Front-page articles summarized hourly.
The author argues that running messages through an LLM to “clean up” wording erases the sender’s true intent and the implicit knowledge readers use to interpret tone, emphasis, and context. This undermines the social handshake of communication and the recipient’s ability to understand the writer as they truly are. He urges embracing mistakes, idioms, and frankness, preserving context so readers can interpret messages in light of how they were created, and to get in tune with the other person.
Dean Markwick outlines building a simple FX factor model anchored to the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY). Using Twelve Data for daily FX data, he constructs a DXY proxy from EUR, JPY, CHF, GBP, CAD, and SEK with specified weightings, then runs rolling 252-day regressions of currencies’ log returns on DXY log returns to estimate betas. He demonstrates data handling and plotting, noting EUR beta near 1, SEK beta >1, TRY low, and HKD's peg yielding low beta. The work establishes a daily FX dataset and a foundational beta-based framework, with future expansion to momentum and commodity sensitivities.
The post documents refining and verifying RISC-V assembly with Knuckledragger, a Python toolset built atop pypcode/Ghidra semantics. It replaces unwieldy low-level traces with a high-level model via a high_low translator and a bisimulation checker, enabling automated proofs of correctness against a higher-level state (pc, registers, memory). Demonstrations include a simple program and a memcopy variant (including a deliberately buggy version to trigger a counterexample), plus a readable Python-state model for proofs. The author shares smoke tests, outputs, and links to code and a walkthrough video.
Terence Tao announces an experimental competition linked to the Equational Theories Project (ETP): distilling its 22 million universal-algebra true/false results into a short human-readable cheat sheet. Stage 1 asks contestants to create a cheat sheet (max 10 KB) to boost cheap/open-source models on true/false problems. A playground with 1,200 problems (1,000 easy, 200 hard) is provided; submissions close April 20. The top 1,000 advance to Stage 2, with proofs or counterexamples. The event, coordinated on Zulip and supported by SAIR, seeks productive distillation techniques and may expand to other problems.
An investigation into applying Monte Carlo Tree Search (MCTS) with online PPO distillation to improve language-model reasoning. The author runs a Tree-of-Thought–style MCTS over reasoning steps for Qwen-2.5-1.5B-Instruct, distilling selected trajectories back into the model via CISPO/PPO. Trained on Countdown (20,000 problems) and evaluated on 820 problems. Results: the MCTS-distilled model without a separate search harness reaches mean@16 of 11.3%, vs 8.4% for CISPO and 7.7% for best-of-N. Best-of-N underperforms despite higher training reward. Concludes that search distillation shows promise but may scale with larger models; code released; future work to tune knobs.
The Braun T3 pocket radio (1958) by Dieter Rams epitomized minimalist, user‑friendly design. Decades later, Apple’s iPod drew direct inspiration from the T3’s simplicity and portability—evident in its clean form, intuitive navigation (scroll wheel), and white/metallic aesthetic—demonstrating how Rams’ principles helped shape modern portable digital music design and design excellence in consumer electronics.
Modern kernel anti-cheats deploy a three-layer stack (kernel driver, user service, game-injected DLL) to monitor, protect memory, and enforce bans. They use boot-time vs. runtime loading, IOCTLs, and interprocess pipes to coordinate, and rely on relentless event callbacks (process/thread creation, image load) plus memory scanning (VAD walking, code hashing, big‑pool checks) to detect tampering. They fight injections and hooks (IAT/inline hooks, SSDT/IDT checks), anti-debug/VM, BYOVD-driven driver blocks, and hardware fingerprinting for bans. Behavioral telemetry and ML complement detection. The arms race points to attestation, firmware, and hardware defenses.
By 2027, all new passenger cars must include advanced impaired-driving tech under Section 24220 of the 2021 Infrastructure Act. Infrared cameras monitor eye movement and fatigue; if impairment is detected, ignition can be blocked or speed limited. Cost could rise by $100–$500 per vehicle, with privacy concerns over biometric data and potential sharing with insurers. Automakers oppose the mandate, citing reliability and false positives. Rollout targets late 2026–2027, with possible OTA updates post-purchase. Current vehicles would remain surveillance-free.
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr warned broadcasters they could lose their licenses if their news coverage isn’t in the public interest, urging outlets to ‘correct course’ ahead of renewals. He tied license risk to airing hoaxes or distortions, echoing criticism from President Trump and others about coverage. The FCC licenses local stations, not national networks, making any action against content an unprecedented step. After Carr’s comments, Nexstar and Sinclair pulled Jimmy Kimmel Live! from some ABC stations, then restored it. The FCC has also opened an equal-time investigation into ABC's The View.
