Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Guide to the TD4 4‑bit CPU explains building a tiny 2‑register, 16‑byte ROM machine from a cheap kit. The author details soldering tips (USB power, diode orientation) and how the circuit works: a 16-switch ROM provides opcodes (ADD, MOV, IN, OUT, JNC, JMP) and 4-bit immediates; a demux address decoder (IC11) selects the active ROM bank; a buffering stage (IC12) feeds a ROM output into a 4-bit adder; a command-decoder generates LOAD signals and SEL_A/SEL_B; registers A,B,Out,PC plus a carry flip-flop enable conditional jumps. Includes simple programs, a Python assembler/simulator, and reflections on the project’s limits and related kits.
Humans evolved to attend to threats, but our brains aren’t built for nonstop global bad news. The negativity bias makes negative information more salient, and the 24/7 news cycle floods us with distressing content that provokes stronger physiological reactions and drives engagement. This helps explain widespread news fatigue and Problematic News Consumption, with notable US prevalence and greater impact on minority groups. The fix isn’t avoidance: limit viewing windows, favor deep, trustworthy reporting, turn awareness into action, and watch for rage bait to protect mental health while staying informed.
Urges crawlers to declare a user-agent and adhere to the site's robots policy, with links to the policy page and a related Wikimedia Phabricator task.
Article analyzes fork/exec cost in Linux and a proposed 'spawn templates' to speed repeated launches of the same executable. Chen's patch would create a cached template via spawn_template_create() and later spawn it with spawn_template_spawn(), using argv/envp and an actions array to adjust FDs, CWD, and signals. Checks remain, but startup is faster; benchmarks show ~2% improvement. The piece also discusses posix_spawn as a better overall approach, with Brauner advocating a pidfd-based API and user-space posix_spawn. Ultimately, there are no kernel spawn templates; future work may push posix_spawn into userspace.
Many developers don’t understand CORS, a gap highlighted by Zoom’s localhost vulnerability. Zoom ran a local webserver (localhost:19421) to command the native client; they used an image request to bypass cross-origin checks, exposing risks because any site could potentially trigger Zoom. A secure fix would be: have the localhost service expose a REST API with Access-Control-Allow-Origin: https://zoom.us and block unauthorized contexts via CSP, plus prevent iframe-based rendering. The issue reflects broader CORS confusion across developers and popular but insecure examples; better education is needed.
Vinicius Brasil argues that AI-generated code accelerates work but bloats the review bottleneck, causing cognitive overload and distrust. He often rejects AI changes unless he can explain the approach, preferring more time to consolidate problems and guide the agent to better solutions. He advocates mandatory human review with AI, noting that CI success can hide poor, hard-to-understand design. AI helps but isn’t autonomous or sustainable yet; skilled engineers remain essential for adequate, scalable, extensible software.
Autonomous delivery robots are spreading in cities worldwide to deliver groceries and meals. Operators tout safety features and benefits like reduced traffic and emissions, but pedestrians and officials push back over sidewalk crowding, safety risks, blocked emergency access, and potential job losses for human workers. Cities such as San Francisco, Toronto, Chicago, and Glendale have imposed or considered bans and limits; UK incidents of vandalism are reported. Regulators seek clear rules on permits, insurance, accessibility, and high-pedestrian-area restrictions. Despite opposition, growth is forecast to soar—potentially 2.1 million robots by 2034—necessitating a robust regulatory framework.
LymeAlert is a new at-home test for ticks, not humans. Users grind up to five ticks in a container; a chemically treated strip changes color if Lyme bacteria are present. Priced at $40, it goes on sale in August and promises a 15-minute result, potentially reducing ER visits and unnecessary antibiotics. Experts warn of possible false positives and that it won’t detect other pathogens; medical advice after a tick bite is still advised. The company plans future versions and a smartphone app to map tick-borne infections for surveillance. Founder: Erin Dawicki, MIT.
A system for whole cross-sectional ultrasound tomography (UST) of humans in both reflection and transmission modes uses a rotating transmitter and a 512-element circular receiver array to produce two-dimensional images of the entire in vivo cross-section (abdomen and thighs) with uniform in-plane resolution. Results show strong agreement with MRI. Two key applications are abdominal adipose thickness mapping without ionizing radiation and video-rate biopsy-needle localization relative to tissue features, addressing unmet clinical needs.
Submarius is a mobile-first ocean‑intelligence app for spearfishers, divers, fishermen, and boaters. It offers water‑clarity forecasts from satellite turbidity and a physics‑based visibility model, plus a bite score (0–10) that blends tides, moon, barometric trend, solunar tables, and local patterns to yield a clear GO/DON’T verdict. Core safety tools—shark alerts, buddy GPS, SOS, and breath-hold monitoring—are permanently free. The app adapts dashboards to activity modes (spearfishing, fishing, diving, boating, surfing). Free to start; Pro unlocks include longer forecasts, unlimited spots, overlays, and offline maps.
Anthropic's Project Fetch: Phase Two tested Claude Opus 4.7's ability to autonomously control a robodog to fetch a ball, updating Phase One with Opus 4.1. In three trials, Opus 4.7 completed tasks at least ten times faster than the fastest human team from the prior year. On four common tasks, it was ~37x faster than a Claude-less team and ~18x faster than the Claude-enabled team. It struggled with fine closed-loop ball manipulation and used an outdated detector, but generated efficient code. This supports a path toward physical agentic AI.
Loupe is an open-source iOS/iPadOS app from Mysk that demonstrates device fingerprinting by showing raw values from public iOS APIs that any app can call. It explains how readings—grouped as Passive, Needs Permission, and Advanced—can enable cross-app and cross-site recognition without exposing personal data. Privacy: nothing leaves the device; values aren’t aggregated or uploaded. Built largely with AI tools; MIT-licensed; macOS version mostly complete; the project also promotes Psylo, a privacy-first browser.
TownSquare is a tiny real-time presence layer for websites. Visitors see each other instantly, move around, and chat with no accounts or algorithms. Add a single <script> before </body>—no build steps or dependencies. Free to add (about a minute) and connects sites into a growing map of TownSquares where people wave and chat in real time.
Esquire summarizes a Wired report about Dialog, a secret cabal of elites led by Peter Thiel. A leaked 2026 Dublin-area retreat roster lists military figures, former Trump officials, two senators, Paypal Mafia members, and data/ads leaders attending off-the-record sessions on topics from money and nukes to Build-a-Cult and Build-a-Party. The group centers on AI and longevity, predicting labor upheaval, possible AI winters, and religious revivals; the piece argues this network’s power could reshape politics and society.
Phoenix Semiconductor, founded in 2023 in Austin, repackages off-the-shelf semiconductors onto an interposer to imitate legacy parts for high-mix, low-volume defense, aerospace, medical, and industrial systems—keeping aircraft and other critical equipment running when original chips are scarce. Prototypes are in-house; production is outsourced to Micross, QP Technologies, and TTM Technologies. ISO 9001 certified in June 2026. The company aims to automate and eventually build its own optimized manufacturing flows to meet ongoing legacy-chip demand that large fabs ignore.
Overview of Linux async I/O: epoll vs io_uring. Epoll, a readiness-based mechanism, requires a separate syscall per I/O and per registration, causing high overhead at scale. io_uring introduces submission and completion rings, enabling batch submissions and completions with far fewer syscalls; SQPOLL can keep a kernel thread polling with trade-offs. The article includes simple C examples for epoll and io_uring, notes caveats (blocking on stdin, possible NULL sqe), and mentions zero-copy buffers and SEND_ZC. Conclusion: io_uring is the modern standard for async I/O on kernel 5.1+; drop epoll where possible.
Finland treats libraries as democratic infrastructure, not just books. In Helsinki’s Oodi, people borrow sewing machines, sports gear and meeting rooms, study, debate, create music, and learn digital skills. Across Nordic countries, libraries are public‑service hubs that help people navigate tax portals, pensions, and job applications, promoting inclusion and active citizenship. The Finnish Library Act enshrines democracy; library funding is high (about €371m in 2025). Studies show libraries deliver broad value—literacy, employability, wellbeing—and high trust, making them bridges between citizens and decision‑makers, a contrast to library closures elsewhere.
Gravina notes a bias toward books published by 2022 or earlier, often discounting post-2022 works from unfamiliar authors. He uses LLMs for coding but believes good results matter regardless of the tool. He values pre-2022 books because the text is manually edited and proofread, which lends greater weight to the content. He resists doom-and-gloom over AI-enabled media and suggests there may be no single solution—only adaptation. Page updated Jun 20, 2026.
Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML