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12 votes
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Ransomware gang threatens release of DC police records
10 votes -
China’s ruling Communist Party has opened a new front in its long, ambitious war to shape global public opinion: Western social media
13 votes -
A closer look at the DarkSide ransomware gang, which was responsible for the recent attack on Colonial Pipeline
15 votes -
Substack is selling soap operas
8 votes -
TI announces new TI-84 Plus CE Python
16 votes -
Australian Criminal Intelligence Agency looking to expand it's intelligence gathering powers by claiming that criminals use encrypted platforms 'almost exclusively'
19 votes -
EFF Surveillance Self-Defense - Privacy breakdown of mobile phones
18 votes -
96% of US users opt out of app tracking in iOS 14.5
35 votes -
Midnight Sun K-Pop ‘pirates’ being reported to INTERPOL, streaming platform warns
6 votes -
New York Attorney General issues report detailing millions of fake comments, revealing secret campaign to influence FCC’s 2017 repeal of net neutrality rules
28 votes -
Deepfake lips are coming to dubbed films
16 votes -
The current chip and semiconductor shortage
7 votes -
The Epic vs. Apple trial: What we've learned so far
7 votes -
How China turned a prize-winning iPhone hack against the Uyghurs
11 votes -
Pressing flesh against flesh 🤝: The multi-skin toned handshake emoji reveals that it is more than a routine gesture
9 votes -
The Instagram ads Facebook won't show you
26 votes -
They told their therapists everything. Hackers leaked it all.
15 votes -
Getting kinky for the sake of data
4 votes -
Getting inked up? Thank Thomas Edison.
3 votes -
Twitter has acquired Scroll, a subscription for news sites, and intends to integrate it into their own upcoming subscription service
11 votes -
Inside the all-hands meeting that led to a third of Basecamp employees quitting
30 votes -
What3Words - The algorithm used to generate its geocodes, and issues with it that result in ambiguous locations being common
11 votes -
A third of Basecamp’s workers resign after a ban on talking politics
18 votes -
What would make app stores better?
There was a recent discussion about the Windows App Store where people said they don't like using it. I'm in the Apple world, and people here constantly complain about the Mac and iOS app stores....
There was a recent discussion about the Windows App Store where people said they don't like using it. I'm in the Apple world, and people here constantly complain about the Mac and iOS app stores. I grudgingly use Steam to download games that are only available there. Everyone seems to hate using app stores, but most agree that having them is better than having to find stuff on the web or in bricks and mortar stores.
I don't tend to "shop." When I decide I need a product, I do research. I try to find unbiased sources, though that's problematic in itself. But I don't go browsing for anything because it's largely pointless and tends to drive you towards what the company that's best at selling wants you to buy rather than what's best for your needs. So for the most part, my interaction with app stores is searching for a specific program and either finding it or not.
What do people think would make app stores better? Complaints I've heard include:
- Too hard to find a product you want when you don't know the specific name of a particular one (like you want a photo editor that can make a photo mosaic, but don't know the name of a specific photo mosaic app)
- You search for a specific product and the top hit is a paid placement for a competitor
- Stores are full of crapware with similar names and similar keywords
- Top apps are all games
How could app store makers improve the situation? What would make using an app store a joy for you?
21 votes -
Florida bill would fine social media platforms for banning politicians— with exemption for Disney
14 votes -
Tech people of Tildes, what have you automated in your life?
Talk about anything you have "automated" in your life. No restrictions on the tools or things to automate. You have a simple "silence your phone at work" thing? Great job! Do you have a complex...
Talk about anything you have "automated" in your life. No restrictions on the tools or things to automate. You have a simple "silence your phone at work" thing? Great job! Do you have a complex thing with hundreds of lines of custom code? Wonderful! All are welcome!
I myself have automated a bit of stuff, and am constantly looking for more (that's why this thread exists):
Home:
- My room will turn on the lights when it detects the brightness inside is going down, but will slowly do it relative to the current brightness so it doesn't suddenly turn on at once. (Tries to keep a certain brightness at certain times)
- I can send "loff", "lon" or, "lauto" through XMPP to turn my lights off, on, or toggle the automatic mode mentioned above from anywhere. I am blocking internet connections from my smart light hub so I had to re-implement that manually
Computer:
- Copying any YouTube links (or Invidious links, which get translated into YouTube) will automatically prompt me about opening them under MPV
Phone:
This is where I do the bulk of my automation, as Tasker is a very convenient way to automate stuff.
- Toggle full brightness and/or auto rotation on specific apps (Gallery, NewPipe, etc.)
- A couple of Android "Share" targets for
- Uploading dumb images to my webserver
- Adding links to Miniflux (abusing it's bookmarklet functionality)
- youtube-dl through Termux
- And some (mostly gimmicky) text-to-speech notifications for calls and XMPP messages
Planned:
- Miniflux notifier over XMPP. My last attempt failed because Node-RED apparently doesn't reconnect over to XMPP when its connection drops :(
26 votes -
What the 2000s thought today would be: Computers
4 votes -
Juan Joya Borja, known as 'El Risitas' or the 'Spanish Laughing Guy' meme, has died
12 votes -
Beavers chewed through a cable and knocked out internet service to hundreds in a Canadian town
6 votes -
The big business of manifesting money
3 votes -
Extremists find a financial lifeline on Twitch
7 votes -
Inventive grandson builds Telegram messaging machine for 96-year-old grandmother
16 votes -
Some tips for multilingual SEO best practices
3 votes -
Reddit faces lawsuit for failing to remove child sexual abuse material
15 votes -
William Gibson says today's internet is nothing like what he envisioned
10 votes -
Apple sued for terminating account with $25,000 worth of apps and videos
15 votes -
Proctoring tools and dragnet investigations rob students of due process
19 votes -
Microsoft enables Linux GUI apps on Windows 10 for developers
24 votes -
Dutch MPs in video conference with deep fake imitation of Alexei Navalny's Chief of Staff
11 votes -
After decades of not using them, the Pentagon has given control of millions of IP addresses to a previously unknown company in an effort to identify possible cyber vulnerabilities and threats
17 votes -
Bad software sent postal workers to jail, because no one wanted to admit it could be wrong
20 votes -
A community of 3D graphics hobbyists are making and selling avatars of real people in order to fulfill their sexual fantasies, and there's little anyone can do to stop them
11 votes -
What should a lay user know about Linux app packaging?
I’m enough of a Linux lay user that I’m not even sure if I’m using the right terminology in the question (feel free to tweak it if needed!). Here’s what I mean: I’m running Pop!_OS currently, and...
I’m enough of a Linux lay user that I’m not even sure if I’m using the right terminology in the question (feel free to tweak it if needed!). Here’s what I mean:
I’m running Pop!_OS currently, and I have at least one app installed via each of the following methods:
- Deb app from the distro repositories
- Deb deb downloaded from program website
- Flatpak app downloaded from Flathub
- AppImage app downloaded from program website
- Snap app downloaded from the Snap store
As someone who doesn’t really know or necessarily even care to know what’s going on under the hood, these all pretty much work identically for me (with the exception of AppImage which doesn’t integrate into my regular programs menu, and the standalone Deb, which requires manual updating). In fact, for most of the programs on my computer I couldn’t tell you which one they’re sourced from. They all just run like they should.
I’ve looked up differences between all of the options and usually end up finding conversations that go well above my head and get deep into technical details. My question here is basically aimed at cutting through a lot of that depth: what is the important, need-to-know information about these different methods of installing apps? Is there anything I should be aware of if all I’m really going to be doing is running them as a standard, non-power user? Also, if an app is available via multiple methods — is there one that is preferred/better/safer/superior/etc.?
14 votes -
New in progress Blender render engine: Cycles X
7 votes -
eProcessor is a project that will create an open source RISC-V core for High Performance Computing (HPC)
7 votes -
Discord has halted talks with Microsoft and other potential acquirers, is resuming interest in a future IPO
28 votes -
They hacked McDonald’s ice cream machines—and started a cold war
17 votes -
Foxconn and Wisconsin have amended their contract to reflect a $672 million investment, instead of the $10 billion promised in 2017
17 votes -
Apple Event — April 20
15 votes