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3 votes
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Xenia, the forgotten trans Linux mascot
15 votes -
What kind of text content you like that is hard to find on the internet?
I'm asking mainly to get an idea of what kind of content I might wanna write for my blog. I intend to share my writings on Tildes so it makes sense to know what might be of interest around here....
I'm asking mainly to get an idea of what kind of content I might wanna write for my blog. I intend to share my writings on Tildes so it makes sense to know what might be of interest around here. Plus, Tildes is my home on the internet. It would feel weird not to consider fellow Tilderinos when creating content.
Could be anything: a subject, a theme, a writing style, a certain length, or a combination of factors. Something that you actively seek, but that is not easy to come by.
For example, I like shorter articles (less than 2000 words) that deal with a very specific philosophical problem in accessible, non emotional language. Philosophy articles are often much longer than that, and also quite complicated.
7 votes -
Why Google Play’s APK replacement is scaring some security experts
15 votes -
Reddit CryptoSnoos NFT Auction has ended; The average sale price is 131.67 ETH
10 votes -
British right to repair law comes into force today, excludes smartphones and computers
10 votes -
Judge tears Florida’s social media law to shreds for violating First Amendment
16 votes -
Suggestions for things to do with a NAS?
Hey all, recently bought a Synology NAS and looking for suggestions for things to do with it. I'm not exactly tech saavy when it comes to something like this, so guides accompanying suggestions...
Hey all, recently bought a Synology NAS and looking for suggestions for things to do with it.
I'm not exactly tech saavy when it comes to something like this, so guides accompanying suggestions would be super helpful.
8 votes -
Have you felt or do you still feel the optimism of the Internet / Web 2.0 in the early 2000s and 2010s?
Title is the question. It's left open for your interpretation. It'd be interesting to see people's different interpretations and reasons.
18 votes -
Building the world's first 'breathing' PC
7 votes -
LinkedIn breach reportedly exposes data of 92% of users, including inferred salaries
13 votes -
Hitachi Rear Projection TV - No audio on inputs, except Static on Antenna
So I rescued an old TV from the trash, appears to be a Hitachi Rear Projection TV, no obvious model number available, and when I try to power it on, it will display just fine, but it has no audio...
So I rescued an old TV from the trash, appears to be a Hitachi Rear Projection TV, no obvious model number available, and when I try to power it on, it will display just fine, but it has no audio coming out UNLESS I turn it over to antenna input, in which case it has bone rattling analog static. This is the US where everyone changed over to digital television, so not super helpful, and while I could do some sound splitting magic, that seems like a waste if there are already good speakers. So I have come to you, honored Tildos, for assistance in pointing me in the right direction on whether or not this television's speakers can be saved.
6 votes -
NewsBlur Mongo database deleted in ransom attack (and restored)
NewsBlur was down yesterday evening due to its Mongo database getting attacked by a hacker and held for ransom. It’s restored from backup, but there are privacy implications for anyone who had...
NewsBlur was down yesterday evening due to its Mongo database getting attacked by a hacker and held for ransom. It’s restored from backup, but there are privacy implications for anyone who had sensitive private data there. We will likely find out more after the maintainer recovers from a busy night.
There are no good links for this, but it’s being discussed on Hacker News. Since it’s open source, someone described what’s being kept in that database.
(I use NewsBlur, but I don’t think my RSS reading habits are all that sensitive. Others might be in a different situation, though.)
6 votes -
Michelin proposes putting puffy sails on cargo ships
16 votes -
How should I make my personal website?
I am not a developer, but I do have interesting in learning. A while ago I asked a question similar to that. I did not take any concrete action since then, and now have some new information to...
I am not a developer, but I do have interesting in learning.
A while ago I asked a question similar to that. I did not take any concrete action since then, and now have some new information to add.
The website shall be called
myactualname.com
, and will contain about/biography, and a few sections containing articles that I wish to write on different subjects.That can probably be done without coding on one of the many free blogging platforms currently available, such as Medium, Wordpress, and Substack, but the lack of control is unfortunate.
At the same time, I wish for this website to last a long time, and to be reasonably independent of maintenance. With the Brazilian Real valued at less than one-fifth of the US dollar, hosting prices skyrocketed. Besides, I cannot always rely on my own ability to stay on top of that kind of thing, so it would be beneficial for my web presence to be more resilient than my bank account and mental state. I figure that hosting it on Github Pages, Gitlab Pages (or both) would be a good way to avoid ever going down (it looks like duplicate content is bad for search engines, though, so I might keep one of those private, just for backup reasons). And I could reserve the domain for two or three years in advance.
I really like simple text-focused personal websites like this one. They load fast and are easy to read, but are generally not very pretty or responsive. I have basic notions of HTML and CSS and intend to learn more.
In the previous post, someone suggested using Hugo, which seems like a good option. On the other hand, for something that simple, I wonder what would be the downside of simply coding it from scratch. One thing I know for sure is that I want this website to be rather permanent: whatever changes I ever do to its design should not impact accessibility to previous content (link rot). How can I achieve that? No idea.
Since I write in English and Portuguese, the website must be bilingual. I'm not sure how to implement or manage that, especially in regards to search engines.
I resumed the course on Free Code Camp, which I expect will help in achieving all that.
With that in mind, I reiterate my question: should I make my personal website? Should I just use a free blogging platform? Should I use Hugo or something similar? Any particular free CMS? Or maybe just use what I learn to code it from scratch?
Thanks!
15 votes -
Differential privacy code removed from Chromium
In a discussion on Hacker News, Jonathan Mayer pointed out that the differential privacy code was removed from Chromium. It looks like they finished doing this in February. I haven't seen any...
In a discussion on Hacker News, Jonathan Mayer pointed out that the differential privacy code was removed from Chromium. It looks like they finished doing this in February.
I haven't seen any announcement, discussion, or explanation of this based on a brief web search, so I figured I'd note it here.
At about the time this process finished, there was a Google blog post about how they're still using it in other products.
We first deployed our world-class differential privacy anonymization technology in Chrome nearly seven years ago and are continually expanding its use across our products including Google Maps and the Assistant.
(If you read this quickly, you might think it's still used in Chrome.)
Reading between the lines, I suspect that some folks at Google are still advocating for more usage of differential privacy, but they lost an important customer. Why that happened is a mystery.
11 votes -
Reddit introduces CryptoSnoos NFTs
19 votes -
Western Digital urges users to disconnect unsupported MyBook Live external hard drives from internet, after drives start being wiped remotely using vulnerability reported three years ago
14 votes -
The bullshit economy: Amazon Sidewalk
7 votes -
Built a satirical social network (ShlinkedIn)—would love to pick y'alls brains about social media and this project!
39 votes -
What are your ISP support experiences?
I just wanted to see what everyone else’s experience has been working with your ISP. I recently had a horrible experience and wanted to see if anyone else can relate and maybe just vent a little....
I just wanted to see what everyone else’s experience has been working with your ISP. I recently had a horrible experience and wanted to see if anyone else can relate and maybe just vent a little.
My recent experience: I moved to a new town, and I had been experiencing issues with my internet dropping out, as we all probably have had at some point, and I contacted Cox communications through their chat app. After multiple attempts to fix it, they finally sent a tech out to find that the coax connectors at the pole were rusted out. He replaced them but it wasn’t fixed completely. The tech dismissed it and said to just use it for now and I wouldn’t notice. So I did, and it wasn’t great at first, but it actually slowly got better and was good for a while until the last couple of weeks. This past week every single night it would drop out. I watched the connection drop while I was trying to watch mythic quest (great show btw) and every night for the past week the internet was unusable in the evenings. I then contacted Cox again multiple times, got a credit refunded back to my account and they wanted to do the whole reset modem thing again, so I did just to get to the next steps. Again they said use it and see if it improves, so I did, and it didn’t. I contacted them again, and again the modem reset, so I got fed up and filed a complaint with the FCC while I was chatting with this guy and he had the nerve to try and sell me home automation at the end of our chat!
The next day goes by, a woman from their escalation lines contacts me about my FCC complaint and they send a new tech out. Turns out Cox never buried my original line in conduit, so the line was probably damaged underground as it was sending a weak return signal. The tech ran a new drop from a different tap and used the thickest coax I’ve ever seen. So far it’s been good after the new drop, but it took multiple chats and calls with two different field technicians and an FCC complaint to get it fixed. The worst part about it is Cox Communications is the only broadband ISP in my area other than Starlink and I seriously considered Starlink. So if you read this far, thanks! Please share your experiences if you’d like, or if you want to vent that’s okay.
15 votes -
The Chinese content farms running hundreds of "factory TikTok" accounts for marketing
4 votes -
Canonical offering Blender support
4 votes -
Flathub, runtimes and stats
4 votes -
I’m scared of the person TikTok thinks I am
8 votes -
Free Geek Twin Cities: E-Waste and education
5 votes -
Reddit is about to delete a lot of subreddits based on post activity metrics
31 votes -
Hyundai completes deal for controlling interest in Boston Dynamics
1 vote -
How many layers of UI inconsistencies are in Windows 10?
10 votes -
The internet feeds on its own dying dreams
4 votes -
Quit Social Media - An educational website that argues against proprietary social media and its risks
7 votes -
Robinhood: We're all investors, alone
5 votes -
Stumbled, a collection of anything interesting, weird or astonishing; websites of exceptional quality, sites to kill time or learn something new
14 votes -
Kill Hollywood
4 votes -
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's jeremiad against online sanctimony
9 votes -
Windows 11 leak reveals new UI, Start menu, and more
21 votes -
Any deleted content (comments, links, threads, etc.) will now be inaccessible to moderators and the original posters of the deleted content
22 votes -
I am an object of internet ridicule, ask me anything
18 votes -
The Vtuber industry: Corporatization, labor, and kawaii
10 votes -
Antirez on managing burnout in Open Source
11 votes -
Namecheap Expert Summit 2021
6 votes -
In leak investigation, tech giants are caught between courts and customers
9 votes -
780GB of data, tools, and source code were stolen from EA by purchasing a stolen cookie to get access to the company's Slack and social-engineering an IT Support employee
21 votes -
US Democrats circulate draft antitrust bills that could reshape Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google
15 votes -
A modest proposal: Just log off
18 votes -
Twitch, Pinterest, Reddit and more go down in Fastly CDN outage
25 votes -
Reddit will shut down Reddit Gifts and Secret Santa at the end of 2021
34 votes -
US Department of Justice recovers $2.3 million worth of Bitcoin that Colonial Pipeline paid to ransomware extortionists
17 votes -
How to make your data harder to find online
7 votes -
US FBI secretly ran the An0m encrypted messaging platform, yields hundreds of arrests in global sting
7 votes