Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Atomic is a personal knowledge base that turns markdown notes into a semantically-connected, AI-augmented knowledge graph of "atoms"—notes automatically chunked, embedded, tagged, and linked by semantic similarity. Features include semantic search, a force-directed Canvas, Wiki Synthesis with inline citations, an agentic chat, auto-tagging, and support for multiple AI providers (OpenRouter or Ollama). It offers a browser extension, RSS sync, MCP server access for Claude, and multi-database support. Deployments include a desktop app (Tauri) or self-hosted server (Docker/Fly.io). Underlying Rust core with React frontend and modular components.
During WWII, two coal-fired paddle-wheel escort carriers operated on Lake Michigan: USS Wolverine (ex Seeandbee) and USS Sable (ex Greater Buffalo). Converted from luxury passenger liners, they were homeported in Chicago and never left the Great Lakes. Although they could launch and recover fixed-wing aircraft, they lacked hangars and carried planes on deck, making them impractical combat ships. Their real role was training naval aviators for carrier landings; thousands of flights per month were conducted with minimal risk. Wolverine was commissioned Aug 12, 1942; Sable on May 8, 1943. Not officially carriers but valuable training ships.
512 Pixels reports that macOS Tahoe cluttered menus with icons. Steve Troughton-Smith found a Terminal command to disable action icons: defaults write -g NSMenuEnableActionImages -bool NO, preserving essential icons like window zoom/resize, effective after relaunch. The author hopes Apple reverts the change or adds a global setting in macOS 27 to disable icons for distraction.
Explores how 11 languages handle semicolons and newline termination to inform Roto’s design: Python, Go, Kotlin, Swift, JavaScript, Gleam, Lua, R, Ruby, Julia, Odin. Each language’s approach is summarized: Python uses indentation and logical lines; Go inserts semicolons in the lexer; Kotlin makes newlines part of the grammar; Swift parses greedily with operator rules and unused-value warnings; JavaScript’s semicolon insertion is complex; Gleam uses a whitespace-insensitive grammar; Lua treats line breaks as non-semantic; R and Ruby split on lines with limited continuations; Julia and Odin mix lexing/grammar rules. The piece ends with guidelines: favor simple, explicit rules and tooling.
Reverts the addition of a birthDate field to systemd's JSON user records (#40954). After broad discussion and privacy/legal concerns, the team chose not to implement OS-level age attestation or birth date storage. The field is optional in the userdb JSON and does not act as a policy engine or API; systemd itself enforces no age policy. No upstream consensus; major distros paused/rejected the change. Revisit only if a privacy-preserving, opt-in age-proof standard emerges or laws are clarified.
Hawaii faces its worst flooding in over two decades as heavy rains surge across Oahu’s north shore. About 5,500 people were evacuated and 200+ rescued; 72 campers were airlifted from Our Lady of Kea’au. A 120-year-old Wahiawa dam near Honolulu is at risk of imminent failure, prompting orders to evacuate. Officials warn of more than $1 billion in damage and forecast 6-8 inches of rain in 2-3 days (8-12 inches overnight). Hawaii is pursuing the dam’s acquisition from Dole, but the transfer isn’t complete. No deaths reported.
Large, 45-year, 54 randomized trials meta-analysis in The Lancet Psychiatry finds medicinal cannabis does not effectively treat anxiety, depression, or PTSD and may worsen mental health by raising psychosis risk and cannabis-use disorder, and by delaying proven treatments. Some weak signals suggest benefits for insomnia, autism, and tic disorders, but overall evidence is low. For substance-use disorders, cannabis-based treatments may help cannabis dependence but can increase cravings in cocaine-use disorder, so not recommended for that purpose. The study calls for stronger regulation as medical cannabis use grows.
An accessible bottom-up tour of Common Lisp development tooling, framed as six-to-seven layered stack (Machine, Compiler/Runtime SBCL, Build with ASDF, Package repos—Quicklisp/Ultralisp/ocicl, Per-project isolation—Qlot/ocicl/CLPM, Swank wire protocol—SWANK/SLYNK with editors, and Editor). It explains how live Lisp development differs from file-based workflows, the role of editor integrations, and tradeoffs across Emacs/SLIME, Vim equivalents, VSCode, and Lem. It covers Roswell, Docker containers, and per-project isolation, guiding beginners to understand where to start.
