Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Pylon is a full-stack framework that lets you define a single TypeScript model and generate the whole app—schema, policies, server functions, and a typed client—with live sync, auth, storage, and jobs in one binary for SQLite or Postgres. It provides row-level policies, live queries, and a generated React client; server functions and a unified runtime; and optional features like file uploads, search, scheduling, and WebSocket rooms. Apps deploy from GitHub or the CLI to a global edge network, with Hobby, Pro, and Enterprise plans and self-hosting options.
Abralo is a native desktop app that runs multiple Claude Code agents in one window. It lets you manage several agents per project, see attention-needed alerts, and monitor token usage, with free support for up to four agents. Available on macOS, Windows, and Linux, it emphasizes a lightweight, readable UI and fast performance over terminal setups. It positions itself against tools like Conductor or Claude Squad and offers per-agent views, usage gauges, and straightforward downloads and contact options.
The next AI era centers on infrastructure, not only models. Production AI reveals fragmentation across many providers, opaque costs, and governance gaps. The solution is a “control layer”: an orchestration layer that routes requests by cost, capability, latency, and compliance; offers real-time observability; enforces policies; and lets you swap providers without rewriting code. Mozilla’s Otari is an open-source control plane for LLMs, aiming to give organizations ownership of their AI stack and define a new category for agentic AI.
Kotaku reports solo developer Novatetsu Games’ Running Train is being hailed as the best train sim ever. The hyper-realistic title is set in a fictional Japanese region (Fukugawa and Sankai Lines) with 42 routes, variable weather, and ultra-detailed environments—from power lines to temples. You can drive or watch it run itself with a free camera. In Steam Early Access for $18, it supports the Zuiki MASCON peripheral; the developer plans passenger and conductor modes and up to 100 km of track by the end of next year.
colibrì runs GLM-5.2 744B MoE on a 25 GB RAM consumer machine by streaming routed experts from disk. The dense core (~17B params) stays resident in RAM in int4 (~9.9 GB); 21,504 routed experts (~19 MB each in int4) live on disk (~370 GB) and are fetched on demand with an LRU cache and optional hot-pin. The engine is a single C file (glm.c), with no BLAS, no Python at runtime. It uses int8/int4 quantization, MTP speculative decoding, and async readahead; cold runs read ~11 GB/token. Pre-converted int4 model available from HuggingFace; Apache 2.0.
DrumMate argues that drum hits aren’t a clock; machines should follow the drummer’s tempo, dynamics, and feel. It uses a beat-aware estimator: timestamped onsets are fitted to a tempo/phase grid, and agreeing hits nudge a free-running clock while syncopations are ignored. Tempo changes smear over a bar and the clock bends, not snaps. Notes are scheduled ahead to avoid latency; when confidence wobbles, the follower coasts rather than stops. Implemented in DrumMate (Android) with USB MIDI; invites others to explore mutual entrainment and compare notes.
A Ruby meetup sustains a local Ruby community. Start by securing a venue and date, creating a simple event listing, and promoting via direct invites and existing channels. The first meetup will be small; focus on a good experience. Formats vary—talks, hack nights, workshops, or social hangs—short talks work well. Keep costs low with a sponsor or small budget, and manage AV, sign-in, and name tags. Build welcoming culture, avoid burnout by co-organizing, and grow only when the community asks. Connect to the broader Ruby world for support and hand over responsibly when ready.
WIRED reports that Apple’s iOS 17 Assistive Access, designed for cognitive disabilities, can turn an iPhone into a safe six-app ‘dumb phone’ for kids. By selecting allowed apps (Calls, Messages, Maps, Camera, Photos, Music) and omitting any web browser, internet access is effectively blocked while tracking and calling remain. It’s toggleable with a passcode and exit via triple-click. Downsides include sluggish performance, voicemail disabled, and occasional app freezes; Apple doesn’t market it as a kids’ phone. The author repurposed an old iPhone to great effect.
Overview of getsentry/sentry repository: active since 2010; last activity today 2026-07-09. 1,222 total contributors, 211 active in last 3 months. Merged PRs: 89,064 (89%); open PRs: 311. Est. LOC: 5,185,619; est. files: 18,960. Top languages: Python and TSX (~39% each), with significant pysnap, jsx and json. In the past 30 days, 14 new contributors; several churned. Time to merge improved in last 7 days (6.3h / 3.8d), last 30 days 15.4h / 2.3d. PRs merged: 249 (7d), 1,543 (30d).
