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5 votes
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The dangers of A/B testing and "funnel hacking": How we made things worse by making them better
8 votes -
What is a good "eternal" Linux distribution?
I need to put Linux on a laptop, but I'm afraid I may not be around to upgrade to major versions (which usually means reinstalling everything) and maintaining the machine. Something like Arch or...
I need to put Linux on a laptop, but I'm afraid I may not be around to upgrade to major versions (which usually means reinstalling everything) and maintaining the machine. Something like Arch or Manjaro (which I use) might be good because I wouldn't ever need to reinstall the OS, but stability leaves a lot to be desired for a non-technical user. So I was thinking of getting something with an enormous support lifecycle, like Rocky Linux (10 years). Is that a terrible idea?
16 votes -
What the Securing Open Source Software Act does and what it misses
6 votes -
Ratios are a nightmare
7 votes -
A history of ARM, part 1: Building the first chip
4 votes -
Firefox for families: The TechTalk - Making awkward tech conversations with kids slightly less awkward
5 votes -
Turnstile: Privacy-preserving alternative to CAPTCHA by Cloudflare
11 votes -
How to pay your rent with your open source project
5 votes -
F-Droid status update: Slowly getting faster
8 votes -
Intel's Arc A770 GPU is priced at $329
7 votes -
Does this button work? Investigating YouTube’s ineffective user controls.
12 votes -
I built an artificial intelligence that not only calls scammers to waste their time, but can steal their account information to help get them shut down (and it's working)
8 votes -
AI won't take coders' jobs. Humans still rule for now.
4 votes -
Off the Mark
3 votes -
The Emoji Kitchen
6 votes -
A Danish city built Google into its schools – then banned it
12 votes -
Revealed: US Military bought mass monitoring tool that includes internet browsing, email data
11 votes -
Reddit CEO Steve Huffman discusses how he wants every subreddit to be its own media company and he wants to see money being exchanged from users to users and users to subreddits
35 votes -
Last year I secretly ghost-wrote and published my best friend's autobiography as a joke. This year I recorded the audiobook version using a deepfake of his voice, and released it for charity.
9 votes -
To bond with humans, robots are learning to laugh at the right time
5 votes -
EVGA terminates NVIDIA partnership, cites disrespectful treatment
25 votes -
How to approach and evaluate programming languages for a project
2 votes -
The day the US TV industry died
9 votes -
Heart Aerospace's current project is a thirty-passenger plane designed to have a fully battery-powered range of 200 kilometres
4 votes -
Should the Steam Deck just be a gaming tablet?
I struck me while using my Steam Deck the other day to watch Twitch that the device has almost everything it needs to provide users with a tablet-like experience alongside being a gaming device....
I struck me while using my Steam Deck the other day to watch Twitch that the device has almost everything it needs to provide users with a tablet-like experience alongside being a gaming device. When you're not in desktop mode Steam provides you with a high quality UI optimized for many of the same constraints as a tablet. For "great on deck" games and the store/library UI you get an easily navigable touch screen-supporting experience. If Valve can bring in Android apps for Twitch, YouTube etc. we could get that kind of experience universally.
Desktop mode can peacefully co-exist with a tablet experience as you will switch between the two distinct modes of operation. This seems like a great way to capture a market of users normally turned off by ideas of tablets replacing their normal computers. I haven't used a tablet in years but I would use one that was a full Linux gaming OS at the same time.
8 votes -
Wikipedia Speedruns
19 votes -
Adobe in final talks to acquire Figma for $20B USD
17 votes -
Ideas how to unlock Google's blocking of my YouTube RSS feeds
I subscribe to quite a few youtube channels to get notified when there are new videos posted. I've had this set up for several years. Today I tried to add a new channel I've discovered. My RSS...
I subscribe to quite a few youtube channels to get notified when there are new videos posted. I've had this set up for several years.
Today I tried to add a new channel I've discovered. My RSS reader informs me it's blocked. I check all the other youtube feeds. Every single one of them reports "Error transferring <feed url>." server replied Forbidden (201).
Update: One day later and every feed is connecting and transferring again. It seems to be a temporary block. My IP address has changed overnight though so that's still my main suspicion.
It seems like I'm not the only victim
That contains a link to the author's issue on google's issue tracker
The official response is
Status: Won't Fix (Infeasible) Unfortunately, there's nothing we could do here. Please reach out to community forum or Stackoverflow. Check out the link below:
They completely misunderstood the question - it's not asking how to find a feed, it's asking why that feed is getting blocked.
Not only this but using DuckDuckGo bangs for to search google get randomly sent to a captcha page - issuing the exact same query a second time goes through perfectly. The same is happening with keyword searches I set up in my browser. .
Any ideas what to do about this?
So sick of google's monopoly.
13 votes -
Wordpress to Pelican in twenty-four hours
4 votes -
During his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Peiter "Mudge" Zatko claims Twitter only has live production environment that all engineers can access
@Benjamin Powers: Mudge walking through Twitter's construction - they only have live production environment, no test environment.
17 votes -
Evidence suggests Wikipedia is accurate and reliable. When are we going to start taking it seriously?
17 votes -
Prompt injection attacks against GPT-3
14 votes -
Requesting resources for de-googling
I'm starting to get tired of being complacent about the fact that I am using Google's services when I'm well beyond the 'reasonable doubt' phase of Google being evil. They're a giant monopoly and...
I'm starting to get tired of being complacent about the fact that I am using Google's services when I'm well beyond the 'reasonable doubt' phase of Google being evil. They're a giant monopoly and I want to stop making them money as much as I possibly can.
Thankfully, I'm not as badly intertwined with them as I could be; I have already downloaded all the music I bought from them and since I have switched to iPhone, I'm not reliant on too many of their services. They do have some of my old files and pictures, but that shouldn't be too hard to get out. The biggest problem I can see is my email. Right now I'm actually paying $4/mo for an Amazon WorkMail account for a failed venture (which I'm planning on getting rid of), but I'm sure there are much better alternatives out there. I'd prefer something that has good spam filtering options including custom filtering. I was also wondering if anyone would recommend Apple's email service since I'm already paying for iCloud+ to store my backups.
Another more specific recommendation I need is for a replacement to Google Authenticator that works on iPhone. It looks like there are several options but I'm frankly not sure how to evaluate them.
If you have any other resources you'd like to share, please feel free to share.
24 votes -
The next chapter for Learning on YouTube
7 votes -
Apple’s iPhone 14 event: The nine biggest announcements
11 votes -
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