-
42 votes
-
It may soon be legal to jailbreak AI to expose how it works
29 votes -
Radxa X4 low-cost, credit card-sized Intel N100 SBC goes for $60 and up
16 votes -
CrowdStrike code update bricking Windows machines around the world
143 votes -
It's starting to look a lot like... Y2K
24 votes -
/r/nixos enables automated moderation with Watchdog
16 votes -
Microsoft laid off a DEI team, and its lead wrote an internal email blasting how DEI is 'no longer business critical'
37 votes -
DuckDuckGo seems like a significantly worse search engine than Google despite SEO bloat, and I think community discussions mislead people by omitting that
In the recent months I started getting dissatisfied with Google the company in general, but also with its search engine due to privacy reasons, and SEO bloat affecting certain searches. A few...
In the recent months I started getting dissatisfied with Google the company in general, but also with its search engine due to privacy reasons, and SEO bloat affecting certain searches. A few weeks ago I switched to Duckduckgo from Google. Some searches are fine but there are three main issues I've been experiencing with Duckduckgo since the switch.
- The search "fails" and shows me results that are tangentially related to the query. Happens quite often and for various topics.
- It shows me a semi-related search results instead of the one I searched for, because it says there are not enough results for my query. Then I have to click again on the small text to search for the actual query.
- The automatic prompts that complete your query are scarce and unsatisfactory.
Because of this I've been switching back and forth between Google and Duckduckgo lately. I don't want to use Google, but Duckduckgo is definitely the worse option in general in my experience. It's better in some searches and shows useful results instead of big site bloat, but my overall experience was one of getting heavily downgraded.
This led me to a criticism about the discussions around this topic. People talk a lot about SEO bloat affecting search results, and it's definitely a real issue. It's especially a problem for some political searches, as it results in you getting propaganda results. However, recommending people Duckduckgo without mentioning its significantly worse search quality seems misleading.
I am of course not against using or recommending Duckduckgo. In fact, I wish them greater success in market share and development, as I think their policies are much better. But I think mentioning Duckduckgo's downsides is important to adequately inform people. I expected a noticeable downgrade, but I didn't expect it to be this worse because nobody mentioned it. As a result, I felt misled, and I definitely didn't know what I was getting into. Being adequately informed would have prevented that, as I would adjust my expectations.
So, this seems to be largely unaddressed in discussions around this topic, and I suspect the echo chamber effect around anti-Google discourse and privacy issues might be to blame.
What are your thoughts? Has anyone experienced something similar?
65 votes -
Scarlett Johansson says OpenAI’s Sam Altman would make a good Marvel villain after voice dispute
33 votes -
Maximum-severity Cisco vulnerability allows attackers to change admin passwords
26 votes -
Cheap phone plan with international service?
I am going to be living in France for the next year. I want to keep my US mobile phone number, and I would like it to be somewhat usable while I am out of the country, but I can't find an...
I am going to be living in France for the next year. I want to keep my US mobile phone number, and I would like it to be somewhat usable while I am out of the country, but I can't find an affordable way do set this up. I am hoping someone here has some more insight for me.
I am going to be buying a French mobile phone plan (most likely through Orange) that will cover my data usage, along with a local number for calls and texts. I already have either whatsapp or imessage set up for calls and texts to/from my family in the US. Ideally, I would like to have my US number on a second sim on my phone. I wouldn't need any roaming data for that sim, just calls and texts, and my actual usage will be very small.
Here are the solutions I have explored:
-
Porting my number to Google Voice. This is probably the best solution, but I would like to avoid google if at all possible. This costs only $20 with no monthly fees. This would require me to use a separate app for this number. If possible, I would like to be able to use the iPhone system apps for calls and texts.
-
Some MVNO with international roaming. So far the best I have seen is Ting mobile. It costs $0.30 per minute calls and $0.12 per outgoing text. This pricing would be perfect for my extremely low usage. However it requires a $10/month pay as you go plan which is more than I want to pay.
-
IoT sims (although I am almost positive this won't work). These appear to be sms and data only, so for my usage they would be sms only. Telnyx is the service I found that actually supports esim (my phone has only esim). I am having trouble with the console, but I am trying to get an esim on my iphone. If this can work, it would be only $2/month plus usage, which would be perfect.
Are there any other possible solutions that I should look into?
17 votes -
-
Objects of Our Life: Steve Jobs' talk at the 1983 design conference in Aspen
7 votes -
What the all-American delusion of the Polygraph says about our relationship to fact and fiction
27 votes -
What's our thoughts on Perplexity.ai for search?
If you haven't used it yet, it's more like a cited source summary tool. I actually really like for questions such as "Who is X and why are they important?" I'm interested in people's thoughts on it.
15 votes -
What do you read/watch to keep up with new computer tech?
Sorry in advance if this is kind of a ramble. Thanks for any thoughts you may have. This post asking about specific hardware made me realize that I have lost touch with major architectural changes...
Sorry in advance if this is kind of a ramble. Thanks for any thoughts you may have.
This post asking about specific hardware made me realize that I have lost touch with major architectural changes in PC hardware. Back in college (over 20 years ago), I was constantly upgrading and rebuilding computers, talking about them, reading about them. But that's probably par for the course in a EE program. I'm sure there must have been other online resources, but Slashdot is the thing that sticks out in my memory of that time.
