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5 votes
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Altstore.io - A third party App Store for iOS
14 votes -
Kik is shutting down their chat app and firing most of their employees to focus on their Kin cryptocurrency and SEC trial
23 votes -
Facebook’s suspension of ‘tens of thousands’ of apps reveals wider privacy issues
5 votes -
Popular Podcasts app Pocket Casts goes free, web & desktop app now subscription-based
22 votes -
Jeremy Renner’s app is shutting down because of trolls
13 votes -
Hong Kong protestors using Mesh messaging app China can't block: Usage up 3685%
23 votes -
Google employees are systematically listening to audio files recorded by Google Home smart speakers and the Google Assistant smartphone app
23 votes -
Creator of DeepNude, app that undresses photos of women, takes it offline
30 votes -
iOS 13 now shows you a map of where apps have been tracking you
13 votes -
Facebook suspends app pre-installs on Huawei phones
9 votes -
People of Tildes, what apps and programs do you use regularly on your PC?
I'm interested in what applications people use, maybe I can discover some better alternatives. Music: Spotify for streaming, Dopamine for local music. Cloud: OneDrive. As a student, I get 1 TB of...
I'm interested in what applications people use, maybe I can discover some better alternatives.
Music: Spotify for streaming, Dopamine for local music.
Cloud: OneDrive. As a student, I get 1 TB of space for free.
Email: Mailspring, though I'm eyeing eM Client as an alternative right now.
Text Processors: Mostly VS Code with LaTeX, but I do sometimes use good old MS Office.
Code: VS Code again, and also IntelliJ IDEA and CLion for the respective languages. VS Code for anything that isn't C or Java related. I'm also watching the development of Oni Vim 2.
PDF: On my laptop with a touch display, I use Drawboard. On my PC at home I use Nitro PDF.
Browser: Firefox, ever since the quantum update it's nice and snappy. Though maybe I'd switch to Vivaldi when they add Sync at some point.
48 votes -
'It's time for us to watch them': App lets you spy on Alexa and the rest of your smart devices
11 votes -
What little known mobile apps do you use?
What are some apps that you use that aren't particularly well known? Let's help each other discover some interesting new tools! lichess - best chess app out there IMO. Completely free and open...
What are some apps that you use that aren't particularly well known? Let's help each other discover some interesting new tools!
lichess - best chess app out there IMO. Completely free and open source, has daily puzzles, and a pretty active pool of users to play against!
Syncthing - file syncing tool that works with just about any operating system (although I don't think it works with iOS). I use it to take notes and write lyrics/my journal and sync them back to my linux laptop.
Untappd - social media app for tracking craft beers that you drink. I've only just started using it, since I was on holiday and wanted to keep a note of the ales I was drinking. It's a free app, but supported by ads. I believe there's a paid tier, but the free version works well enough, and it's useful for encouraging me and my friends to try new beers when we're out and about.
WK - Japanese flashcard app, which is technically a front-end for the wanikani service. As you learn new radicals, characters, and vocabulary, it serves them back up to you after a certain length of time. If you remember it, it'll wait longer next time, and if you don't get it right, it brings it back to the top of the pile.30 votes -
Apple to reveal glimpses of its next era of apps and sevices at WWDC
7 votes -
The standalone YouTube Gaming app and standalone gaming.youtube.com website have shut down
17 votes -
Please don’t theme our apps
9 votes -
Why WhatsApp will never be secure
16 votes -
Adobe warns customers of potential legal action for using older versions of Creative Cloud apps
19 votes -
Samsung spilled SmartThings app source code and secret keys
5 votes -
Popular apps in Google's Play Store are abusing permissions and committing ad fraud
9 votes -
Oil traders are now watching workers’ phones to spot problems at refineries
5 votes -
A family tracking app was leaking real-time location data
7 votes -
Instagram adds in-app checkout as part of its big push into shopping
3 votes -
Apple denies Spotify's "unfair play" claim
12 votes -
Spotify are asking the European Commission to stop Apple's anti-competitive behaviour
9 votes -
Telegram gets three million new signups during Facebook apps’ outage
7 votes -
The hottest chat app for teens is … Google Docs
28 votes -
What would you want in a Stackoverflow/Quora competitor?
My friend was rambling about making his own Stackoverflow/quora clone, but with some random specific features. Note that this project would probably compete directly with Quora, but have multiple...
My friend was rambling about making his own Stackoverflow/quora clone, but with some random specific features.
Note that this project would probably compete directly with Quora, but have multiple subcomminties like Stackoverflow/Reddit. We think taking programming FAQs from SO is too uphill of a battle to focus on.
What are some great ideas?
10 votes -
Nike’s self-lacing sneakers turn into bricks after faulty firmware update
22 votes -
What would you want in a Reddit app?
My friend and I are considering finishing a prototype of a Reddit app. We've already agreed to the following features on first release (if we keep going). Similar urls to current Reddit website...
My friend and I are considering finishing a prototype of a Reddit app. We've already agreed to the following features on first release (if we keep going).
- Similar urls to current Reddit website (so you can change the URL to reddit.com and see the same page)
- voting, commenting, posting selftexts and links
- Directly uploading image posts may come later if it looks complicated
- Masstagger integrated.
- Dark theme (other options in later releases)
- Primary use case: desktop and mobile web.
- Performance first. Reddit's 1 minute load time on default mobile, missing/broken features on i.reddit.com/.compact, and a few tiny complaints on the desktop site are the primary reasons we are considering writing this app. Native is not in our collective skillsets or radar, so we're going to go the extra mile to make sure the app respects both your time and your battery where possible. We did do some research and found that Reddit has actually been negligent in this regard on mobile web, meanwhile we have years of experience in the subject.
- Mailbox (send/receive messages, orange icon on new message/comment reply/thread reply).
- No infinite scroll
- View source JSON of comments/posts.
What are some features/ideas that members of this community would really like in a Reddit app?
13 votes -
China's Communist Party requires millions of people to tune into 'Xi Jinping thought' every day
10 votes -
Critics call on Apple and Google to shut down Saudi app that can restrict women’s travel
6 votes -
Netflix stops paying the ‘Apple tax’ on its $853M in annual iOS revenue
14 votes -
Google takes down Artstation android app for explicit content
11 votes -
At Blind, a security lapse revealed private complaints from Silicon Valley employees
13 votes -
Slack is banning users who have visited US-sanctioned countries (including Iran and Cuba) while using its app
20 votes -
Facebook says new bug allowed apps access to private photos of up to 6.8m users
33 votes -
Your apps know where you were last night, and they’re not keeping it secret
23 votes -
Mac, Electron and the decline of native apps
17 votes -
Facebook launches Lasso, its music and video TikTok clone
9 votes -
TikTok surpassed Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube in downloads last month
14 votes -
Signal technology preview: sealed sender
21 votes -
Your kid’s apps are crammed with ads
17 votes -
In Iran, state sanctioned messaging apps are the new hallmark of internet nationalisation
4 votes -
A look at the Android Market (aka Google Play) on its 10th Anniversary
3 votes -
Sneaky subscriptions are plaguing the App Store
16 votes -
How game design transformed Hillary for America's supporter engagement
2 votes -
Concerning the iPhone XS' camera—from the makers of the Halide iPhone photography app
12 votes -
What if app stores were federated?
I've been thinking a lot lately about the future of software and where native apps and the web will reconcile and I had the idea that what if "the next OS" had a OSS federated app store that...
I've been thinking a lot lately about the future of software and where native apps and the web will reconcile and I had the idea that what if "the next OS" had a OSS federated app store that people and organizations could host themselves, but the system still used the app store model that pull app/program listings from all the installations online? This could apply to mobile or desktop computing, or even any of the other platforms (see windows store system compatibility).
11 votes