Front-page articles summarized hourly.
EFF argues federal court records should be free, backing the Open Courts Act of 2026 to replace PACER/CM/ECF with a modern, unified platform. The bill would end per-view fees, improve searchability and accessibility, bolster cybersecurity, and cut long-term costs. Supported by Fix the Court, the Free Law Project (RECAP), and other civil-society and media groups, it aims to strengthen democratic accountability by making court records openly accessible.
Steve Braithwaite drives a 23-foot Big Banana Car, built on a pickup, and has logged over 250,000 miles. He’s been pulled over by police hundreds of times—often for photo ops or minor license-plate issues—but never ticketed. The banana attracts attention and funds travel through rider donations. Started in 2008 after a Top Gear-inspired idea, Braithwaite now envisions a World Needs More Whimsy Grand Tour—driving through Central America and around the world, possibly racing the Wienermobile.
Scientists created ultrasonic espresso: a room-temperature extraction using high-frequency sound waves that yields espresso-strength coffee in under three minutes with up to 75% less energy by skipping heating. Ultrasound cavitation helps extract flavors, oils and caffeine from coffee grounds. Key variables are brew ratio, grind size, and duration (about 2.5–3 minutes). In a blind test with ~100 regular drinkers, espresso samples were indistinguishable from conventional shots; ultrasonic filter coffee was slightly preferred. The method could enable concentrated, ready-to-drink coffees; UNSW holds the patent.
Pagecast is a local-first publishing tool that takes local HTML, Markdown, and static mini apps and publishes them to shareable Cloudflare Pages URLs via the terminal or coding agents. It provides a local admin UI for previewing, versioning, renaming, re-syncing, and revoking URLs, plus headless publish commands and a Wrangler abstraction for Cloudflare Pages. It supports publishing individual files or static build folders, and integrates with Codex/Claude agent skills and a Chrome extension for one-click publishing. Requirements include Node.js 20+, npx, and a Cloudflare Pages account. MIT licensed.
Microsoft's June 2026 Windows 11 Patch Tuesday (KB5095051) introduces a Recycle Bin bug where the delete-confirm dialog shows internal filenames like $Rxxxxx.ext instead of the real name; deletion and Recycle Bin functionality remain correct, with restoration working. A workaround exists but is limited to commercial users; others must wait for a future update fix. The update also causes issues such as trouble accessing OneDrive/Dropbox, slower File Explorer on many PCs, random BSODs on some HP devices, freezes on Lenovo devices, and BitLocker Recovery on local-account machines.
UMass Amherst’s 1976 Wind Furnace (WF-1), a 25-kW turbine cobbled from a Ford truck axle, proved wind could heat homes and cut oil use, launching the U.S. wind industry. Led by Captain William Heronemus, a former Navy submariner who opposed nuclear power, a team of students designed a turbine that pitched blades to regulate torque and spun up a nascent industry. The project sparked the California wind rush, the first grid-connected wind farm (1980), and US Windpower, and helped form the UMass Wind Energy Center; WF-1 is in the Smithsonian. His offshore multirotor visions foreshadow today’s floating wind.
Growing reliance on AI risks deskilling: surveys show many health workers fear skill loss. In Poland, endoscopy specialists using real-time AI to flag adenomas saw their non-AI performance drop (adenoma detection 28.4% pre-AI to 22.4% post-AI when AI was unavailable). Expert warns clinicians may become less motivated, focused, or responsible without AI. A randomized trial with software engineers tested whether AI aid affects basic coding ability, illustrating the question in computer science as well. While more research is needed, experts call for strategies to preserve core human skills as AI usage expands.
Senators Cruz and Wyden unveiled the JAWBONE Act, a bipartisan bill that creates a federal cause of action against government officials who coerce private platforms—broadcasters, interactive services, and AI providers—to suppress lawful, First Amendment–protected speech—and establishes a transparency system for government communications with such intermediaries about user expression. Jawboning, pressuring platforms to censor, raises free‑speech concerns, but not all government-platform exchanges are unconstitutional. Platforms retain First Amendment rights to curate content. EFF supports the bill, citing ICEBlock coercion and related FOIA lawsuits, and urges a balanced approach to protect everyday speech online.
Google Workspace is reportedly warning Firefox users they must switch to Chrome, at least for Business Plus accounts. As of 2026-06-18, Firefox can still access, but it may be blocked soon. The remediation page instructs downloading Chrome and signing in with the work account. The author criticizes the lack of useful Google support and emphasizes the need for cross-browser compatibility.
Could not summarize article.
Hyundai Motor Group is acquiring SoftBank's remaining 9.65% stake in Boston Dynamics for $325 million, giving Hyundai full ownership. SoftBank exits to redeploy capital into its AI infrastructure push, notably Roze AI, aiming for a $100B valuation. Hyundai previously bought 80% in 2021 for about $880M, valuing Boston Dynamics around $1.1B. Atlas will be deployed in Hyundai plants, with a production version planned for Hyundai's Metaplant in Georgia by 2028; expansion to heavier tasks by 2030. The deal signals Hyundai's intent to own a robotics platform rather than rely on external partners.
Starfront Observatories in Rockwood/Brady, Texas, run by Bray Falls, hosts hundreds of other people’s telescopes on 40 acres under ultra-dark skies (Bortle Class 1). Photographers worldwide can operate their scopes remotely for about $99/month; Falls reportedly manages 550+ telescopes. The post features Falls’ image of a nebula he discovered, The Crown of Thorns Nebula, described as a rare, out-of-place supernova remnant in Virgo—far from the Milky Way plane—and notes Dr. Robert Fesen’s doubts and that a professional observatory is studying it. The author mentions learning about telescope ranching from Ian Lauer.
Argues that 'instances' are a Mastodon-specific misconception. RSS/Reader-style hosting and app aggregation work for blogs; Mastodon federation creates fiefdoms because each instance is a separate identity and data space. In atproto, hosting is decoupled from apps: you publish on hosting, apps aggregate from many hosting. There are no atproto instances; you can switch hosting or create new apps, similar to RSS/Google Reader. This yields true decentralization, avoids obsession with instance-count, and invites experimentation with new apps and shared infrastructure.
Tom Di Mino, a self‑taught AI engineer, claims to have deciphered Linear A, arguing the Bronze‑Age script encodes a Semitic language related to Hebrew. He identifies a Linear A sign '*301' as 'na' and links inscriptions to the root 'nawaya' ('to dwell'), tying prayers to Hebrew patterns. Using Claude Code, he proposes readings for 37 of 102 signs (including all 13 Linear A–only signs), resolves 3 Linear B signs, and produces a 383‑term Linear A lexicon plus a draft Ya Diktu manuscript. The claims are under review at Rutgers and Cambridge, echoing Cyrus Gordon’s proposals.
Brian S Campbell reviews Ada Palmer's Inventing the Renaissance: Myths of a Golden Age, praising its high-spirited, non-academic, “public-facing” history. Palmer treats the Renaissance as an idea, not a fixed era, and foregrounds how historians’ choices shape what we call the period. She reassesses Burckhardt and Baron, argues Renaissance humanists were not modern atheists, and links biography with broader political and cultural forces. The central Part III assembles fifteen brief lives—Florence, Machiavelli, popes, artists—and uses them to trace patronage, statecraft, and print culture across Italy and beyond. Campbell calls it engaging and essential for informed readers.
VocabOwl offers a scientific word-count feature.
NASA awarded Relativity Space, led by Eric Schmidt, a contract to build a spacecraft for the Aeolus mission to Mars. The four-instrument orbiter will map Mars’ dust, wind, and temperature daily, aiding future landers and astronauts. Planned for 2028, the deal follows NASA’s public-private partnership model: NASA provides science; Relativity supplies low-cost infrastructure. Risks include Relativity’s unproven track record and funding hurdles, though a successful mission could unlock commercial launches and data services. If on schedule, Aeolus could be the first private Mars mission, challenging SpaceX’s plans.
Jake Worth argues for leaving traces online: comment on helpful posts, share what helped, and, if possible, a quick note or emoji. If something doesn’t work, explain why and include details or a reproducible link. Why bother? It adds humanity, helps others find solutions, and builds your learning footprint and public profile in a noisy internet.
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