-
58 votes
-
"Game changers" in Ukraine (2025) - evaluating effective, disappointing and weird systems
11 votes -
Open social: an explanation of the ATProto principle
15 votes -
Google details Android developer certification requirement, and it’s as bad as we feared
76 votes -
How we're designing Audacity for the future
40 votes -
A better way to watch YouTube
21 votes -
DosDude builds a custom 2G GSM cellular base station
14 votes -
Elon Musk plans to take on Wikipedia with 'Grokipedia'
39 votes -
Introducing Kagi News
85 votes -
imgur.com geoblocks the UK
Imgur appears to have geoblocked the UK. This is likely in response to the stupid Online Safety Act (brought in by the previous Conservative government) which requires age verification for "adult"...
Imgur appears to have geoblocked the UK. This is likely in response to the stupid Online Safety Act (brought in by the previous Conservative government) which requires age verification for "adult" content - not just porn, it's a bunch of other poorly defined other stuff too.
My guess, based on very little information because imgur don't appear to have said anything much officially at this point, is they've had a letter from Ofcom (UK telecoms standards agency) and decided an IP ban is easier than compliance and I totally understand their decision. But urgh.
I didn't have much stuff on there and it's all backed up but still. Annoying.
54 votes -
DoorDash’s new delivery robot rolls out into the big, cruel world
11 votes -
OpenAI launches new AI video app spun from copyrighted content
18 votes -
Berkeley engineers develop customizable, 3D-printed robot for tech newbies
12 votes -
OpenAI enables shopping directly from ChatGPT
27 votes -
Proton batteries - new still-in-the-lab batteries that use hydrogen ions instead of lithium ions (also a different anode/cathode)
21 votes -
What's a setting that you'd recommend?
Kind of an awkward title, but I'm talking about settings for your phone, your OS, your coffee maker, etc. With all the tech in our lives, and with so many devices and software having quite a...
Kind of an awkward title, but I'm talking about settings for your phone, your OS, your coffee maker, etc.
With all the tech in our lives, and with so many devices and software having quite a robust set of options for how they work, it's easy for us to not even know that something is available. How many cool things are we missing out on if we're just accepting the defaults?
So, what's a setting, on anything you have or use regularly, that you recommend to others?
What makes it so worthwhile?
82 votes -
California attorney fined for using twenty-one AI hallucinated cases in court filing
53 votes -
Data removal services?
Is anyone familiar with data removal services like Incogni, DeleteMe, PrivacyBee, etc? Do they work? Are they safe?
26 votes -
New Jersey theme park puts animatronic dinosaurs on Facebook Marketplace as it shuts down
21 votes -
Video models are zero-shot learners and reasoners
17 votes -
How AI and Wikipedia have sent vulnerable languages into a doom spiral
29 votes -
Why does this happen?
A photographer I knew passed away, and I was trying to see if there was any information. This was the top result I got on google. The part after the ellipses says “killed in a plane accident in...
A photographer I knew passed away, and I was trying to see if there was any information. This was the top result I got on google. The part after the ellipses says “killed in a plane accident in Pantanal.”
He did not die in the plane accident! That’s another piece of Brazilian news, about the architect Kongjian Yu. The search result is even tagged with Yu’s Sponge City/Cidade Esponja.
So why is this showing up for a post summary about José Bassit? There’s nothing in the post comments or the post itself saying anything like this.
14 votes -
DIY haptic input knob: BLDC motor + round LCD
8 votes -
My take on Apple's Liquid Glass
28 votes -
I tried to protect my kids from the internet. Here’s what happened.
49 votes -
Bitnami’s August 28th bombshell: The end of free container images as we know them
16 votes -
British AI startup beats humans in international forecasting
27 votes -
Using Apple Photos captions for journalling
15 votes -
Has anyone here tried bone conduction headphones?
I just found out that bone conduction headphones exist, and I’m admittedly intrigued. I usually wear only one earbud because I like to still be able to hear my surroundings (transparency mode...
I just found out that bone conduction headphones exist, and I’m admittedly intrigued.
I usually wear only one earbud because I like to still be able to hear my surroundings (transparency mode doesn’t feel the same to me). My husband feels similarly and also hates the feeling of in-ear buds. So a pair of two of these might work nicely for us.
Does anyone have any
handsheads on experience with them (any make/model)?Would you recommend them?
How is the sound quality?
Are they comfortable to wear?
How do they compare to standard headphones?
48 votes -
British Columbia rescuers use helicopter-mounted cell tower to find missing man
18 votes -
Solarpunk and the way out
10 votes -
The last days of social media
25 votes -
Dark patterns killed my wife's Windows 11 installation
102 votes -
The most fragile gif on the internet
37 votes -
Mastodon now has a Quote Post feature
23 votes -
Forecast accurately predicting an unusual monsoon season reached thirty-eight million farmers
25 votes -
Samsung confirms its $1,800+ fridges will start showing you ads
73 votes -
Keynote - Blender Conference 2025
7 votes -
Automation for android, preferably FOSS
I'm wanting to automate a thing on my android phone. I would like to activate and deactivate alarms based on calendar events (by keywords in their name or description). example I have an event...
I'm wanting to automate a thing on my android phone.
I would like to activate and deactivate alarms based on calendar events (by keywords in their name or description).
example
I have an event **work** with the description *shop* so I would like to activate the alarms "wake up work shop 1", "wake up work shop 2" and "wake up work shop 3".22 votes -
iOS 26 is here
32 votes -
ChatGPT is blowing up marriages as spouses use AI to attack their partners
32 votes -
Three options to increase privacy on LinkedIn
11 votes -
ente.io as a Google Photos alternative?
I've been in the lengthy process of degoogling myself. Email is done, Calendars are done, drive is more or less done (but now at MS, so... yeah) - but a real sticking point is Google Photos. I...
I've been in the lengthy process of degoogling myself. Email is done, Calendars are done, drive is more or less done (but now at MS, so... yeah) - but a real sticking point is Google Photos.
I just love looking up places and faces and the occasional "This day one year ago" albums really lighten up my day.
Additionally, I am a bit of a hoarder, I never ever throw out photos, so I have right now 101 GB of pictures since 2012. This will be a pain to migrate so I only want to do it once.
I tried Immich, but could not make it work on my NUC with a very limited connection to the Internet and probably because of the vast number of images.
I came across ente.io, and it looks promising. While 4.99€ per Month for 200gb isn't exactly cheap, it feels still okay for hosting all of my visual memories.
But before committing, I would like to get some more feedback on this service, what is nice and what is not so nice and why you feel comfortable with entrusting them with your pictures.
Edit
After the very helpful answers in this thread, I signed up for a 200 GB plan, downloaded all my pictures from google and I'm currently in the process of uploading them to ente. This takes a bit longer than I thought, but then again, these are 45.000 pictures and live-pictures.
So far, this feels pretty slick. Thanks for the feedback here.26 votes -
A full body air dryer
22 votes -
Slow social media
25 votes -
My guess and opinion on the common blockers to Linux adoption
The big one seems to be the inability to buy a mainstream device with a Linux distribution preinstalled. The few options I know of are niche devices or sometimes single models usually marketed as...
The big one seems to be the inability to buy a mainstream device with a Linux distribution preinstalled. The few options I know of are niche devices or sometimes single models usually marketed as dev devices. It is also near impossible to even find something without any os installed. Even manufacturer like Framework doesn't offer Linux preinstalled laptops or even just fully assembled ones but without os.
Lacking third party software and hardware support. This is a very real problem and something that can make Linux unviable for specific use cases but also something that will never resolve without higher adoption in personal computing, my guess is at tenth of marketshare we would start seeing it being treated as a serious option. It is amazing that something like wine exists and how well it works but it still can't do everything and it is worse than native support. Similarly not many people are willing to even consider VMs or dual booting for specific workflows that need Windows.
Fragmentation of distros and ways to do things but with standard recommended beginner distros this seems to me more of a perception then a clear problem for most use cases for majority users who would theoretically migrate.
A fallacy where people value a thing perceived to be free less also seems to play a role along with public perception of Linux and its users. Slogans such as Linux is only free if you don't value your time which is ironically IMO more true of Windows these days with the cost usually part of the price of the device and not really perceived or considered by the average buyer.
This seems similar to the usual jokes about vegans and other ill formed perceptions. My guess is that it is the result of people plain ignoring things that have potentional to be uncomfortable along with those with niche opinions being more likely to have considered them and to have strong reasons to hold them along with wanting to at least tell people what they are.
I am just plain ignoring Mac here to be more concise and because I have zero experience with them.
36 votes -
The nVidia AI GPU black market: investigating smuggling, corruption, and governments
17 votes -
What can I do with my old Pixel 3 phone in 2025?
I recently moved to a place and unearthed an old Pixel 3. I updated it to the last official update (October 2021) but not sure what to do with it. It’s not worth any money (or at least I don’t...
I recently moved to a place and unearthed an old Pixel 3. I updated it to the last official update (October 2021) but not sure what to do with it. It’s not worth any money (or at least I don’t think so) and I have a dedicated Android gaming device (Retroid Pocket 5).
What could I do with this device?
I was trying to think of a way to use it. Was thinking of setting it up facing my backyard to film squirrels/possums/birds, but it would likely fill the storage up in less than one day of continuous recording. I’m probably getting way ahead of myself but would there be a way to use it like an IP cam or Ring doorbell that records everything not on the device?
Any other unrelated ideas are welcome too. I just don’t want to throw it away since it’s functioning quite well.
29 votes -
Wireless earphones: a belated review
20 votes -
Ghosts in the machine: the fight for privacy after death
12 votes