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23 votes
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5G: The outsourced elephant in the room
12 votes -
Built-in FTP implementation to be removed in Firefox 90
13 votes -
MathBox^2: PowerPoint Must Die
10 votes -
Mask off
26 votes -
Drug cartel now assassinates its enemies with bomb-toting drones
17 votes -
Nothing breaks like AI heart - An interactive essay about artificial intelligence, emotional intelligence, and finding an ending
8 votes -
Team Navalny apologizes after database of email addresses registered for planned protest leaks online
7 votes -
This robot has applications to archaeology, space exploration, and search and rescue — with a simple elegant design inspired by a plant
4 votes -
Released: Docker Desktop for Mac [Apple Silicon]
5 votes -
Is content moderation a dead end?
19 votes -
Thread of Brian Armstrong seeking cofounder on HN (2012)
4 votes -
How Facebook let fake engagement distort global politics: a whistleblower's account
11 votes -
Why do people follow social media from those presenting a perfect life when it makes them feel inadequate?
I've never been one to follow much social media - certainly not the kind that is just a (almost certainly fake) presentation of a perfect life. Someone's highlight reel. But I did catch myself on...
I've never been one to follow much social media - certainly not the kind that is just a (almost certainly fake) presentation of a perfect life. Someone's highlight reel. But I did catch myself on the other side of this. I spent hours on some days baking or cooking specifically to flex on people with well-crafted photos of the finished food. I still enjoyed it, but once I realized what I was doing I started cooking much more reasonably difficult dishes - so I'm sure it was motivated by a wish to instill envy in others.
So I think I understand that side of the equation. But I had a more or less captive audience (a Slack #food channel). Can anyone speak from the side of the willing consumer? The avid subscriber?
14 votes -
Life’s a Bitche: Facebook says sorry for shutting down town’s page
6 votes -
Do I need a new computer?
Long time lurker, first time poster. I have a 7 year old lenovo y-40 running Ubuntu which has served me well, but I am starting to get concerned that it may be time to put it out to pasture....
Long time lurker, first time poster. I have a 7 year old lenovo y-40 running Ubuntu which has served me well, but I am starting to get concerned that it may be time to put it out to pasture. Nothing has broken, but I know it's getting a little old.
The way I see it, my options are to stick with this computer and upgrade the ram (currently 8gb, space for up to 16) and perhaps replace the hard drive (although replacing things makes me a little nervous, I have only replaced the battery thus far), or buy a new computer.
I kinda hate buying things but will throw down for a decent piece of gear if I need it. I have a budget of ~1000 (but if it can be cheaper that's better), want to run linux and use my computer mostly for programming and internet-stuff. I am also unsure if I need to stick with a laptop-I almost never take my computer anywhere and have it hooked up to a monitor anyway. I mostly have been looking at getting a T14 or something from System76 but they all seem a little pricey. Thoughts?
16 votes -
Discord will start designating entire servers as NSFW, and prevent all under-18 users from accessing them, as well as all users on iOS
27 votes -
Richard M. Stallman addresses the free software community
40 votes -
Let's get Right to Repair passed!
14 votes -
Non-Fungible Taylor Swift
9 votes -
In defense of Signal
12 votes -
Linus Tech Tips accidentally became a top 1% OnlyFans creator
19 votes -
[SOLVED] Tech support request: Finding the biggest files of a specific type
Hey Tildes! I need some help with a specific tech issue, and I'm sure someone here can help me do it way quicker than I would be able to on my own. General Request I'd like to be able to scan a...
Hey Tildes!
I need some help with a specific tech issue, and I'm sure someone here can help me do it way quicker than I would be able to on my own.
General Request
I'd like to be able to scan a directory and find all of the largest files of a specific type (e.g. the largest .jpg files). I'm running Pop!_OS and I'm assuming there's some way to do this in the terminal, or alternately some utility I could use.
More Specific Details
I'm cleaning up my digital music library, and I realized in setting it up I made some errors by saving some very high res cover art. Many of my Bandcamp purchases come with a
cover.jpg
orcover.png
file that is several megabytes large. I made the mistake of writing these into the files (adding, for some albums, an extra, say, 100 MB across all tracks). They also take a lot longer to load when I pull them up in my cloud music player. I'd like to be able to identify the albums with the largestcover.*
files so that I can go in and replace the album art with a lower res version and gain back all that wasted space lost to unnecessary duplication.I could go folder by folder and take a look at the sizes of each, but I figure there's an easier way to surface the ones that need my attention. Everything I've looked at online so far has helped me figure out how to identify the biggest files in general, but all that will do is surface the actual audio files, when it's the cover art that needs the specific attention.
Also, in case it's necessary information, the directory structure is
Music/[artist]/[album]/cover.*
Any help will be very appreciated!
12 votes -
Apple’s quiet war on independent repairmen
12 votes -
Am I FLoCed?
22 votes -
Comcast nightmare: Six months without Internet despite $5,000 payment
12 votes -
The French army is testing Boston Dynamics’ robot dog Spot in combat scenarios
9 votes -
[SOLVED] Looking to debug a wifi issue, or possibly for a new wifi router
EDIT: Crisis averted! The problem was with the modem and not the devices connecting to it. I'm not sure why the first person I called at the ISP couldn't help me. In reality, the second person I...
EDIT: Crisis averted! The problem was with the modem and not the devices connecting to it. I'm not sure why the first person I called at the ISP couldn't help me. In reality, the second person I called also didn't help, but something magically started working after talking with them a second time and rebooting the modem about 5 more times, so it turns out I don't need a new WiFi router at this time. That said, I will take these suggestions to heart, as I may be buying one anyway as a backup for when this inevitably happens again.
TL;DR: I probably need a new wifi router and want one that isn't malware and will work even if the company I bought it from goes under or stops making it.
Long version:
So today my wifi stopped working. I use an Apple Airport Extreme (the tower one that has a Time Machine backup in it). I've had it for 5 or 10 years and it's worked fine during that time, other than replacing the hard drive it backs up to. My spouse and I were sitting on the couch after lunch surfing the web on our phones, when we suddenly couldn't reach anything. The router itself appears fine. We can connect to it and see other devices that are connected to it, but for some reason, it's no longer communicating with the cable modem via the WAN port. It still backs up the computers in our house, though. I have tested the cable that was connecting it to the cable modem, and it appears fine. I can connect my computer directly to the cable modem without issue using the same cable. So my guess is that the WAN port is hosed.However, I'm suspicious that something else is going on for 2 reasons. #1, the cable company (Spectrum) made me replace my cable modem last week. I did that, got my Airport connected to it, and after a call to tech support got it up and running. It's been working for the past week. I suspect the modem may have updated or changed configuration without me knowing it and that's the real cause here. They sent me a Wifi router with the modem, but will charge me $5.00/month if I keep it. I'd rather own the hardware. #2, I have an older Airport Express that was working the last time I used it. I replaced it with the newer model about 5 years ago so I could do backups. It fails to work in the same way. It seems like the WAN port isn't communicating with the cable modem. So, if there's some way to verify that the WAN ports on my Airports are or aren't working, I'd be interested to hear about it.
I am able to connect a wired ethernet switch to the cable modem and all devices on the switch can see the Internet just fine. I tried connecting both Airports to the switch via their WAN ports while the switch was connected to the cable modem, but that did not work. (Or at least, I couldn't connect to the internet via either Airport.)
So, on the off-chance that both my Airports have a similar failure, I need to replace them. I have gotten suggestions from others, but have been pretty unhappy with them. I have the following requirements:
- Absolutely must not store any information about me in the cloud (for example as Ubiquiti apparently does)
- Absolutely must not rely on any sort of connection to the manufacturer to work properly and must not phone home without my permission
- Preferably not a poorly made device that will die in 3 years
- Must work properly and at full speed with Apple devices
- Must not require a phone app to configure
- Must have ~3 ethernet ports so I can hardwire in my TV devices (AppleTV, TiVo, etc.)
Things I don't need, but aren't a deal-breaker if it has it:
- The ability to configure every little setting. I prefer to set it and forget it.
- Mesh networking. My house is not huge, the cable modem is in the middle of the house and my single Airport base station has good coverage of the entire house.
If you know of any device like this, please share!
7 votes -
Sixty-week delay on router orders shows scale of chip crisis
16 votes -
Supreme Court of the United States Justice Clarence Thomas argues for regulating large internet platforms as common carriers
21 votes -
7% of Americans don't use the internet
18 votes -
Twitch will ban users for 'severe misconduct' that occurs away from its site
18 votes -
I called off my wedding. The internet will never forget
24 votes -
Trio | Social video optimized for threes
10 votes -
LG to close mobile phone business worldwide
12 votes -
533 million Facebook users' phone numbers and personal data have been leaked online
29 votes -
Rust in the Android platform
7 votes -
RIP SpaceJam.com, 1996-2021
16 votes -
Employees at law enforcement agencies across the US ran thousands of Clearview AI facial recognition searches — often without the knowledge of the public or even their own departments
9 votes -
Supreme Court of the United States sides with Google over Oracle
46 votes -
Facebook makes it easier for users to see News Feed stories in chronological order
8 votes -
Facebook built the perfect platform for Covid vaccine conspiracies
9 votes -
Checkbox
12 votes -
Are we automating racism?
3 votes -
I now own the Coinhive domain. Here's how I'm fighting cryptojacking and doing good things with content security policies.
15 votes -
Urban fish ponds: Low-tech sewage treatment for towns and cities
7 votes -
YouTube experimenting with removal of public dislike count
@YouTube: 👍👎 In response to creator feedback around well-being and targeted dislike campaigns, we're testing a few new designs that don't show the public dislike count. If you're part of this small experiment, you might spot one of these designs in the coming weeks (example below!). pic.twitter.com/aemrIcnrbx
23 votes -
The "S" in "IoT" is for Security
29 votes -
Inside a viral website - An account of running istheshipstillstuck.com
10 votes -
A story about losing $10M on a to-do list startup
@Andrew Wilkinson: This is a story about how I lost $10,000,000 by doing something stupid.Ten. Million. Dollars.Literally up in smoke. Money bonfire.That's enough to retire with $250,000+ in annual income.Here's what happened...
14 votes