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23 votes
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Home Assistant Voice Preview Edition review (FOSS alternative to Alexa, Siri etc)
16 votes -
GPT-5.2
9 votes -
How Europe is gearing up to follow Australia's teen social media ban
29 votes -
LEGO’s first retail 3D printed element marks nine-year tech leap
27 votes -
Advice/Suggestions on headphones or earbuds while listening to voices in the same room
Scenario: I am frequently playing video games with my partner, and we have our PCs side-by-side. I am looking for a comfortable set of headphones or earbuds that will also make it easy to hear...
Scenario: I am frequently playing video games with my partner, and we have our PCs side-by-side. I am looking for a comfortable set of headphones or earbuds that will also make it easy to hear each other so we can talk while gaming.
Main priorities:
- Openness / Ability to hear physical surroundings
- Comfort for long wear duration (I wear glasses, which rules out most over-the-ear)
- Budget
Nice to haves:
- Audio quality decent enough for gaming (doesn't have to be 3D positional or anything)
- Audio quality acceptable for listening to music while playing some games (but nowhere near audiophile level, not expecting much bass from something light)
- Wireless (but not against a wired option - can be USB or 3.5mm since this will be used exclusively with my PC)
I've really only ruled out one thing: I'm not interested in bone induction headphones. I tried out a pair of JLab JBuds Frames that sit on your glasses, and while they aren't bone induction, the pressure against that area of my head, combined with nothing in my ears, would give me a headache after an hour or two. I suspect I'd have a similar issue with bone induction.
In a world that seems to prioritize noise cancelling, my search for other options has been inconclusive. There's a lot of negative reviews about comfort in options like the Cleer ARC series and Baseus clip-on styles. I found some of the suggestions in a previous thread on bone induction headphones to be interesting, but nothing seems to meet all of my criteria perfectly.
16 votes -
How did you choose your podcast app and would you switch to a different one?
I first started getting into Podcasts in 2017 after hearing about them for years. I finally had a regular, medium length commute to an internship and was tired of the radio and listening to music...
I first started getting into Podcasts in 2017 after hearing about them for years. I finally had a regular, medium length commute to an internship and was tired of the radio and listening to music in the morning. I did a quick search for "Best Android Podcast app" and saw that Pocket Casts was highly reviewed. Since I had enough credit in my account to purchase it, I went ahead and installed it and never ended up looking for another app. Since then, I've become hooked as my form of audio entertainment/information gathering over the years, and Pocket Casts has become an app that I use every day.
I was thinking this morning while opening my app, what would cause me to switch. I briefly considered switching when Pocket Casts moved to a subscription model, but the features that were included in that subscription are really only "nice to haves" for me and how I use the app. This got me thinking about how other people engage with podcasts and choose the app that they use.
- How did you choose your podcast app?
- Do you ever try out other podcast apps?
- Are there any features that would/did make you want to switch to a different app?
- Do you use a cross-platform podcast app or different apps on different platforms?
- What are your favorite/most used features of your current podcast app?
- What podcast(s) are you currently listening to that you'd like to recommend to others?
26 votes -
Grow slowly, stay small
38 votes -
Finally making the jump to a custom router so I can have all my outgoing traffic over mullvad but that brings with it two questions for me
Changing Mullvad server at router level Reddit is becoming increasingly more and more hostile to VPN connections to the point where I often get the "whoa pardner" error message and have to try 4-5...
Changing Mullvad server at router level
Reddit is becoming increasingly more and more hostile to VPN connections to the point where I often get the "whoa pardner" error message and have to try 4-5 different VPN servers on my desktop or phone before I finally get one to work with Reddit. Same thing sometimes with Google/YT, it keeps asking me to prove I am not a bot and a bit of experimentation with the servers gets me through.
This makes me wonder, is it as easy to switch my Mullvad server on OPNsense? I get the sense from the YT videos I have watched, I have to effectively setup an entry for every Mullvad router as separate instance on my OPNsense' VPN WireGuard settings and toggle which instance is being used at the router level?
I know I can technically have Mullvad on my router to hide all my traffic and then on all my devices that I use Reddit on, I can additionally have Mullvad on them too and play with the servers I am connected to on my device specifically until I find one that works but I am curious what the workflow is if I choose to do all my Mullvad related configs at the router level.Making custom block?
I have a love-hate relationship with Reddit. On one hand, I can't deny that certain subreddits are useful as someone in tech, but I also can't deny that certain subs are just a time-sink and some subs are just toxic (looking at you AITA). I can often prevent myself from browsing the time-sink/toxic ones but sometimes I lose myself in them and I am in search of a way to block them via Mullvad at my router. Obviously a DNS-block won't work if I want to block reddit.com (the home page) and certain specific subreddits but leave any other tech related subreddits open for me to read so the next best thing I assume is some kind of firewall? But I don't know if such a firewall exists that can basically start doing regex on a URL to see if it should be accessible from within the network? Which makes me wonder if I can create my own firewall but I don't even know the first step, as in would this be something that integrates with OPNsense, or a stand-alone program I have to create myself? I know Python, Java and have some basic knowledge of C++ but don't even know if those are the language I need to know to create such a filter or if the filter I am looking for is even possible? Any and all pointers welcome.
19 votes -
One too many words on AT&T's $2,000 Korn shell and other Usenet topics
12 votes -
Matthew Perry, Jennifer Aniston and a gaggle of stereotypes introduce Windows 95 features in this time capsule video
26 votes -
[SOLVED] USB hub with a detachable cable?
My life story before the recipe. Been working on cable managing my desk, and figured that mounting a USB hub behind my monitor would be an easy way to keep some ports in reach without them being...
My life story before the recipe.
Been working on cable managing my desk, and figured that mounting a USB hub behind my monitor would be an easy way to keep some ports in reach without them being on my desk.
I don't need anything fancy, just a couple usb ports. I thought it'd be pretty straightforward to find a cheap hub, that either had a long integrated cable or let me bring my own to route from my monitor to my desktop.
Boy was I wrong.
It seems that the vast majority of USB hubs have integrated cables, and those cables are super short. Detachable cables seem to only become common above my budget (~$50), and also include a bunch of features I don't need (charging, networking, display out, etc...).
"but /u/zoroa, why not just grab the first hub you see, a usb extender, and call it a day?" As far as I understand, USB-C male to USB-C female cables aren't compliant with the USB standard and can potentially cause issues. My google-fu isn't good enough to tell whether the same applies to USB-A male to USB-A female cables, so I'm just assuming that they are also non-compliant.
I'm looking for a USB hub that:
- Has at least 4 usb ports
- The USB ports are all along the same edge of the device. (For easy access even when the hub is behind my monitor)
- Can be bus-powered (i.e. doesn't need to be plugged into an outlet)
- Has a detachable cable for the connection from the hub to my computer
It'd also be nice if it:
- Was USB 3.0
- Cost less than $50 USD
- Had a mix of USB-A and USB-C
- Didn't look ugly
I've spent a couple hours looking, and the only hub I've found that hits my hard requirements the 4 port and 7 port variants of a hub from
StarTech.com. I was curious if anyone was aware of anything better in this price range, before I just pull the trigger.17 votes -
Tim Berners-Lee: Why I gave the world wide web away for free
18 votes -
RAM is so expensive, Samsung won’t even sell it to Samsung
49 votes -
Polymarket is struggling with a $59 million bet about itself
17 votes -
AI agents find $4.6M in blockchain smart contract exploits
10 votes -
Fizzy, a new source-available Kanban tool by 37signals
25 votes -
'It’s time to talk about my cat. To which you might be saying, “Chuck, I didn’t know you had a cat!” and I’d respond with, “I didn’t know I had a cat either.”'
23 votes -
EU slaps €120M fine on Elon Musk’s X, straining ties with US
14 votes -
A new anonymous phone carrier lets you sign up with nothing but a US zip code
25 votes -
Netflix kills casting from phones
52 votes -
Is YouTube's use of AI upscaling for Shorts unethical?
17 votes -
Is “green AI” even possible?
13 votes -
Bun is joining Anthropic
24 votes -
Interview with Pierre-Loup Griffais on SteamOS, ARM, FEX and more
23 votes -
FEX: Emulate x86 Programs on ARM64
24 votes -
Shopify's Black Friday/Cyber Monday site showcase
14 votes -
Over 120,000 home cameras hacked for 'sexploitation' footage
54 votes -
The DoorDash problem: How AI browsers are a huge threat to Amazon
41 votes -
Building the perfect Linux PC with Linus Torvalds
41 votes -
Japan unveils human washing machine, now you can get washed like laundry
45 votes -
Animals versus ghosts
6 votes -
Are there any current Kagi extended trial codes?
Around this time last year, Kagi gave away extended (3-month) trial code for customers to share with others. I've done the standard Kagi trial (100 searches) and I like some of it, but I've been...
Around this time last year, Kagi gave away extended (3-month) trial code for customers to share with others. I've done the standard Kagi trial (100 searches) and I like some of it, but I've been stingy in using my limited supply of searches, so I wasn't able to evaluate it in full day-to-day use.
Are they offering the same extended trials this year? If so, would anyone here be willing to share one of their codes for my
noblemediocre cause of evaluating if I'd like to pay for Kagi going forward?Thanks!
20 votes -
An AI company wants to clone me
9 votes -
Weathering software winter (2022)
26 votes -
Hacking a weird (retro) TV censoring device
6 votes -
Looking for a non-smart watch recommendation
I'm looking for a digital watch with a step counter that ideally resets every day. I've had a few smartwatches and my latest Garmin is nearing the end of its life. I've decided that time and step...
I'm looking for a digital watch with a step counter that ideally resets every day. I've had a few smartwatches and my latest Garmin is nearing the end of its life. I've decided that time and step counting is really all I need out of a watch. Can anyone reccomend a watch like this?
35 votes -
GPT-5 has come a long way in mathematics
21 votes -
I made a floppy disk from scratch
16 votes -
A new era of intelligence with Gemini 3
39 votes -
I tried to build a WhatsApp bot. Meta banned me before it left the drawing board.
20 votes -
Pebble/Core Devices (hardware and software open source update)
16 votes -
Advice on Fairphone
I have been an Android user for a long time, but I never bothered to buy a new phone when I didn't feel I needed one, so my current phone is very old (Android 7.0). There are several annoyances I...
I have been an Android user for a long time, but I never bothered to buy a new phone when I didn't feel I needed one, so my current phone is very old (Android 7.0). There are several annoyances I see in modern smartphones that I'm kinda hoping to avoid, the biggest one being that I want to be able to replace the battery. I'm therefore eyeing the Fairphone for being modular and repairable.
- Has anyone used a Fairphone and can talk a bit about what it's like?
- Does anyone know the best time of year to get the best deal? Should I wait until after Christmas?
- Will I still be able to side-load/use F-Droid? I hear that Google is putting a stop to this but if I get one that allows it now, will it continue to allow it in perpetuity?
Would love to hear some input from fellow nerds who know more about this stuff than I.
Edit to add: I'm in Germany.
26 votes -
Looking for recommendations for a new home router
I currently have a Netgear R6700 - Nighthawk AC1750 router that has reached end of service and am looking for a replacement. When I set up the router, I had issues with some of my devices not...
I currently have a Netgear R6700 - Nighthawk AC1750 router that has reached end of service and am looking for a replacement.
When I set up the router, I had issues with some of my devices not connecting to either WiFi 6 or the 5 GHz band (I can’t remember which was the issue) so I had to set up a guest network for those devices to live on.
I would like, if possible, to have one network that everything in my house can connect to, but that’s a preference not a necessity. Are modern routers fully backwards compatible with older devices?
