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16 votes
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Ásgeir – Against The Current (2026)
5 votes -
Shadowspawn – He Who Slept In Fire (2026)
3 votes -
US President Donald Trump isn't building a ballroom
45 votes -
Dimension 20: Gladlands - "Welcome to the Wastes"
6 votes -
José González – Against The Dying Of The Light (2026)
9 votes -
How I stopped cooking breakfast every day - baked oats
23 votes -
One formula that demystifies 3D graphics
23 votes -
Cryptic Shift - Hexagonal Eyes (Diverity Trepaphymphaszym) (2025)
5 votes -
My favorite media of 2025
24 votes -
Solving Factorio with Terraform
17 votes -
The truth about what happened on Anthem
10 votes -
How Copenhagen built the metro of the future | Københavns Metro
4 votes -
Any beautiful and/or interesting magazines you like?
I always loved magazines. Like, real paper magazines. Lately I realized that I can find digital versions or scans somewhat easily and it sparked a new obsession. I'm weird, I know. But there are...
I always loved magazines. Like, real paper magazines. Lately I realized that I can find digital versions or scans somewhat easily and it sparked a new obsession. I'm weird, I know. But there are so many beautifully designed magazines, such as the Japanese travel-related Transit or the men's lifestyle Brutus. Even their websites are beautiful and worth visiting. There's also this independent Brazilian retro gaming magazine called Jogo Véio that is almost like a love letter to the classic video game magazines.
I think I've been craving creativity lately, in a World of AI slop and "content" creators. So any magazines you like? What do you like about them?
21 votes -
Reiley – Feeling (2026)
3 votes -
There’s no such thing as a fake feather
17 votes -
Good News Everyone! - the coping with everything edition
In this edition of the Good News thread, I'd love it if folks shared not just a positive news story, but perhaps a video, article, story, something that can function as a happy moment, a chill...
In this edition of the Good News thread, I'd love it if folks shared not just a positive news story, but perhaps a video, article, story, something that can function as a happy moment, a chill vibe, a memory that makes you smile. We're all just trying to deal with the world, so if you cannot find joy in current events, consider sharing something else joyful.
For this thread, even if something happy also reveals the sadness at the heart of the world, we're going to focus on the joy here. (Posting in misc due to the extended ask this time)
44 votes -
Concerning YouTube short I came across
Short in question This short popped up in my recommended. It's clearly AI (tinny voice, random jump in scenes in the middle of one of her sentence, very awkward "oh yeah, stop me"), but, unlike...
Short in question
This short popped up in my recommended. It's clearly AI (tinny voice, random jump in scenes in the middle of one of her sentence, very awkward "oh yeah, stop me"), but, unlike older AI videos, virtually nobody in the comments realizes. With how good AI is getting, we'll very probably have actual riots and political conflict breaking out over AI hoaxes and AI-fueled sentiment campaigns (if the WhatsApp lynchings in 2017-2018 are any measure of how bad social media hoaxes can get). On the other side, citizen journalism of atrocities may come to be worthless and easily dismissed as AI. Humanity is cooked, as the kids say.
(Reposted as a text post and with a better title. Previous comments can be viewed here)
12 votes -
North America's elevator problem
12 votes -
Shawn Lee's Ping Pong Orchestra - Techstar (2017)
4 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.
20 votes -
The US operation in Venezuela - Nicolas Maduro's capture and what next for Venezuela?
9 votes -
Looking for audio recording advice
Some background here - I have a niche YouTube channel, mostly doing longform (often 3+ hour) commentaries on a board game with a friend. We're both very skilled at the game and are apparently...
Some background here - I have a niche YouTube channel, mostly doing longform (often 3+ hour) commentaries on a board game with a friend. We're both very skilled at the game and are apparently entertaining to listen to, but it's all very amateur - I don't really know anything about videomaking except what I've picked up as I go.
That had never really been an issue, because the topic is so niche that only people really interested in the game watch, and they didn't really mind. But last year we got a shout-out from a big YouTuber and the subscriber count has gone up a lot since, to the point where it feels like I really should figure out how to make it a little less amateurish.
I want to start with audio, because that's 90% of what we do. But I don't even know where to start with it.
I got Blue Yetis for both of us a few years ago because I was vaguely aware that was a good mic, but if anything it made it slightly worse than just using headsets (quite a bit more echoey) - I don't know if that was a mistake, and if there are better mics to go for?
I'm also aware that you're supposed to have some kind of padding on the walls to stop the echoing, but that isn't really feasible for me both because I rent, and because all the rooms of the apartment I'm in are absolutely massive. I've heard that you can throw a blanket over your head, which I've tried for a short video but I absolutely couldn't handle for a three hour one. I'm lost on how to solve that too.
If anyone here knows much about it, I'd love either direct advice about it or a recommendation for how/where to learn about this stuff. It's super appreciated!
