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10 votes
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EA Access and EA Games on Steam
16 votes -
Is it OK if someone wants to live for years on a bench?
6 votes -
The material science of metal 3D printing
5 votes -
The 1619 Project by the New York Times
4 votes -
Blizzard confirms departure of veteran developers amid cancelled projects
27 votes -
Twisted - Kevin Macleod
5 votes -
‘Star Wars’ setback: ‘Game Of Thrones’ duo David Benioff and D.B. Weiss exit trilogy
15 votes -
Why your cell phone is silent: Federal Communications Commission says 874 sites are down in California. They lack backup power
9 votes -
Text Editing Hates You Too
14 votes -
Why palladium is suddenly a more precious metal
4 votes -
fornclake is developing an open source GBC Zelda clone with online multiplayer
17 votes -
Migrating Russian eagles run up huge data roaming charges
14 votes -
Letterpress business card printing with five Pantone colors
5 votes -
Financial incentives are weaker than social incentives but very important anyway
5 votes -
"#GameofThrones was basically an expensive film school [for us]"—David Benioff & D.B Weiss
18 votes -
One Year of ProtonDB
16 votes -
House Will Vote To Formalize Impeachment Procedures In Ongoing Inquiry
9 votes -
What do you want to do/be when you grow up?
"What do you want to do/be when you grow up?" is a question we've all been confronted with, willingly or not, throughout our lives. It's intercultural, except for the increasingly rare instances...
"What do you want to do/be when you grow up?" is a question we've all been confronted with, willingly or not, throughout our lives. It's intercultural, except for the increasingly rare instances where it's culturally or familialy expected that you'll continue a family trade.
And then there are those of us who just can't pick the one true direction, or thought we had it right for a while, then abruptly got bored/burnt out and had to find a new career or calling. I've personally had no fewer than eight different or only tangentially related "careers", sometimes overlapping with hobbies, and I'm floundering a bit to find the next one.
I was just introduced to the "multipotentialite" concept today - see the TED Talk, Why Some of Us Don't Have One True Calling for details, and https://puttylike.com/ for the speaker's site and book information. As the video mentions, polymathy was once highly respected in the Renaissance, but it's been devalued in favor of increasingly narrow specializations in the industrial and information economies.
This thread is for the bewildered, the career peregrinators wandering with or without aim, who've been branded as flakes or losers, or are suffering anxiety/depression because the heavens haven't opened up and rained down purpose and meaningful work.
Tell your story to the extent you're comfortable, ask questions and seek support.
- What is it like to discover a passion?
- What is it like to find yourself losing that passion?
- How did you accommodate the change?
- What carried over successfully from prior careers?
- Did you experience pressure to stay with just one thing?
- Have you had disrupted relationships with family, partners, or friends as a result of these changes?
- Do you feel that you've made unique contributions due to broad experience and/or interdisciplinary knowledge?
- Do you feel discriminated against in the job market for lacking a clear career path?
- Did you suffer damaging mental distress before or as a result of making a career change?
- Is it exciting or frightening to make a change, and has it become more or less so with repeated changes?
This is also open to the people who were seemingly born knowing precisely what they wanted to do - were you successful in pursuing it, or did you have to make accommodations, perhaps discovering something else?
20 votes -
The most gender-switched names in US history
9 votes -
Killing time during the Trojan War with Ajax and Achilles | Curator's Corner S05 E10
4 votes -
The iPod silhouettes
6 votes -
Buried in ice - The Franklin Expedition cemetary
4 votes -
The self-hammering probe on NASA’s Mars lander can’t seem to actually dig into the ground
10 votes -
The evolution of urban planning in ten diagrams
12 votes -
Beyond headlines?
Tildes is much like Hacker News and Reddit in that article previews are limited to just headlines. (Well, there are tags, but they're de-emphasized since they're hidden by default.) While they are...
Tildes is much like Hacker News and Reddit in that article previews are limited to just headlines. (Well, there are tags, but they're de-emphasized since they're hidden by default.)
While they are very concise, a problem with headlines is that we rely on them too much. Even good ones don't really tell you what the article is about. In cases where it's hard to read the article (because it's paywalled or whatever) the conversation can be based mostly on the headline rather than the substance of the article. On Hacker News there are often mini-disputes about whether the headline is clickbait or not, and what's a better headline. "Headline is misleading" is a pretty common complaint.
I'm wondering if we could add a bit more information? One possibility would be a "Subtitle" field. Lots of articles have subtitles that are somewhat more informative, and doing a copy-paste is pretty easy.
