Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Nordstjernen 1.0.0 releases a browser written from scratch in C, focused on HTML/CSS standards. It runs on Windows, macOS, Linux, with an Android port in progress. License: Nordstjernen Source License v1.0 (free to use/modify/redistribute, except as a competing browser); each release becomes MIT after ten years. Commercial licenses by agreement. Release date: 2022-06-05; repo: nordstjernen-web/nordstjernen; 5 commits since this release.
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An ABC Classic FM visualization tracks the Classic 100 rankings for 2001, 2010, and 2021, using dots for pieces and lines to show changes over time. You can click a dot to view details, with other works by the same composer highlighted. A notable point is that “The Lark Ascending” was #2 in 2001, dropped by 2010, then rose again in 2021. The page also includes an “About me” from Alex of Hobart, who favors Vivaldi’s “La Follia” and invites feedback via a form.
Random UUIDs (UUID4) as primary keys in SQLite hurt performance because they break cluster order, forcing frequent B-tree rebalancing. SQLite’s clustered index is the rowid, or the declared PK for WITHOUT ROWID tables. A baseline with an integer PK inserts ~1M rows/sec. Using UUID4 as a primary key (WITHOUT ROWID) slowed inserts by ~10–12x due to random insertions into the B-tree. Using time-ordered UUID7 improved performance, returning near baseline speeds, though UUIDs are still slower due to 16-byte vs 8-byte keys. The post illustrates clustering and ordering pitfalls and suggests UUID7 as mitigation.
Salvaged Circuitry details repairing a broken Sigma 45mm f/2.8 I-series lens. After confirming mechanical integrity, the author traces power on the control PCB, finds a blown 2A fast‑blow fuse (ERB-RE2R00V) feeding the 3.3V MCU and motor controller, and replaces it. He analyzes the TMPM341FYXBG ARM MCU, Rohm BU24020GU motor controller, the lens’s flex cables, and test pads, using a camera jig to probe voltages. The lens now works with AF not lightning-fast but usable; the teardown and fuse swap took under an hour, with the write‑up longer.
Over 19 years, GPS L1 C/A Subframe 4 has functioned as a global numbers station, broadcasting encrypted messages via the public signal. An analysis of 12.16 million observations (2007–2026) found most payloads resemble random data, but with intentional structure: 0xAA placeholders indicating empty payloads; recurring 9-byte headers like LY47IRP16 across messages. A 2011 fleet-wide switch to 0xAA coincided with faster key distribution via OTAD. In 2023, PRN 8 began prefixing a four-byte TEXT before 18 bytes of ciphertext. Authors publish open code/data and call for community auditing.
The GitHub repo a-yiorgos/wambook hosts Warren's Abstract Machine: A Tutorial Reconstruction by Hassan Ait-Kaci. The README notes the book explains the Warren Abstract Machine and is out of print. The author owns the copyright, and the electronic version was once freely available for non-commercial use at vanx.org (now parked). The repo provides electronic copies (PDF/PS) and slides (e.g., wambook.pdf, wam-slides.pdf) to make the book accessible.
Internal Microsoft strategy documents reveal plans to "make people addicted" to Scout, the company's AI personal assistant, before rolling out more features, described as "three phases from addictive app to agentic platform." The piece frames this as part of a pattern of dependency on Microsoft products, citing Windows.
An aging-and-eye-problems post discusses personal experiences with floaters and reading difficulties. It cites two RSS-linked posts: Robert Breen, who after turning 50 began seeing two lines on spreadsheets and, for him, closing one eye helps; Bryce Wray, who uses dark mode to cope with floaters causing glare on light backgrounds. The author himself had a posterior vitreous detachment in the left eye, with floaters and flashes; while the floaters faded, left-eye cloudiness persists, making light-mode reading especially hard. Mentions a follow-up post on subtle Drafts themes.
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A Cloudflare 524 timeout on elijahpotter.dev means the origin server didn’t respond quickly enough, likely due to overloaded background tasks, database, or application resources. Visitors should try again in a few minutes. Owners should consult Cloudflare’s Error 524 article, check for long-running processes or an overloaded server, and use status polling for large requests to avoid the error. Run long-running scripts on a grey-clouded subdomain. Enterprise customers can raise the timeout via Cache Rules.
GitHub is handling an authentication issue that impacted the API and disrupted Slack/Teams channel subscriptions. The incident is under investigation; degradation has been mitigated and monitoring is ongoing. A recently enabled feature-flag caused authorization failures (14:49–16:45 UTC) and has been turned off. Chat integrations are being restored. Some users may see unexpected repo unsubscriptions in Slack/Teams and may need to re-subscribe. Further updates will outline options to restore deleted subscriptions and return to normal service.
Not building is a powerful feature. The article argues that backlog ideas left unexecuted often become irrelevant or legacy cruft, and choosing not to build accelerates teams and sharpens priorities. As AI/LLMs push for more features, codebases risk bloating, duplications, and hard-to-read implementations. Removing unnecessary code can be a net positive, even if hard to justify. Hyrum’s Law also shapes APIs, suggesting we often benefit from opting out of writing certain code. In short, selective building beats relentless expansion.
FAISS enables billion-scale similarity search by embedding data into vectors and using approximate indexes. It contrasts Flat (exact), IVF (coarse partitioning), PQ (compressed codes), and IVFPQ (combining both with residuals). PQ reduces 512-byte vectors to 8 bytes, enabling RAM-scale storage; coding uses LUTs and ADC for efficient distance estimation. GPU optimizations include memory coalescing and warp-level processing. Use cases: semantic search, image similarity, RAG/LLM memory, recommendations, deduplication, anomaly detection. The point: choose an index to meet latency and memory constraints.
Do the hardest thing means pursuing the highest-value problem that few others tackle and sticking with it until it pays off. The idea, echoed by Jesse Hanley, Ruben Gamez, and others, is that ambitious projects have outsized payoff despite longer timelines. Examples: Bento, Transistor, and Skype—hard problems with demand. A snowboarding shop was hard work but in a low-value space. The power-law idea suggests your best idea can dwarf the rest. Choose a hard problem within your expertise, get obsessed, and push it long enough; results may follow. Note: advice is necessary but not sufficient.
AI agents struggle to write meaningful tests, often producing poor or vague results due to bad examples and teaching. Jason Swett describes his agent-based TDD skill, built on a Specify-Encode-Fulfill loop and Kent Beck's Canon TDD. Process: list specs, encode them as automated tests, write just enough code to pass the current test, then optionally refactor after success. He adds Test Design Review and Software Design Review to catch design flaws. He argues that combining timeless principles with AI boosts productivity.
An article alleging Cloudflare’s CEO misrepresented bot traffic to push a pay-to-crawl product. It argues real online traffic remains about two-thirds human, not the claimed AI-driven surge. The CEO cited HTML-only data while ignoring the dashboard’s All-traffic metric. The largest bot category is search crawlers; AI traffic mainly comes from training scrapers (GPTBot, ClaudeBot) predating the announcement. Googlebot is counted twice, inflating AI traffic; the supposed agentic increase is the smallest category. In short, the release is a marketing ploy based on misrepresented data.
An empirical analysis of rsync releases tests whether Claude-assisted releases are unusually buggy. Using bugs per 10 commits (bugs/10c) across 46 releases, with two Claude releases (v3.4.2, v3.4.3), the study employs an exact permutation test (p=46%) and Fisher's test (p=74%) and finds Claude releases fall within the historical middle 50% and are not statistically worse than non-Claude releases. The historical mean bugs/10c is higher (7.59) than Claude's (3.78). Regime checks show no shift; a pre-Claude outlier (v3.4.1) skews older data. Methods rely on releases, not per-commit. Conclusion: no evidence Claude increased bugs.
Sakana AI announces the RSI Lab in Tokyo to develop open-ended, autonomous, sample-efficient Recursive Self-Improvement architectures, moving beyond brute-force scaling. Building on milestones like LLM-Squared (with Oxford/Cambridge) yielding DiscoPOP; Darwin Godel Machine (UBC); ShinkaEvolve; ALE-Agent (first in AtCoder Heuristic Contest); Digital Red Queen (MIT); and The AI Scientist, with a Nature paper in 2026. The four-phase trajectory spans Agent-Native Models, the AI Scientist, Recursive Self-Improvement, and Democratized AI, plus responsible RSI and open publication. Recruitment for Frontier Research Scientists and Advanced Core Engineers is underway in Japan and abroad.
Adyen has been appointed the payment services provider for GOV.UK Pay, taking on non-Crown card payments and pay-by-bank services for about 1,000 public-sector services across local authorities, the armed forces, and police. The transition from Stripe to Adyen aims to modernise public-sector payments with a unified platform, enabling faster innovation and scalable, secure transactions. Migration will occur in phases with no expected disruption. GOV.UK Pay will continue to manage supplier relationships, compliance, and infrastructure as services transition.
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