Electronics for Kids, 2nd Edition is a beginner-friendly, full-color guide (ages 10+) that rewrites the topic from basics to digital electronics. It includes 21 hands-on projects—learning to read schematics, solder, and work with circuits—culminating in a playable LED reaction game. Projects cover intruder alarms, electromagnets, sunrise alarms, color‑guessing games, touch sensors, and secret-code checkers. The book emphasizes understanding how components work and how circuits behave, with a clear progression through chapters on electricity, circuits, and digital electronics. Available as print plus a free ebook; preorder offers 25% off.
Age verification is being reframed as a broad access-control layer, turning the open internet into a permissioned one via OS- or device-level identity. Regulation risks privacy loss, data aggregation, and centralized control, with easy workarounds that undermine effectiveness. The core issue is guardianship, not content moderation: decisions about what’s appropriate belong to parents, schools, and communities, not a centralized authentication system. A better path is to keep moderation at the endpoints and preserve local, context-aware control rather than a universal age gate.
tinygrad is a minimal neural-network framework organized around three op types—ElementwiseOps, ReduceOps, and MovementOps—with lazy tensors and per-op kernel compilation to enable fast forward and backward passes with autodiff. It’s used in openpilot and aims for simple, high-performance execution. The Tiny Corp sells the tinybox, a high-end deep-learning computer shipping now, with no customization and payment by wire transfer; starting prices and variants are listed. They’re hiring, offering bounties, and seeking sponsorships to accelerate AI and commoditize the petaflop for everyone.
termcraft is an unofficial, terminal-first 2D sandbox survival game in Rust. It recreates the early-block-survival loop as a side-on terminal game with procedural Overworld/Nether/End, mining, crafting, furnaces, brewing, farming, equipment, and chests. It includes health, hunger, combat, weather, gravity, mobs, villages, dungeons, and Nether fortresses, plus local, repo-local saves (saves/). Currently an early alpha focusing on single-player; client/server code exists but is not a public mode. Unofficial fan project not affiliated with Mojang or Microsoft. Installation requires Rust and a capable terminal.
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Isabel Fattal’s The Wonder Reader piece examines why male friendship often frays under work, family, and stigma around vulnerability. Through Andrew McCarthy’s questioning of his own friendships and a 2021 survey showing 15% of men have no close friends (up from 3% since 1990), it highlights how men struggle to maintain bonds. It surveys research on the decline of passionate male friendship, texting pitfalls, and models like vulnerability in shows such as Dave, arguing for reimagining male bonds beyond traditional, constant-crew dynamics.
Joonote is an Android note-taking app that lets you add, view, edit, and delete notes, lists, and reminders directly from the lock screen and notification panel, without unlocking. It offers a 30-day free trial, then $9.99 Pro forever. Key features: private notes, lists, reminders, search, speech-to-text, custom color labels, a homescreen widget, offline storage, dark mode, and automatic backup/restore to Google Drive. It emphasizes speed and on-device security, with user testimonials and a QR code to download.
Could not summarize article.
Align Technology is shifting Invisalign to direct in-house 3D printing, aiming to become the world’s biggest user of 3D printers. CEO Joe Hogan says mass customization can produce millions of unique aligners daily, supported by in-house scanners, software, and printing. The company bought Cubicure to develop a high-viscosity resin and is tackling a complex, scale-heavy process involving resin recapture, washing, and laser cutting. The move could lower costs, widen access, and boost growth, with potential US manufacturing expansion and more functional (non-cosmetic) orthodontics.
United Airlines updated its contract to allow refusing boarding or removing passengers who don’t wear headphones while listening to audio or video content. The change comes amid ongoing concerns about unruly passenger behavior, with FAA reporting over 1,600 incidents last year (down from 2021’s peak but still high). The policy is presented as promoting courtesy for fellow travelers.
The piece explains a “molly guard” as a safety barrier (hardware or software) users must bypass before a significant action, named after a datacenter incident. It notes such guards appear in recessed hardware, UI dialogs, and extra keys. It then introduces “reverse molly guards”: mechanisms that auto-press or proceed after inactivity, a pattern common on mobile. These are useful for long-running tasks (OS updates, renders) to prevent users from assuming the system is stuck. Good design should signal progress and convey that the process will complete, potentially using reverse guards to confirm progression.
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