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7 votes
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Is there a digital compass app (Android) for walking around?
I'm spending time at a new city and Google Maps is shit for walking. It's hard to say exactly what's wrong with it, everything feels wrong. Car centric logic just doesn't work for walking I guess...
I'm spending time at a new city and Google Maps is shit for walking. It's hard to say exactly what's wrong with it, everything feels wrong. Car centric logic just doesn't work for walking I guess (yes I'm using the walking mode). It feels bad, unreliable, and I'm lost all the time. Yesterday I ended up 2 hours away from my destination and had to call an Uber (big humiliation!). Walking is my preferable way of urban exploration and I hate talking to strangers.
What I want is a simple compass that tells me "go to that general direction and you'll get there". No map, no street names. Just an arrow and a linear distance (like, in a straight line). Like a videogame. Without foreknowledge, street names are just confusing and unnecessary. I can handle the route myself.
Does such an app exists?
4 votes -
Judge decides against Internet Archive
20 votes -
Here is the FBI’s contract to buy mass internet data
7 votes -
Antisemitic tweets soared on Twitter after Musk took over, study finds
6 votes -
Yann LeCun: From machine learning to autonomous intelligence
4 votes -
Once praised for its generous social safety net, Denmark now collects troves of data on welfare claimants
10 votes -
Robot learns to see in thirty minutes (2022)
3 votes -
Gordon E. Moore, Intel co-founder behind Moore’s Law, dies at 94
8 votes -
My channels were hacked, streamed crypto scams, then deleted last night
12 votes -
Incredible invention - this drone could change everything
21 votes -
These new tools let you see for yourself how biased AI image models are
7 votes -
Adobe announces Firefly, generative AI tooling inside of Adobe Creative Suite products
11 votes -
Update to Kagi Search pricing
22 votes -
What are the potential negative consequences of open-sourcing the Twitter recommendation code?
I'm not sure anything quite like this has happened before. What problems could happen as a result of this?
4 votes -
How social media shapes our perceptions about crime
7 votes -
The history of ecommerce: 1979 to 2023
2 votes -
AI can fool voice recognition used to verify identity by Centrelink and Australian tax office
11 votes -
Another megathread for news/updates/discussion of ChatGPT and other AI chatbots
Hype is still going strong since the previous one.
9 votes -
GPT-4 announced
31 votes -
Major Reddit outage in progress
20 votes -
Micro datacenters begin trials as commercial heating units
19 votes -
A weapon to surpass Metal Gear
7 votes -
GPT-4
2 votes -
A flock of chickens, held for ransom — Growing cyberattacks on Canada's food system threaten disaster
9 votes -
The lost art of lacing cable (2018)
9 votes -
Why Sweden is (still) betting on the metaverse – we chatted to the experts on why Swedes are so keen on virtual worlds
3 votes -
Microsoft’s Bing is an emotionally manipulative liar, and people love it
14 votes -
The internet’s richest fitness resource is a site from 1999. ExRx.net is little changed since the days of GeoCities yet beneath its bare-bones interface is a deep physiological compendium.
16 votes -
The Verge complains about ubiquitous login prompts
19 votes -
Hackers claim they breached T-Mobile more than 100 times in 2022
8 votes -
How many battery-operated devices do you have in your home?
A student asked me this question today. They were looking into lithium batteries and e-waste and whatnot. My initial response was something low, like maybe five or six, but the more I thought...
A student asked me this question today. They were looking into lithium batteries and e-waste and whatnot.
My initial response was something low, like maybe five or six, but the more I thought about it, the higher the number kept climbing — old phones, key fobs, wireless mice, flashlights, a food thermometer, etc.
I’m not sure I have an official count yet, but the number is WAY higher than my gut reaction. I also thought it was an interesting thought experiment, so I figured I’d ask here to prompt people to do their own inventory.
How many battery-operated devices do you have in your home? (They don’t have to specifically be lithium batteries, but if you want to limit it to just that, feel free).
16 votes -
Megathread for news/updates/discussion about Musk's takeover of Twitter – Part 3
Part 1, Part 2
12 votes -
Could we make the web more immersive using a simple optical illusion?
8 votes -
Belgium launches nationwide safe harbor for ethical hackers
10 votes -
Testing Spotify's virtual radio host – the service curates a stream of songs I've heard before. Do I really need this?
3 votes -
The rise of self-hosted apps
14 votes -
Danish parliament urges lawmakers and employees to remove TikTok on work phones as a cybersecurity measure, saying “there is a risk of espionage”
4 votes -
Request: Alternatives to the Raspberry Pi?
I will shortly have need for a small, low power (power as in watts, not compute power) system for always-on Home Assistant use. However, Raspberry Pis are out of stock everywhere and while they...
I will shortly have need for a small, low power (power as in watts, not compute power) system for always-on Home Assistant use. However, Raspberry Pis are out of stock everywhere and while they can be had for extortionate prices on various auction/marketplace sites, I'm not sure I want to spend a load of money on something which might not even be what it claims to be.
Home Assistant suggest Odroid which I'd probably go for the C4 edition but it's relatively expensive (I need to add an MMC and a psu and various other things to the listed main board price)
Any suggestions? The Asus Tinkerboard looks overkill and is very expensive. It needs to be capable of running a standard Linux distro, ideally Home Assistant's own OS. Low power consumption is a definite, 2-3W at idle is probably the maximum I'd be happy with. Wifi is a bonus although not required right now - but the ability to add it if needed is essential. Some amount of expansion capability would be good if I want to add hardware sensors or bluetooth or a Zigbee transceiver or whatever. It needs some reasonably amount of compute grunt I assume but I don't think HA is all that hungry for number crunching power. The machine will more than likely be headless at first but a little bit of GPU and graphical IO would be handy if I want to stick a display on it in the future, which I might want to.
Any ideas? Oh, and also must be easily available in/to the UK.
15 votes -
Fine-tuning to enable Stable Diffusion to generate very dark or light images easily
4 votes -
The internet is already over
7 votes -
SolidGoldMagikarp and other words that cause buggy behavior with ChatGPT
18 votes -
Computer dating 1960s style (1966)
5 votes -
Hayes command set history: The tech that dialed in a million modems
5 votes -
The fediverse is already dead
13 votes -
Megathread for news/updates/discussion of ChatGPT and other AI chatbots
There's a lot of discussion out there and it doesn't seem to be dying down, so it seems like we should have a place for minor updates.
16 votes -
Google lawyer warns internet will be “a horror show” if it loses landmark US Supreme Court case
13 votes -
9yo son wants to join Discord to talk to friends. Any advice?
Well, as the headline says my son wants to join Discord to talk to his friends while playing Roblox on the iPad. Up until now he's been using Teams to communicate while playing. Recently his...
Well, as the headline says my son wants to join Discord to talk to his friends while playing Roblox on the iPad. Up until now he's been using Teams to communicate while playing. Recently his friends have been switching to Discord so naturally he wants that too.
I only know Discord by name so I'm looking for insight into how it works and how safe it is for children and in general. I'm aware that the age limit is 13.
10 votes -
The prompt box is a minefield
11 votes -
Fanless x86 mini PCs are getting absurdly fast and cheap
Pretty much what the title says - I’ve been looking for something small and not too expensive to run a few VMs on recently, and I’m just genuinely amazed at where the tiny SBC space is at right...
Pretty much what the title says - I’ve been looking for something small and not too expensive to run a few VMs on recently, and I’m just genuinely amazed at where the tiny SBC space is at right now.
The Celeron N5105 seems to be the go to choice at the moment. You can get an entire machine running that CPU that’s slightly smaller than an old double CD jewel case, for $150. Less than $200 if you want 16GB RAM and a fast NVMe SSD in there too. Four decent quality 2.5GbE NICs thrown in as a bonus. And it’s not that much slower than my expensive full size desktop from late 2020.
Part of me thinks I’m just getting old - phones have been plenty of people’s primary computer for years now, after all - but there’s something about having a real standalone x86 PC that size for literally 1/5th the price of a flagship phone that just blows my mind.
7 votes