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3 votes
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MDN Plus announcement
10 votes -
Florida has passed an unconstitutional law to allow suing and fining social media companies (except ones that also own theme parks) for censoring users or de-platforming politicians
20 votes -
Android 12 will finally let alternative app stores update apps without bothering the user
14 votes -
What is a minimum viable product?
1 vote -
Apple employees are going public about workplace issues
6 votes -
App Store arguments
6 votes -
Spreadsheet horror stories
9 votes -
Listen to old podcasts on a modern release schedule
I once heard about a website that does this, but I cannot find it. You would give the website an RSS feed, and it would give you a new feed to subscribe to. It would then release “new” episodes on...
I once heard about a website that does this, but I cannot find it. You would give the website an RSS feed, and it would give you a new feed to subscribe to. It would then release “new” episodes on a set schedule. This way you could listen to, for example, a weekly podcast starting at the very beginning, released on a weekly schedule as if you were listening to it when it first released.
I hope one of you awesome tilderinos know a website that does this. Thanks in advance!
16 votes -
1099s and Tenderness: Papa Health
2 votes -
Best way to consume YouTube without the algorithmic results?
I'd love to get a passable alternative interface to YouTube that just shows me what I'm subscribed to, a search bar, and nothing else. Does this exist as a userscript or alternate site? Edit: My...
I'd love to get a passable alternative interface to YouTube that just shows me what I'm subscribed to, a search bar, and nothing else. Does this exist as a userscript or alternate site?
Edit:
My current solution is to have my YouTube bookmark go directly to my subscriptions listing. I also have my ad blocker cut out the recommendations feed on the side. It works okay but maybe there's a better solution out there.
This is the ad block rule:
www.youtube.com##.ytd-watch-next-secondary-results-renderer www.youtube.com##.ytd-guide-entry-renderer[title=Explore] www.youtube.com##.ytd-guide-entry-renderer[title=Home]
18 votes -
The Freenode resignation FAQ
30 votes -
Internet is slow, but only when opening a new domain
Internet in my fiancee's house is weird. Once I open up a domain, going to links in the same domain is quite fast, but if I try opening another domain in another tab it is super slow. On Chrome it...
Internet in my fiancee's house is weird. Once I open up a domain, going to links in the same domain is quite fast, but if I try opening another domain in another tab it is super slow. On Chrome it is really bad, Firefox is better but still sluggish. This occurs similarly on different devices running Windows, Linux, and Android. What could be causing this?
8 votes -
CP/M for OS X allows you to run CP/M-80 software on your Mac
3 votes -
The Matrix Spaces beta
14 votes -
Google AMP pages no longer get preferential treatment in Google search
14 votes -
Man against marketing
5 votes -
Can anyone recommend a printer? (...ahem...) a Linux printer?
Last time I owned an inkjet was well over a decade ago. I had a nice HP color laserjet that Just Worked™for almost a decade (and PS, I bought it used), and then I just lived w/o a printer for the...
Last time I owned an inkjet was well over a decade ago. I had a nice HP color laserjet that Just Worked™for almost a decade (and PS, I bought it used), and then I just lived w/o a printer for the past 3-4 years. Now, I'm window-shopping for inkjets, it sounds like the whole "use-our-ink-or-die" business model has only gotten worse.
Are there any good inkjet printers where I can just use it like a normal printer, just buy ink (cheaper than the printer was) when I need it, yada? Or should I just write off the entire industry (again), and go straight to the laser printers?
And does anyone actually have a decent (color, all-in-one) printer that works reasonably well with their (YourDistroHere) Linux machine?
Danke
ETA: Thanks for all the feedback. I'm now prioritizing a Brother laser (maybe just mono), or possibly an Epson Ecotank.
Side-note ... how cool is it that we have so many Linux-folk in our midst!?
Thanks again.
13 votes -
Twitter may be working on Twitter Blue, a subscription service that would cost $2.99 per month
14 votes -
Google I/O 2021: The fourteen biggest announcements
6 votes -
Michealsoft Binbows isn't what you think it is
11 votes -
Introducing Firefox’s new Site Isolation security architecture
19 votes -
Scroll has been acquired by Twitter
4 votes -
Terms and Conditions Apply
9 votes -
Huge Eufy privacy breach shows live and recorded cam feeds to strangers
5 votes -
The future of microprocessors
5 votes -
Here’s what the opt-in app tracking in iOS 14.5 means to marketers — and how they might respond
11 votes -
Is there a way to make sure sent e-mails are opened?
A few years ago I decided to ditch Gmail and started using Disroot as my e-mail provider. It was recommended by privacytools.io. I realized that at least one e-mail I sent went to spam and now...
A few years ago I decided to ditch Gmail and started using Disroot as my e-mail provider. It was recommended by privacytools.io.
I realized that at least one e-mail I sent went to spam and now every time I send an e-mail I get paranoid if it will reach its destination. Is there a way to know if the e-mails I send are opened?
I've thought about switching to a more mainstream e-mail provider like ProtonMail but I already have so many accounts linked to Disroot that make switching dreadful. As a matter of fact I still have over 100 accounts that are using my Gmail address because it's so time intensive and not a priority to do the switch. Hopefully in the password-less future this kind of problem will cease to exist.
11 votes -
How holograms, deepfakes, and AR are raising the dead
6 votes -
We found Joe Biden’s secret Venmo. Here’s why that’s a privacy nightmare for everyone.
17 votes -
DarkSide ransomware gang quits after servers, Bitcoin stash seized
17 votes -
Largest fuel pipeline in the United States hit by ransomware attack
31 votes -
I mailed an AirTag and tracked its progress; here’s what happened
23 votes -
HTC unveils new Vive Pro 2 with 5K resolution display and 120Hz refresh rate
13 votes -
Canadian charity recommendations
Hi Everyone! I'm looking to donate some money to a charity that is focused on helping children learn how to code. I've always heard that lots of charities are scams, and I was hoping to get the...
Hi Everyone!
I'm looking to donate some money to a charity that is focused on helping children learn how to code.
I've always heard that lots of charities are scams, and I was hoping to get the opinions of you fine folks about a good charity to donate to!7 votes -
My strange, slow, twenty-year quest for broadband
12 votes -
Ransomware gang threatens release of DC police records
10 votes -
China’s ruling Communist Party has opened a new front in its long, ambitious war to shape global public opinion: Western social media
13 votes -
A closer look at the DarkSide ransomware gang, which was responsible for the recent attack on Colonial Pipeline
15 votes -
Substack is selling soap operas
8 votes -
TI announces new TI-84 Plus CE Python
16 votes -
Australian Criminal Intelligence Agency looking to expand it's intelligence gathering powers by claiming that criminals use encrypted platforms 'almost exclusively'
19 votes -
EFF Surveillance Self-Defense - Privacy breakdown of mobile phones
18 votes -
96% of US users opt out of app tracking in iOS 14.5
35 votes -
Midnight Sun K-Pop ‘pirates’ being reported to INTERPOL, streaming platform warns
6 votes -
New York Attorney General issues report detailing millions of fake comments, revealing secret campaign to influence FCC’s 2017 repeal of net neutrality rules
28 votes -
Deepfake lips are coming to dubbed films
16 votes -
The current chip and semiconductor shortage
7 votes -
The Epic vs. Apple trial: What we've learned so far
7 votes -
How China turned a prize-winning iPhone hack against the Uyghurs
11 votes