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49 votes
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Iceland's startup scene is punching above its weight – dodging the venture capital doldrums, Frumtak Ventures lands $87M for its fourth fund
5 votes -
‘We’re living in a nightmare:’ Inside the health crisis of a Texas bitcoin town
65 votes -
Google Chrome ships a default, hidden extension that allows code on *.google.com access to private APIs, including your current CPU usage
69 votes -
We need to control AI agents now
19 votes -
Help my wife decide about AJ & Smart
My wife is thinking about signing up for the Master Workshopper program from AJ & Smart. It’s a relatively big financially decision so I thought I would pass along some of her initial thoughts and...
My wife is thinking about signing up for the Master Workshopper program from AJ & Smart. It’s a relatively big financially decision so I thought I would pass along some of her initial thoughts and questions here in the hopes anyone had some experience with this program either personally or just anecdotally.
Hey everyone,
I'm thinking about signing up for the Master Workshopper program from AJ & Smart and would love to hear from anyone who's already gone through it. If you've done it, I'd really appreciate your thoughts!
Here’s what I’m curious about:
1 Quality of Content: Is the material solid and up-to-date? 2 Instructors: How are the instructors? Do they make the content engaging and clear? 3 Practical Application: Were you able to use what you learned right away in your work? 4 Community and Networking: How’s the community aspect? Did you make any good connections? 5 Value for Money: Do you think it was worth the investment? Why or why not? 6 Career Impact: Has it made a difference in your career or skills?
Any other thoughts or experiences you can share would be awesome too!
Thanks a lot for your help!
15 votes -
Meet Mercy and Anita – the African workers driving the AI revolution, for just over a dollar an hour
18 votes -
Most reliable privacy-conscious notes app?
as the title indicates, I am in search of a reliable privacy-conscious notes app, I have tried the following which have the indicated bugs that I frequently experience and make the notes app feel...
as the title indicates, I am in search of a reliable privacy-conscious notes app, I have tried the following which have the indicated bugs that I frequently experience and make the notes app feel unreliable or just too inconvenient:
- NextCloud Notes:
- https://github.com/nextcloud/notes/issues/1187
- bug is that sometimes I have to rename a note 2-3 times in the browser for it to take
- bug where the pop-up menu doesn't go away after favoriting a note
- and the nextcloud android app has its own slew of issues
- StandardNotes app: I remember the app being really buggy on Firefox to the point where I had to regularly use Brave just for that app.
32 votes -
What's up with solid state batteries? A conversation with Siyu Huang of Factorial Energy
12 votes -
Superintelligence—ten years later
8 votes -
The asymmetry of nudges
21 votes -
The best robot vacuum for me is the one I hacked
32 votes -
Announcing the Ladybird Browser Initiative
54 votes -
Proton is launching encrypted documents to take on Google Docs
42 votes -
OnlyFans vows it's a safe space. Predators are exploiting kids there.
15 votes -
ChatGPT is bullshit
61 votes -
Thirty years later, FreeDOS is still keeping the dream of the command prompt alive
18 votes -
Ouroboros - packet networking rebuilt from the ground up
17 votes -
Mitigating Skeleton Key, a new type of generative AI jailbreak technique
15 votes -
Framework Laptop 16, six months later
36 votes -
Microsoft says it's okay to steal content published on the web
16 votes -
Microsoft CEO of AI claims online content is 'freeware' [and can be used to train LLMs in the absence of a specific directives from the author against this]
43 votes -
FreeDOS open-source text-based OS turns 30, still in active development and primarily used for retro gaming
13 votes -
AI-powered scams and what you can do about them
7 votes -
AirPods with camera modules to reportedly enter mass production in 2026, will be designed to deliver an enhanced spatial audio experience
6 votes -
Shopping app Temu is “dangerous malware,” spying on your texts, lawsuit claims
45 votes -
Why so many bitcoin mining companies are pivoting to AI
14 votes -
Question about Google's Find My Device network with the new trackers
Hi everyone, Have a quick question if you have the time. I want to buy some of the new Android Find My Device trackers, have wanted to ever since destroying my Tiles when they were bought by that...
Hi everyone,
Have a quick question if you have the time. I want to buy some of the new Android Find My Device trackers, have wanted to ever since destroying my Tiles when they were bought by that scummy data-retailer.
My question is: if I buy, for example, a Pebblebee device, does Pebblebee get my location data? Google already has that; that's the deal with the devil you have to decide whether or not you want to take. But I don't want to give this information to another third party.
I've done some Googling on this but of course search is useless these days. I tried to read Pebblebee's privacy policy but gave up pretty quickly:
➜ ~ cat pebblebee | wc -w 17391
Does anyone have an authoritative answer on this? Would love to know.
TIA and thanks for your time!
ETA: I have seen where Pebblebee claims they don't sell user data; I'm not even questioning that with this post (although I do question every company's trustworthiness). This is more a question about the architecture of the Find My Device network itself.
Edit 2: I'm already carrying around a personal spy that reports everything I do to Google, I don't think it matters whether they can get my location from the trackers lol. I just wondered if I was exposing that to Pebblebee (just as an example) as well.
13 votes -
The day AppGet died
40 votes -
Microsoft erases guide for switching to local Windows accounts
82 votes -
YouTube is testing "Premium Jump Ahead" (built-in sponsorblock)
43 votes -
Polyfill supply chain attack hits 100K+ sites
45 votes -
AI work assistants need a lot of handholding (gifted link)
7 votes -
Flathub has now served more than two billion downloads for Flatpaks
23 votes -
Vibe Check - Let AI find you the best things
30 votes -
My Windows computer just doesn't feel like mine anymore
78 votes -
Microsoft shelves its underwater data center — Project Natick had fewer server failures compared to servers on land
20 votes -
Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win
59 votes -
3D printing my teeth
14 votes -
Anthropic's CEO on being an underdog
9 votes -
Which user feedback tools would you recommend?
Hey everyone, I'm currently getting close to releasing a piece of software and I think that engaging users and collecting their feedback to inform the development of future features is valuable....
Hey everyone,
I'm currently getting close to releasing a piece of software and I think that engaging users and collecting their feedback to inform the development of future features is valuable. So, I am currently evaluating different specialized solutions to see which one is best.
Does anybody have a preference for a particular tool, or otherwise know which tools are the best in terms of functionality etc.?
Thanks in advance for your input!
I'll go back to comparing options and I'll check back in here later on. Have a nice one.
Edit: To clarify, I am looking for an end user-facing tool for a (currently closed-source) SaaS (I may eventually open-source it, but I'm a bit on the fence-I would have to weigh the pros and cons).
8 votes -
Minimalist Android launcher recommendations
Currently, I'm using the Aero launcher, and I really like having all the names of my apps listed out, but if I could have something with a to do list and then swipe for apps, it would be kind of...
Currently, I'm using the Aero launcher, and I really like having all the names of my apps listed out, but if I could have something with a to do list and then swipe for apps, it would be kind of neat.
Other wish list functions:
- Folders for Apps.
- Able to add PWA or a URL to a list of apps.
- Start a search from searching through all apps.
- Corner widgets/shortcuts
- A pony!
Willing to poke around if there is an open source project I can add stuff too.
24 votes -
This impossibly thin fabric could cool you down by sixteen-plus degrees
19 votes -
Squabblr is now a free speech platform
139 votes -
Wikipedia's Philosophy game: A breakdown, and how someone broke it
10 votes -
AI the product vs AI the feature
17 votes -
Experiences using a local voice assistant with LLM with HomeAssistant?
Has anyone out there hooked HomeAssistant up to a local LLM? I'm very tempted: Alexa integrations fail often. HomeAssistant integrations tend to be rock solid. Alexa is rule/pattern matching...
Has anyone out there hooked HomeAssistant up to a local LLM? I'm very tempted:
- Alexa integrations fail often. HomeAssistant integrations tend to be rock solid.
- Alexa is rule/pattern matching based. LLMs can understand natural language fairly well. The "magical incantations" required by Alexa are awkward.
Other than the software, the device side seems challenging. There are $50 fully-baked POP devices. I'm less sure on the DIY front.
Also, I desperately want my house to speak to me in the voice of the NCC-1701D computer. I've read enough now to know this should be achievable with a modicum of effort via OSS voice cloning tools or training a new model (same difference except "voice cloning" seems to often refer to doing this without training a whole new model?).
Thoughts? Experiences?
I've seen several pages that have led me to conclude this is tenable:
https://github.com/myshell-ai/OpenVoice
https://github.com/domesticatedviking/TextyMcSpeechy
https://github.com/mezbaul-h/june
https://www.home-assistant.io/voice_control/voice_remote_local_assistant/
14 votes -
Detecting hallucinations in large language models using semantic entropy
17 votes -
I don’t know James Rolfe
35 votes -
Fast crimes at Lambda School
21 votes