Then in grad school, my last set of desktops from college carried me through the first few years, and I had a series of laptops provided by school.
Since then, I've always just bought laptops because they've gotten good enough to do everything I want, and with kids, it's much more flexible to be able to work anywhere in and out of the house. My latest (now several years old) has a high end I7 cpu, an NVIDIA GPU, two solid state drives (1.5TB total). It weighs just a few pounds and does everything I want, including things like Solidworks, zbrush, and older PC games.
Since I can remember a time when I was excited about 90mhz processors and feeling like I was getting a screaming deal to pay $500 for a 500mb hd, sometimes it just feels surreal for this to be so normal.
So, am I out of the loop? Or is this reflective of a more general shift? What do you read / where do you post to discuss hardware, hardware compatibility, etc. Are you still building desktops? Laptops? Cyberdecks? What are your thoughts on cost/value trade off of dell, etc. vs rolling your own?
13 votes -
Inside the tiny chip that powers Montreal subway tickets
14 votes -
How are AI and LLMs used in your company (if at all)?
I'm working on an AI chat portal for teams, think Perplexity but trained on a company's knowledgebase (prosgpt dot com for the curious) and i wanted to talk to some people who are successfully...
I'm working on an AI chat portal for teams, think Perplexity but trained on a company's knowledgebase (prosgpt dot com for the curious) and i wanted to talk to some people who are successfully using LLMs in their teams or jobs to improve productivity
Are you using free or paid LLMs? Which ones?
What kind of tasks do you get an LLM to do for you?
What is the workflow for accomplishing those tasks?
Cheers,
nmn12 votes -
Internet mysteries: The website you can only open once
21 votes -
Nvidia RTX 50 graphics card family TDPs 'leaked' by Seasonic
31 votes -
"Privacy-Preserving" Attribution: Mozilla disappoints us yet again
68 votes -
Is this the right time to buy an AM5 desktop?
I am planning to go back to a desktop after using laptops for years. I already have an 1080p IPS monitor. I want just the tower. There is the new Zen 5 coming out soon. I was thinking about buying...
I am planning to go back to a desktop after using laptops for years.
I already have an 1080p IPS monitor. I want just the tower.
There is the new Zen 5 coming out soon.
I was thinking about buying a Ryzen 7600 and maybe buy a GPU in the future if I want to play heavier games. The Ryzen 7600 has integrated graphics for basic things.
My main use now is just some casual gaming (Afterimage, Hollow Knight, Fallout 4), movies, browsing the web and compiling some software (Gentoo Linux).
I use exclusively Linux and I want to keep using AMD.
Should I wait the Zen 5 to come out and see if the 7600 price drops or this probably won't happen?
6 votes -
I'm a mess, so I'm making my own file organizer [TagStudio]
11 votes -
Exclusive: OpenAI working on new reasoning technology under code name ‘Strawberry’
17 votes -
Weak security defaults enabled Squarespace Domains hijacks of former Google Domains accounts
19 votes -
What happened to user interfaces?
23 votes -
💾 Floppy8 - A tiny computer, in a floppy drive
22 votes -
What are some fun/interesting websites that don't involve news or current events?
As the title says, looking for recommendations of fun and interesting websites that don't involve current events/news. Sites where you can spend hours diving down rabbit holes, browsing fun and...
As the title says, looking for recommendations of fun and interesting websites that don't involve current events/news. Sites where you can spend hours diving down rabbit holes, browsing fun and interesting content, or just otherwise detach from reality for a bit.
This isn't a request for just myself, but just in general. I feel like all the biggest websites just have a bit too much influence from current events and news, which can make browsing pretty stressful. And given how centralized the internet has become, finding sites outside those has become a bit trickier. It'd be fun to see some more focused sites for various topics and niches. Can be an educational site with cool articles, could be entertainment, could be a forum or a blog. Just, what sites could you spend hours on?
59 votes -
Disney hack results in leak of over 1 TB of Slack data
34 votes -
Wikipedia’s mobile website finally gets a dark mode — here’s how to turn it on
27 votes -
Computer monitors that are good for watching videos?
I know it isn't a good habit. I like to watch movies, "T.V. shows" on my computer. It was never a problem with older style monitors. However with newer style monitors ( like I have ) and T.V....
I know it isn't a good habit. I like to watch movies, "T.V. shows" on my computer. It was never a problem with older style monitors.
However with newer style monitors ( like I have ) and T.V. screens you either have to be far away from the monitor or be sitting up straight for the images not to fade. Worse, you can't see anything with night scenes.
Anything I can do about it aside from buying a hug TV and sitting on a couch at the other end of the room?
Update: I got the monitor /user/ButteredToast recommended. It works noticeably better than my old monitor and the price was very reasonable
10 votes -
Library asks users to verify that books actually exist before making a loan request because AI invents book titles
43 votes -
Spotify is no longer just a streaming app, it’s a social network
41 votes -
DVDs are dying right as streaming has made them appealing again
20 votes -
Someone is wrong on the internet (AGI Doom edition)
28 votes -
AT&T says criminals stole phone records of ‘nearly all’ US customers in new data breach
26 votes -
How to raise your artificial intelligence
7 votes -
Crunchyroll announces the removal of its comment section across all platforms to 'reduce harmful content'
49 votes -
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 -
Court says Andrew Tate can leave Romania but remain in EU as he awaits trial
18 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