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9 votes
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Here are the browsers iOS 14 now lets you set as default
13 votes -
Everything we know so far about the mysterious and confusing deal between TikTok, Oracle, and Walmart
4 votes -
Eight ways to know that it’s time to hire a new QA tester
3 votes -
At this point, 5G is a bad joke
16 votes -
What sort of software do you want to see?
Devs make things they feel like making, or things they think the world needs. What kind of an app (web, desktop, or mobile) would you want to see? What is something you wanted or needed for a long...
Devs make things they feel like making, or things they think the world needs.
What kind of an app (web, desktop, or mobile) would you want to see? What is something you wanted or needed for a long time that simply isn't there, or there but so bad with X that you can't use it?
Alternatively, what is a common problem that could be solved with software but hasn't been yet, or at least not effectively?
Leaving this vague on purpose, to let Tilderinos express themselves.
28 votes -
Which is arguably the best phone for ROMs?
This post is born from another discussion we have currently on tildes about the benefits of LineageOS. Please, check it out if you wanna discuss about the benefits of the custom ROM scene. Here,...
This post is born from another discussion we have currently on tildes about the benefits of LineageOS. Please, check it out if you wanna discuss about the benefits of the custom ROM scene.
Here, instead, I ask primarily about hardware, not about software. Although, as always, they later intersect.My question comes from my search for a new phone, I have been rocking a Moto G5 Plus since 2018 (it was released in 2017 and I bought it second-hand) and my experience has been great overall. I knew that I could root this phone so that I did in September 2018 and from there I haven't gone back to stock ever since. Mistakes aside, the experience has been great overall and has nourish my interest in computing. But, this phone is 3 and a half years old and I definitely notice it. One, due to the wear and second the 2GB of RAM my model had (XT1680). I'm in no hurry in a change though, I think I could use it for some more years and I can say that thanks to an amazing community that still supports this phone. (Seriously, I am using Android 10 with the latest patch, unthinkable!).
Nevertheless, as a thought experiment, or as a backup plan, or useful for anyone interested in being part of custom ROMs, I would like to ask you guys which do you think are the most dev-friendly phone in the market right now?
The criteria would be:
- It has a unlockable bootloader.
- The kernel has been released and is available.
- Has a community that constantly supports it.
It doesn't have 2GB of RAM
Please, write any phone you have the idea that has a modding scene. I'm afraid that some will not be available in my country, but I want to make it as international possible so I insist, write any phone that has that criteria. And feedback for the english will also be appreciated.
10 votes -
A new browser extension developed by Mozilla will allow YouTube users to record and upload information about harmful videos recommended by the site, as well as the route they took to get there
14 votes -
Court blocks Trump’s WeChat ban from taking effect today
17 votes -
Where’s the Yelp for open-source tools?
12 votes -
Arm officially supports Panfrost Open-Source Mali GPU driver development
7 votes -
Film: The reason some of the past was in HD
9 votes -
LG Wing hands on
4 votes -
Canonical CEO Mark Shuttleworth makes peace with Ubuntu Linux community
11 votes -
Why do computers running Windows get progressively slower over time?
I promise this is a genuine question and not a Windows hit piece. Every Windows computer I've ever had has slowly gotten laggier over time until my impatience has forced me to reinstall the OS to...
I promise this is a genuine question and not a Windows hit piece.
Every Windows computer I've ever had has slowly gotten laggier over time until my impatience has forced me to reinstall the OS to get the speed boost that comes with a fresh copy. In the schools I've worked in, computer labs and carts full of Windows machines have slowly sunsetted, becoming wholly unusable over time. I think Chromebooks have taken over education in part because they have a snappiness to them that sticks around for a long time, unlike the decay demonstrated by Windows computers.
In my current job, I was issued a Windows computer and a Chromebook at the same time, when I was hired. The Chromebook is still chugging along just fine, but the once fresh and quick Windows computer is now ramping down. I know it's not because of startup or background programs latching on over time because I don't have admin rights and thus can't install anything! I'm not a power user either. I really only ever run a browser with minimal tabs, along with the very occasional instance of office software and/or PDF reader. That's it. And what used to be instant and quick is now like... trudging... through... sludge...
Is there some fundamental design flaw in Windows? Am I finding a pattern where none exists? Do I not have enough experience with other OSes to know that this is true for them too? I'd love someone's insight on this topic.
26 votes -
What's new in the Linux kernel
14 votes -
A crash course in CDA Section 230, and a discussion between two lawyers about the EARN IT Act and what it means for free speech and privacy online
5 votes -
Gigapixel AI accidentally added Ryan Gosling’s face to this photo
5 votes -
This electrical transmission tower has a little problem
13 votes -
When you browse Instagram and find former Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott's passport number
32 votes -
Twenty years of Linux on Big Iron
5 votes -
Web history - Chapter 4: Search
4 votes -
Apple unveils new iPad and Apple Watch models; a new Fitness+ service; and Apple One, which bundles its key services for one monthly price
16 votes -
Apple’s reckoning has come - Breakdown of the EPIC v. Apple (and Google) lawsuits
6 votes -
Breaking up is hard to do: Chrome Web Browser separates from Chrome OS
11 votes -
How to be helpful online
15 votes -
6,600-word internal memo from a fired Facebook data scientist details how the social network knew leaders of countries around the world were using the site to manipulate voters — and failed to act
21 votes -
ARM: UK-based chip designer sold to Nvidia
27 votes -
TikTok reaches deal to partner with Oracle, rejects Microsoft's plan
22 votes -
Is high-fidelity audio a genuine product or unnecessary overkill?
Note: if this topic is better served in ~music than ~tech feel free to move it! If I wanted to buy Linkin Park's A Thousand Suns, I have the following options: From Amazon 256 kbps VBR MP3...
Note: if this topic is better served in ~music than ~tech feel free to move it!
If I wanted to buy Linkin Park's A Thousand Suns, I have the following options:
From Amazon
- 256 kbps VBR MP3 ($11.49)
From 7digital
- 320 kbps MP3 + 256 kbps MP3 ($12.99) (I'm assuming it's 320 CBR/256 VBR)
- 16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC ($16.49)
From HDTracks
- 24-bit/48kHz FLAC ($19.98)
From Qobuz, which appears to be a different mastering of the album:
- "CD Quality" FLAC ($14.49)
- 24-bit/48kHz FLAC ($16.49)
- 24-bit/48kHz FLAC ($10.99 with subscription to their $250/year service)
Does paying more for the higher fidelity actually matter? I suspect that this is just a form of price discrimination preying on my want to have an "objectively" better product, because I'm assuming there's a ceiling for audio quality that I can actually notice and the lowest encoding available here probably hits that. I also don't have any special listening hardware.
I understand the value of FLAC as a lossless archival encoding (I used to rip all my CDs to FLAC for this purpose, and I've been downloading my Bandcamp purchases in FLAC all the same), but for albums I can't get through that service it appears that the format has a high premium put on it. Bandcamp lets me pay the same price no matter the format, but every other store seems to stratify out their offerings based on encoding alone. A Thousand Suns costs nearly double on HDTracks what it does on Amazon's MP3 store, for example, despite the fact that I'm getting the exact same music, just compressed in a different way.
As such, is paying more for FLAC unnecessary? Is high-fidelity FLAC in particular (the 24-bit/48kHz options) snake oil?
Furthermore, Qobuz seems to offer a different mastering of the album, which seems like it actually could be significant, but it's hard to know. Is this (and the various other "remasters" out there) a valid thing, or is it just a way to try to get me to pay more unnecessarily?
(Note: I'm using this specific album simply because it was a good example I could find with lots of different stratified options -- I'm not interested in the particulars of this album specifically but more in the general idea of audio compression across all music).
21 votes -
What the internet could be
18 votes -
Why the orange sky looks gray in some photos
7 votes -
Changes to Apple's in-app purchase rules
11 votes -
Analysis of UK charity websites finds that tracking is prevalent, with almost all of the most popular charities including trackers for advertising or data brokers and failing to comply with GDPR/PECR
8 votes -
Apple has given Epic Games an indefinite extension for their use of Apple's SSO
@Epic Games Store: UPDATE: Apple previously stated they would terminate "Sign In with Apple" support for Epic Games accounts after Sept 11, 2020, but today provided an indefinite extension. We still recommend you prepare your accounts now for "Sign In with Apple" removal. https://t.co/hUDCKcajGo
10 votes -
C++20 approved, C++23 meetings and schedule update
11 votes -
Apple disabling 'Sign in with Apple' for Epic Games on September 11
18 votes -
Innovation Lab showcases the construction industry’s tech future. Or to get to the point: A robot dog
4 votes -
Human rights and "technical protection measures" (DRM) - Lessons from twenty-two years of the US DMCA
9 votes -
A robot wrote this entire article. Are you scared yet, human?
21 votes -
Sometimes, developers find it hard to work with content creators, so here are some tips to help the collaboration along
4 votes -
Masnick's Impossibility Theorem: Content moderation at scale is impossible to do well
22 votes -
Android 11 starts rolling out today with improvements to notifications, privacy, 5G, and more
9 votes -
Is there a Google-free future for Firefox?
27 votes -
Windows 10 Ameliorated review
13 votes -
Vid2Player: Controllable video sprites that behave and appear like professional tennis players
8 votes -
My startup (Buderflys) has made it to the semi-finals of Denver Startup week. Any chance you would vote for us?
8 votes -
Amazon Alexa for Residential will let the voice assistant power apartment complexes
15 votes -
Does Google know me better than I know myself?
5 votes -
Auto industry TV ads claim right-to-repair laws would benefit "sexual predators"
18 votes