Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Automate Excel with Python by John Wengler (No Starch Press, May 2026) teaches Excel power users to replace copy/paste and brittle formulas with Python workflows. It covers loading messy Excel files into pandas dataframes, filtering and reshaping data, merging sources, and exporting results with preserved formatting. A capstone script imports a multi-tab workbook, generates exception reports, and emails them. Chapters guide Python basics, dataframes, dates/times, and end-to-end workflows. The book emphasizes user control, with AI able to write code but the user remains in control.
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Peter Moore reviews Andrea Wulf’s The Traveller, praising its brisk, lucid reframing of George Forster as a central Enlightenment figure rather than a marginal voyager. Born near Gdansk, Forster thrived under a formidable father, mastered many languages, and joined Cook’s Resolution. Wulf makes him a thoughtful observer who grappled with cannibalism, Pacific migrations, and what makes humans human, often siding with Indigenous peoples over colonial brutality. He clashed with Kant, argued for observation over theory, and navigated love and politics in Europe. Forster dies exhausted in Paris during the Great Terror; the biography portrays him as humane and perceptive.
The article argues that the AI/coding paradox dissolves when we distinguish two kinds of work: “today’s task” (getting something to work) and “accretive” work (creating durable, canonizable software). It introduces centaurs (workers who shape automation) and reverse centaurs (workers subsumed by automation), showing why some are rewarded while others are ground down. It extols vibe coding as personal, vernacular software, contrasted with production code. Canonization—making code legible, reusable, and maintainable—underpins durable progress and open-source canons. AI incentives push toward reverse centaurs and tech debt, whereas canonizable code yields lasting value.
OpenAI announces GPT-5.6 Sol, along with Terra and Luna, will launch publicly this Thursday, with preview access expanding globally now.
Guide to a minimal ZFS NAS on Debian 12 (OpenZFS) with a RAIDZ1 pool across four NVMe drives using ashift=12. ZFS is self-contained on disks, so pools can be imported on another host if the OS fails. Steps: identify disks (lsblk); optionally map aliases; create pool s16z1 raidz1 nvme0 nvme1 nvme2 nvme3 -o ashift=12; set mountpoint=/mnt/s16z1 and compression=lz4; create datasets s16z1/docs and s16z1/backups. Install Samba, create user john, configure two shares (docs and backups) with Time Machine support; test from macOS or smbclient.
Controls for Neil the Seal Mischief: 0 W/S drive, A/D turn, Space slam, Esc pause, C recenter camera, M mute.
GP_ELITE is a pure-Python, NumPy-based symbolic regression tool that discovers readable mathematical laws from small experimental datasets (≤10 variables, 100–5000 points). It emphasizes interpretability over black-box models, supports physical/trigonometric/poly modes, robust regression with Huber loss and IRLS, and offers reproducibility, multi-restart, and Pareto-front results. New in 0.2: Levenberg–Marquardt constant fitting, deterministic runs, merged archives, and extrapolation mode. Benchmarks show recoveries on physics equations and real data (NASA battery SOH), with strong interpretability vs black-box methods.
Claude says on X that Claude Fable 5 access is extended to all paid plans through July 12, 2026.
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Free, browser-based Moxie Docs toolkit for generating structured docs and diagrams: Markdown-ready README, AGENTS.md, ADR, and llms.txt generators with live previews; a private Mermaid diagram editor with instant SVG/PNG export, shareable URL links, and GitHub integration to auto-generate diagrams from repos; an llms.txt validator; and living documentation for GitHub repos (MCP context, Friday Recaps, cleanup PRs). No signup or server data sent; diagrams stay in your browser; 14-day trial and pricing available.
Fortress is an open-source Stealth Chromium engine that patches the browser engine (C++) to correct the fingerprint, exposing raw CDP on localhost:9222 so existing Playwright/Puppeteer scripts work unchanged. Detectors like CreepJS, Sannysoft, BrowserScan, and Cloudflare Turnstile see a stock Chrome, not a patched page. It requires only one line of code change to integrate. It ships as BSD-3 software with patches and build scripts, available as native Linux/Windows binaries or Docker images, with stable and latest Chromium options. It also provides Fortress MCP for AI agents with 29 tools to fetch/protect pages.
Chiptune Radio is a 24/7 Twitch broadcast by Aleph Void, LLC featuring pure chiptune music inspired by classic sound chips (SID, NES APU, Game Boy) and the tracker scene. A side project of the software security and reverse engineering firm, it runs continuously for background listening. Listen on Twitch at twitch.tv/alephvoidchiptuneradio or visit alephvoid.com; contact: [email protected].
Benford's Law states that in many real-world data, the leading digit is not uniform but follows P(d)=log10(1+1/d), with 1 ≈30.1%, 2 ≈17.6%, …, 9 ≈4.6%. It holds across diverse data (river lengths, populations, prices, Fibonacci, powers of 2) and is scale-invariant. Origin: Newcomb (1881) and Benford (1938); Hill (1995) proved it for mixed distributions. Applications include fraud detection and data integrity checks; deviations signal anomalies but are not proof of manipulation. The article also presents eight datasets, a reproducible dataset explorer, and steps to compute first-digit distributions and MAD.
MIT OpenCourseWare offers 6.001 Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs (Spring 2005, undergraduate) with 20 video lectures by Hal Abelson and Gerald Jay Sussman (1986, Hewlett-Packard production). Lectures follow the 1985 edition (useful for the 1996 second edition). Topics span Lisp basics, procedures, higher-order functions, data and state, metacircular evaluators, logic programming, compilation, storage, and garbage collection. Instructors: Eric Grimson, Peter Szolovits, Trevor Darrell (Electrical Engineering and Computer Science). Course materials include syllabus, readings, notes, exams, projects; licensed for Creative Commons.
Several Tenda firmware versions contain an undocumented backdoor in /bin/httpd/login() that bypasses authentication by directly comparing a stored password (GetValue('sys.rzadmin.password')) to user input; any username works for admin access (role=2). CVE-2026-11405. Affected: US_FH1201V1.0BR_V1.2.0.14(408)_EN_TD; US_W15EV1.0br_V15.11.0.5(1068_1567_841)_EN_TDE; US_AC10V1.0re_V15.03.06.46_multi_TDE01; US_AC5V1.0RTL_V15.03.06.48_multi_TDE01; US_AC6V2.0RTL_V15.03.06.51_multi_TDE01. Mitigations: disable remote management; restrict LAN exposure; change LAN IP. Vendor has not provided a statement.
Slopfix is a three‑engineer team that refactors AI-generated vibecoded codebases to maintainability. They offer a free initial analysis; if solvable, they quote a fixed price and a reduction target (e.g., 100,000 lines down to 35,000). They do one week of focused work, preceded by a written, screen‑by‑screen and endpoint checklist. They consolidate formatters, convert bespoke code to libraries, remove duplication, and rebuild what’s necessary. Deliverables: smaller codebase, QA checklist, CLAUDE.md, lint rules, CI checks, plus two weeks warranty. Cost: $10,000 for a week; payment scales with target hit. Contact [email protected].
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