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4 votes
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Founder burnout
3 votes -
Nebula strikes deal with Spotify to stream video content
38 votes -
AMD officially confirms no more Windows 10 chipset driver and support for next gen Ryzen
26 votes -
What's next for Kagi?
82 votes -
The leak of an internal Google database reveals thousands of potential privacy and security issues reported by employees
21 votes -
How influencer cartels manipulate social media: Fraudulent behaviour hidden in plain sight
19 votes -
Hands-on: Frame by Brilliant Labs is a disappointing stepping stone to something better
14 votes -
Build small, play big – Introducing Small Form Factor-ready enthusiast GeForce cards and compatible cases
15 votes -
Hundreds of thousands of US internet routers destroyed in newly discovered 2023 hack
23 votes -
All Santander staff and 'thirty million' customers in Spain, Chile and Uruguay hacked
22 votes -
YouTube seems to once again be rolling out its widely hated new web redesign
51 votes -
The invisible seafaring industry that keeps the internet going
21 votes -
Ex-OpenAI board member reveals what led to Sam Altman's brief ousting
35 votes -
Using a desktop monitor outside
Hiya folks, I work remotely, and I've got a little deck with a table and umbrella that I like to work at for most of the summer. The trouble is, my umbrella can never be fully angled to shade me...
Hiya folks,
I work remotely, and I've got a little deck with a table and umbrella that I like to work at for most of the summer. The trouble is, my umbrella can never be fully angled to shade me from the sun.
I find my laptop screen (13") to be woeful for working on outside. Not only is it tiny and promotes bad posture, it also doesn't have amazing brightness. Lots of squinting and hunching, depending on the sun!
Every monitor in my house it turns out is 350 nits, except my laptop screen, which is 500 nits.
Does anyone have practical experience lugging a monitor outside and working on it during the sunny day? If so, what brightness gets you over the usability threshold?
It seems like I could get a 1000 nit monitor relatively easily. Anything above 1000 the market seems to narrow quite quickly.
21 votes -
Data centers set to consume 9% of US electricity by 2030
12 votes -
How are you dealing with AI generated results in your searches?
I'm finding it more and more frustrating having to parse the things I'm actually looking for from what feels like a deluge of rubbish. Are there any strategies, extensions, add-ons, etc that...
I'm finding it more and more frustrating having to parse the things I'm actually looking for from what feels like a deluge of rubbish. Are there any strategies, extensions, add-ons, etc that people are using to filter results?
46 votes -
Mozilla is adding vertical tabs, profile management, and local AI to Firefox
78 votes -
Spotify won’t open-source to-be-bricked Car Thing, but starts refund process amid lawsuit
21 votes -
Carpenter's AirTags help uncover 'massive' case of stolen tools in Maryland
16 votes -
In a first, OpenAI removes influence operations tied to Russia, China and Israel
15 votes -
AI is making economists rethink the story of automation
15 votes -
ICQ is shutting down after almost twenty-eight years
56 votes -
Microsoft developer demos .NET on the NES — delivers .NES
9 votes -
Minnesota repeals law that protected ISPs from municipal competition
22 votes -
Will Microsoft want to introduce a subscription fee to their Windows OS in the future?
Just had a chat with friends about the possibility and how it would likely be introduced. Paraphrased into the following; 2.99$/Month OEM installs have a 2 year license Upgrades are free for the...
Just had a chat with friends about the possibility and how it would likely be introduced.
Paraphrased into the following;
2.99$/Month
OEM installs have a 2 year license
Upgrades are free for the first year (from 11 to the new)
Comes with Office 365 and AI functionality to soften the blowWhat are your thoughts on this?
30 votes -
Surveilling the masses with wi-fi-based positioning systems
15 votes -
'I was misidentified as shoplifter by facial recognition tech'
59 votes -
War safety - Home assistant config by Denys Dovhan
23 votes -
Google just updated its algorithm. The Internet will never be the same.
56 votes -
These autonomous drones can recharge themselves from power lines
15 votes -
Randy Travis sings again, courtesy of AI
9 votes -
"&udm=14" strips AI junk from Google results
61 votes -
Google scrambles to manually remove weird AI answers in search
20 votes -
Reddit shares soar 14% after company reports revenue pop in debut earnings report
32 votes -
Rabbit gaslit me, so I dug deeper
33 votes -
Scarlett Johansson says she is 'shocked, angered' over new ChatGPT voice
61 votes -
Extracting interpretable features from Claude 3 Sonnet
13 votes -
A brief roundup of Qualcomm Snapdragon X news
Now that there are some specs, development news, and Snapdragon X Elite vs Intel benchmarks from the past couple days to discuss (with the exception noted below), I thought I'd put together a few...
Now that there are some specs, development news, and Snapdragon X Elite vs Intel benchmarks from the past couple days to discuss (with the exception noted below), I thought I'd put together a few links for people. I'm curious how people feel about this iteration of technology in an ARM package for development, tinkering, or edge AI applications. And are folks enthused by the possibilities (Windows or otherwise), dislike the price points, or tired of the AI/CoPilot buzz?
New Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite Benchmarks Show It's a Serious Contender
Qualcomm Snapdragon Dev Kit for Windows is a tiny desktop PC with a focus on AI apps
Debian 12 and Linux upstreaming for the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite SoC (January, 2024)
Microsoft is already taking orders for both Surface Pro (11ᵗʰ Edition, $999+) and Surface Laptop (7ᵗʰ Edition, $999+)[1] orders planned for shipping in June. Each can be bought in X Plus or X Elite flavors, though Wikipedia suggests there are several models of the X Elite so I'm curious which flavors we'll see in MS devices.
[1] Note that I linked to the "business" versions of the MS Store listings because they get straight to the point with a tech overview, etc. The "business" versions are listed for $100 more than the consumer versions.
Sharing this in ~comp, but if there's a better place for this then I'm happy to see it moved to a more suitable location. Thanks!
9 votes -
University suspends students for AI homework tool it gave them $10,000 prize to make
46 votes -
British Library on why it kept it real in communication about ransomware attack
9 votes -
How to make a CPU
11 votes -
Building the worlds first Etch-A-Sketch camera
5 votes -
Privacy woes and autonomy, where do I go now?
I'm very sorry, but this is going to be rant. One that may seem to come up almost daily, but I still feel the need to vent. Every day I feel like I'm jumping through hoops to keep a little bit of...
I'm very sorry, but this is going to be rant. One that may seem to come up almost daily, but I still feel the need to vent.
Every day I feel like I'm jumping through hoops to keep a little bit of privacy and autonomy, without ever winning. DuckDuckGo is my search engine, use a paid mail provider, I try to stay away from anything Google and Meta, use only Signal, ad blocking everywhere, hosting most services locally, etc. It seems, however, to make no difference in the long run. The user-profile-building just seems to enter the home faster than I can mitigate it. Kids install some new app or new hardware ends up listening in, privacy infringement is there.
The reason I'm starting this post now is because I switched ISP and TV provider recently, but it has been on my mind for a long time. Finding one that isn't owned by one of huge 3 parent companies, is almost impossible here. After a year of deciding, I finally figured it was time to throw in the towel and just pick the least bad option. Yesterday was the day of switching and it has been such a frustrating process.
The provided router doesn't allow me to turn off its WLAN. I live in a city, so the airwaves are already crowded enough as it is. No need to keep that antenna on, but screw me, that's not possible. Opened up the device to just remove the card, but everything is soldered on the board and disconnecting the antennas didn't do shit.
It's possible to buy a modem/router myself, but it'll need to follow their requirements and will set me back $200. It would be okay if the rest of the service was great, but here comes the TV part!The device they use for TV is apparently Android TV. I assumed it would be IPTV with this subscription, but Android TV isn't that. Booting the device makes it immediately clear they are here to harvest data. It makes me so unhappy that a service I'm paying for, is also making money on the side by collecting data. To get a quick idea of what's being done, I routed the box through wireshark to sniff DNS traffic. It's riddled with domains used for data collection and ads. That combined with the features this box wants me to agree to (location, using the mic, access local network, sign into PlayStore, make a profile including real life information) does not make me trust this device. So I've decided to not play and will be sending it back.
People around me are pretty conscious about what they do online, but compared to them I'm highly paranoid. Wherever I look, there are privacy issues. It seems impossible to escape from. How are other people dealing with this?
UPDATE: I don't know if anybody is really interested, but I thought I would update anyway. I decided to listen to my gut and I cancelled the subscription. It feels like the best decision I've made in a long time. It's nice to feel like I'm still a little bit in charge, even though I know that's also just a false sense of autonomy. Suck it, Google! You're not the boss of me :-)
33 votes -
Winamp has announced that it is opening up its source code to enable collaborative development of its legendary player for Windows
89 votes -
Cyber security: A pre-war reality check
34 votes -
The lonely work of moderating Hacker News
37 votes -
Taiwan, on China’s doorstep, is dealing with TikTok its own way
11 votes -
Archie, the (pre) Internet’s first search engine, is rescued and running
14 votes -
How makers of nonconsensual AI porn make a living on Patreon
15 votes