I’d also like something with a relatively long life ahead of it (though security is paramount and I’d rather have a secure router that I have to replace sooner over an insecure one that lives longer).
My house is just over 1000 square feet so coverage area doesn’t need to be huge. I do stream a lot of games to my laptop via Moonlight though, so being able to continue to do that without lag/hiccups is a necessity for me.
Let me know your recommendations and avoids, as well as any advice you have.
29 votes -
Poets are now cybersecurity threats: Researchers used 'adversarial poetry' to trick AI into ignoring its safety guard rails and it frequently worked
28 votes -
How to customise status icons in Android 16?
Hullooo, today I got updated to Android 16 by GrapheneOS autoupdater. I'm 99.5% happy with it as I trust them more than myself with regards to privacy & security, but... The battery icon in the...
Hullooo, today I got updated to Android 16 by GrapheneOS autoupdater.
I'm 99.5% happy with it as I trust them more than myself with regards to privacy & security, but...
The battery icon in the status bar is invasively ugly and disturbing.
It's too big and it changes colour, makes me shiver!
So... Is there anyway to change that? Most importantly the size (to match the other icons) but also the colour stuff.
23 votes -
Frame of preference: a history of Mac settings, 1984–2004
19 votes -
Google must double AI serving capacity every six months to meet demand
36 votes -
Russians confront wartime internet cuts with public shrug, private fury
38 votes -
Library exhibit brainstorming
Hey, tildes - cqns here, I work in a library and, once in a while, when I have time, I make something called a "display", which is essentially a curated selection of books for the public to check...
Hey, tildes - cqns here,
I work in a library and, once in a while, when I have time, I make something called a "display", which is essentially a curated selection of books for the public to check out, which lasts for approximately a single month. Usually, most people do things very linearly with their displays, a single letter-sized paper that serves as the title label for the topic of the display, and then the physical books in an array on the shelf. I, however, think that most of the displays are particularly boring in the way that they approach the public, hence my need for brainstorming.
What I have in mind is an interactive one-stand exhibit, akin to an art gallery in a museum. The title of the exhibit is "Libri Insoliti", which roughly translates to "strange/unusual books". It is a nine item list that includes the following titles in order:
- The Road - Cormac McCarthy (BOOK, AUDIOBK, EBOOK, DVD, BLU-RAY)
- The Mezzanine - Nicholson Baker (AUDIOBK only)
- Several People Are Typing - Calvin Kasulke (BOOK, AUDIOBK, EBOOK)
- Hopscotch - Julio Cortázar (BOOK - as compilation, EBOOK)
- Ficciones - Jorge Luis Borges (BOOK, BOOK en espanol, AUDIOBK en espanol, EBOOK en espanol)
- The Employees - Olga Ravn (BOOK, EBOOK)
- House of Leaves - Mark Z. Danielewski (BOOK only - Read one page to find out why.)
- "S" - Doug Dorst (BOOK only - some cutouts missing)
- Finnegans Wake - James Joyce (BOOK, EBOOK)
Of each title, I have my written piece on the side that informs the public on what to generally expect when reading the specific titles...and then a QR code that links to a Vocaroo recording of yours truly narrating that which I've already written. Therein lies the rub - in my side of town, it appears as though the general public may not know how to use a QR code, hence my idea being to go a bit above and beyond.
With the QR code method, people may not realize their device's volume level is extremely high and cause distraction. The library is ideally a quiet place for people and I would like for the exhibit's audio to be non-intrusive, leading me to another idea: the purchasing of some type of equipment that allows patrons to listen to the exhibit audio with attached headphones only. There are many things to consider, because the exhibit is in an area which a plug is not easily accessible, so ideally, it may need to work with a battery pack of some kind. I do have, in my possession, a Raspberry Pi5, but, it needs to be plugged in to work. So, does such a device exist? I've searched it up extensively and came across this (https://www.digitalaudiotechnologies.com/product/soundclip-2-2-button-looping-or-pir/), but I don't know whether or not this would even work. Any suggestions?
17 votes