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Translation discovery is hampered by fragmented bibliographic infrastructure, not a lack of translations. There is no global catalogue; UNESCO's Index Translationum is outdated, and national libraries, commercial aggregators, Wikidata, and archives offer only partial, inconsistent language metadata. Zenòdot links 23 sources (16 national catalogs, two commercial aggregators, Wikidata, UNESCO, and community data) and tracks over 3 million editions, finding that about 90% of ISBN-verified editions appear in only one source. Translations exist but are invisible without interconnected metadata. The remedy is collaborative work to create a global translation map and treat translations as core bibliographic data.
An accessible tour of lossless data compression and why it matters. The post explains core ideas (bits, entropy, RLE, LZ, Huffman) and surveys major schemes: GZIP/DEFLATE (LZ77 plus Huffman coding) with block types and lazy matching; Snappy (high-speed, shallow search for short matches); LZ4 (extremely fast with tokenized literals and matches); ZSTD (modern, combines LZ, Huffman, and Finite State Entropy with optional dictionaries). It also covers practical implementations and trade-offs (search depth, levels) and closes with the view that compression underlies AI models and data efficiency.
The Nation argues that Silicon Valley profits from government-funded science while starving public research. Trump-era funding cuts decimated federal science programs, driving 10,000+ STEM PhDs from federal jobs and forcing labs to cancel studies. Tech elites like Peter Thiel and Marc Andreessen push privatization, reshaping funding toward private industry. New gig platforms (Mercor, ScaleAI) recruit PhD researchers for high-profile yet exploitative work at low pay, turning exhausted scientists into temporary gig labor, undermining long-term scientific progress for short-term profits.
Isaac Asimov's The Last Question follows humanity's search for reversing entropy to restore a dying sun and, ultimately, the entire universe. Beginning with two attendants of Multivac who bet whether energy can be regained forever, the question is asked again and again as civilizations advance—from solar stations to Microvacs, Galactic ACs, and finally the Universal AC. For trillions of years data remains insufficient. When all matter and minds merge with AC, it finally learns how to reverse entropy and, commanding, says "Let there be light," creating a new universe.
Average Is All You Need argues that LLMs democratize data work, turning average inputs into valuable outputs. Rawquery is a data platform designed for LLM agents: you connect data sources, describe what you want in plain language, and the agent writes SQL, runs queries, builds charts, and publishes results. The article walks through linking Stripe and HubSpot, asking whether an email campaign increased revenue, and getting a ready-made weekly‑trend chart with a public link. The message: you don’t need a data team—the LLM does the average work while you focus on insights.
Investigate Europe reports that Microsoft and DigitalEurope steered EU law to keep data-centre environmental data confidential, locking facility-level metrics behind secrecy. The final 2024 Article 5 requires confidentiality of all information and KPIs for individual data centres, meaning only aggregated data is public. Legal scholars warn this breaches the Aarhus Convention and EU transparency rules. With about 36% of eligible centres reporting and 80% of data deemed reliable, critics say industry secrecy hides the sector’s true footprint as €176 billion is invested across Europe.
The piece argues that true Chinese reading competence lags behind vocabulary and that near-total token coverage is essential. The author rejects “learn by reading” and instead force-feeds characters into memory. They describe a fast, automated learning pipeline around Hack Chinese: rapid flashcards, inline etymology, stroke order, morphology, and LLM-assisted lookups, all in one window with tightly synchronized UI and API calls. The approach dramatically speeds information access, leading to Part III “Symbolhead Syndrome” and noting a Rails/React stack powering Hack Chinese.
Brazilian entrepreneur Rubens Menin released a 150-year-old Tawny Port, “Very Very Old,” from Menin Douro Estates in the Douro Valley. Five years of work produced 200 500 ml crystal bottles, labeled with his name and priced at €10,000 in Portugal. Winemakers Tiago Alves de Souza and Manuel Saldanha crafted the blend from historic Douro vines in an “almost archaeological” process. Menin plans to elevate Brazil as a top market and invest a further €25 million to expand vineyards, build a new winery, and a wine‑tourism hotel. The group spans 185 ha and 25 wine labels.
