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53 votes
-
Mozilla sees surge in Firefox users thanks to EU’s Digital Markets Act
68 votes -
Suggest a remote desktop program?
TL:DR: Need a remote desktop program that will let me get into my desktop from another network with no action required at the desktop itself. Will be out of town for about two weeks, have a...
TL:DR: Need a remote desktop program that will let me get into my desktop from another network with no action required at the desktop itself.
Will be out of town for about two weeks, have a Windows 10 desktop and a Windows 10 tablet. Desktop stays home, tablet is going with me in case I need something from my desktop. Need a way to connect and access and control my desktop from the tablet (I'll have KBM with me) with no interaction at the desktop itself (most remote desktop programs require confirmation at the desktop to access and/or gain control).
Suggestions? FOSS preferred.
18 votes -
Build it yourself
19 votes -
Apple's software quality crisis: when premium hardware meets subpar software
35 votes -
Why didn't Keynote take off?
This is a bit of a round about story, but bear with me. I like PowerPoint, I love using it, it's intuitive to me. Google slides is okay, (I never delved into OpenOffice or any other offshoot...
This is a bit of a round about story, but bear with me.
I like PowerPoint, I love using it, it's intuitive to me. Google slides is okay, (I never delved into OpenOffice or any other offshoot really), but when I have a choice, I like using PPT.
I consider myself a comfortable Apple user as well, I prefer it for most of my computing needs, but not all, so it's not like I am not capable of using the Apple ecosystem.
However, whenever I have tried Keynote or Pages or any of the "office" tools, I don't like them.
I cannot tell if this is because these products or projects were killed off because of lowspread adoption at their onset, and thus did not get any development or improvement. Apple often does not release things and then just let them die, it usually waits a long time before it releases something, so they don't release things with potential failure (maybe I'm wrong, my memory doesn't recall anything like that other than this very example lol, and I guess their camera, but I digress).
I guess my rambling is, is PowerPoint just good and Keynote just bad or is there some more interesting story to it?
11 votes -
Microsoft moving from Skype to Microsoft Teams
30 votes -
Obsidian is now free for work
66 votes -
Single most useful program you daily use?
What's the most useful program you use on a daily basis? For me it's Espanso, it's a text expansion tool but you can do so much more with it like custom scripts or shell commands.
98 votes -
San Francisco unveils marble bust of Aaron Swartz, hero of open-access internet
48 votes -
AI is creating a generation of illiterate programmers
52 votes -
The making of Community Notes
14 votes -
Adobe Lightroom's AI Remove feature added a Bitcoin to bird in flight photo
15 votes -
Microsoft says having a TPM is "non-negotiable" for Windows 11
31 votes -
From where I left off (antirez returns to Redis)
6 votes -
Are ‘ghost engineers’ real? Seeking Silicon Valley’s least productive coders.
23 votes -
Lies I was told about collaborative editing, Part 1: Algorithms for offline editing
14 votes -
Touch typing learning software
Hey Tildes, I learned to touch type with ye olde Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing CD-ROM that came with my first home computer (I'm not quite THAT old -- what was what we could afford). Can you...
Hey Tildes, I learned to touch type with ye olde Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing CD-ROM that came with my first home computer (I'm not quite THAT old -- what was what we could afford).
Can you recommend a better / newer / snazzier / rizzier typing program for a teen / child?
Online or offline are fine, paid is fine. What do you like about it and what didn't you like about it?
Edit: Side note: how did y'all learn to type? Anyone here doesn't touch type (eg, not using your eyes) and use some other kind of keyboard configure or other tech? For Cantonese Chinese language, more young people are starting to use alternative methods even beyond the numpad Q9 and go straight to "speech to text" using their phone software. Curious about your languages and input.
32 votes -
Pine64 November update: Something borrowed something new
20 votes -
NGI Mobifree grants awarded for fair mobile software
6 votes -
Looking for a simple ebook or notetaking app where I can visually organize my bookmarks/tabs. Example attached.
Very similar to how the recipe book in the game "Potion Craft" is organized. I essentially want to be able to mark pages and assign an icon, letter, symbol, or whatever to the tab. Clicking the...
Very similar to how the recipe book in the game "Potion Craft" is organized. I essentially want to be able to mark pages and assign an icon, letter, symbol, or whatever to the tab. Clicking the tab brings you to that page. I also want the freedom to arrange these tabs around the perimeter of the book.
I'm not even sure what search terms to use to find a software like this. I'm not looking for anything robust, just a simple reader app with minimal page marking with intuitive visual organization.
Does anything like this exist?
23 votes -
Verbalize - text editor with writing assistance for Brazilian Portuguese
I believe this is a interesting issue to post it here because it's very difficult to get writing tools outside the English language. That's exactly why I ended up starting this project. If it's...
I believe this is a interesting issue to post it here because it's very difficult to get writing tools outside the English language. That's exactly why I ended up starting this project. If it's not allowed, I apologise in advance.
I'm a linguist and technical writer (tech writer, dev writer, documenter, technical editor, etc.) and I've always used Hemingway for my English writing. The problem was that I'd never found a text editor capable of suggesting possible improvements to a text in Brazilian Portuguese.
Years passed, and this week I had time to create a fork of Techscriptor with some interface improvements and adapt it to Brazilian Portuguese. That's how version 0.1 of Verbalize was born.
What does it do?
In a basic and summarised way, you can upload a file from your computer (in
md
ortxt
, for now) and the editor, besides allowing you to actually edit, will give you hints on how to improve the text (long sentences, complex words, jargon, adjectives and other things we should avoid in texts, especially technical ones).Once edited, you can download the file in
md
format.Access
The application can be installed (Electron), accessed through the web, or you can download the code from GitHub and run it locally in your browser.
Improvements
I have a few 'next steps' in mind:
- Google Drive/Onedrive integration.
- Possibility to upload a custom rules file.
- Allow it to be used offline as well.
- Improve the GUI.
9 votes -
Make it ephemeral: Software should decay and lose data
24 votes -
Using winutil or MicroWin to disable Windows Recall is breaking File Explorer
33 votes -
Using AI generated code will make you a bad programmer
38 votes -
Winamp deletes GitHub repository after a rocky few weeks
58 votes -
Follow-up to an earlier topic I made about my hunt for a privacy-respecting notes app
after the comments in my previous topic, I proceeded to try Notesnook and Joplin after having issues with Nextcloud Notes (that I have already documented in my previous post) Notesnook ain't bad...
after the comments in my previous topic, I proceeded to try Notesnook and Joplin after having issues with Nextcloud Notes (that I have already documented in my previous post)
Notesnook ain't bad if it's your jam. I found it easy to use and quite nice U.I. the only dings against it (obviously subjective) is that it really isn't supportive of markdown in an easy way, you have to pay for it cause there's no self-hosting option and you have to pay for the ability to have more than 5 tags.
Joplin's only ding imo is just that it has no web browser interface, but beyond that, there's nothing else fuctionality-wise I can really count against it, the U.I. is rather dated but the functionality is so stable that I am more than willing to deal with a dated UI. and I can self-host using my nextcloud instance so that's a great plus in avoiding additional charge.
So I personally recommend Joplin if you don't care about a dated UI in order to avoid having to pay a subscription if you are willing to self-host.
In other news, by the time I finally imported all my Nextcloud notes to Joplin, the nextcloud Notes App had managed to wipe 60 of my notes empty. I love nextcloud and its let me do wonderful things but the notes app they have is incredibly buggy when combined with their android app and how they are trying to implement markdown support.
11 votes -
Using YouTube to steal your files
40 votes -
Kaspersky deletes itself, installs UltraAV antivirus without warning
22 votes -
Microsoft Graveyard: a website for tracking dead and soon-to-be-dead Microsoft products
39 votes -
CrowdStrike estimates the tech meltdown caused by its bungling left a $60 million dent in its sales
37 votes -
US lawsuits against Crowdstrike begin with Delta Airlines and Crowdstrike shareholders filing suit
21 votes -
This behavior is by design
12 votes -
Android launchers
What sort of non stock andriod launchers are people using at the moment? Just moved from iPhone to Android and want to use something better than oneui. Currently using niagara but curious what...
What sort of non stock andriod launchers are people using at the moment? Just moved from iPhone to Android and want to use something better than oneui. Currently using niagara but curious what people are actually using?
33 votes -
The US Department of Justice files an antitrust suit against a software company for allegedly manipulating rent prices
46 votes -
Top companies ground Microsoft Copilot over data governance concerns
23 votes -
Microsoft to host security summit after CrowdStrike disaster
16 votes -
“Something has gone seriously wrong,” dual-boot systems warn after Microsoft update
43 votes -
GitLab is reportedly up for sale
58 votes -
Branch fires team behind Android launcher Nova, only the founder remains
41 votes -
Sideloading with iOS 17.4: any use cases?
