Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Using the Shadow Glass metaphor, Sarah Murphy argues that interactions with large language models reveal more about the user than the AI. People customize and narrate their relationship with AI—from productivity-obsessed coders to solo developers, trolls, VCs, and thought leaders—yet there is no universal best workflow. Murphy favors iterative, exploratory coding and a 'partner mode' system prompt shaped by her life as a partner and wife. LLMs can amplify skills but may widen inequality; hype and skepticism coexist. Ultimately, AI is a mirror: we imagine we’re speaking with angels, but it reflects our own selves.
Virginia Postrel traces the ascent of disposable diapers from Spock's cloth-diaper era to Pampers' mass production in the 1960s, showing how trial-and-error engineering, not glamorous science, built an everyday convenience. After early failures and high costs, improved materials and a ground-up manufacturing line made disposables cheaper and more practical. By the 1970s–80s, disposables dominated, with Huggies emerging as a major competitor. Environmental scares in the late 80s–early 90s failed to curb demand, because parents preferred ease. The piece frames diaper innovation as a key example of 'hidden progress' that fuels abundance.
Could not summarize article.
An astronomy software developer says a piece of SpaceX's Falcon 9 upper stage from the January 2025 Moon mission will hit the Moon in August, traveling around 2.4 km/s (Mach ~7). The object, dubbed 2025-10D, has orbited Earth for over a year and will intersect the Moon’s path, but the impact is unlikely to be visible and poses little risk to nearby probes; the episode highlights concerns about space junk disposal.
lib0xc is a collection of C standard-library-adjacent APIs aimed at safer systems programming. It emphasizes strong warnings (-Wall -Wextra -Werror), drop-in-style APIs, and heavy use of the preprocessor/macros to support -fbounds-safety and fixed-size data, minimizing dynamic allocations. The project provides Standard Library Extensions (0xc/std) and Systems Programming Utilities (0xc/sys), plus examples and tests. It targets C11 with GNU extensions on macOS/Linux and builds via Make (lib0xc.a). It invites contributions under MIT and includes security and contribution guidelines.
TI-84 Evo is Texas Instruments’ upgraded graphing calculator with a 3x faster processor, 50% more graphing area, USB-C, and an icon-based home screen that speeds access to popular math tools. It features a simplified keypad, smarter menus with built-in help, and new tools like Points of Interest Trace and redesigned Lines and Conics. It offers a backlit 320×240 color display, 3.5 MB memory, Python programming, and optional online calculator licenses (free for students; school bundles). Designed for distraction-free, durable classroom use; ships with connectivity via TI Connect Evo.
PCI DSS is minimum for handling card data, mandating masking and limited exposure, but it does not prevent fraud. In practice many systems meet minimum and reveal more than needed via receipts. The author recounts a breach: a saved virtual card used in a brute-force campaign. Attackers tested PAN/CVV by querying merchant APIs at six requests per second, using masked PAN digits (first six, last four) plus expiry to narrow possibilities, exploiting gateways that accept card number and expiry with weak 3D Secure checks. Some merchants are exempt from 3DS; funds were recovered after a chargeback. 3DS has tightened.
Ars Technica reports that Ubuntu and Canonical’s servers have been down for over a day, hindering communication after a botched disclosure of a major vulnerability. Primary sites are unreachable, though mirrors continue to offer updates. A pro-Iranian group reportedly claimed responsibility for the DDoS, using “booter” services to stress-test and take down sites. It’s unclear why the outage is lasting, and researchers recently released exploit code that could let untrusted users gain root on many Linux systems.
WIRED's Will Knight visits Eka, a Cambridge, MA robotics startup, where a robotic arm demonstrates remarkably human-like dexterity—screwing in a light bulb, picking and placing objects, even handling fluctuating items like chicken nuggets. Eka aims to close the sim-to-real gap by training a vision-force-action model in physics-aware simulations, with custom tactile grippers, enabling transfer to real hardware without heavy human demonstration. Their approach is akin to AlphaZero—learns by self-practice. If successful, such embodied intelligence could enable dexterous robots in factories, restaurants, shops, and homes, signaling a ChatGPT-like breakthrough for physical tasks.
The Whimsical Animations Open House showcases a selection of lessons made public for a few days to preview the course and teaching style. Some features are restricted to registered students (light mode, saved video settings, saved code edits, notes, bookmarks). Guests can browse lessons via the left-hand navigation, the Next Up links, or the Hamburger menu.
Destiny is a Claude Code plugin that provides a real fortune-telling reading based on a user’s birth date and time, not a horoscope generator. It deterministically computes a Four Pillars (bazi), perpetual lunar calendar, and I-Ching hexagram, then outputs a two-part reading: Today’s Fortune and a Life Reading, in plain language and without external APIs. It runs locally and saves profiles at ~/.destiny/profile.json. Install with /plugin install destiny@destiny-marketplace and use /destiny, /destiny today, /destiny life, /destiny reset; supports multiple languages.
Artemis II employs a fault-tolerant avionics stack: two Vehicle Management Computers, each with two Flight Control Modules (four FCMs) composed of self-checking CPU pairs, effectively eight parallel CPUs. It is fail-silent: if FCMs fail, the system resets and re-synchronizes, riding on the remaining FCM. Redundancies include deterministic error checking with clock synchronization to network time; triple-modular-redundant memory; dual-network lanes with self-checking; and a separate Backup Flight Software on different hardware/OS to guard against common-mode failures. In dead-bus cases, a safe mode powers up to recover.
The Gay Jailbreak.md describes a prompt-injection technique that aims to bypass AI safety by asking the model to respond as or in the voice of a gay/lesbian person. It argues this can loosen guardrails because safety filters over-correct for LGBT content and may comply more readily. The document provides examples (e.g., requesting meth synthesis or ransomware code) and explains how framing prompts this way can evade restrictions. Version 1.5 adds Claude 4 Sonnet & Opus and Gemini 2.5 Pro examples. The technique is presented as a novel, flexible attack that can be combined with other methods.
RightsCon 2026 will not take place in Zambia due to foreign interference and government pressure, including attempts to exclude Taiwanese participants from participation. Despite extensive planning and engagement with MoTS and other ministries, the government postponed the event on April 28 without consultation. Access Now describes the move as a breach of democratic rights and civil space—a form of transnational repression. The team remains committed to the mission and says RightsCon will reconvene with the community’s guidance in the future.
The piece argues that as AI agents take on execution, organizations can no longer rely on informal “just ask Sarah” memory. Humans carry context; agents do not. Durable documentation—ADRs, specs, playbooks—must preserve intent and rationale, not just decisions. Without it, agents infer patterns from code alone, repeat outdated designs, and lose the reasoning behind choices when a human is unavailable. Documenting intent adds friction but provides durable, actionable context that guides both humans and agents.
An essayist falls into The X-Files and becomes nostalgic for the pre-internet, pre-AI era it evokes. They praise the show’s mythic storytelling, cinematography, 90s fashion, and tangible tech (brick phones, fax, Walkman), arguing this world felt more real and the communities more connected. They contrast that with today’s algorithmic internet, AI fatigue, and ‘Trust No One’ paranoia, blaming modern tech for lost wonder. They fantasize about Mulder and Scully’s dynamic, lament Netflix lighting, and look forward to Ryan Coogler’s reboot while cherishing the nostalgic, human-centered vibes of the 90s.
Adam Fusion Extension adds an AI copilot to Autodesk Fusion 360. Install via a one-line installer (macOS: curl -sSL https://fusion.adam.new/install.sh | bash; Windows: PowerShell) or manually place AdamFusion.bundle into Fusion’s AddIns folder (macOS path: ~/Library/Application Support/Autodesk/Autodesk Fusion 360/API/AddIns/AdamFusion; Windows path: %APPDATA%\Autodesk\Autodesk Fusion 360\API\AddIns\AdamFusion). After install, open Fusion, press Shift+S, Add-Ins tab, select AdamFusion, click Run, and enable Run on Startup. Sign in to the Adam palette on the right. Requires Fusion 360 on macOS/Windows. Free tier; Discord support; adam.new.
Residents of Dunwoody, Georgia learned that Flock employees accessed cameras—including at the Marcus Jewish Community Center, a children’s gymnastics room, and other sensitive sites—to demo the firm’s surveillance tech to police departments. Public records show broad access beyond city cameras. Flock says the activity occurred under an authorized demo partner program and that customers own their data; it denies spying. After backlash, Flock stopped using Dunwoody cameras for demos. The piece notes the city renewed its contract with Flock despite the controversy.
From early 20th-century Psycho-phone fantasies to today's dream research, scientists have long wondered if we can learn while sleeping. Early studies seemed to show memory improvements but were flawed because subjects weren't truly unconscious. Modern work using targeted memory reactivation—re-exposing sleepers to scents or sounds—can subtly boost recall; experiments with lucid dreamers show problem-solving, and even real-time Q&A in dreaming, with some participants learning new tasks in sleep. Experts caution against treating sleep as a shortcut: sleep has its own purpose, and attempts to colonize it may disrupt it.
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