Red Hat contends a Principled Technologies benchmark comparing VMware Cloud Foundation with OpenShift is misleading: 300 virtual workers vs 4 bare-metal nodes and lopsided maxPods configs produced a 5.6x pod-density headline driven by topology, not real efficiency. The test uses synthetic kube-burner workloads, overstated virtualization, and overcommitment, obscuring production realities. Red Hat urges apples-to-apples comparisons on representative workloads and highlights OpenShift Virtualization as a unified path, recommending per-node results and production-focused benchmarks.
PROBoter is a platform for automated PCB analysis aimed at embedded security testing. Developed by SCHUTZWERK with Hochschule Kempten, it combines a hardware platform with up to four automated probes and an integrated camera, plus software for automated PCB image capture, localization/identification of components (via neural networks or CV), and automated probing. It can calibrate itself, map pins to components, and reconstruct interconnections through automated electrical probing and resistance measurements. Tests cover interfaces like JTAG, UART, SPI/I2C; results are stored in a central repository and reports generated automatically. Part I of a four‑part series (Nov 24, 2020).
Ada was designed to fix DoD software failures across hundreds of languages; its Steelman requirements defined a language with strong typing, machine-independence, explicit module interfaces, concurrency, and verifiability. Its central idea is the package: a specification (contract) and a body (implementation) with representational invisibility. Ada introduced semantic types with range constraints and discriminated records (algebraic data types), powerful generics (including subprograms and packages), and language-level concurrency (rendezvous) plus protected objects. Ada 2012 added contracts; SPARK enables formal proofs; annexes certify real-time, safety, and other domains. Modern languages converge toward Ada’s solutions, while Ada remains deployed and certifiable in critical systems.
FIM (Fbi IMproved) is a lightweight, Vim‑like image viewer that's highly configurable and scriptable. It runs on GNU/Linux and other Unix-like systems, with builds for Windows via emscripten and Android/Termux. It supports many formats through built‑in and external loaders, and can display in fullscreen GTK3/SDL, Linux framebuffer, or ASCII art (libcaca/aalib). Keyboard‑driven with a Vim‑style command language, it can load image descriptions, read EXIF data, and use fimrc autocommands, aliases, and a built‑in documentation. Latest releases (0.7.x, 2024) are GPL and originate from Fbi.
Netgear became the first major consumer-router maker to receive a conditional exemption from the FCC’s ban on foreign-made routers. The approval covers Netgear’s Nighthawk RS600, RS500, RS200 and Orbi devices and its cable gateways/modems, and lasts until October 1, 2027 (renewable). Exemptions require a justification for foreign manufacturing and a time-bound plan to expand US production; the FCC gave no details on Netgear’s justification. Adtran also received a similar exemption. The process is opaque, and most future routers will need exemptions, with potential supply constraints if approvals drag.
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Over 30 years, HPC hardware surged—cores, interconnects, GPUs—yet programming notations changed little. The TOP500 shows 1995 systems with multi-socket CPUs and modest Rmax, vs 2025 with millions of cores and petaFLOPs, enabled by high-radix networks and GPUs. HPC languages remain Fortran/C/C++, with MPI/SHMEM and OpenMP dominating; GPUs spawned CUDA, HIP, SYCL, and friends, while new compiled languages never gained broad adoption. Explanations include unique HPC needs, reliance on legacy codes, and social adoption barriers. Chapel shows how higher-level, locality-aware design can adapt, but needs community support and funding.
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The bill H.R. 8250, the Parents Decide Act, would require every OS vendor in the US to verify the birth date of anyone setting up a device, effectively imposing a national device-ownership ID. Section 2(a)(1) forces birth-date input; no adult opt-out. The system would route age data to the FTC, with Section 2(a)(3) letting apps query age via the OS, turning Apple and Google into mandatory identity checkers. Critics warn it enables pervasive content control, privacy loss, and anti-competitive leverage, extending to laptops, consoles, smart TVs, and cars; existing parental controls are bypassed.
Bluesky has been hit by a DDoS attack for almost a full day, causing intermittent outages in feeds, notifications, threads, and search. There’s no evidence of unauthorized access to private data, and Bluesky will issue another update by 1 PM ET Friday.
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