17 votes -
Nicky Hopkins - Lady Sleeps (1975)
4 votes -
2SAXY - Sweetwater music store in Fort Wayne, Indiana (Live saxophone improv session while walking around, 2026)
11 votes -
The next Windows background that appears, I travel to
14 votes -
Krushor – Taste Of Hatred (2025)
5 votes -
Μιχάλης Κουμπιός, Τάσος Αθανασιάς - Tales from the deep (2025)
8 votes -
Hooters | Bankrupt
31 votes -
The Rainbow Bastard | Sculpting a medieval manuscript demon
14 votes -
Hurricane vs. Tiny Houses
9 votes -
Darghl – Systemic Violence (2026)
5 votes -
La Marseillaise, Casablanca (1943)
12 votes -
Pasta al formaggio (mac & cheese): Italian chef Paolo Lopriore rewrites the American classic recipe
21 votes -
Freyr – New Man (2025)
3 votes -
Sharktopus
3 votes -
Ghoulie - Daft Punk - ALIVE 2021: EPILOGUE (2021)
9 votes -
Labcoatz recreates Coca Cola
21 votes -
Toy Story's villain is a lie
13 votes -
Far Cry 5 | When gameplay and story fundamentally oppose each other
24 votes -
Robyn – Talk To Me (2026)
7 votes -
Bullet – Kickstarter (2025)
3 votes -
Calvin Jones' retirement announcement
16 votes -
Post-American internet by Cory Doctorow
31 votes -
Art Boys Collection - Love (1972)
5 votes -
СБПЧ - Дикий (2024)
5 votes -
Gadgets for people who don't trust the government
37 votes -
On 2016 nostalgia
I’ll try to keep this post as brief as possible. I spend a lot of time on the internet. Twitter and TikTok mainly. And I’ve been extremely online since I gained unlimited access to it in the early...
I’ll try to keep this post as brief as possible.
I spend a lot of time on the internet. Twitter and TikTok mainly. And I’ve been extremely online since I gained unlimited access to it in the early 2010s. I would say that the biggest shifts in attitudes and styles on the internet occurred throughout the 2010s, with 2016 marking a clear-cut turning point.
We transitioned from the hipster aestheticisms and YOLO branding of 2010-2012 to the more “baddie” Instagram aesthetic popularized by celebrities like Kylie Jenner, Selena Gomez, and Ariana Grande.
Now, some people have confused that early 2010s aesthetic for what we actually saw during 2016. Which was a cleaner, less quirky idea of what “style” was. Music also showed this as we went from Party Rock Anthem by LMFAO being a chart topper to One Dance by Drake and Sorry by Justin Bieber being the club-friendly radio hits. Things were less ironic; in order to be cool, you had to be calm (if you listen to the 2016 songs, they don’t feel as aggressive as LMFAO’s songs).
I was 16 during most of 2016. Old enough to remember everything and young enough to still be “hip” with the culture (although I’ve always been kind of an old man mentally). Most of my internet use around this time was on Reddit. Specifically, the meme subreddits such as dank_memes and me_irl. The tone back then was super depressing. Saying you were gonna kill yourself was a common punchline. Everyone circle jerked about how sad they were. These are common on the internet now, but were relatively new for the mainstream back then. The running joke was that 2016 was the worst year in history. Many high-profile celebrities died during this year (Prince, David Bowie, George Michael, Carrie Fisher), which led to people saying “DAMN YOU 2016!” every single time. That saying “damn you [year]” became normal for every subsequent year.
Reflecting on this period, I will say, I do not recall much nostalgia for say 2006 back then on the internet. I saw more nostalgia for the 00s from Zillennials and older Zoomers throughout these past four years than I ever did back then.
So what is it? Why have we been seeing so many people longing for the days of 2016? I’ve seen videos like this for the past two years, and they’ve only accelerated now that we’re exactly 10 years removed. Videos, such as this, are making the rounds, glorifying the aesthetics of the time.
My first instinct has always been: these are people around my age who miss being a teenager. This is still the likeliest explanation. A time before you worried about bills or felt like you were behind in life. I also miss that time period for that reason, and I also wish I could wake up exactly that year and do everything over and better this time.
But, this general analysis of the human condition doesn’t explain why this specifically. Why 2016, why not 2010, why didn’t this happen ten years ago for 2006? In which case, I don’t really know.
I suppose 2016 felt less cringe. The aforementioned millennialisms of the early 2010s weren’t as prevalent, so the time period doesn’t feel as dated. Speaking of things feeling “dated,” many of the interfaces we use now are not so far off from what we were using in 2016. I remember watching the 2014 film Whiplash and being shocked at how old the cell phones looked there, but if you put on Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping (2016) the technology doesn’t really stand out that much. Many of the social media apps we use are the same as they were in 2016. You could realistically have had the same Instagram and Twitter accounts for nearly 20 years now. With the exception of TikTok, the way in which we use the internet today is about the same as we used it then.
Which is why 2016 is this comforting year. Where everything is the same, except you’re younger. It was right before politics got really weird. It was before we lived through a global pandemic. Clubbing still felt like a thing that people did. Youth had a defined image that we currently lack. It felt like a party compared to the way we experience life now.
16 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.
25 votes -
The birth of the internet, according to Jon Bois
15 votes