Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Agentic platforms shift cognitive load from building to governing, enabling rapid, ongoing production. Team Topologies provides four team types (stream-aligned, platform, enabling, complicated subsystem) and three interaction modes (facilitating, X-as-a-Service, collaboration) to distribute and absorb load. Stream-aligned teams own business intent; the platform guarantees reliability, guardrails, and tooling; enabling teams bridge gaps; complicated subsystems handle advanced AI infra. Guardrails prevent shadow IT, with graduation turning recurring needs into platform services. The platform is a living product with shared ownership: product teams own context; the platform owns systemic capabilities. Result: business teams produce with agents; developers shift to building platforms.
Sean Gong, formerly a Citadel Securities options market-maker who built and automated a desk handling about 100,000 options across ~300 stocks in India and Hong Kong, authored the traders’ manual. He now helps independent traders develop robust strategies by modeling how a market-maker would view an edge: Is the edge real, what is the optimal size (Edge/Variance), and can it be captured cost-effectively through execution. Invitees share an idea for a strategy report from a Citadel quant’s perspective. Disclaimers: educational use only, not investment advice, AI persona.
The piece argues that 8086 segmented memory was clever at enabling 1MB addressing without rewriting code, using 64KB segments identified by segment registers and a 20‑bit address from segment:offset. In practice, developers treated memory as almost flat, exploiting 16-byte segment spacing and turning segment registers into the high bits of an address, which undermined the model and cemented the 1MB limit. A true-segment metadata approach (with per-segment data and hardware) would have been possible but impractical. Hearthfire learns the lesson but avoids 8086-style segmentation.
Plotnine is a Python data-visualization package based on the grammar of graphics (like ggplot2). It lets you build publication-ready plots from data with a simple, layered syntax. Using Anscombe’s Quartet as an example, you can make basic scatter plots, color by dataset, facet panels, and add trend lines, then override defaults (colors, sizes, scales, coordinates, labels) and apply themes for a polished look. The workflow goes from a single line to customized figures; installation and further resources follow.
Lume is a local-first Rust hybrid search engine (CLI + MCP server) that indexes Markdown, code, and PDFs, ranking with three independent primitives: field-aware BM25, local dense vectors via GTR-T5 (Shivvr), and a significance-weighted entity graph. Retrieval is auditable and inspectable, with two-stage pruning (roaring bitmap candidate sets followed by Gödel tag-signature filtering), query hygiene (stopword removal and coordination), and a multiplicative blend: bm25 * (1 + alpha*semantic + beta*skg). It runs largely on-device, with semantic vectors fetched from Shivvr by default and tunable knobs, plus a case study of retrieval bugs and fixes.
C++26 boosts std::format: std::println can print an empty line; pointers format directly with default, {:p}, or {:P}; nullptr becomes 0x0 with padding. A formatter for std::filesystem::path adds unquoted default output and debug/generic variants ({:?}, {:g}, {:g?}). Windows paths now transcode UTF-16 to UTF-8 to avoid garbled text. constexpr support extends to std::format and related functions (static_assert usage), though floating-point, chrono, and locale-aware formatting remain unsupported; runtime_format is renamed to dynamic_format and is constexpr.
Ymawky is a Linux ARM64 assembly web server (syscall-only, no libc) with fork-per-connection, ported from MacOS. It serves static files from a docroot (default www/), supports CGI in cgi-bin, lists directories, and handles common HTTP methods (GET, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS, HEAD, POST via CGI). PUTs support up to 1GiB, atomic writes via temp files. It auto-prefers index.html, decodes percent-encoding, prevents path traversal, and prepends docroot. It serves custom error pages from err/, detects MIME types, supports Range requests, and basic safety against slowloris. Config via config.S (DOCROOT, CGI_DIR, ERR_DIR, DEFAULT_FILE). Built with make, runs on 127.0.0.1:8080.
The article explains RFC 10008's HTTP QUERY method for read-only queries with a request body. GET/URL filters struggle with long, nested, or hard-to-encode data and are inconsistently handled when a body is used. POST can replace GET but is non-idempotent and hinders caching. QUERY is designed to be safe, idempotent, and cacheable (with the body considered in the cache key). Adoption is limited; Kreya 1.20 supports it, but many clients still reject it. Don’t rush replacing GET; test its suitability for your use case.
An independent benchmark tests whether Mythos is truly superior at finding security bugs. The author builds a 9-bug corpus allegedly found by Mythos, vetted with Opus, then pits multiple models against it in a minimal, hints-free harness in a fresh container. Results show several non-Mythos models can detect/describe the bugs; Qwen 3.6 27B is surprisingly strong, Gemma 4 MoE shows high-precision hits on some bugs, and MiMo/DeepSeek are cheap yet competitive. Mistral and Laguna underperform. Conclusion: Mythos’s claimed edge isn’t proven; more testing with time and tooling is needed.
