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11 votes
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LinkedIn users are being scammed of millions of dollars by fake connections
7 votes -
Bitwarden raises $100 million from PSG Equity
12 votes -
Cloudflare blocks Kiwi Farms
36 votes -
Breaking down how USB4 goes where no USB standard has gone before
15 votes -
One week of Stable Diffusion
4 votes -
Quora+ Program: A case study in ruining a perfectly functional community forum and online information resource
10 votes -
Nerdforge & Linus Tech Tips collaborate to build the ultimate cyberpunk PC
Part 1: Nerdforge - I Built the Ultimate Cyberpunk PC (18:28) Part 2: LTT - This PC took 600 HOURS to Build! (25:04) And if you just want to skip to the results, it's at 19m32s in the LTT video.
5 votes -
Will we run out of lithium?
2 votes -
The real problem with Mozilla
5 votes -
iOS 12.5.6 rolling out to older iPhone and iPad devices with important security fixes
6 votes -
How Twitter’s child porn problem ruined its plans for an OnlyFans competitor
9 votes -
World's highest jumping robot
3 votes -
Erik Prince wants to sell you a “secure” smartphone that’s too good to be true
12 votes -
The twisted life of Clippy
6 votes -
Lord of the pings: How I turned off my phone notifications, and got my life back
9 votes -
‘Pre-bunking’ online misinformation
7 votes -
Ex-Twitter exec blows the whistle, alleging reckless and negligent cybersecurity policies
13 votes -
Plex breach exposes usernames, emails, and encrypted passwords
12 votes -
Stable Diffusion public release - a fully open text-to-image generator
20 votes -
Norway wants Facebook fined for illegal data transfers – European regulators are finalizing a decision blocking Meta from transferring data to the US
6 votes -
A dad took photos of his naked toddler for the doctor. Google flagged him as a criminal.
14 votes -
How I do (and don’t) prepare a talk for a tech conference
4 votes -
Hacker jailbreaks control unit that stops farmers repairing their tractors, then runs Doom on it
22 votes -
The American family that mined the Pentagon’s data for profit
5 votes -
Looking for a specific map app on iOS
Hello everyone, I recently moved to a new town and I'm looking forward to walking on all its streets and discover its secrets. However, it's relatively a big town and it will take me a while to do...
Hello everyone,
I recently moved to a new town and I'm looking forward to walking on all its streets and discover its secrets. However, it's relatively a big town and it will take me a while to do that.
I also don't like walking all that much and I'm not an outgoing person at all, so I want to gamify this a little bit to trick my monkey brain.So, as an idea, I wondered if there was an iOS app that used the GPS on my phone (or some other trick that I can't think of) to map my route, save it, and place it on the map of the town so I can coordinate my future routes according to the places I've already visited. It's sort of like those running apps that shows you your route after you finished running, except I want it to be not about running and I want them to save the route data, preferably locally.
Thank you everyone in advance for their time.
8 votes -
Interview with John Carmack: Doom, Quake, VR, AGI, programming, video games, and rockets
5 votes -
The Matrix Summer Special 2022
9 votes -
New political party in Denmark, whose policies are derived entirely from artificial intelligence, hopes to stand in the country's next general election in June 2023
10 votes -
Testing end-to-end encrypted backups and more on Messenger
15 votes -
Meta's chatbot says the company 'exploits people'
9 votes -
Finland's parliament hit with cyberattack following US move to admit the country to NATO
7 votes -
Amateur propulsively lands a model rocket
9 votes -
OnlyFans bribed Meta employees to put thousands of porn stars on terror watchlist, suits claim
17 votes -
Facebook helped arrest a 17-year-old for having an abortion
13 votes -
Reddit launches NFTs
30 votes -
Amazon is acquiring iRobot
21 votes -
The armchair psychologist who ticked off YouTube
1 vote -
TikTok: Life on the algorithm
4 votes -
What cool online services should I sign up for while I have a burner phone?
I have a burner phone for the next month. (Lately a number of services refuse to accept my google voice number, and I refuse to share my actual number.) Are there any cool services I should try...
I have a burner phone for the next month.
(Lately a number of services refuse to accept my google voice number, and I refuse to share my actual number.)
Are there any cool services I should try out that maybe require a phone number to sign up?
5 votes -
Linus Torvalds is using an Apple Silicon Macbook running Asahi Linux
26 votes -
The 300mm silicon wafer transition
5 votes -
Hide nothing
11 votes -
The notorious hacker who’s trying to fix social media
13 votes -
Gadget graveyard: We found the hidden death dates on popular devices
7 votes -
Google’s new Play Store rules target annoying ads and copycat crypto apps
8 votes -
Stop hoping for an Instagram replacement, diversify instead
21 votes -
Xfce's Xfwm4 sees Wayland port with Wlroots
8 votes -
Anyone DIY-fixed a liquid-damaged MacBook Pro keyboard?
Long story short, I wiped my keyboard with a moist towel and I knocked out exactly 6 keys on my mid-2020 MacBook Pro (Magic Keyboard, A2251). I'm now looking at either paying $300+ to have it...
Long story short, I wiped my keyboard with a moist towel and I knocked out exactly 6 keys on my mid-2020 MacBook Pro (Magic Keyboard, A2251).
I'm now looking at either paying $300+ to have it serviced by a technician. But I have the tempting option of buying an aftermarket replacement keyboard for less than $100 and replacing it myself. That + I'm in the spirit of DIY repairs to keep my things going longer.
Has anyone attempted this before? Any tips and advice?
It seems slightly daunting because the keyboard is adhered to the aluminium body so I would have to literally tear the existing one off.
7 votes -
Mexican scam loan apps will edit your face onto X-rated photos and send them to your family
8 votes