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13 votes
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Spotify is adding direct messaging to their music streaming app
50 votes -
Google will require developer verification for Android apps outside the Play Store
82 votes -
How Tea’s founder convinced millions of women to spill their secrets, then exposed them to the world
44 votes -
App request: Mobile and desktop remote assistance
My elderly father has an android phone and so do I. Is there a reputable remote assistance app that we can both install so I can help him with basic phone stuff from far away? It has to be as easy...
My elderly father has an android phone and so do I. Is there a reputable remote assistance app that we can both install so I can help him with basic phone stuff from far away?
It has to be as easy to use as possible: it won't work if he has to open an app or toggle settings or punch in a buncha code. He doesn't even know how to take a screenshot and send it over WhatsApp. Ideally the app would just be sleeping until I send him a request, it'll have a pop up to allow, and he just has to click yes. I won't need full control, just be able to see what he sees and tell him what thingy to click.
On the desktop front, I'm considering getting Mint for him to upgrade. All he wants to do is open browser and go to bookmark sites. Is there a Mint compatible remote assistance app that's super easy? Again I'm okay with minimal control trade off with ease of use from his side.
Thanks Tildes :)
12 votes -
How do you manage separate development environments on your computer?
Hello Tildes! There's an open-source app I would like to work on and contribute code to, but it uses a toolchain that I'm not terribly familiar with (Deno), and I'm not a huge fan of letting tools...
Hello Tildes!
There's an open-source app I would like to work on and contribute code to, but it uses a toolchain that I'm not terribly familiar with (Deno), and I'm not a huge fan of letting tools like this have full access to my system and files.
Do any of you use a system to containerize different development environments for software development? I could definitely use a standard Docker/Podman container to run the app, but I'm not aware of a good system where you can edit a program's source in an IDE, make changes, build the app, open a local port, and save your new code, all within a sandboxed environment.
If anyone uses a system like this or something related, I would love to hear about it and share ideas.
14 votes -
The viral 'Tea' app just had a second data breach, and it's even worse
50 votes -
Apple overhauls EU App Store rules following penalty
32 votes -
Peertube (federated video streaming platform) crowdfunding it's mobile app
33 votes -
Duolingo is replacing human workers with AI
34 votes -
Introducing a unified future for app updates on Windows
21 votes -
What was your favorite older social media site/app? What did you like or dislike?
+1 for slashdot, mainly because of intelligent topics and conversations about science, technology, scifi, games and all that fun stuff. Community participation and quality discourse made it...
+1 for slashdot, mainly because of intelligent topics and conversations about science, technology, scifi, games and all that fun stuff. Community participation and quality discourse made it interesting.
Everything on popular social media "out there" now is about click bait and sound bites, even comments and replies. Posts (and communities) are reduced to nothing more than grabbing a few seconds of attention.
69 votes -
Slowly starting a passion project of a finance web-app that I can use help me budget but I have a crucial question
I am planning to use Plaid API and have a spring boot backend but given that I will be storing my financial information (such as whatever the Plaid API needs me to store to use their endpoints as...
I am planning to use Plaid API and have a spring boot backend but given that I will be storing my financial information (such as whatever the Plaid API needs me to store to use their endpoints as well as just the transactions on my credit and chequing account), the security of the data is obviously crucial. and I think my problem is I don't know what I don't know.
I have a basic idea of what kind of things I need to protect against.
- WIll have to use Spring security (or whatever is best) for thing like protecting against xss and csrf
- I need to ensure that the PostgreSQL database is encrypted
but beyond that, I don't know much about the nuances of each type of security and customizations I should be on the look-out for. wonder if there's a trustworthy resource for at least detailing for me the kind of security I need to implement on either the Spring or PostgreSQL side of things?
11 votes -
Somebody explain the logic of massive permission overreach?
18 votes -
Apple is no longer allowed to collect fees on purchases made outside apps
81 votes -
Your phone doesn't listen to you but apps send screenshots home
44 votes -
Twingate: Go beyond VPN
9 votes -
Government censorship comes to Bluesky, but not its third-party apps … yet
26 votes -
Fintech founder charged with fraud after ‘AI’ shopping app found to be powered by humans in the Philippines
39 votes -
Vibe coding on Apple Shortcuts
5 votes -
LocalSend: a free, open-source, cross-platform app to share files to nearby devices
62 votes -
US government workers and military planners love Signal now
30 votes -
The iPad’s “sweet” solution
18 votes -
What are the best truly unbeatable E2EE, presumably P2P messaging apps?
My thoughts are that apps can have end-to-end encryption, but if the app on the end is still connected to someone's servers, there's nothing stopping them from pulling the contents of the chat...
My thoughts are that apps can have end-to-end encryption, but if the app on the end is still connected to someone's servers, there's nothing stopping them from pulling the contents of the chat after it's been decrypted on the other end. What options do we have for messaging that don't have this issue? I understand that anything that I can see can still get taken by the OS, etc., but I'm curious about that first step.
28 votes -
Utah becomes first US state to pass bill making app stores verify ages - Governor has not yet signed the bill
18 votes -
What's the deal with SafetyCore, the weird app that suddenly appeared on Android?
29 votes -
Screen Time on iOS shows "verizon.com" as an app being used 24/7, and I don't even know what "verizon.com" is
While not the same website, this reddit thread from several years ago is the only thing coming up on Google for me and everyone in there has had the same thing happen to them: the Screen Time...
While not the same website, this reddit thread from several years ago is the only thing coming up on Google for me and everyone in there has had the same thing happen to them: the Screen Time settings in iOS showing some website being up 24/7
It should be noted I don't have Verizon, have never been to verizon.com, and don't even use Safari as my browser. I have -0- idea how in the world this is showing up, and so it automatically makes me assume my phone has been hacked somehow (but try to remind myself that tech is also just wonky).
I set the screen time limit to 1 minute, and it has not showed up again as an app that has even been used. This is on a iPhone XS on iOS 15.4.1
Does anyone have any idea what this means or why this would happen?
14 votes -
Obsidian is now free for work
66 votes -
Algorithmic complacency: Algorithms are breaking how we think
82 votes -
A timeline to bring them all together
7 votes -
Dating app cover-up: How Tinder, Hinge, and their corporate owner keep rape under wraps
39 votes -
WikiTok
53 votes -
TikTok and TikTok Lite APK are available on TikTok.com
9 votes -
Team behind Twitterrific launches a multi-feed app called Tapestry
18 votes -
What really happens inside a dating app
19 votes -
App/browser extension idea if it doesn't already exist: likely bot database
I just finished reading I hate the new internet post, in which the OP stated: Every social medium is just bots. The front page of Reddit is easily 35% easily detectable bots at least and who knows...
I just finished reading I hate the new internet post, in which the OP stated:
Every social medium is just bots. The front page of Reddit is easily 35% easily detectable bots at least and who knows what the rest is comprised of.
Why couldn't we create a bot database, which I imagine would work similarly to uBlock for ads? There would be a number of signals to attempt to classify users of social media sites (likely human, likely bot, etc.) in addition to user-provided feedback ("I think this person is a bot" or "this account is me -- definitely not a bot").
An extension could then be attached to the database to provide visual changes to social media platforms ("WARNING! LIKELY BOT!") or simply hide bot posts/comments.
Off the top of my head, some bot signals:
- Posting known duplicate posts with political motivation (e.g. on Reddit you see the same exact post about how the tariffs will create a stronger America by different posters) [strong indicator]
- Usernames that follow the lazy bot format, e.g., Pretentious_Rabbit_2355 [weak indicator]
- Usage of AI-generated or ripped off profile pictures, post images, etc. [strong indicator]
- etc.
On the crowdsourced side, there would have to be some rules in place to prevent profile bombing, etc.
All in all, I could see something like this adding a bit of human value back to the various social media platforms AND I would think it would lead to higher advertisement click rates (bots will become less valuable over time on a given platform and decide to invest their resources elsewhere, while "human" user engagement increases at the same time).
If this concept already exists, I apologize. I only did a very quick google.
15 votes -
MOS brings macOS' smooth scrolling to any mouse
14 votes -
Looking for a simple lists app
I've been using Google Keep (check boxes mode) for my work and personal to-do lists for a while now, and it's almost perfect for my use case. I love the simplicity and lack of options gumming up...
I've been using Google Keep (check boxes mode) for my work and personal to-do lists for a while now, and it's almost perfect for my use case. I love the simplicity and lack of options gumming up my process, and specifically I like the UI of having nested subtasks that all move with their head task when you reorder the top level tasks. That is to say, when you drag a headline task, all of its subtasks "roll up" inside it and "unfurl" when you drop the task into its new location. The fact that it syncs across devices is also really great, but not necessarily a deal breaker.
What is becoming a deal breaker is that you can only have 2 levels: top level or nested. I want more nesting levels, but with the simple touch-and-drag UI to which I've become accustomed.
Have any of you heard of/used an app such as I've described? I have issues using bigger, more fleshed-out apps because all the features distract my goblin brain, and the friction of having to use various touch menus or the keyboard on my phone to adjust indent levels keeps me from getting crap done.
Thanks in advance!
Edit: for now, I have settled on Workflowy. It seems to offer the most similar functionality with an acceptable number of interactions to do the things I want to do. Thank you to everyone who offered their experience!
20 votes -
Dillo 3.2 celebrates the browser's 25th anniversary
10 votes -
TikTok is coming back online after US President-elect Donald Trump pledged to restore it
27 votes -
TikTok makes app unavailable for US users ahead of ban
54 votes -
Donald Trump says he'll 'likely' give TikTok a ninety-day extension to avoid US ban
19 votes -
US Supreme Court unanimously backs law banning TikTok if it’s not sold by its Chinese parent company
48 votes -
US President Joe Biden won't enforce TikTok ban
31 votes -
Candy Crush, Tinder, MyFitnessPal: See the thousands of apps hijacked to spy on your location
65 votes -
Google faces US trial for collecting data on users who opted out
39 votes -
App that asks “Why?” every time you unlock your phone
22 votes -
Pinterest alternatives
Seems to be a common subject online that pinterest sucks. I've found so many threads of people asking for alternatives...but I've yet to find a replacement, or really recommendations. I've been...
Seems to be a common subject online that pinterest sucks. I've found so many threads of people asking for alternatives...but I've yet to find a replacement, or really recommendations.
I've been trying out the site cosmos.so, Interesting concept but it is limited by the lack of android and Firefox plugin support
Any suggestions? What I am looking for is a tool that I can use to save stuff I find online, links, images, screenshots. Preferably open sourced or privacy friendly, but at this point I'll take anything lol.
I feel like there has to be something out there!! Not sure why I am having such a hard time finding it. Any recommendations would be appreciated
11 votes -
What kind of app/service am I looking for?
like anyone, I use a calendar app, (my choice of app is ProtonCalendar as I will install only open-source apps) anyways, I will make a reminder even for myself, let's say 2:00 PM tomorrow, I want...
like anyone, I use a calendar app, (my choice of app is ProtonCalendar as I will install only open-source apps)
anyways, I will make a reminder even for myself, let's say 2:00 PM tomorrow, I want to pay a specific bill.
so 2 pm tomorrow comes around, and I am not at home, so what I will do when I get the notification is to not swipe it away but leave it in the notification section of my Google Pixel and I will only swipe it away once I have actually done it. and if I dont get to it that day, I will go to my computer and schedule that event for another day so I don't lose track of it.
problem is, more than 1, I have accidentally swiped away a notification without meaning to and sometimes I had like 3-4 different ones and I had to go through the history of what notifications I had swiped to make sure I didnt swipe away anything too urgent. but I'd much rather just not be able to swipe away a to-do I haven't completed yet until I could check a box indicating I had completed it.
I have considered getting a to-do notes app, but I really like seeing these sorts of reminders on a graphical calendar interface.
any suggestion for what I should do or do I just need to be really careful to not swipe away notification and there's no other option for me?
9 votes -
Looking for an Android keyboard app
Hello friends, and thank you in advance for any help on this topic. I am looking for an android keyboard that does not have emoji, stickers or gifs, but also has long press options for special...
Hello friends, and thank you in advance for any help on this topic.
I am looking for an android keyboard that does not have emoji, stickers or gifs, but also has long press options for special characters like dashes, slashes and colons etc.
Searching online for variants of "no emoji keyboard," only floods my results with the opposite and it's beyond frustrating!
I realize that the answer is likely right under my nose and I'm just missing it for whatever reason.
I would glady pay money for such an option if only I could find one.
I'm sorry if this question is silly or posted in the wrong thread, but I'm at my wits end.
Again, thank you for any help or redirection to my query!
Cheers!
28 votes