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8 votes
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Anyone DIY-fixed a liquid-damaged MacBook Pro keyboard?
Long story short, I wiped my keyboard with a moist towel and I knocked out exactly 6 keys on my mid-2020 MacBook Pro (Magic Keyboard, A2251). I'm now looking at either paying $300+ to have it...
Long story short, I wiped my keyboard with a moist towel and I knocked out exactly 6 keys on my mid-2020 MacBook Pro (Magic Keyboard, A2251).
I'm now looking at either paying $300+ to have it serviced by a technician. But I have the tempting option of buying an aftermarket replacement keyboard for less than $100 and replacing it myself. That + I'm in the spirit of DIY repairs to keep my things going longer.
Has anyone attempted this before? Any tips and advice?
It seems slightly daunting because the keyboard is adhered to the aluminium body so I would have to literally tear the existing one off.
7 votes -
Mexican scam loan apps will edit your face onto X-rated photos and send them to your family
8 votes -
‘Supercookies’ have privacy experts sounding the alarm
12 votes -
Interview with Apple engineer about transition from Mac OS 9 to OSX
4 votes -
US Congress' push to regulate Big Tech is fizzling out
11 votes -
Two US senators propose ban on data caps, blasting ISPs for “predatory” limits
18 votes -
DALL·E now available in beta - with full commercial usage rights
15 votes -
Denmark bans Chromebooks and Google Workspace in schools over data transfer risks
25 votes -
chiark’s skip-skip-cross-up-grade
0 votes -
Free AI bot that provides the Excel formula for any problem
7 votes -
Red Hat's next steps, according to its new CEO and chairman
9 votes -
Does software piracy mitigate poverty?: Evidence from developing and Latin America countries
12 votes -
Amazon shared Ring security camera and video doorbell footage with police without a warrant
31 votes -
Accessibility Week on The Verge
6 votes -
AI and ethical licensing
9 votes -
Food delivery drivers fired after ‘cut-price’ GPS app sent them on ‘impossible’ routes
8 votes -
German antitrust body launches investigation into Google Maps
8 votes -
Five UX improvements that could save lives
14 votes -
On-device browser translations with Firefox Translations
15 votes -
Rogers CEO says service back online for most Canadian customers, blames outage on 'network system failure'
17 votes -
yt-dlp: A youtube-dl fork with additional features and fixes
24 votes -
Elon Musk says he’s terminating $44bn Twitter buyout deal
26 votes -
The code the FBI used to wiretap the world
7 votes -
Nineteenth-century critiques of technology show how longstanding many current concerns are
4 votes -
How traceable are you? - Experiment results & analysis
11 votes -
Is it possible to expand my Windows EFI partition?
I currently dual-boot Arch and Windows and just use the Windows EFI partition in Arch as well, however I only have about 13 MB of space left on it. I’d like to try installing Gentoo on an extra...
I currently dual-boot Arch and Windows and just use the Windows EFI partition in Arch as well, however I only have about 13 MB of space left on it.
I’d like to try installing Gentoo on an extra SSD I have with nothing on it, but don’t really want to have a second EFI partition if I can avoid it.
So my question is, can I shrink the Windows main partition towards the right and expand the the Windows EFI partition into the newly freed space?
6 votes -
Jordan Peterson suspended from Twitter, says it might as well be a ban: 'I won’t apologize'
16 votes -
How to edit a podcast on Linux?
Looking at the available options, I see many programs such as Ardour and Audacity that seems to focus on recording, mixing, streaming, etc. But what should use it to actually edit the thing? By...
Looking at the available options, I see many programs such as Ardour and Audacity that seems to focus on recording, mixing, streaming, etc. But what should use it to actually edit the thing?
By that I mean changing the order of things, removing silences, involuntary sounds, and noises, adding music and sound effects, as well as making what I'm saying more concise and intelligible.
I have a background in video editing, and I'm used to working in the "timeline paradigm" that is common to Adobe Premiere and older versions of Final Cut (I have no idea what Final Cut looks like now...). But I have no idea how to edit stuff using actual audio software, I've only used those to treat audio and then finish editing on other programs.
I'd use a video editor for that, but I currently don't own any machine powerful enough to use a video editor software comfortably.
7 votes -
What should a layperson know about AI?
Asking for a friend. 😉 In all seriousness, the question was inspired by the news out of Google and specifically @Whom's comment here. What should non-technical laypeople know about AI? The info...
Asking for a friend. 😉
In all seriousness, the question was inspired by the news out of Google and specifically @Whom's comment here.
