us | 16 September 2005
- del.icio.us | 20 December 2005
- del.icio.us | 11 October 2006
- Delicious.com | 11 May 2011
- Delicious.com | 27 November 2011
- Delicious.com | 12 May 2012
- Delicious.com | 30 August 2012
- Delicious.com | 14 October 2013
- The period between 2013 and 2016 seems to be one endless loading screen from the archive’s perspective
- Delicious.com | 15 March 2016
- At some point in 2016, they went back to their original domain name – del.icio.us | 14 May 2016
As a sidenote, I also found this explanation of Delicious' approach to tagging to be very interesting: del.icio.us/help/tags | 21 February 2006
I hadn't realized that Delicious was actually the first to introduce the concept of user-controlled tags for bookmarks:
When Delicious was first launched, it was the first use of the term "tag" in the modern sense, and it was the first explicit opportunity where website users were given the ability to add their own tags to their bookmarks so that they could more easily search for them at a later time. This major breakthrough was not much noticed as most thought the application at the time "cool" but obvious. – Source
Edit: I hope it's alright to edit a post this many hours after having submitted it. There were a few important updates that I really wanted to include here.
18 votes - I want to know the current state of online bookmarking for you. I’m curious to know if it’s as much of an unmet need in anyone else’s life as it seems to be in mine.
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Move the "votes" string on your own posts?
Just a minor UI thing - other people's vote count/vote button is on the bottom of their posts, while yours is on top. Just a bit jarring going from one to the other, is there any reason your...
Just a minor UI thing - other people's vote count/vote button is on the bottom of their posts, while yours is on top. Just a bit jarring going from one to the other, is there any reason your post's vote count can't be in the same place?
3 votes -
Thoughts on putting the comment box at the beginning of Tildes threads?
It's a slight inconvenience to have to scroll past dozens of comments just to reply to the thread. What do you guys think? Does having the ability to quickly jump into the conversation stifle...
It's a slight inconvenience to have to scroll past dozens of comments just to reply to the thread. What do you guys think? Does having the ability to quickly jump into the conversation stifle discussion? I can see if some people feel that it should be necessary to read a more posts before posting in the thread, but I also think that a lot of people will just hit the END key or scroll past comments without really paying attention to them (if they just want to quickly reply).
12 votes -
The Peacock Of My Town
Let me preface this by saying that I live in upstate NY, which is far from anywhere a peacock should be. Well, a decade ago, our local zoo closed. Last year, my stepmom saw a male peacock around...
Let me preface this by saying that I live in upstate NY, which is far from anywhere a peacock should be.
Well, a decade ago, our local zoo closed. Last year, my stepmom saw a male peacock around the area. A week ago, now that i'm living with her, I see him. Today, I decided to feed the poor guy some crack corn like we feed our chickens. The guy ate right out of my hand! I hope he's doing okay, my new buddy.
5 votes -
One year later, did Sony keep its E3 2017 promises?
3 votes -
Microsoft sinks data centre off Orkney
8 votes -
A better way to trace neuronal pathways: Moving forward by moving backward more effectively
8 votes -
How the brain performs flexible computations: New neural model reveals how the brain adapts to new information.
7 votes -
What are you favorite albums from the 1970s?
I always like Tapestry by Carole King, Tusk by Fleetwood Mac, and of course the first six Eagles albums.
10 votes -
Idris Ackamoor and the Pyramids -- Sunset (2018)
6 votes -
Small UI Improvement: Increase Gap Between Collapse Comment & Username
I'm really enjoying the mobile interface, if there is one improvement I would like to see be made is the ability to quickly swipe through on a touch interface and collapse comment threads that I...
I'm really enjoying the mobile interface, if there is one improvement I would like to see be made is the ability to quickly swipe through on a touch interface and collapse comment threads that I want to skip. I'm using a larger phone, and have pretty big fingers, so I'm constantly hitting the username and accidentally begin reading their post history. Maybe I just have poor hand eye coordination, but the collapse button is small and really close to the edge of the screen.
This could easily be remedied in a couple ways, by either adding a couple more spaces between the button and username, or by making the button rectangular instead of square.
9 votes -
The technology fetish
What excites humans the most today is technological progress. Faster computers, better autonomous driving, colourful displays - a preoccuppation with 'means'. There seems to be much lesser...
What excites humans the most today is technological progress. Faster computers, better autonomous driving, colourful displays - a preoccuppation with 'means'. There seems to be much lesser excitement and study among popular consiousness with what is done with all these tech. Your smartphone is a technological marvel - but what are you doing with it?
This seems to be in similar veins as the idea of human progress from stone age to bronze to iron. "Stone age people used primitive technology, bronze age better, iron age the best. There are still peoples in the world who are still stuck in the stone age".
But this is a biased perception of human endevours. What matters is what humans did, not what they did it with. The incas, mayas and aztecs were 'stuck' in stone technology. But they built marvelous civilizations, buildings and cultures rivalling the greatest achievements in the rest of the world in their time.
Advancing technology is a fetish. One in pursuit of which we forget what matters is what we do with it. But there seems to be little of that going on. Most of the doing is for improving technology. And most of it in a fetishistic attempt to get out of the ditch we dug ourselves in from past technological 'progress'.
Today, humans are like a bunch of sculptures spending most of their days dicussing chisel technology rather than sculpting.
18 votes -
Anyone pick up Memories of Mars?
3 votes -
How many of you are intersted in astronomy/stargazing and telescopes?
I think it would be nice if Tildes had a community in which we could discuss these subjects. Stargazing is also a pretty engaging hobby.
9 votes -
My game, Levantera, released on Steam back in April. Here is the release trailer for it!
6 votes -
Looking better every day!
I haven't logged in for a week or so (~tildes admin can tell me when I last lurked ;p) and it's looking better and better! Reddits, especially worldnews, are looking more and more stagnant and...
I haven't logged in for a week or so (~tildes admin can tell me when I last lurked ;p) and it's looking better and better!
Reddits, especially worldnews, are looking more and more stagnant and Hacker News is getting stale too. Whereas tildes is looking nicer and nicer. Keep up the awesome work :D
6 votes -
If wages are to rise, workers need more bargaining power
7 votes -
Vote system theory
I guess there has been a lot of deliberation on the ramifications of reddit's upvote/downvote system, and voting for topics. How do you all feel about the way reddit aggregates karma and shows...
I guess there has been a lot of deliberation on the ramifications of reddit's upvote/downvote system, and voting for topics.
How do you all feel about the way reddit aggregates karma and shows totals for users?
How does this impact submissions and and commentary?
How does the voting system here change post and comment visibility?Interested to see everyone's take on this.
6 votes -
My oatmeal says to add salt to the water before boiling
But my grits say to add the salt with the grits, after the water boils. Why the difference? Always been curious about this.
6 votes -
If NFL Teams were Mega Man Robot Masters
4 votes -
Bank details, TFNs, personal details of job applicants potentially compromised in major PageUp data breach
5 votes -
Stan boss backs Aussie content but says quotas 'not required'
3 votes -
Default Topic View - Expanded Top Level Replies, Collapsed Lower Level Replies
I'd like to suggest that the default view for topics look something like the image below, with expanded top level replies, and collapsed lower level replies. And have an option under each reply...
I'd like to suggest that the default view for topics look something like the image below, with expanded top level replies, and collapsed lower level replies. And have an option under each reply that would expand the next level of replies below it, continuing this behavior on down to the lowest level comments. There could even be an "Expand all below this comment", although I don't show that in this illustration.
That would all readers to quickly read through many or all of the direct responses to the topic before deciding which responses to dig into deeper. It would also help direct responses which aren't listed near the top get more exposure. The site could even be coded to delay loading lower level comments until an expand link is clicked, reducing page sizes and improving load times.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/0u6vuopufierijp/TildesDefaultThreadDisplay.png?dl=0
6 votes -
Apologies if this has been requested previously: is there a possibility of a comment preview?
I'm not very adept with markdown, and it's helpful to see what my comment will look like before I post it with my borked formatting.
5 votes -
What's your favourite music to paint to?
Music and art were meant to be together. I love listening to stuff like weather report, steely dan, ozric tentacles and tycho while I'm painting.
4 votes -
How do you manage your tasks, keep focused
I'm currently in a "how can I improve and refocus" and wanted to see what this group thinks since either seems we have some pretty thoughtful and techy people here. I have toyed around for years...
I'm currently in a "how can I improve and refocus" and wanted to see what this group thinks since either seems we have some pretty thoughtful and techy people here.
I have toyed around for years with different techniques. I got really into GTD and used several apps focused on that even writing my own JavaScript app to use with Google sheets.
I've used spreadsheets, OneNote, Wunderlist, plain text files.
What do you use to keep your tasks moving forward and how do you use these tools to manage your tasks and get work done? I found spreadsheets are nice because you can do a lot of scratch work but it's hard to "check them off' but many "check them off" tools don't give you a lot of scratch workspace. OneNote is cool but I can't stand the Microsoft environment and it doesn't seem to give a lot of indication how best to use the tool. Maybe I should do a training....
10 votes