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Front-page articles summarized hourly.

What loss.backward() actually does

loss.backward performs reverse-mode automatic differentiation. A forward pass builds a computation graph; a backward pass walks it in reverse topological order, applying local derivatives and summing contributions from multiple paths to each input. One backward sweep yields dLoss/dp for all parameters, enabling efficient training. The article uses a microcrad example (a, b, e, L) to show the two paths and how gradients accumulate. It explains how the graph is constructed and memory managed (reference counting) in C. It ends with the standard four-step training loop.

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In Praise of Exhaustive Destructuring

Exhaustive destructuring in Rust improves safety during refactoring. Listing required fields (instead of ..) makes changes visible when a struct like WeatherReading gains new fields (e.g., wind_speed), because missing fields trigger compile-time errors, preventing silent propagation through layers. Destructuring self in methods enforces explicit field handling. The article argues this helps ensure consistency across data access, business logic, and API layers, and notes that while TypeScript supports pattern destructuring easily, and Haskell has some options (and proposals), Rust currently benefits from explicit field lists rather than partial patterns.

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Starlink from 1984

StarLink (1984) was DRI’s hardware-software approach to turn an IBM PC into a multiuser system. A card with an 8088 CPU, 64KB RAM, and four RS-232 ports plus an extra CPU/RAM ran Concurrent DOS on the host PC, allowing up to five users (one at the PC, four terminals). It aimed to extend MP/M’s multiuser lineage and compete with Altos systems but required 512KB RAM and a 5MB hard drive. Priced at $1,695, it failed to gain traction and was abandoned in 1985; the StarLink name later reappeared in different forms.

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EEG shows brain can simultaneous encode two speech streams

In a dynamic, multi-talker EEG study, competing speech streams are represented in cortex during attention switching. The findings show an asymmetry: engagement with the new stream begins before disengagement from the old one, creating a transient period where both streams are encoded; this is accompanied by a drop in EEG alpha power, reflecting listening effort. The study also tests lexical-context updating after switches using four context models and LLM-derived regressors; the Reset model (context reset after switch) best predicts neural data, suggesting the brain resets lexical predictions post-switch. Implications for attentional reallocation and speech processing are discussed.

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UIUC AI Teaching Assistant

Center-for-AI-Innovation/ai-teaching-assistant-uiuc is an open-source UI/UX and driver code for a multi-model TA_Chatbot. The system runs 11 models in parallel for text/image retrieval, generation, moderation, and ranking, delivering ~2-second responses. It leverages textbooks, lecture videos, and student QA forums (not publicly licensed) and uses semantic search in RLHF. Evaluation compares model outputs against human-authored answers. The project is plug-in friendly with Pinecone for document stores; installation via requirements.txt and a Gradio-based web app. Main files: main.py, TA_gradio_ux.py, prompting.py, evaluation.py, run_ta_gradio.sh. MIT license; live on HuggingFace.

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Pebble Mega Update – July 2026

Pebble Time 2: 23k+ built, ~80% of pre-orders fulfilled; remaining colors ship by July 28–31; stock imminent. Software: longer battery life (Time 2 ~21 days; Pebble 2 Duo ~30), new SDKs (Touch Screen, Speaker, RGB Backlight, FFI, debugger) and 2,120+ apps. Index 01: now in mass production; pre-orders shipping mainly by August end; ring size advisory. Pebble Round 2: mass production planned late July; ~14,000 pre-orders; ships by end of September. Hardware notes: replacements for reported faults (battery drain, touch, glass cracks); reports via Pebble app.

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Old Icons

Dr. Drang reflects on Mac icon history amid 'squircle jail' debate, tracing from 32x32, black-and-white icons to early guided cues. Apple used tilted rectangles with pictorial hints and protruding hands (MacWrite, MacPaint, HyperCard), while documents had upright dog-eared icons. Other publishers (Aldus PageMaker, QuarkXPress) followed, THINK used two hands at a keyboard generating a flowchart. As Macs evolved, these cues faded and icons became less constrained, even Apple utilities abandoned them. The piece, inspired by Paul Kafasis, celebrates whimsy of early Mac icons like ResEdit.

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How Has Roman Concrete Lasted for Millennia? 1,900-Year-Old Latrine Offers Clues

Researchers studying a 1,900-year-old latrine at Hadrian’s Villa found Roman concrete lasts partly due to long-term carbonation: atmospheric CO2 reacting with calcium to form calcite that fills cracks and strengthens the material, in addition to the known pozzolanic reaction. Analysis showed calcite as a primary binder in pores. The findings suggest carbonation contributes to durability and could inspire sustainable, lower-carbon modern concretes, building on 2023 work about quicklime deposits and aiming to cut concrete emissions.

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GrapheneOS recommended for domestic abuse victims

Tech-facilitated abuse is a major DV risk in Australia (99% of cases involve tech; up to 650% rise in some states; 27% of cases affect kids). A DV Safe Phone uses de-Googled devices (GrapheneOS on Pixel) to reduce tracking with near-zero telemetry, app isolation, and emergency controls. Regular smartphones expose location data, spyware, cloud syncing, and messages to abusers. Key safety features include a de-Googled OS, private hardware (new Pixel, 12GB RAM, 128GB+), kill switches for mic/cam/location, No-log VPNs, Tor, encrypted/self-deleting messaging, tracker detection, and metadata removal. PrivacyPros offers 4–7 hour hardening and Australian support resources.

