-
8 votes
-
The Expression Problem and its solutions
4 votes -
Researchers in Argentina found a bee's nest made entirely from plastic
18 votes -
What are you reading these days? #21
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk a bit about it. Notes: I am aiming to make a list of all the books mentioned...
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk a bit about it.
Notes: I am aiming to make a list of all the books mentioned in toplevel comments in these threads, see this wiki page. If you want to help with that, that'd really be appreciated, PM me please.
Past weeks: Week #1 · Week #2 · Week #3 · Week #4 · Week #5 · Week #6 · Week #7 · Week #8 · Week #9 · Week #10 · Week #11 · Week #12 · Week #13 · Week #14 · Week #15 · Week #16 · Week #17 · Week #18 · Week #19 · Week #20
18 votes -
A ranking of every ‘Black Mirror’ episode
8 votes -
Animation showing the hierarchy of health research since 1947
@drmohidkhan: This is amazing: the hierarchy of diseases studied in the last 70 years! From https://t.co/aANCZti0Io #research #clinicalresearch #letstalkaboutnets https://t.co/xWUe5Jq56P
3 votes -
The inside story of Europe's first narco-state
6 votes -
In 'Don't Wake The Night', You Have The Power Of A God Without The Omniscience
6 votes -
Facebook suspends app pre-installs on Huawei phones
9 votes -
Breaking the mold - RPG evolution and paradigm shifts in Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire
4 votes -
Have you guys read "Without Their Permission" by Alexis Ohanian?
It's about u/kn0thing (the reddit user, not the tildes user, I don't think they're related), the reddit co-founder, and how to start a startup, It's very interesting, you guys should check it out.
10 votes -
The fight for rent control
5 votes -
Poll: Most Texas voters believe business owners shouldn't be allowed to refuse service to LGBT people
25 votes -
Accused Darwin shooter tells court he is 'very sorry about what's happened'
6 votes -
The Fair Work Ombudsman has finalised its investigation into Uber and found its drivers to be independent contractors, not employees.
ABC news article: Uber drivers are not employees, Fair Work Ombudsman finds Fair Work Ombudsman's media release: Uber Australia investigation finalised
10 votes -
"Shipbreakers" A documentary about the people and communities involved in the dangerous and dirty industry of scrapping old ships. (2004, National Film Board)
9 votes -
Industrial methane emissions are 100 times higher than reported, researchers say
14 votes -
How to make wind power sustainable again
6 votes -
Frank Zappa - Amnerika
5 votes -
VULFPECK - Darwin Derby
8 votes -
The Toronto Raptors achieved a rare feat: intimidating the Golden State Warriors
4 votes -
Spotted: A Swarm Of Ladybugs So Huge, It Showed Up On National Weather Service Radar
12 votes -
Lesbian bar in Tokyo hit by transgender controversy
6 votes -
How Japan copied American culture and made it better
7 votes -
A Housing Economy for the Many: To deal with the housing crisis, we need to roll back the financialization of housing.
5 votes -
When is validation good/bad?
The recent topic about vote counts being removed has sprung up some discussion about the nature of validation. Given that the comments over there seem to address the idea in the context of Tildes...
The recent topic about vote counts being removed has sprung up some discussion about the nature of validation. Given that the comments over there seem to address the idea in the context of Tildes specifically, I figured I'd create an offshoot thread for a more philosophical discussion of the question at large.
- When is validation a good or bad thing?
- Is seeking validation fundamentally a bad thing?
- Is receiving validation for something great you've done fundamentally a good thing?
- What is your own relationship like with validation?
- Should platforms structurally encourage/discourage/balance methods for validation?
23 votes -
Amid safety complaints, police launch crackdown on illegal homeless camps in Kakaako
4 votes -
Barack and Michelle Obama sign Spotify deal to produce exclusive podcasts
4 votes -
Dr. John dies at age 77
6 votes -
AI: The Somnium Files | Official gameplay trailer (September 2019 release)
4 votes -
My Friend Pedro - Release date trailer (June 20)
5 votes -
US President Donald Trump dodges his own Benghazi: Pentagon quietly closes investigation into Niger ambush
7 votes -
Cryptocurrency pioneer Justin Sun pays US$4.57M for lunch with Warren Buffett
7 votes -
The number of votes on comments is no longer visible (for the next week)
I want to try another experiment today, and unlike some other times when I've referred to something as an "experiment" and ended up just leaving it around forever, I'll set a specific time limit...
I want to try another experiment today, and unlike some other times when I've referred to something as an "experiment" and ended up just leaving it around forever, I'll set a specific time limit on this one.
For the next week, the number of votes on comments will be completely hidden. This applies to everyone and all comments, including your own. I'm not even cheating for myself with admin permissions, I can't see comment vote counts any more either (unless I look it up manually in the database, but I won't do that).
There's no functional change: you can still vote and sorting will be affected exactly as before, but there's no way to see how many votes a particular comment has. Topic voting is staying unchanged, with the counts still visible.
I know that some of you are going to hate this. I think that I'm probably going to hate this. But I want to try it, because I think visible vote counts have both positive and negative effects, and I want to try and sort through those a little. Tildes is still small enough right now that almost all threads can be fully read through easily, so the voting isn't really that significant, and this is a good time to try it.
Here are the main things I'd like to think about, and want to hear from you about:
- In what cases does not being able to see the votes make things more difficult for you? Are there particular threads that you feel like you need to see the vote counts? Why?
- From a less functional perspective, when does not being able to see the counts feel better or worse?
- Can you think of other ways that we could accomplish the positive aspects (ones that are lost by hiding the counts), without showing an actual vote count?
Thanks, let me know what you think. Initial reactions/thoughts are good, but I'm also interested in your thoughts after a few days, once you've gotten a little more accustomed to it.
(And as is pretty usual with "official" posts now, I'm using this as a good time to top everyone back up to 10 invites)
128 votes -
The next chapter for Destiny 2 - base game becoming free-to-play on Sept 17 along with new expansion, moving from Battle.net to Steam, and more
13 votes -
European Drug Report 2019 directly contrasts US drug crisis, tells a story of relative calm
7 votes -
Keanu Reeves walks into the Chateau Marmont: an 'Always Be My Maybe' casting story
5 votes -
Hong Kong’s top court sides with gay civil servant in application for spousal benefit and tax assessment
8 votes -
Huntleys & Palmer: Clyde Built 5.0 Compilation (2019)
3 votes -
Peter Cat Recording Co. - I'm Home (2018)
3 votes -
Contentious Oregon climate plan takes lessons from California's mistakes
5 votes -
Japanese-style listening bars, where DJs spin carefully selected records for a hushed audience, are arriving in America. But truly appreciating them can take a little practice.
16 votes -
Eradicating ecocide
4 votes -
Denmark election: Social Democrats win as PM admits defeat
11 votes -
Stadia Connect 6.6.2019 - Pricing, game reveals, launch info and more
13 votes -
The Toronto Raptors are now the most valuable sports franchise in Canada, experts say
8 votes -
Improving the animal welfare movement’s image
9 votes -
'Tetris' turns thirty-five
11 votes -
Throwback Thursday: The Smallest of Bunnies
7 votes -
Behind the scenes with the hacktivists who took on Microsoft and the FBI
4 votes