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18 votes
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New scientific device creates electricity from snowfall
8 votes -
Police are making tone-deaf memes to build community trust
5 votes -
Why the tech industry is wrong about Australia's video streaming legislation
6 votes -
Why you can no longer get lost in the crowd
12 votes -
Popular apps in Google's Play Store are abusing permissions and committing ad fraud
9 votes -
Samsung’s Galaxy Fold is breaking before it’s even out
18 votes -
Animating URLs with Javascript and Emojis
15 votes -
15 Months of Fresh Hell Inside Facebook
6 votes -
An internet for kids: Instead of regulating the internet to protect young people, give them a youth-net of their own
12 votes -
YouTube's "fact-checking AI" intended to counter misinformation was attaching info about the 9/11 attacks to Notre Dame fire videos
13 votes -
Climate change is perhaps the defining challenge of our era. Scientists are tackling it with the help of AI.
5 votes -
Hackers tricked a Tesla, and it's a sign of things to come in the race to fool artificial intelligence
13 votes -
Silicon Valley-funded privacy think tanks fight in DC to unravel state-level consumer privacy protections
5 votes -
Apple and Qualcomm settle all disputes worldwide
11 votes -
Amazon’s slow retreat from Seattle: Amazon has long fancied itself an urban enterprise. Is its pivot to smaller communities a way to avoid messy politics?
5 votes -
A big jump for Wolfram Language and Mathematica: Version 12
9 votes -
Some high-profile male tech executives accused of sexual misconduct are getting second chances
4 votes -
Exploring the world of e-ink
8 votes -
What are the arguments against letting user data be collected?
It's obviously bad when "real" data like full names and credit card info leaks, but most data companies collect is probably email address and some anonymous things like which buttons and when the...
It's obviously bad when "real" data like full names and credit card info leaks, but most data companies collect is probably email address and some anonymous things like which buttons and when the user clicked.
Nevertheless, such data collection, tracking and telemetry is considered quite bad among power users. I don't support those practices either. But I'm struggling to consolidate my arguments agaist data collection. The one I'm confident about is effects on performance and battery life on mobile devices, but why else it's bad I'm not sure.
What are your arguments? Why is it bad when a company X knows what anonymous user Y did and made money on that info? What's the good response to anyone who asks why I'm doing the "privacy things"?
20 votes -
Behind every robot is a human
6 votes -
Compromised credentials for a Microsoft support agent enabled outside access to non-enterprise Hotmail, Outlook, and MSN emails for months
9 votes -
I miss Facebook, and I'm not ashamed to admit it
10 votes -
A rundown of some fun and educational Linux software for kids.
9 votes -
Facebook investors launch desperate bid to oust Mark Zuckerberg
14 votes -
Chicago’s ankle monitors can call and record kids without their consent
7 votes -
Stratolaunch flies world's largest plane for the first time
6 votes -
The Cloudfall: An essay about how to design a truly-personalized experience
7 votes -
Appl still hasn’t fixd its MacBook kyboad problm
23 votes -
Input please: How to identify the right IT project stakeholders
I'd like your input for an article I'm writing. Let’s say you’re starting a new IT project. It could be custom software; perhaps it’s a migration to cloud services; maybe it’s a shiny new IoT...
I'd like your input for an article I'm writing.
Let’s say you’re starting a new IT project. It could be custom software; perhaps it’s a migration to cloud services; maybe it’s a shiny new IoT project.
The point is that you're here to build something great. You’re in charge of the design (or an important part of it), and making sure that the resulting system makes everybody happy.
How do you make sure that you are interviewing the right people to find out what “make them happy” looks like? What do you do to get input from the people who matter for the project’s success… without inviting so many suggestions that it’s impossible to deliver everything?
Case in point: Ten years ago I was in charge of an online tech community. The company I worked for hired custom developers to build the software platform, but the developers never talked to me. They interviewed the boss, two levels above me (who just so happened to be the person who signed the checks) even though she had never used this online community or any other. Needless to say, the community software they delivered was horrible, missing basic-to-me features.
Formally this process would be called “identifying the project stakeholders” or “master the requirements-gathering process” but that seems too corporate-speak. I’m looking for real-world examples of what works and what doesn’t, so I can write a genuinely useful article with practical guidelines.
Note that this is NOT about the questions to ask those stakeholders; that’s another discussion. Here I am writing merely (merely!) about making sure you are speaking to the people whose input you need.
My questions:
• How do you decide which people to ask for input? In what way do you find those people? How do you know when you have everyone you should?
• How do you decide whom NOT to invite? Where do you draw the line?
• Tell me about the manner in which you learned that lesson. (The hard way. Anecdotes are good.)
• If you want to be quoted (it's good for business!) tell me (via PM) how to refer to you in the article: Name, title, company name, short company description, URL.7 votes -
Technology is Heroin
26 votes -
Amazon workers are listening to what you tell Alexa
16 votes -
Reddit’s /r/Piracy is deleting almost ten years of history to avoid ban
33 votes -
Microsoft accused of being 'complicit' in persecution of one million Muslims after helping China develop sinister AI capabilities
8 votes -
Chromium-based preview builds of Microsoft Edge are now available for Windows 10
12 votes -
A regulatory framework for the internet
5 votes -
Put artificial intelligence to work on your photos | No Sweat Tech
3 votes -
Holding platforms accountable to digital workers’ rights
7 votes -
Apology for Kurzgesagt criticism video
12 votes -
Refreshing the VS Code product icon
9 votes -
Switching from Win10 to something else: What are my options?
Win10's issues and walled-in options are driving me nuts lately. I have a variety of software like Illustrator, Photoshop, Blender, Tidal the Office Suite and Solidworks that I use very...
Win10's issues and walled-in options are driving me nuts lately. I have a variety of software like Illustrator, Photoshop, Blender, Tidal the Office Suite and Solidworks that I use very frequently. I really can't not use those. I'd also like to play Steam games.
However, I'd like to use a non-bloated and stupid end user-only OS since win10's shenanigans are driving me mad, but I'm not super tech-savy either(though I'm learning).
Is it feasible to switch over to another OS that offers more freedom in the things I want, but still can run the above programs? If so, which? If not, how should I cope with win10?
14 votes -
Should I go to college for computer science?
I have an undergrad degree in polisci. I was planning on going to law school, but got rejected everywhere I applied. I am really reconsidering going to law school. Last couple years, I realized...
I have an undergrad degree in polisci. I was planning on going to law school, but got rejected everywhere I applied. I am really reconsidering going to law school. Last couple years, I realized that I have a genuine interest in coding, and I could pursue it as a career. I learned C++ with online tutorials, and I think I am proficient at it, or at least have the potential to be much better.
Anyway, money is tight, so I would really appreciate any input you have about a career change. Thank you!
(If this belongs on another sub, please let me know)
EDIT: I am in the U.S. I can move states if necessary.
24 votes -
Microsoft Edge's build system runs on Linux
@kylealden: @VOsikwemhe @MSEdgeDev Not yet - it's something we'd like to do eventually (our build system runs on Linux) but we're taking things one step at a time starting from Win10, and can't commit to Linux just yet.
5 votes -
Protections against fingerprinting and cryptocurrency mining available in Firefox Nightly and Beta
16 votes -
Ethics washing made in Europe - Guidelines for AI ethics published by the EU have been too compromised by industry, according to a member of the group who wrote them
7 votes -
Fundamentals of project risk management
4 votes -
/r/ChangeMyView moderators announce that they are launching their own site at ChangeAView.com
41 votes -
How to increase your chances of finding a hidden camera
14 votes -
How AI will reshape the global order
7 votes -
VPN - A Very Precarious Narrative
9 votes