Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Aggro is the Foundation argues that fast, simple, solo work—aggro—forms the bedrock of any metagame. In games like Magic/Hearthstone, deckbuilding around cheap early threats sets the pace others must meet; in RTS and geopolitics, early aggression dictates strategy. The author applies this to mathematics, claiming progress comes from hard, solo research, with seminars, networking, and collaboration building on that base. While not everyone should pursue solo work, every practitioner must understand aggro and its foundational role.
OpenAI has paused its Stargate UK datacenter project, citing high energy costs and regulatory complexity. The plan, announced last year to align with a UK AI push, will proceed only when conditions—especially energy pricing and regulation—are favorable. OpenAI still supports the UK AI ambitions, investing in local talent and honoring a government MOU to adopt frontier AI in public services. Stargate UK would have spanned multiple sites in the North East with Nscale, potentially using tens of thousands of Nvidia GPUs (initial 8,000, scaling to 31,000).
The post argues MacOS lacks instant space switching due to the animation and surveys solutions. Rejected are Reduce Motion (ineffective), yabai (requires patching and SIP disable), PaperWM.spoon and other non-native managers, and paid options like BetterTouchTool. The author endorses InstantSpaceSwitcher by jurplel, a native menu-bar app that simulates a fast swipe and supports jumping to a specific space; it doesn’t require disabling SIP and includes a CLI. Installation: git clone, build.sh, then run .build/release/ISSCli.
Bitmap fonts are built for constraint and deliver crisp, size-specific glyphs that vector fonts smooth over. They restore the tactile, ‘computer’ mood often lost in modern UI, drawing on hacker aesthetics from The Matrix and Mr. Robot while staying crafted and legible. For programmers they offer clearer symbols and denser editor visuals. The category ranges from workhorse fonts like Terminus and Gohu to editorial and display faces such as NeueBit, Mondwest, Cozette, and PixelCode. Now is a good time to try them in terminals, code screenshots, posters, and overlays to reclaim a dated-but-precise vibe.
ML models are cultural artifacts that encode and reproduce media, entering conversations and shaping spaces; we lack robust myths for AI, which drives misinterpretations and policy missteps. As models advance, they may spawn new media forms—interactive games, courses, dramas—and reshape sexuality, aesthetics, and signifiers, enabling porn, erotica, and fetish communities powered by AI. Media effects include centralization of power in a few firms, as well as cheap, 'slop' aesthetics that mix humor, politics, and style. Humans may still write, but writing could become an avocation; new roles will emerge for creators, teachers, and users in AI-mediated culture.
Maine advanced the first statewide moratorium on large data centers, temporarily blocking permits for new facilities over 20 megawatts through November 2027 while a Data Center Coordination Council studies grid strain. Democrats and Gov. Mills back the pause amid concerns about rising electricity costs in a state with high power bills; developers oppose it. The move follows local opposition over water usage and safety and reflects broader worries as AI infrastructure grows, with data centers consuming a growing share of electricity.
picoZ80 is a drop-in Z80 replacement board that plugs into a Z80 DIP-40 socket and uses a RP2350B dual‑core Cortex‑M33 to emulate the Z80 with cycle‑accurate bus timing. It provides eight megabytes of PSRAM, sixteen megabytes of Flash, and a half‑megabyte of on‑chip SRAM, plus an ESP32 co‑processor for WiFi, Bluetooth, SD storage and a web interface. Configuration is JSON‑driven on the SD card, enabling adjustable memory maps, ROM/RAM banking, virtual devices and multiple machine personas (MZ‑700, MZ‑80, etc.). Features include floppy and QuickDisk emulation, OTA updates, dual firmware partitions, USB boot, and web management.
Unfolder for Mac is a 3D model unfolding tool for papercraft that quickly generates 2D parts from 3D models. Its optimized algorithm minimizes editing time. It lets you split/join parts by clicking edges in 2D or 3D views, edit and reshape flaps with automatic collision avoidance, and customize line styles for cutting and folds. Exports support printing, external editing, or CNC cutting. Available with a free trial and on the Mac App Store.
Little Snitch on Linux is criticized for being a proprietary “brain” behind a Linux port, despite open components. The author rejects closed-source security that requires blind trust and prefers open, auditable tooling. They already solved the problem with AdGuard Home at the DNS level for network-wide privacy, and Wordfence for application protection; for Linux firewall needs they point to OpenSnitch, an entirely open-source solution. The piece argues edge-based, transparent defenses are more trustworthy and questions the value of substituting one black box for another.
