Front-page articles summarized hourly.
TorchLean is a Lean 4 framework that makes neural networks first-class mathematical objects with a single formal semantics shared by execution and verification. It fuses a PyTorch-style verified API (eager and compiled modes) that lowers to a common op-tagged SSA/DAG IR, with explicit Float32 IEEE-754 semantics and proof-relevant rounding models. Verification uses IBP and CROWN/LiRPA-style bound propagation with certificate checking. Demonstrated through certified robustness, PINN residual bounds, Lyapunov-style neural controller verification, and a universal approximation theorem. System: frontend, runtime semantics, and verification modules share semantics end-to-end.
Frank Lantz argues that despite AI's impact on development, there have been no truly groundbreaking AI-based games five years in. He surveys examples: AI Dungeon, Death by AI, Suck Up!, AI engines, and finds them underwhelming and not genuinely novel. He offers three explanations: (1) business models and API costs hinder releasing and monetizing such games; (2) culture wars mean players reject generative AI in games; (3) AI’s improvisational logic isn’t inherently fun, and real fun comes from simple, deterministic rules and emergence. He remains hopeful AI will enable wild gameplay, but not as a straightforward upgrade to genres.
MIM AA is a modular architecture that extends Modular Design by splitting each process into a Business-Module and its Infrastructure-Module. Business-Modules hold domain logic and expose a public API; Infra-Modules contain only infrastructure code (DB, IO, HTTP, messaging) and implement the Business-Module interfaces, enabling testability via DIP. There are no fixed layers; modules communicate by direct calls. Infra-Modules are optional and aid testability. The approach parallels Clean/Hexagonal/Onion in core DIP but is simpler and more flexible for monoliths. The article also covers adaptive testing and modular-design heuristics, with a worked example (H&V Server).
Problem: probability that N random points on a circle lie in some semicircle. Key idea: anchor at each point i; event E_i that all other points lie in the clockwise semicircle starting at i has probability (1/2)^{N-1}. At most one anchor can work, so probabilities are mutually exclusive. Therefore P(all in some semicircle) = sum_{i=1}^N P(E_i) = N / 2^{N-1}. For N=4 this is 4/8 = 1/2. Generalization: for an arc of length x ≤ 1/2, P(all in some arc) = N x^{N-1}. In 3D: N points on a sphere lie in a hemisphere with probability N/2^{N-1}.
Could not summarize article.
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Florida public universities will pause hiring new H-1B workers through Jan. 5, 2027, with renewals unaffected. The freeze, approved by the Florida Board of Governors, aims to root out abuses but can exception critical needs. It follows Gov. DeSantis’s criticisms of the program. More than 600 H-1B holders worked in Florida’s public universities last year (UF 253, UM 146, USF 107). Critics warn it could affect research and reputation; supporters urge targeted exceptions for researchers, physicians, and scientists. A new $100,000 H-1B fee is part of the changes.
React Kino is a cinema-style, scroll-driven storytelling library for React. It ships a tiny core (<1 KB gzipped) and declarative components (Kino, Scene, Reveal, ScrollTransform, Parallax, Counter, VideoScroll, CompareSlider, Marquee, TextReveal, StickyHeader, HorizontalScroll, Progress, Panel) to compose scroll-based animations without imperatives. SSR-safe and Next.js App Router compatible; respects prefers-reduced-motion. Performance-focused with RAF batching and passive event listeners. Includes templates and a CLI to scaffold full-page scroll experiences. Install with npm/pnpm and import only the components you need.
The US Supreme Court declined to hear Stephen Thaler’s bid to copyright AI-generated art, leaving in place lower court rulings that AI-created images can’t be copyrighted due to lack of human authorship. The 2019 Copyright Office decision rejecting Thaler’s work and the 2023 district court ruling were upheld in 2025 by a federal appeals court. The Copyright Office has since issued guidance that AI-generated art based on text prompts isn’t protected, a conclusion echoed by the UK; humans remain required for copyright.
Charting a 60-year arc, the piece argues GUI success came from the WIMP quartet—Windows, Icons, Menus, Pointer—via direct manipulation and four design synergies, culminating in a shift from fixed controls to intent-driven AI. From Spacewar! to Sketchpad, Engelbart’s mouse, NLS, Xerox Alto/Star, Lisa, Macintosh, Windows, Mosaic, iPhone, to 2025–26 Generative UI and Genie 3 world models, interfaces become ephemeral, context-driven and goal-focused. Generative AI lowers cognitive load but risks unpredictability and articulation barriers. Hybrid approaches that blend WIMP stability with AI generation may preserve learnability while expanding capability.
