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42 votes
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Rise of the (fast food) robots: How labor shortages are accelerating automation
10 votes -
The unbelievable grimness of /r/HermanCainAward, the subreddit that catalogs anti-vaxxer COVID deaths
30 votes -
Diners beware: That meal may cost you your privacy and security
8 votes -
Facebook built the perfect platform for Covid vaccine conspiracies
9 votes -
Privacy and digital ethics after the pandemic
3 votes -
Teachers in Africa are using radio to keep remote learning affordable and accessible, since many households have no access to internet or a computer
7 votes -
We need more broadband internet than ever with Covid keeping us at home
9 votes -
How Qanon invaded moms' Facebook groups
11 votes -
Redesigning the intubation box to better protect first responders
4 votes -
Remote learning is here to stay — can we make it better?
5 votes -
Translation from Dropbox to English of ‘Focus will shape the future of distributed work’
3 votes -
Strange idea to fix RPG gaming online - shit or lit / feedback chat
It's Covid days and I am sure all of us who play Pen and Paper RPG's (watup, nerds) have found the experience incredibly lacking. The way we communicate via Discord etc, has to be incredibly...
It's Covid days and I am sure all of us who play Pen and Paper RPG's (watup, nerds) have found the experience incredibly lacking.
The way we communicate via Discord etc, has to be incredibly different from IRL conversations. Its frustrating when the core element of RPG's is the conversations, the chat, the small talk, the adlib and the silly jokes.
The way we talk IRL is so different because we can discern the different sources, we can listen more or less to different people, we can interrupt and add things. Conversations via Discord is more like listening to a speech, and then replying. IRL gaming and the conversations that crop up are more like actual human chatting - taking a joke, building on it, having it taken from you etc etc. (the way me and my friend talk is so natural, we know each other well enough to be able to discern the relevant from the irrelevant - the bits we can tag on to, and the bits we need to leave alone)What I was thinking was to see HOW we talk in gaming, and how that could be mimicked SOMEWHAT in Discord etc.
My idea was to create a set of icons/low quality videos arranged around a table placement, that you can then focus on. Like a mouse controlled object that indicates what part of the table you focus on and how much. Just like a human would by turning her head this way or that to focus on one person talking in a group, or leaning in towards that source to indicate how much she listens to that unique source. By having a physical placement you can focus on an edge of "the table" and then lean in towards one source - and lean out to listen to all.
All other listeners can see your focus, the way you turn towards a source and be able to change their communication to fit.
So imaging having your "icon"/video at the bottom, the table sorted in a half circle shape above and your "focus" in the middle. If you pull it to its "lagrange point" (a snapping midpoint so its easy to find) you are listening to all. By dragging it towards one end you are focusing more on that person and the people around it, as a circle. You can see others focus, by coloured lines focusing more or less on an end or another.
My idea is to abuse the already available 3D audio effects existing and use that to put your focus towards one end or another, muting and muffling audio as your focus move across the table to be able to somewhat mimic the way we as human listen.
The social order of an RPG session, with the DM being the natural focus at times means that that focus can happen naturally either through focus, or simply silence. With it you can find the focus of others as an indicator of whether you are committing a faux pas or not, just like in real life when people pointedly may look directly towards another source.
7 votes -
The forklift truck drivers who never leave their desks
6 votes -
Technology has been promising the dream of a cocooned future, and our pandemic isolation is giving us the rare opportunity to see where this road leads
12 votes -
Analysis of health misinformation on Facebook finds that it's receiving billions of views—about four times as many as content from leading health institutions—and only 16% has a warning label
13 votes -
Bill Gates on vaccines, Trump, and why social media is “a poisoned chalice”
7 votes -
Spotify CEO talks Covid-19, artist incomes and podcasting
4 votes -
UK, US, and Canada accuse Russia of trying to steal information from coronavirus vaccine researchers
15 votes -
Seeking truth in a time of misinformation
9 votes -
How the USA’s massive failure to close the digital divide got exposed by the coronavirus
5 votes -
An army of volunteers is taking on vaccine disinformation online
6 votes -
Covid-19 makes it clearer than ever: access to the internet should be a universal right -- Tim Berners-Lee
14 votes -
Schools turn to surveillance tech to prevent Covid-19 spread: "We are very much interested in the automated tracking of students"
6 votes -
Black Lives Matter protesters aren’t being tracked with Covid-19 surveillance tech. Not yet
6 votes -
Nearly half of accounts tweeting about coronavirus are likely bots
12 votes -
America’s deadly obsession with intellectual property: Privatizing life-saving technology like vaccines and clean energy is bad both for the coronavirus and the climate crisis
9 votes -
Google suspended a popular Android podcast app because it catalogs COVID-19 content
11 votes -
The need for software testing: Neil Ferguson's unstable epidemiologic model
10 votes -
Tech companies are pretending to be on their best behavior: Big tech is watching its step and trying to appear ethical during coronavirus. Don’t be fooled
8 votes -
The workplace-surveillance technology boom
4 votes -
Apple Store's temperature checks may violate EU privacy rules, says German data protection office
5 votes -
A hacker is trying to break Ohio’s tool for reporting workers who quit during the pandemic
23 votes -
Internet giants to staff: Plan to work from home for the year
9 votes -
The people who are keeping the internet running during COVID and how they're doing it
11 votes -
Face ID doesn’t work when you’re wearing a mask—Apple’s about to address that
12 votes -
Twitch steamer Dr Disrespect's shtick takes a dangerous turn into spreading coronavirus conspiracy theories
8 votes -
How I built a $100 drive-in movie theater to hang out with friends while social distancing
6 votes -
Apple COVID-19 mobility trends reports
6 votes -
UNESCO suggests COVID-19 is a reason to create... eternal copyright
10 votes -
Facebook approved ads with coronavirus misinformation, in an experiment which raises questions about how the social media giant screens ads on its platform
8 votes -
US unemployment checks are being held up by a coding language almost nobody knows
21 votes -
Google & Apple adjust maps during pandemic
6 votes -
Google to slow hiring for rest of 2020, CEO tells staff
4 votes -
At least twenty UK phone masts vandalised over false 5G coronavirus claims
13 votes -
Pandemic sparks American tech workers' interest in unions
11 votes -
The coronavirus has changed the way Americans use the internet
9 votes -
5G coronavirus conspiracy theory fueled by coordinated effort
6 votes -
YouTube has banned all conspiracy theory videos falsely linking coronavirus symptoms to 5G networks
26 votes -
After 9/11, Americans gave up privacy for security. Will we make the same trade-off after COVID-19?
21 votes