It’s been a few weeks now since the release of iOS 17.4, which […] provides new options for app marketplaces, web browsers and payments for residents of the European Union. […] Now, don’t get me...
It’s been a few weeks now since the release of iOS 17.4, which
[…] provides new options for app marketplaces, web browsers and payments for residents of the European Union. […]
Now, don’t get me wrong, I am a firm believer in the underlying regulation to it, and have been ever since the possibility of this becoming a reality was in the Brussels air. But so far, I haven’t really been able to come up with a truly practical use case.
Furthermore, I haven’t seen any marketing for an Epic Store, Meta Store, or similar “app marketplaces”, but this may be attributed to the still rather… wobbly legal situation surrounding, notably, still having to direct payments to Apple while not using their store for app distribution. I don’t think there has been any follow-up from Apple (or the EU) that retracts these conditions.
So: Have any fellow EU resident ~tech’ies done anything fun or interesting with this new freedom yet?
To those not affected by this regulation, what would you like to “sideload”, or are perhaps already sideloading on Android?
Do any of you think big companies will move their entire palette onto an alternative store anytime soon, e.g. Facebook and sister products? To be honest, I doubt this will happen, otherwise it would’ve long occurred on the Google Play Store as well.
My ideas were:
- I’ve thought about trying to install Minecraft (the full version, probably using Pojav), or a game of similar caliber, on my phone just for fun and to see how well the iPhone GPU really fares against a “real” game, but didn’t find the time yet for looking into it.
- Also personally, I’d love to see a real “root-capable” shell on iOS, but I don’t think that will ever be a thing irrespective of how much sideloading Apple is forced to allow into their OS.
9 votes -
So you want to compete with or replace open source
26 votes -
Delta CEO says CrowdStrike-Microsoft outage cost the US airline $500 million, will seek damages
44 votes -
Taking command of the Context Menu in macOS
14 votes -
Struggling with first dev job - seeking advice
This is my cry for help. I'm a newer programmer who just got hired for my first actual programming job a few months ago. Before now the only things I really made were simple python scripts that...
This is my cry for help.
I'm a newer programmer who just got hired for my first actual programming job a few months ago. Before now the only things I really made were simple python scripts that handled database operations at my last job. I live in an area with no opportunities, and so this new job I got is my saving grace at this point. For the first time in my life I can have actual savings and can actually work on moving to an area with opportunities. However...
Everything is falling apart. I have no idea how this place has survived this long. There is no senior dev for me to go to. There are no code reviews. There is no QA. There is a spiderweb of pipelines with zero error handling or data-checking. Bugs are frequent and go undetected. The database has no keys or constraints, and was designed by a madman (so it's definitely not normalized whatsoever). I already have made a bunch of little scripts handling data-parsing tasks that are used in prod, and I've had to learn proper logging and notifications on errors along the way, and have still yet to learn how to do real tests (I ordered a book on pytest that I plan on going through). I am so paranoid that at any moment something I made does something unexpected and destroys things (which... kinda actually happened already).
We're in the long and arduous process of moving away from this terrible system to a newer, better-designed one but I'm already just so lost and... lonely? There's a few separate dev "teams" but one is outsourced and the other is infamously unapproachable and works on a completely different domain. There's no one there to catch me if/when I make mistakes except myself. The paranoia I have over my programs is really getting to me and already affecting my health.
I guess I just want advice on what I should do in this situation. Is this a normal first experience? I care deeply about making sure the things I make are good and functional but I also don't have the experience to forsee potential issues that may come up due to how I'm designing things. And how can I cope with the paranoia I'm feeling?
EDIT: It takes me a while to write responses, but I want everyone to know that I really appreciate all your advice and kind words. It does mean a lot to me! I'm doing my best to take in what everyone has said and am working on making the best of an atypical situation. I'm chronically hard on myself, but I'm gonna try to give myself a bit more grace here. Again, thanks so much for all the thoughtful replies from everyone. :)
34 votes -
Windows 11 now shows a full-screen pop-up to use OneDrive and protect your PC
60 votes -
Windows gets Linux's sudo superpower: Here's how to turn it on
17 votes -
CrowdStrike code update bricking Windows machines around the world
143 votes -
I'm a mess, so I'm making my own file organizer [TagStudio]
11 votes -
What happened to user interfaces?
23 votes