Nemo argues that package managers should implement global hooks—global code run at stages of a package’s workflow—to enable universal, proactive defense against dependencies’ threats. He critiques firewalls and registry-based solutions as invasive and inelegant, advocating instead for global hooks that can enforce threat feeds, malware checks, and cooldowns without extra infra. Current managers offer limited or no global hook support (pnpm is per-workspace, npm lacks hooks, yarn has plugins). AUR helpers could host hook scripts. Treat hooks as global config; request standardization.
YOLO26 is an end-to-end, edge-optimized multi-task vision model family (Nano to Extra Large) supporting object detection, instance segmentation, pose estimation, oriented object detection, and image classification. Released Jan 2026, it eliminates NMS and Distribution Focal Loss for lower latency and better edge compatibility, enabling faster CPU inference and broad export formats (TFLite, CoreML, OpenVINO, TensorRT, ONNX). It introduces MuSGD training, improved small-object recognition, and end-to-end predictions. Benchmarks show varying mAP and latency across sizes; alternatives include RF-DETR, LW-DETR, D-FINE. Suited for edge, robotics, IoT.
WSJ 404 page indicating the requested page isn’t found, with URL verification and [email protected] contact. It also lists popular articles (Nadella on AI’s economy, Surfside condo sales, Starmer’s resignation) and recent podcasts (Strait of Hormuz, iPhone price rise, SpaceX/Alphabet dragging Nasdaq).
The piece argues memcached can be a preferable caching layer to Redis in many ops scenarios: Redis is often treated as a persistence layer/datastructure database, leading to maintenance headaches when upgrades or failures occur; memcached offers simpler operations, easier downtime handling (clients ignore connection errors), straightforward horizontal scaling via client-side hashing, no disk persistence, and lightweight multi-instance deployments; for stateless caches, memcached is a pragmatic choice, though developers should still optimize queries for slow databases.
Open Culture curates a catalog of 1,700 free online courses from top universities worldwide (Yale, MIT, Harvard, Oxford, etc.), spanning humanities, architecture, economics, computer science, biology, psychology, and more. Many entries are MOOCs; for free versions, select Full Course, No Certificate or Audit, while certificates incur fees. The page also bundles related free resources (ebooks, audio books, films) and notes download/stream options and affiliate commissions.
Port of PowerPC Windows NT to GameCube/Wii/Wii U (ARC-based loader). Supports Nintendo GameCube, Wii, and vWii on Wii U; experimental on Broadway/Cortado; never on early Dolphin 4MB RAM hardware. Install by copying NT ISO to SD, creating a disk image, repartitioning via ARC, selecting the HAL, and loading required mass-storage drivers and device mappings. Building requires devkitPPC, a libgcc for powerpc, NT4 DDK libs, and MSVC PPC cross-tools; ARC firmware and HAL/drivers built with devkitPro tooling. Notable issues include reboot hangs, USB mass-storage problems, and slow GDI copying; USB/exFAT limitations exist.
ytr is an experimental Emacs package that adds YouTube audio streaming via a widget-style UI. Built as a successor to ready-player, it lets you add a channel URL and auto-pulls content metadata into a small child-frame with subtle animations. The streaming work is powered by mpv and yt-dlp. It’s brand-new and evolving, currently GUI-only on Emacs (tested on macOS). Available on GitHub, with a request for feedback and sponsorship.
Polymarket paid creators to film fake bets on cloned sites to push the idea that users can get rich on prediction markets. The Wall Street Journal reviewed 1,105 videos from 10 creators showing fake bets totaling $1.9 million; 118 videos showed reactions to fake wins or outdated headlines. Posts hid funding, and many avoided Polymarket branding. The campaign targeted US viewers; Polymarket’s main exchange remains US-blocked. Polymarket says it’s auditing promotional content.
Researchers show ntoskrnl-rs, an NT-shaped kernel written by AI (Fable 5) in Rust, booting in QEMU and passing self-tests after a 38-minute run. The core implements OS components (scheduler, memory, I/O, object manager) and later loads Windows drivers and unmodified binaries in kernel and user mode, forming a testing sandbox. The article argues AI-authored kernels reveal trust boundaries and foreground the verification gap: exhaustive concurrency tests, Miri, proptest, and formal verification are needed before such code can be trusted as a TCB. It warns that rewriting critical infrastructure in Rust is possible but requires robust verification and auditable pipelines.
Hydroponic Trash argues that the corporate internet and AI-driven standardization push people toward analog, handmade tech (cyberdecks) and physical media. It links today’s cyberdeck renaissance—driven by women and marginalized groups—to historic medieval guilds, Luddites, and the Arts and Crafts movement, framing tech as a tool that can either exploit or empower. It urges anti-capitalist, permacultural approaches: reuse/upcycle hardware, extend device lifespans, reduce reliance on money, foster mutual aid, resist platform co-optation, and reimagine an economy oriented to human flourishing.
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