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10 votes
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Instagram generated almost 30% of Meta’s revenue in early 2022
27 votes -
Sweden's public sector has ditched Big Tech in the name of privacy as a major telecom provider unveiled a new secure collaboration hub
14 votes -
German state ditches Microsoft for Linux and LibreOffice
56 votes -
‘Time is running out’: can a future of undetectable deepfakes be avoided?
12 votes -
The costs of a phone-based childhood
35 votes -
Apple's $3500 nightmare
47 votes -
Discord to start showing ads for gamers to boost revenue
62 votes -
Kobold letters. Why HTML emails are a risk to your organization.
33 votes -
Interview with the creators of the AI generated short film 'Air Head'
8 votes -
Microsoft to separate Teams and Office globally amid antitrust scrutiny, will cost $5.25/month standalone
50 votes -
Google is killing Retro Dodo and other independent sites
47 votes -
Jon Stewart on the false promises of AI
38 votes -
Wikipedia "AI" Chrome extension
19 votes -
[SOLVED] What does the unsubscribe button on Outlook or Apple mail do?
I'm not talking about the unsubscribe button that is at the bottom of an email that takes you to the sender's website to unsubscribe. I'm talking about the button that occasionally shows up in...
I'm not talking about the unsubscribe button that is at the bottom of an email that takes you to the sender's website to unsubscribe. I'm talking about the button that occasionally shows up in outlook or apple mail that is delivered by the application.
I have clicked unsubscribe using the built in unsubscribe button in outlook and apple mail, only to receive more junk mail from that origin later that day. These buttons don't seem to do anything. What are they doing behind the scenes that is supposed to be getting you off mailing lists?
13 votes -
What email client do you use?
I've seen a lot of posts about email providers, but what about email clients? What email client have you been using? What makes it work better for you than the default client? Does it have any...
I've seen a lot of posts about email providers, but what about email clients?
What email client have you been using? What makes it work better for you than the default client? Does it have any notable features that you didn't know you needed?
29 votes -
Lessons learned from the Google trade secret theft indictment
7 votes -
Why do some people posting ChatGPT answer to the discussion/debate/question?
This behaviour is thankfully not common on tildes? But like, I understand that if they try to pass off as their own argument. But what with the preface "I ask ChatGPT" and then end with "I don't...
This behaviour is thankfully not common on tildes? But like, I understand that if they try to pass off as their own argument. But what with the preface "I ask ChatGPT" and then end with "I don't know enough about topic" or "What do you think". What do they think how that contribute to the discussion? If OP want to ask ChatGPT-like answer, they can just log on and do it right there and then. And they clearly know the stigma and drawback of it (at least I hope so), but still believe it has enough factual information in the answer despite having little or no knowledge of the topic in question (Otherwise they will edit the output or outright just provide it).
(Sorry, if this come out not clearly, I am not very good as convey my idea, even in my native language)
37 votes -
Stability AI reportedly ran out of cash to pay its bills for rented cloudy GPUs
28 votes -
‘Lavender’: The AI machine directing Israel’s bombing spree in Gaza
36 votes -
From its start, Gmail conditioned us to trade privacy for free services
32 votes -
Fighting cookie theft using device bound sessions
14 votes -
Will the Apple antitrust case affect your phone’s security?
15 votes -
Facebook let Netflix see user DMs, quit streaming to keep Netflix happy
37 votes -
Fedi Garden to instance admins: “Block Threads to remain listed”
23 votes -
Noam Chomsky: The false promise of ChatGPT
30 votes -
‘Robot dog’ damaged by bullets during armed standoff in Barnstable, State Police say
21 votes -
The race to replace Redis
35 votes -
Jails banned visits in “quid pro quo” with prison phone companies, lawsuits say
32 votes -
You don't need to document everything
31 votes -
Why Bluesky remains the most interesting experiment in social media, by far
30 votes -
Florida latest to restrict social media for kids as legal battle looms
22 votes -
Redis adopts dual source-available licensing
18 votes -
America's first right-to-repair bill that bans parts pairing
40 votes -
Lego requests California police department stop using their toy heads to cover suspect mugshots on social media
40 votes -
Tiny undervalued hardware companions
37 votes -
Recent ‘MFA bombing’ attacks targeting Apple users
8 votes -
How do you store ”loose” tech hardware?
