-
47 votes
-
Access to Fable and Mythos 5 cut off after US government order
57 votes -
Arch User Repository compromised, 1500+ packages affected
61 votes -
Ruins of the web: Hello Internet
20 votes -
Brave Origin, a paid, premium version of Brave is now available
18 votes -
Our workplace LLM mass delusion
40 votes -
Anbernic to sell replacement parts for some of their handhelds
18 votes -
Would it make sense to wrap my Calibre library in a Git project?
Basically, the title question. I'm rethinking my entire data backup routine, considering using Git to start tracking much/most (all?) of my assorted projects' histories. In most cases, it makes...
Basically, the title question.
I'm rethinking my entire data backup routine, considering using Git to start tracking much/most (all?) of my assorted projects' histories. In most cases, it makes sense; but with my Calibre library, I'm not sure.
Has anyone tried this?
More particularly, if I do it ... what-all should be included in the .ignore file? Should I try to maintain a version history of the metadata.db file (an SQLite db file)? What about the ".calnotes" and ".caltrash" folders?
Thanks.
19 votes -
freemediaheckyeah - The largest collection of free stuff on the internet
61 votes -
Google Chrome to fully remove legacy support for manifest v2
52 votes -
Landmark German ruling declares Google's AI Overviews are Google's own words and makes it liable for false answers
80 votes -
Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5
44 votes -
"Teachers are going to hate it": How social media apps hooked teens at school
28 votes -
Cursor trails of people currently browsing the web
13 votes -
If Claude Fable stops helping you, you'll never know
33 votes -
An interactive introduction to the terrific experience of rendering Arabic typography and its technical debt
15 votes -
USB power delivery: Plugging into the benefits
12 votes -
The user is visibly frustrated
39 votes -
Your URL bar can be a CLI for searching websites
35 votes -
A human in control
9 votes -
Recommendations for e-ink tablets?
Last year, I took a promotion at work which meant I would be managing a few people and also involved with/overseeing a number of long term projects. As I've learned how to manage people, I've also...
Last year, I took a promotion at work which meant I would be managing a few people and also involved with/overseeing a number of long term projects. As I've learned how to manage people, I've also learned that my previous methods for note taking are insufficient for what I'm doing and I'm losing track of things in my paper notebooks.
My employer has offered to buy me a new laptop but I'm actually pretty satisfied with my current laptop, so I've been doing some research into e-ink tablets which I think will help me stay more organized while also allowing me to take notes by hand (my preference) rather than typing things into a Google doc as I've been doing for my one on one meetings.
I don't have any experience with this technology and no way that I can get any hands on experience before buying something, so I'd love to hear from anyone who has used something like this, and especially if there's anything I need to consider that I haven't thought of.
My use cases:
- note taking / digital organization
- online reading (I run literary magazines and our submissions come in through an online system, and there's no convenient way to download them as pdfs to read offline, so having access to a web browser is important)
- access to Google Drive ideally so I can get to my notes from my desktop or laptop
- it'll be used at my desk or on my couch in full light, so no backlight or front light is not an issue
One of my coworkers has a remarkable tablet but he told me it's been less useful for him than he thought. In my research, this seems to be too limited for my uses.
The Onyx Boox Go 10.3 seems to be what would work best for me but I've also read a lot of warnings about their poor customer service so I'm a bit hesitant.
30 votes -
Apple unveils their new operating systems for 2027: iOS 27, macOS 27 Golden Gate, and more
25 votes -
Searching for neighbours on the indie web
Hi and welcome to this post I was just wondering if anyone else (besides me) is currently interested in the indie web and also in extension 88x31 Buttons. I have a small (and very much...
Hi and welcome to this post
I was just wondering if anyone else (besides me) is currently interested in the indie web and also in extension 88x31 Buttons.
I have a small (and very much in-progress) website that I mostly coded myself. I started sometimes 2 years ago, so in 2024. And through that time it has gone through so many iterations. My site only consists of HTML and CSS and some minimal JavaScript. So I was just wondering if anyone also has an interest in the indie web and more importantly also has some buttons?
The idea or goal with this post was to just find some more people to add as neighbors because I find it somewhat scary to just ask people out of the blue or email them.
I also made my own if anyone wants to link it to their site please let me know.