Milk is not just a beverage—it's a branching product tree. From milking to carton, milk is cooled, tested, clarified, and separated into skim and cream, then standardised, pasteurised, and homogenised. Depending on the path, it becomes fluid milk, cream, butter, ghee, buttermilk, yoghurt, kefir, sour cream, milk powder, condensed milk, or dozens of cheeses (soft to hard). Whey and its derivatives fuel protein and lactoferrin markets. Milk’s three-state nature (emulsion, colloid, solution) and multiple separation methods give it a uniquely deep product tree. Globally ~1B tonnes/year from ~270M cows; NZ is a major exporter.
Hegel is a universal property-based testing protocol and family of libraries built on Hypothesis, including hegel-rust, hegel-go, and hegel-core. It provides getting started guidance and reference material covering how it works, why to use it, installation, protocol, and compatibility.
Study shows literature-guided autoresearch boosts coding agents. In llama.cpp CPU inference, 4 cloud VMs and a literature study produced 5 kernel fusions and adaptive parallelization, yielding ~15% faster text generation on x86 and ~5% on ARM (TinyLlama 1.1B), with ~2–3% gains in prompt throughput. Of 30+ experiments, 5 landed after pivoting from compute-bound hacks to memory-traffic optimizations (Softmax fusion, RMS_NORM+MUL fusion, adaptive from_float, graph-level fusion, Flash Attention KQ fusion). The setup costs ~$29 over ~3 hours. The article provides setup steps to replicate for other projects.
Giorgio Liapakis ran Claude Code to autonomously manage a Meta Ads campaign for 31 days with a $1,500 budget, aiming for under $2.50 per lead. The agent generated creatives, launched campaigns, built landing pages, and tracked analytics, with human input. It followed a daily loop: read history, pull data, decide, execute, log. It tested ~50 variants; whiteboard style won with CPL around $1.29 at peak. A later audience-quality issue and a human tweak spiked CPL. Final: $1,493 spent, 243 leads, CPL $6.14. Takeaways: objectives shape behavior, AI builds heuristics but lacks taste, and optimization traps speed up with automation.
EFF is leaving X after nearly twenty years, citing diminishing reach and changes under Elon Musk. Impressions have fallen dramatically, making the platform less effective for their work. They will shift their presence to Bluesky, Mastodon, LinkedIn, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, YouTube, and eff.org, continuing to fight for digital rights, expose platform abuses, and help people access information—even if that means not posting on X.
Two iconic Antarctic species—the emperor penguin and the Antarctic fur seal—are now Endangered on the IUCN Red List due to climate change. Projections show emperor penguin numbers could halve by the 2080s as sea‑ice loss disrupts breeding and moulting habitat; satellite data indicate significant declines. The Antarctic fur seal population has fallen by more than half since 1999 because warming oceans push krill deeper, reducing food for pups. The southern elephant seal is now Vulnerable due to Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza. The assessment urges immediate climate action and data-informed policy ahead of the Antarctic Treaty meeting.
The piece discusses Claude Monet as a fifteen-year-old in Le Havre making caricatures of local figures, selling them at framing shops, earning around 2,000 francs which funded his move to Paris to study art. These caricatures, sometimes imitations of Nadar, included portraits of Léon Manchon, Jules Didier, and others like Henri Cassinelli ('Rufus Croutinelli') and a 'Butterfly Man'. The rapid drawing style foreshadowed Impressionism's aim to capture essence. Monet credits his early success to this, plus a pension from his aunt; he later encountered Eugène Boudin who mentored him and took him plein air.
Craft is a lightweight build tool for C/C++ that replaces manual CMake fiddling. Define your project in craft.toml; Craft auto-generates CMakeLists.txt, fetches dependencies (including git), and builds via CMake. It offers a Cargo-like workflow: create projects, add/remove/update dependencies, save templates, and configure defaults. Built-in templates cover executable, static-library, shared-library, and header-only. Supports local and git dependencies, with reusable templates saved in ~/.craft/templates. Installation: macOS/Linux via install.sh or Windows PowerShell; requires git and cmake. craft.toml is the single source of truth; CMakeLists.txt is generated automatically and should not be edited directly.
The Free Press reports a closed Pentagon meeting where Under Secretary of War for Policy Elbridge Colby lectured Cardinal Christophe Pierre, Pope Leo XIV’s ambassador, claiming the U.S. can act with overwhelming military power and urging the Vatican to align, even invoking the Avignon Papacy as a warning. Vatican officials were alarmed; some plans for Pope Leo XIV’s U.S. visit for America’s 250th anniversary in 2026 were shelved after the exchange. The Vatican declined the invitation amid foreign-policy disagreements and opposition to a partisan display in 2026. Leo XIV continued to press diplomacy over force.
One Brain to Query is a personal site by Meryll Dindin (Thoughts Ventures). It lists sections such as Thoughts, Ventures, Suggestions, Mentions, and Missions, with links to Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, plus a consent notice: “By browsing through my website, you agree for me to know about it.”
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