Growtika tracked 10 major English-language tech publications (CNET, Wired, The Verge, TechRadar, etc.) from Feb 2024 to Jan 2026. Combined US organic traffic fell from a 2024 peak of about 110M visits/month to 47M in Jan 2026 — a 58% drop (roughly 63M lost). Digital Trends (-97%), ZDNet (-90%), HowToGeek (-85%), The Verge (-84%), TechRadar (-74%), Wired (-62%), Tom's Guide (-50%), CNET (-47%), Mashable (-30%), PCMag (-29%). The declines rose sharply after mid-2025, coinciding with Google's AI Overviews; similar patterns appeared in NerdWallet and Healthline.
Apple unveiled Studio Display and Studio Display XDR. Studio Display is a 27-inch, 5K panel with a 12MP Center Stage camera (Desk View), a three-mic array, six-speaker audio, and Thunderbolt 5 with two USB-C ports; starts at $1,599 ($1,499 education). Preorders begin March 4; ships March 11. Studio Display XDR adds a 27-inch 5K Retina XDR with mini-LED, 2000 nits HDR, 120Hz, Adaptive Sync, DICOM imaging presets, and dual Thunderbolt 5/USB-C ports with up to 140W charging; starts at $3,299 ($3,199 education). Both emphasize sustainability and Mac workflows.
Apple unveils the MacBook Air with M5, pairing a 10-core CPU and up to 10-core GPU with Neural Accelerators for AI and creative work, delivering up to 4x AI speed vs M4 and 9.5x vs M1. It doubles starting storage to 512GB (configurable to 4TB), adds Wi-Fi 7/Bluetooth 6, and 153GB/s memory bandwidth. The thin aluminum design features a Liquid Retina display, 12MP Center Stage camera, Spatial Audio, two Thunderbolt 4 ports, and MagSafe. Available in 13" and 15" in colors, pre-orders March 4; ships March 11; from $1,099 (13"), $1,299 (15"). Includes macOS Tahoe and Apple Intelligence; eco-friendly materials.
Anton Zaides argues senior engineers shouldn’t rush into Engineering Management in 2026. He previously urged taking EM roles for the experience, but now cites three factors: (1) pace of change leaves less time to experiment as teams grow; (2) a flattening ladder with fewer Director/VP roles and stiff internal competition; (3) pay often trails Staff Engineer across the industry, making the IC path more lucrative. He remains an EM because he enjoys it and values hands‑on skills, but would wait a couple of years unless your gut truly insists on management.
The author questions identity/age verification policies and finds there are no services he’d willingly verify for. He emphasizes privacy and censorship concerns, describing his self-hosted, decentralized setup (fediverse, RSS, Jellyfin, XMPP, Kiwix for Wikipedia) and avoidance of mainstream sites with verification. He warns that verification could harm creators and users through reduced traffic and revenue, and force digitale isolation. Even if not universally refused, he’d adopt self-imposed limits and seek alternatives when verification is required.
Apple unveils 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro and M5 Max, delivering AI-accelerated performance via Fusion Architecture, up to 18-core CPUs, Neural Accelerators in the GPU, and up to 4x AI vs prior models. SSDs up to 2x faster; starting storage 1–2 TB. Wi‑Fi 7, Bluetooth 6, Thunderbolt 5, 8K HDMI, 12MP camera, and macOS Tahoe with on‑device AI. Battery up to 24 hours. Pre-orders begin March 4; ships March 11. Prices from $2,199 (14" M5 Pro) to $3,899 (16" M5 Max). Environmentally conscious with recycled content and 2030 carbon-neutral goal.
Roland van der Vorst cites Richard Sennett’s “material consciousness,” a hands-on dialogue with material that deepens understanding when making. He warns that software and AI distance coders from this contact: if coding is left to machines, developers lose tactile knowledge of how systems fit together, and products become black boxes. AI-driven work might yield new craft, but not the same deep grasp, risking a future where “computer says no” becomes the default without anyone able to explain why.
A stolen Google Cloud Gemini API key racked up $82,314 in Gemini charges in 48 hours, versus a normal monthly spend of about $180. The post warns to always set billing caps and alerts on cloud API keys, as a compromised key without limits can bankrupt you overnight.
AI is democratizing software, letting individuals ship products fast, but the underlying systems are buckling. The shift to cloud, IaC, and automation created bureaucracy, misaligned incentives, and a widening gap between rapid change and understanding. As AI agents outnumber engineers, the ability to understand a running system becomes the critical bottleneck; monitoring shows something is wrong, but not why. A supply-chain crisis of change vs. understanding is unfolding. The future belongs to those who can explain what was shipped and how it behaves. Start the conversation now.
India's Supreme Court chastised the use of AI-generated judgements after a junior civil judge in Vijayawada cited four AI-created precedents in a property dispute. The high court accepted the error was in good faith and that the ruling could stand on merits, but the Supreme Court stayed the order, calling AI in adjudication misconduct and ordering further review with notices to the Attorney General, Solicitor General, and Bar Council. The case fits a broader global worry about AI in courts, echoed by recent US and UK concerns and a judiciary white paper on safeguards and human oversight.
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