This is my button:
https://postimg.cc/xqYQ8dJr<a href="https://luna-uwu.nekoweb.org"><img src="https://luna-uwu.nekoweb.org/button-luna.png" alt="Luna's Button"/></a>I guess the link to the site is this:
https://luna-uwu.nekoweb.org/ (I think i posted it before)Some "definitions"
What is the Indie Web?
It is some sort of a movement to bring back personal blogs and personal websites there are a few hosting alternatives similar to geocities in the 2000s. One is called neocities and the one I'm currently using is Nekoweb because indeed the web should be for cats!
What are these 88x31 Buttons?
so these buttons usually link to other's people site and they are the size of 88x31px it's pretty small but since you can do it in the GIF format, you can even animate them, and they usually look pretty great.
There are some examples on my site :) on the bottom :)I guess that's about it. I hope you have a nice time of day wherever you are.
43 votes -
Social media has become a freak show
6 votes -
People who want less AI are breaking up with Google Search
43 votes -
When AI builds itself — progress toward recursive self-improvement and its implications
25 votes -
Finland tests new system to help detect threats to subsea cables before incidents happen – scores of breaches in previous years have crippled critical underwater infrastructure
14 votes -
Amazon shuts down internal AI leaderboard after employees cheated
27 votes -
Have you tried Pewdiepies' self-hosted AI workspace, Odysseus?
18 votes -
What do you think of robots in the military?
Do you think it is ethical? Should robots be remotely controlled at all times or should they be automated? Who do you think should be held responsible if a robot accidentally commits a war crime?...
Do you think it is ethical?
Should robots be remotely controlled at all times or should they be automated?
Who do you think should be held responsible if a robot accidentally commits a war crime?
Do you think war would be more frequent if there were no humans fighting?
Also a more general question: what do you think is the future of robots?24 votes -
Clanker: A word for the machine
40 votes -
Comedian Ronny Chieng tells Harvard to ‘Destroy AI’ as graduates cheer
17 votes -
Commemorative US Mint Steve Jobs coin sells out in just eleven minutes
4 votes -
No right to remain silent: negative rights in a positive-rights world
40 votes -
A vernacular web (2005, Olia Lialina)
7 votes -
A new industry body, The Tokenomics Foundation, will hammer out open standards for measuring and managing the soaring costs of AI infrastructure as token-based pricing becomes the norm
16 votes -
Hackers used Meta’s AI support bot to seize Instagram accounts
18 votes -
You can now use your Gmail account in Proton Mail
35 votes -
Xteink X4 Developer Edition
13 votes -
Which Substacks do you subscribe to/follow?
Im dabbling in substack and starting with this one food writer.. but who else should i follow? I see a lot of people post these interesting essays from Substack - any general recs?
16 votes -
US FBI says Google engineer used internal search data to win $1.2M on Polymarket
39 votes -
Building Pi with Pi
4 votes -
Introducing WebGPU support for llama.cpp
12 votes -
Insomniathought: blocking people in social media can be a positive thing
Most social media sites have options for muting and blocking people. As we know, muting is one-way (they see me, I don't see them) and blocking is two-way (neither see each other). Recently, while...
Most social media sites have options for muting and blocking people. As we know, muting is one-way (they see me, I don't see them) and blocking is two-way (neither see each other).
Recently, while having too much caffeine in my system way too late, I had the thought that "blocking" is a far more negative term than what it should be. Sometimes it's done in spite, absolutely. You wanna slap somebody for being how they are.
But sometimes you just recognize that there's someone who you have nothing against, whom you might even like if you met them in real life, but in this context of limited human connect, you understand that the only possible communication between you and them would be toxic. That your opinions, your way of speaking, perhaps your whole existence offends them. Or vice versa.
So you protect them from yourself by blocking them, in lieu of a better word. I think there should be a better word but I haven't figured out what it should be yet. "Spare"?
(P.S. I think tildes should perhaps have such a functionality)
22 votes -
Outsourcing plus local AI will soon become more economical vs frontier labs
23 votes -
Is AI profitable yet?
68 votes -
Criticizing Eric Schmidt, ex-Google/Alphabet CEO - Casey Muratori
13 votes -
I think Anthropic and OpenAI have found product-market fit
32 votes -
If you let AI do your writing, I will come to your house and kill you
78 votes -
Motorola's Smart Feed injected affiliate links into their device's Amazon app, Motorola corrects "unintended" behavior
35 votes