Hesitating between posting this as a comment or a topic but here we are. While reading this Tildes post (and the blog post) about tiny undervalued hardware, a curiosity sparked in my head. How do...
Hesitating between posting this as a comment or a topic but here we are.
While reading this Tildes post (and the blog post) about tiny undervalued hardware, a curiosity sparked in my head.
How do you organize and store your cables, tiny hardware, and other stuff? Mine are like a bunch of rat tails tangled up inside a plastic box.
I live in a small apartment (for now) and would like to hear your thoughts. And recommendations.
We don’t have to limit ourselves to just wires and cables. For example, I also have old phones, external CD players, etc.
Bonus points if it’s portable and you could travel with your “tiny hardware”.
22 votes -
Hackers found a way to open any of three million hotel keycard locks in seconds
42 votes -
Spotting visual signs of gentrification at scale
11 votes -
Apple releases macOS Sonoma 14.4.1 with fix for USB hub bug, and Java crashes
11 votes -
A university librarian asks: How do we rescue the past?
14 votes -
Apple has kept an illegal monopoly over smartphones in US, Justice Department says in antitrust suit
95 votes -
CEO of data privacy company Onerep.com (used by the Mozilla Monitor service), founded dozens of people-search firms
44 votes -
Reddit pops as much as 70% in NYSE debut after selling shares at top of range
37 votes -
Novo Nordisk Foundation is entering into a partnership with Nvidia to establish a national AI research centre in Denmark – will be home to one of the world's most powerful supercomputers
5 votes -
Has anyone here received any benefit as a consumer from algorithmic ad targeting?
I always get ads for items I have already purchased and won't need again for years if ever.
40 votes -
US judge rules YouTube, Facebook and Reddit must face lawsuits claiming they helped radicalize a mass shooter
47 votes -
Is a NAS for me?
Hi, I keep reading about this thing called a "NAS" and I don't have in my social network a bunch of reasonable geeks to figure out if this is something for me or if it is overkill and I can get by...
Hi, I keep reading about this thing called a "NAS" and I don't have in my social network a bunch of reasonable geeks to figure out if this is something for me or if it is overkill and I can get by with less -- trying to be frugal and all.
The Situation
At the moment, I have a Raspberry Pi 3 (that a colleague gifted me) which runs Jellyfin, mostly for music. I'd use it for watching series and movies, but given how slow it is at transferring files and the fact that it has a 1GB (maybe 2GB) RAM... I was afraid to break it. On top of that, its storage is a years-old external hard drive.
I use Jellyfin mostly to have music on my iPhone. I can access it when I'm out and about on Tailscale. I hope to find a solution for my photos as well.
I'd also occasionally use the pi to experiment with some self-hosted open-source apps.
I constantly find myself wanting to upgrade because I want to also backup my important photos (with face recognition if possible) and documents "offline" (i.e. in my local network) to something more stable than an aging hard drive. They're all in the cloud, but a second backup option could be great.
What I understand from reading about NAS's is that I basically have one, it's just not... reliable?
The Question
I understand there is definitely a buy-in cost for buying an actual NAS, I'd like to know how much... so that I can make an informed decision on if and when I would buy it. What is an entry-level NAS and how much will it cost? What could it NOT do that an RPi could, and vice-versa? Am I missing an in-between or even an alternative solution for my use case? Is it overkill and should I just upgrade the pi? What are my options?
Thanks in advance for reading my post!
20 votes -
How to start Google
27 votes