Another would be to have a "pull quote" field. This requires a bit of editorial judgement by the submitter about what's the best pull quote, but I think that's okay. It's still copy-paste so at least they don't have to summarize anything in their own words.
For the last few days I've been posting a pull quote as the first comment whenever I post an article, and I think it works fairly well, except that the summary says "1 comment" when actually nobody commented - it's just the pull quote. Also, having an explicit field for the pull quote might allow better UI possibilities, like you could put them under the headline in the topic list.
18 votes -
Andrew Yang was groomed for a high-paying job at an elite law firm. He lasted five months.
9 votes -
Google owner Alphabet has made an offer to acquire wearable device maker Fitbit
9 votes -
When Amazon Web Services, Azure, or GCP becomes the competition
7 votes -
Bruce Soord - All This Will Be Yours (2019)
3 votes -
Three "programming" board games: Lovelace & Babbage, Quirky Circuits, and Pixoid
9 votes -
Overwatch 2 to feature PvE, new map, at least one new hero
8 votes -
Robin Sloan: Three things I learned about games while contributing writing to Neo Cab
4 votes -
Max Cooper - Repetition (2019)
4 votes -
Pando sold to BuySellAds - Sarah Lacy reflects on 8 years building the company, and 20 years in tech journalism in Silicon Valley
6 votes -
Dark color—Things you should know about color when adopting dark mode
6 votes -
Tether: The story so far
7 votes -
I've been accepted into GitHub Sponsors - if you have a Patreon pledge or other recurring donation to Tildes, I'd really appreciate it if you could move it over
When GitHub Sponsors was announced back in May, I applied immediately, and have just recently been accepted. This is now, by far, the best way available to make a recurring donation to Tildes:...
When GitHub Sponsors was announced back in May, I applied immediately, and have just recently been accepted.
This is now, by far, the best way available to make a recurring donation to Tildes:
- They aren't currently charging any fees, even for payment processing.
- They're matching up to $5000 in contributions for the first year.
On Patreon, about 10% of every donation is taken between processing fees, Patreon's own fees, and PayPal (for transferring the money out to the bank). Even without the matching, donating through GitHub instead means that 10% more of your money (all of what you're donating) will come to Tildes, and until we exhaust the matching it's more like 2.2x. For example, a $5/month donation on Patreon results in Tildes receiving about $4.50, but through GitHub it will be $10.
So if you have an existing recurring donation (or would like to start donating), I'd really appreciate if you could do it through GitHub Sponsors. Tildes is a non-profit, and its only source of income is user donations—there's no advertising, no investors, and I'm not selling your data or anything else (and none of those will ever change). Donations are what makes it possible for me to keep working on the site. For some more info, please see the Donate page on the Docs site (which I'll update soon with info about GitHub Sponsors).
The page is here: https://github.com/sponsors/Deimos
A few quick notes:
- I believe you'll need a GitHub account to sponsor through here, but it's quick to create one.
- You have the choice of making your sponsorship private or public.
- You have to choose one of the pre-defined "tiers", but I tried to create ones that match the most common donations. If you need a different amount that isn't available, let me know and I can probably add it. I still have a couple of slots left for more tiers.
- If you're currently donating through Patreon, please remember to cancel your pledge through there if you move it over to GitHub. The next Patreon payment will happen on November 1.
I'm also working on a couple things to make the amount that's currently being donated to Tildes public, and I hope to have that available later this week (and hopefully with a much higher number because of the GitHub matching!).
Thanks very much, and if there's anything confusing about the process or if you have any questions, please let me know.
114 votes -
New LA museum spotlights Hollywood costumes, from Dracula cape to Spider Woman dress
7 votes -
Australia wants to use face recognition for porn age verification
22 votes -
Apple reveals new AirPods Pro, available October 30
9 votes -
Xbox One All Access (Console and twenty-four months of Game Pass Ultimate starting at $20 a month)
3 votes -
This video is sponsored by ███ VPN
38 votes -
Prateek Kuhad - cold/mess (2018)
3 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.
10 votes -
How a social network could save democracy from deadlock
4 votes -
What are you doing this week?
This topic is part of a weekly series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss their week. If you have any plans, goals, accomplishments, or even failures, whether they be personal or work...
This topic is part of a weekly series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss their week.
If you have any plans, goals, accomplishments, or even failures, whether they be personal or work related, I'd love to hear about them. This is a place for casual discussion about your week, past, present, and future.
A list of all previous topics in this series can be found here.
So, what (or how) are you doing this week?
8 votes -
Firefox to get page translation feature, like Chrome
11 votes -
It's time to boycott any company doing business in Xinjiang
17 votes -
Dashboard act would force companies to tell users what their data is worth
7 votes