What should non-technical laypeople know about AI?
The info doesn't have to be limited to just this particular news item either. What information would you want included in an AI 101 rundown? What is it currently used for? What will it do in the future? What are its limitations? What are its potentials?
And, of course, how should people interpret stuff like today's big news item?
15 votes -
RadioShack would like to clarify that its Twitter account wasn’t hacked. It just sells crypto now.
18 votes -
How technology loses out in companies, countries & continents
6 votes -
Suggest me a GPU
Building myself a computer for the first time, and I have most of the parts specced except for the GPU. I don't play a lot of video games, so my first priority is getting something that can...
Building myself a computer for the first time, and I have most of the parts specced except for the GPU. I don't play a lot of video games, so my first priority is getting something that can display output at all; but I would like something a bit capable, as I do play some 3d games from time to time. Prefer an nvidia gpu, as I would like to play with some nv-specific features (nv_path_render, maybe cuda), but not a hard requirement.
I've spotted the following gpus on craigslist:
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gtx 1070 - C$260 (~$200 usd)
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gtx 1660 super - C$320 (~$250 usd)
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gtx 1070 ti - C$300 (~$230 usd)
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gtx 1050 ti - C$120 (~$90 usd)
Any suggestions? Something else I should look out for? Are these good prices?
8 votes -
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Coinbase is selling US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) a suite of features used to track and identify cryptocurrency users
11 votes -
Abortion Search Noise Generator
10 votes -
I've locked myself out of my digital life
16 votes -
Setting up a NAS as a first timer?
So I've seen some posts here and elsewhere about people making a home NAS setup, using it as a media server with jellyfin/plex/.arr to set up media + keep files/passwords/photos, and then managing...
So I've seen some posts here and elsewhere about people making a home NAS setup, using it as a media server with jellyfin/plex/.arr to set up media + keep files/passwords/photos, and then managing it remotely. That sounds incredibly cool.
I also did some cursory searching that one way to do things without messing with port-forwarding is to look into Tailscale to network remotely.
I want to try this for my parents and I, especially since I will be training abroad for several years while they will be based in Asia.
The obvious problem is I don't have any experience with the process or even networking in general. I also do not know how to code in any capacity. I am in a decidedly non-tech field of work.
I've been googling but want to know if this a feasible idea at my skill level? Is this work for hobbyists or those in the professional field of computing? Am I going to potentially shoot myself security-wise if i try this? Should experiment with something smaller-scale first?
Preliminary "Research":
- Watched Practical Networking on youtube to see what I was getting into (understood... lets say 45% of what he was talking about)
- Plan to get a synology NAS with minimum 4 drive bays (Supposedly this is easiest for beginners?)
- Connect to network via tailscale
- Get a vpn
- Install docker
- Install apps
- Connect it to PCs and smart tv at my parent's home in Asia
- ???
- Maintain it from Europe?
Any advice on how to start or any guides to recommend? (most of what I've found is 2021 or earlier so I am unsure if a lot's changed since then)
9 votes -
Facebook, Instagram taking down posts about US abortion pills
5 votes -
She spent a decade writing fake Russian history. Wikipedia just noticed.
8 votes -
Creators are mitigating burnout with longform YouTube videos
8 votes -
You can run Doom on a chip from a $15 IKEA smart lamp
12 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg envisions a billion people in the metaverse spending hundreds of dollars each
16 votes -
Security and privacy tips for people seeking an abortion
14 votes -
SMS phishing is way too easy
6 votes -
TikTok turns on the money machine
8 votes -
Parti: Pathways Autoregressive Text-to-Image model
3 votes -
Having been on Android for over a decade, I just got my first iPhone! What should I know?
So far I have been having a surprisingly easy time learning iOS. It is incredibly intuitive! Though to be fair, my friend who has always been on iOS said the same thing about Android when she...
So far I have been having a surprisingly easy time learning iOS. It is incredibly intuitive! Though to be fair, my friend who has always been on iOS said the same thing about Android when she switched.
There are so many things that are basically identical on the two operating systems. But I am sure I am missing out on a lot of things that my iPhone 13 can do that my Samsung A50 could not do.
So far I'm really loving the switch, everything feels smooth. But I am very accepting of any tips and tricks that anyone might have up their sleeves! 😊
19 votes -
What will a Chromium-only Web look like?
7 votes -
Telegram celebrates 700M users and introduces Telegram Premium
7 votes -
Leaked Amazon memo warns the company is running out of people to hire. Unions might not be the tech giant’s biggest labor threat.
18 votes