GrobPaint is a lightweight, cross‑platform image editor between MS Paint and Paint.NET, with a web frontend and tiny Python backend. It supports layers (opacity and blend modes), a full toolset (pencil, brush, eraser, shapes, text, selection), color picking, canvas zoom/pan, multi-document work, and file I/O (PNG/JPEG/BMP/GIF) plus a native .gbp ZIP project format that preserves layers. Run from source with Python/pywebview or as a standalone app; no npm/bundling required. Pragmatic, not bloated like Photoshop.
SBCL Fibers introduces lightweight, user-space cooperative threads (fibers) in SBCL (fibers-v2). Each OS carrier runs a per-carrier scheduler; multiple schedulers form a scheduler group with lock-free work-stealing for scalability to tens of thousands of fibers. Fibers have their own control and binding stacks and are integrated with SBCL’s GC via a two-list design and TLS overlays, supporting yield, resume, sleep, park, join, and pin. I/O is fiber-aware (epoll/kqueue, one-shot edge-triggered). Stacks are fixed-size, pooled, and recycled for memory efficiency and fast context switches. Platform support spans major architectures with a :sb-fiber flag.
Type erasure hides concrete types behind a small, uniform interface. The article starts with classic polymorphism via a Shape interface (virtual destructor, area()) and concrete Square and Circle, then a function printing areas. It contrasts this with template-based polymorphism, which lacks a common runtime base and can bloat code. To cope, wrappers are introduced: SquareWrapper and CircleWrapper implement Shape by forwarding to the wrapped objects; a single ShapeWrapper<T> generalizes this. The approach yields a type-erasing AnyShape, and then a standard pattern with Concept and Model<T> that underpins std::any (and std::function).
Airbus is developing an operational Uncrewed Collaborative Combat Aircraft (UCCA) for the German Air Force by 2029, using Kratos’ Valkyrie with Airbus’ European MARS mission system and MindShare AI. Two Valkyries in Manching will fly with the European mission system, slated for 2026. The UCCA will be autonomous or pilot-assisted, capable of multiple mission types in single or multi-platform formations. Airbus and Kratos emphasize affordability and sovereign European control. The Eurofighter can act as command aircraft with upgraded connectivity via Litening 5.
Explores how MoarVM’s JIT-compiled code can advertise its functions to the OS and tooling. A Windows longjmp change broke stack unwinding for JIT frames, prompting work to provide unwind data (via RtlAddFunctionTable or libunwind’s _U_dyn_register). The post surveys approaches to expose metadata: Perf Map (simple names via perf), full ELF/DLL packaging, GDB jitreader (with __jit_debug_descriptor), and the Linux JITDUMP format (with perf inject). Perf Map remains simplest; JITDUMP is the most powerful for disassembly in perf. Valgrind support is still missing. The author hopes for a universal solution.
Ageless Linux is a Debian-based distribution that openly refuses California AB 1043's age-verification requirements for OS providers. It argues that control of OS software makes users (and distributors) OS providers; installing the conversion script makes you responsible under the law. It offers standard and flagrant modes, with a stub age-verification API or none at all, and ships a README/refusal notice instead of real age data. The project envisions physically handing low-cost devices (USB sticks, Raspberry Pi Pico) to children to test enforcement, frame the law as a tool for selective prosecution, and advocates education over surveillance.
A EU-funded study across five Central European countries tested 180 headphone samples from 81 models and found hazardous chemicals in every headset, notably bisphenol A (BPA) in 98% and BPS in over 75%, with up to 351 mg/kg—far above proposed EU limits. The research notes 'regrettable substitution' with organophosphate flame retardants and warns that even high-end brands are not safe; online marketplaces yielded highest toxicity. Authors call for urgent EU reform moving to class-based restrictions on bisphenols and flame retardants to better protect consumers and enable a safe circular economy; consumers urged to demand safer products.
db9 is serverless Postgres for AI agents, pairing full PostgreSQL with a cloud filesystem. It stores memory in tables and context in files, with sessions and artifacts kept in the filesystem in one workspace. Features include built-in auto-embeddings, vector search, and HTTP in SQL; file storage, cron jobs, and branchable environments. Zero-config install and one-command database creation; automatic TypeScript/Python type generation. Supports multiple agent stacks and plugins via a CLI bootstrap.
Learning Creative Coding by Stig Møller Hansen is a free, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 book for design students learning programming. It catalogs 45 common frustrations mapped to nine virtues (Curiosity, Humility, Courage, Perseverance, Patience, Openness, Compassion, Playfulness, Prudence). Each spread covers The Feeling, This Is Real, What’s Happening, What This Teaches You, Moving Forward, plus Reflect and Do exercises. Navigate by virtue, learning stage, or frustration type. Aimed at beginners and educators, the 148-page PDF is freely downloadable. The author is a senior associate professor at DMJX with two decades teaching designers to code.
Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML