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11 votes
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Vodafone denies Huawei Italy security risk
8 votes -
Economics of recycling
11 votes -
Uber and Lyft stop accepting new drivers in New York City
10 votes -
Simon Pegg and Nick Frost’s Stolen Picture to adapt Ben Aaronovitch’s epic fantasy drama ‘Rivers of London’
9 votes -
Does anyone on Tildes produce hip-hop instrumentals?
It seems like hip-hop is not the most popular genre on Tildes based on what I see most of the "what are you listening" responses to be, but I want to see if there are any of you out there. I...
It seems like hip-hop is not the most popular genre on Tildes based on what I see most of the "what are you listening" responses to be, but I want to see if there are any of you out there. I happen to be a big fan of hip-hop, all of it - from 1980 to 2020 and any subgenre that has existed. Just a true love for the art and culture. Out of all that love poetry came into my life, and eventually writing lyrics to hip-hop songs just as some of you talented folk here write to or produce other genres.
I recently decided to take a step and record some of the lyrics I was writing and I feel pretty confident and happy about it for the first time. I like to write to any beats, experimental to boom bap to trap so if you make hip-hop in any sense or with any influence from any sphere of other types of music at all, I'd love to hear some different takes on it.
Bottom line: if I like it and you like my style, let's collab! That's why I'm asking. I just met a dude from Russia via reddit and made a track with him - the internet is an amazing place (I'm from US). So, yes, plug your tracks if you're a producer I want to hear em.
11 votes -
Programmers solve MIT’s 20-year-old cryptographic puzzle
12 votes -
Music streaming services are gaslighting us
23 votes -
Dictionaries recently added more than 1,500 words. Here are some new entries.
7 votes -
…and in the end there will be the command line.
18 votes -
Young Puerto Ricans are leaving the island to escape the territory's debt
7 votes -
The Beautiful South - Dont Marry Her
3 votes -
Not dead but gone: How a concussion changed my girlfriend's personality forever
21 votes -
Will the Canadian Premier League turn the country into a football power?
5 votes -
Venezuela's opposition leader calls for uprising in video
9 votes -
Exploring Canada’s worst street
8 votes -
Black Sun Empire feat. Thomas Oliver & Youthstar - All is Lost (Memtrix Remix) (2013)
5 votes -
The totalitarian buddhist who beat SimCity
15 votes -
When Gabriel García Márquez wanted to be a foreign correspondent in Madrid
4 votes -
Miracle Musical - Dream Sweet in Sea Major (2012)
4 votes -
The once-hot robotics startup Anki is shutting down after raising more than $200 million
7 votes -
U-zhaan & Ryuichi Sakamoto feat. Tamaki ROY × Chinza DOPENESS - Energy Flo (2019)
4 votes -
'Uber was supposed to be our public transit'
16 votes -
The Brian Jonestown Massacre - Oh Bother (2016)
3 votes -
'League of Legends' studio faces employee walkout, promises changes
14 votes -
Ayrton Senna: Twenty-five years since F1 lost its flawed, fascinating hero
5 votes -
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein submits letter of resignation, effective May 11
12 votes -
Robin Williams' daughter Zelda to direct "AMA (Ask Me Anything)" in feature debut
9 votes -
No Spanish allowed: Texas school museum revisits history of segregation
8 votes -
Adjustments to the experimental single-reply-flattening & user-page sorting is now available
We've had an experimental method of avoiding deeply nested comment threads in effect for a little over a week now, and while I think it's useful in some ways, it's definitely also pretty confusing...
We've had an experimental method of avoiding deeply nested comment threads in effect for a little over a week now, and while I think it's useful in some ways, it's definitely also pretty confusing in some cases (as multiple people have pointed out to me).
I've made two changes to it now that should help quite a bit:
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The flattening will now only happen when there won't be any "sibling" comments after the flattened thread.
This is to avoid what seemed to be the most confusing case (it's a bit difficult to explain, but I'll try): Previously, you could have a thread where a comment has a few replies ("A", "B", "C"), and the first one has a string of single replies ("A2", "A3", "A4"). If the flattening applied, you would have all 6 comments displayed on the same level, in the order of A, A2, A3, A4, B, C. It was very difficult to tell where the "A subtree" ended and it went back to siblings of A—you had to look for where comments stopped having the "(Reply to above comment)" note on them.
Some people suggested that we use a more obvious indicator of the flattened threads (which might still be a good idea), but this case should now be avoided entirely, which should reduce a lot of the potential confusion when threads are flattened. This also means that the flattening will apply in fewer cases overall, but it should still work for the most common and impactful case of a long string of single replies going back and forth.
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As mentioned in the original announcement, one of the nice parts of managing to do the flattening entirely in CSS means that it could easily start at higher thresholds on larger screens, so that threads aren't flattened as early on desktop/laptop-size screens as they are on mobile. I've applied this now, and it should now be very rare to see a flattened thread if you're using the site on a PC.
If you want to see this in action, you can go to a thread where flattening would apply (the ~tildes.official thread about "source info" is still a good one), and try resizing your browser window to see how the flattening kicks in and adjusts at different sizes. If you're using Firefox, an easy way to try this out is to press Ctrl-Shift-M to go into responsive design mode, and you can easily resize the viewport or set it to specific sizes.
Other than these changes to the flattening behavior, I've also merged in another open-source contribution that adds alternate sorting methods on the user page. These only appear when you're on the Topics or Comments listings (not the default "mixed" page), and allow you to sort by the other methods available, such as "most votes". Note that since those Topics/Comments pages are only available to logged-in users, viewers without a Tildes account won't be able to use these alternate sortings. Thanks for the work on this, JediBurrell (whose Tildes username I don't know either)!
Let me know what you think of these changes and if you notice any issues with either of them.
37 votes -
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Indonesia plans to move its capital out of Jakarta, a city that's sinking
9 votes -
The hurdy gurdy | Down the rabbit hole
13 votes -
Release of '13 Reasons Why' associated with increase in youth suicide rates
18 votes -
The happiest cats on Earth
7 votes -
Boeing didn’t tell airlines a 737 MAX safety feature wasn’t functional
7 votes -
SpaceX cuts broadband-satellite altitude in half to prevent space debris
7 votes -
Steve Bannon caught on video admitting Breitbart lost 90% of advertising revenue due to boycott
21 votes -
"Looping" has created an underground market for old Medtronic insulin pumps with a security flaw
10 votes -
Burger King plans to roll out Impossible Whopper across the United States
42 votes -
Buying from Amazon: Three steps to find what you need and avoid fake reviews | No Sweat Tech
7 votes -
United Methodist court upholds Traditional Plan’s ban on LGBTQ clergy, same sex marriage
11 votes -
Of all the meaningless terms in the food labeling world—and there are a lot—”natural” might be one of the worst
10 votes -
The Bob Emergency: a study of athletes named Bob, Part I | Chart Party
6 votes -
Minecraft creator Notch excluded from ten-year anniversary plans for the game because of his "comments and opinions"
61 votes -
The hundred-tonne robots that help keep New Zealand running
3 votes -
Dominic Fike - Don't Forget About Me, Demos
5 votes -
Los Campesinos! - Miserabilia
4 votes -
Nintendo pulls Switch game A Dark Room from eShop after dev reveals he sneaked in a basic code-editor as an "Easter egg"
23 votes -
Eudora Welty on Charlotte's Web, Dorothy Parker on Winnie the Pooh, and more classic reviews of beloved children's books.
5 votes -
A Brazilian drug bust led to a parrot’s arrest. The feathered vertebrate almost foiled an undercover raid.
11 votes