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Simulating everything, sort of: The promise and limits of world models

World models aim to simulate the real world beyond language, with academia and industry pursuing robotics, simulation, asset generation, and scientific modeling. They’re defined variably: a world model internalizes an environment to predict future states, using video-diffusion, 3D representations (NeRFs, Gaussian splats), or abstract state prediction (JEPA). The field emphasizes real-time interaction and dynamic environments, not just static video. Tradeoffs exist: 3D representations enable fast rendering but may limit dynamics; video models are rich but compute-heavy. Data scarcity for robotics, ambiguous interfaces, fragmentation vs unification, and hype temper expectations; progress is incremental but hopeful.

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The Human-in-the-Loop Is Tired

An honest look at AI-assisted programming: useful yet destabilizing as LLMs generate code that still requires heavy human review, enforcing cognitive overload and a broken reward loop. Collaboration becomes solitary, and the pace of starting tasks outstrips finishing them. The piece draws a parallel with the shift to responsive design: craft persists through evolution, not extinction, relying on taste, architecture, and judgment. Practical responses include pre-mortems, codifying tacit expertise, and tools like Pydantic AI and Logfire to keep humans in the loop, albeit tired.

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Lingbot-map: A 3D foundation model for reconstructing scenes from streaming data

LingBot-Map is a feed-forward 3D foundation model for streaming scene reconstruction. It uses a Geometric Context Transformer that unifies coordinate grounding, dense geometric cues, and long-range drift correction via anchor context, a pose-reference window, and trajectory memory. It enables high-efficiency streaming inference (~20 FPS at 518×378) over sequences longer than 10k frames. It delivers state-of-the-art reconstruction versus both streaming and iterative optimization methods. Install via conda, PyTorch 2.8, optional FlashInfer (recommended) with SDPA fallback; Kaolin and rendering deps for offline/batch rendering. Includes interactive demo, long-sequence pipeline, sky masking, benchmarks, and Apache-2.0 license; citation Chen et al., 2026.

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M 3.9 Experimental Explosion – 147 Km ENE of Ponce Inlet, Florida

The Earthquake Event Page requires Javascript; enable it or use Real-time Notifications, Feeds, and Web Services to access features. It supports most recent browsers; link available to view supported browsers.

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Google Kills Custom Search API on Jan 1, 2027

The page is inaccessible due to a 403 Forbidden error.

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Solod: Go can be a better C

So is a strict subset of Go that translates to C11. It outputs readable C from Go code with zero runtime, no GC or hidden allocations, and native C interop (C from So and So from C) without CGO. It keeps Go basics—structs, methods, interfaces, slices, maps, multiple returns, defer—with stack allocation by default and heap only via standard library. Generics are limited; concurrency is provided by the std library. Aimed at Go developers needing system-level control or C programmers who like Go’s tooling. Status: active development (v0.3); 0.2 added networking, WebAssembly, freestanding mode; 0.3 to add concurrency.

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Show HN: Clx – Compile Lua to Native Executables Through C++20

clx is a cross-platform ahead-of-time Lua compiler and runtime (C++20) that emits standalone native executables from Lua sources. Its goal is AOT compilation, fast startup, predictable performance, and seamless integration with existing C/C++ toolchains, with aggressive optimizations and small binaries (Lua 5.5 compatible). It avoids a bytecode interpreter, supports a value-oriented runtime, 16-byte tagged values, inline small strings, and fast table access. It ships a C++ API, examples (Pong, Mandelbrot), and beta status; supports Linux/macOS/Windows; uses CMake or build.sh, and MIT license.

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The Little Book of Reinforcement Learning

The Little Book of Reinforcement Learning is a GitHub repository hosting a brief intro to RL, with the book itself and supplementary material. It includes PyTorch implementations of core RL algorithms (from Monte Carlo to PPO) in algos/, plus detailed explanations and proofs of dynamic programming in supplementary/. It's a 2021 document, with current version V1 (June 2026), licensed CC BY-SA 4.0 non-commercial.

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Just Do Things

Could not summarize article.

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CVE-2026-25089: FortiSandbox unauthenticated command injection added to CISA KEV

Fortinet FortiSandbox CVE-2026-25089 is an unauthenticated OS command injection in the web UI, CVSS 9.8, actively exploited since mid-June 2026. Affected: 4.2.x, 4.4.0–4.4.8, 5.0.0–5.0.5; fixed: 4.4.9+, 5.0.6+ (Cloud/PaaS 5.0.6+). CISA KEV dated July 16; third FortiSandbox vulnerability exploited in 2026; CVEs 39808 and 39813 exploited earlier. Remediation: patch immediately; upgrade to 4.4.9+ or 5.0.6+; isolate management interface; restrict to trusted networks; patch CVEs 39808/39813; audit integrations; monitor logs. Locate exposed instances by port scan (443/80/22/514), HTTP headers, TLS certs, DNS patterns (sandbox.*, fortisandbox.*).

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Show HN: ReasonGate- An explainable gate that blocks LLM prompt injection

ReasonGate is an explainable security gate for LLM apps that blocks prompt injection while providing auditable reasons for each decision. It analyzes the user prompt, retrieved context, and model output through layers: normalization, injection/jailbreak detection, indirect injection, leakage canaries, and a policy engine that fuses signals to decide block or allow. It can accumulate risk across turns and emits a structured audit record with a unique ID, timestamp, action, score, and evidence. Core is pure Python; enterprise add-on enables ML detectors. Pip install reasongate. Apache-2.0.

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