Marin Dedic analyzes decentralized group chats with Kiyeovo. He weighs options: centralized servers (easy state/ordering) vs decentralized schemes like MLS/TreeKEM, leaderless membership, or Briar-style fixed groups. He rejects choices that reintroduce centralization, require a delivery service, or fix membership. His serverless design uses a single creator who can invite/kick. Each group has epoch-based keys; messages use XChaCha20-Poly1305; the creator distributes the epoch key to members via public keys; topics derive from the key. Group state is a DHT append-only log; offline messages use per-sender sequences. Tradeoffs: single point of failure, limited forward secrecy, small groups (~10).
arXiv Atlas Tomesphere loads a full atlas of 2,995,493 papers (~45 MB). The data caches after the initial fetch, making pan/zoom instant. On slow connections, browse paper pages first since the atlas is the heaviest surface. The map streams the arXiv corpus; once it lands, the legend, field lens, and per-paper insights light up.
The post presents WFQueue, a bounded MPMC queue built from a ticket-lock scheme. It uses separate producer/consumer tickets and two buffers: a data buffer for items and a state buffer that tracks ownership and turns. Reservation numbers modulo N identify slots; producers enqueue by waiting for the slot’s turn, then writing data and flipping to consumer; consumers do the reverse. The design avoids CAS loops and minimizes cache contention, offering bounded waiting (not truly wait-free) and a drivable operation mode for async use. Limitations include possible undefined behavior on overflow, costly drivable drops, and benchmarks with source code.
Meta announces Muse Spark 1.1, a multimodal, agentic AI that excels at planning, tool use, coding, and multimodal understanding. It can orchestrate multi-agent workflows, generalize to new tools and services, and manage up to 1 million tokens of context. It automates across apps, writes scripts, debugs code, and handles complex projects faster than Muse Spark. Public access via the Meta Model API; available in Thinking mode in the Meta AI app. Safety evaluations under the Advanced AI Scaling Framework show robust safety margins and resilience to prompt-related attacks.
Wildcard seeks a Founding Engineer (0.5-4% equity, $130k-$250k) in San Francisco as the engineering hire. Own product and infrastructure end-to-end (frontend, backend, queues, browser automation, reliability) and build an AI-first agentic commerce platform for ecommerce/retail brands, working directly with founder Kaushik Mahorker. Week 0 projects include scaling browser orchestration, robust queues and attribution, and platform adaptations. Requirements: prior founding or early-stage startup experience; strong full-stack skills; high-agency; expert with AI coding tools and decision-making on AI use; fast, outcome-driven; comfortable wearing multiple hats. Preferred: TS/Node/Express, React, Postgres/Redis, browser automation, AI agents. Interview: quick call, system design, work trial, offer.
Wire is moving AI context containers from Cloudflare Durable Objects to a self-hosted runtime on Fly Machines. Four limits—external vector index, multi-stage compute off-object, fixed placement, and no self-hosting—motivated the change. The new system gives each organization a Bun host and per-org containers (SQLite with embedded vector index via sqlite-vec). Retrieval happens in-process; model calls still go to inference; snapshots go to object storage; a per-region router places containers near callers; control plane uses signed requests. Benefits: faster warm starts, steadier recall (78.1%→89.1% at top5), and portability; beta now, open-sourcing planned.
79 infants and adults listened to music vs shuffled music and high- vs low-pitch versions while EEG and markerless video tracked neural and movement responses. Neural results showed music elicited stronger responses than shuffled across ages; P1 in all, with P2 only in 12 months and adults; ASSR matched the beat and was higher for music. Movement: only 12-month-olds moved more to music, mainly upper-body actions; no beat-synchronous coordination. Granger causality indicated music predicted movement with about 160–200 ms delay; pitch had limited effects on movement. Conclusion: early neural encoding of music; beat-related movement emerges gradually, by 12 months.
An email-writing guide focused on speed, clarity, and judgment. Start with the point; put bad news first; use as few words as possible; be literal and specific with names, numbers, and dates. One email should do one job; make the next step obvious; separate facts, judgment, and recommendation. Write for forwarding; use AI only if edited to be specific and human. Respect time—aim for one-screen emails; do not save face at the expense of clarity; keep threads clean with clear subject lines; follow a default structure and avoid unnecessary politeness.
Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML