Front-page articles summarized hourly.
WSL 2’s cross-OS file access gets faster: a May 2026 update gives each virtio device its own SWIOTLB DMA pool, removing shared DMA contention and speeding heavy I/O on Windows mounts (e.g., /mnt/c). It requires kernel Microsoft.WSL.Kernel 6.18.26.3-1 and WSL DeviceHost 1.2.29-0. To enable, set virtiofs=true in the [wsl2] section of .wslconfig, update to the latest pre-release kernel, and maintain at least 1 GB RAM with 64 MB SWIOTLB headroom. Virtiofs remains opt-in; Plan 9 over Hyper-V is still the default.
Xtreme Systems researchers tested the Elmor External Clock Board (ECB) to push RTX 50‑series GPUs beyond stock limits by modding VRAM and crossbar (xBAR) clocks using a 27 MHz XTAL. The ECB provides an AC‑coupled signal, but wiring and signal integrity pose challenges. On RTX 5090, they achieved ~2920 MHz xBAR and a large memory clock boost (+5467), with Port Royal gains around 1500 points; results vary by card and cooling. The mod is experimental, risky, and not fully refined. Credits to Turbogear, ASGxx, ElmorLabs; supplies, wiring, and steps are documented.
Mercek is a macOS desktop IDE for Amazon ECS that uses your existing AWS credentials from ~/.aws (SSO, MFA, assume-role) and shows clusters, services, and tasks across accounts and regions in a tree. It reads data directly from AWS with no telemetry or middleman, and is read-only by default until you approve changes. Features include deployment tracking with rollbacks, cross-environment comparisons, metrics from Container Insights (fallback to ECS metrics), log tailing and a shell, environment details with ARNs for secrets, a topology map, and an optional coding agent (Claude Code) that explains state and proposes diffs. Local-first; Linux/Windows planned.
Hitoku Draft is an on-device, offline AI writing tool for macOS (Apple Silicon) that runs entirely on your Mac with no cloud, telemetry, or account. It lets you dictate in any language, transcribe audio/video, and AI-edit in any app with a text field via a hotkey. One-time purchase (early launch $5). It emphasizes privacy: data stays on device, no training data sent. Works faster with Neural Engine+GPU, supports many languages.
Scott H. Young argues against radical schooling reforms and cites evidence that direct instruction with ample practice often outperform discovery-based approaches. He notes reading requires phonics and repetition, and that ed-tech and AI may help but can’t replace solid pedagogy. Education’s constraints—motivated learners, diverse backgrounds, and cognitive limits—make sweeping reform unlikely. Real improvement comes from increasing system efficiency (better sequencing and spaced practice) or careful curricular choices. Ultralearning suits highly motivated individuals and can excel outside traditional classrooms, but it cannot fix average outcomes without substantial knowledge-building.
The Infinite Echo describes a state-mirror bug: a receiver applies an incoming change but doesn’t update its dedup key, turning two mirroring nodes into an amplifier. In a Tasmota/MQTT setup with two switches, a power outage left both sides echoing: mirror commands toggled relays while VAR1 remained stale, so every hop produced a new publish. The fix is simple: emit a SYNC event and update VAR1 before applying the effect, so Power1#State equals VAR1 and the loop dies. Seed both relays to the same state before enabling.
Researchers discovered queen honeybee cells are built from chemically engineered, bespoke wax distinct from worker-cell wax. Queen-cell wax is richer in unsaturated fatty acids and poorer in n-alkanes, with lower density and higher melting temperature. A younger crew of queen-cell builders overheats their bodies to process the wax, altering the royal nursery’s chemical signature. Grafting queen larvae into standard worker wax caused high mortality (62.5%). The study shows that both the chemical cues and physical properties of the wax contribute to queen development, alongside nutrition.
IPv6 link-local addresses require zones (fe80::...%iface) to disambiguate multi‑interface hosts. In URLs the host is bracketed, but parsing breaks on the %iface, so a workaround is escaping the percent sign as %25 (e.g., http://[fe80::4%25eth0]:80), which yields fe80::4%eth0 when parsed. RFCs exist (RFC 9884, RFC 6874) but browsers don’t reliably support IPv6 zones for origins; Go’s net/url is inconsistent. A painful edge case the author dislikes, effectively forcing a percent-escape hack. TL;DR: computers were a mistake.
The Financial Times page shows a security verification prompt due to a 403 error, instructing users to enable JavaScript and cookies. It provides a Reason, Request ID, and Status Code, plus links to Terms, Privacy Policy, Cookie Policy, and cookie management, and notes FT’s self-regulation under the Editorial Code of Practice.
Branchless Quicksort using Sorting-Networks with C/C++ interfaces (blqs.h, blqs_thr.h, blqsort.h, blqsort_thr.h) offers single- and multi-threaded sorts. Benchmarks sorting 50 million doubles: Apple M1 (Clang): std 1.33s, pdqsort 1.33s, blqsort 0.97s; AMD Ryzen Linux (GCC): std 5.56s, pdqsort 2.81s, blqsort 2.06s (single-threaded; threaded blqs ~3–4x faster on M1). For 50M structs: M1 std/pdqsort 3.46s, Ryzen 4.75s/4.72s, blqsort 0.96s and 2.20s respectively. Uses a 1024-element auxiliary buffer, branchless partitioning, median-of-medians pivots, and small sorting networks; code available on GitHub.
This GitHub project implements the first formally verified multipolygon intersection algorithm. Using Lean 4, it proves that the interior of the intersection equals the intersection of interiors for any configuration of polygons, despite infinite point sets and potentially non-unique boundary merging. The verification relies on a small, human-reviewed specification, with AI agents autonomously producing proofs and code; trust comes from the Lean checker rather than the LLM. The repo includes a web demo, background on multipolygons, discussion of verification challenges (e.g., Eulerian cycles), and build/run instructions for a WebAssembly app.
Bloomberg reports unusual activity from your network and requires CAPTCHA verification to prove you’re not a robot. Ensure JavaScript and cookies are enabled. A block reference ID is provided for support, with links to Terms of Service and Cookie Policy, and a prompt to subscribe to Bloomberg.com.
BBC reports Banda, Uttar Pradesh, endured 47–48C for over a week, making it India's hottest spot. People trimmed life to shade and early mornings: markets close by 8–10am, workers pace eight hours across dawn and late afternoon. Heat damages crops and triggers health concerns; hospitals see more heat-related cases, especially among children and the elderly. The Ken river's cooling is weakened by groundwater depletion and sand mining, while tree loss and fossil-fuel use intensify the heat. Experts warn of a broader, longer humid-heat trend in the Indo-Gangetic Plain; UP could see thousands of excess deaths in a severe spell.
ffmpeg-webCLI is a browser-based video editor powered by ffmpeg.wasm that runs entirely locally with no uploads or servers. It’s an offline-first PWA; processes video in Web Workers in your browser, with zero data sent to servers. Features include 30+ operations (format conversion, compression, trimming, resize, rotate, crop, GIF, subtitles, audio mix, overlay logos, picture-in-picture, side-by-side, etc.), live previews, and raw ffmpeg command access. It supports MP4/WebM/MKV/MOV/AVI/GIF and various audio formats. Install as an app, work offline after loading ffmpeg.wasm, privacy-focused, GPL-3.0.
CASTOR is CERN’s hierarchical storage manager (disk and tape) for archiving large physics data, accessed mainly via XROOT and GridFTP (RFIO supported until 2016). It succeeded SHIFT, with CTA taking over since 2020. Data on tape has grown through CASTOR 1 (1998–2007), CASTOR 2 (2005–2022), and CTA (2020–). Its architecture centers on a central database and five functions: Stager (disk-pool), Name Server (file namespace/metadata), Tape Infrastructure (tape writes/recalls), Volume Manager with VDQM, and Client/SRM interfaces for Grid access. Tape offers cheaper, long-term storage but slower access; ~100 PB of tape at CERN (as of 2013).
Anthropic's defending-code-reference-harness is an open-source reference for autonomous vulnerability discovery and remediation using Claude. It provides a modular pipeline (recon → find → verify → report → patch) and interactive skills for threat-modeling, static scanning, triage, and patching on a target repo, portable to other languages and vuln classes via /customize. The repo includes quickstart guides and docs, a Docker/gVisor sandbox, and notes that it’s a reference harness (not a product). Steps cover Day 1 threat modeling, Day 2 static scanning, and Week 2 autonomous scanning and patching.
Ashby Engineering argues that AI-generated code now accounts for over half of new production code, yet customer issues remain stable and code quality has not deteriorated. The thesis: the cost of producing code is approaching zero; AI handles mechanical tasks while human judgment, empathy, and customer understanding remain essential. Ground rules: empathy cannot be replaced by AI; you’re responsible for what you ship. Two AI modes: sidekick for high-risk work and delegate for low-risk prototyping. Ashby scales AI with safety layers, specs for humans, rigorous reviews, and automated testing, pushing engineers to focus on customer problems.
Meta's Stella app for its smart glasses contains a full on-device face-recognition pipeline: detector (SCRFD), aligner (KPSAligner), and 2048-d embedding (SFace), plus a cosine-similarity index in SQLite and a local RLDrive-based database for face records. It can end-to-end recognize a face, emit a "Person recognized" notification, and stash unknown faces (cropped image + 2048-d embedding) on disk under NameTagsPending. A "Connections" widget exists in the APK but isn’t exposed on stock unenrolled accounts, and no server-pushed identity data was observed. Production deployment not confirmed.
Daniel Mangum shows how to attach a J-Link to a Pinecil breakout to debug Bouffalo Lab BL706 via JTAG. He covers wiring a 10‑pin JTAG header (3.3V VTref, GNDs, JTAG signals) with dupont or a ribbon cable and notes orientation. Use JLinkExe to verify mapping, then JLinkGDBServer to connect to the E24 core at 4,000 kHz. After halting, RV32 is detected, and you can attach GDB (target remote :2331) to load symbols and step through code. Happy debugging.
Ryan Thorpe visualizes the U.S. wealth distribution (Federal Reserve data since 1989) as a 100-slice pizza: 1 person gets 30 slices; 9 get 3.7 each; 40 get 0.75 each; 50 get 0.05 each (about 96 total). The post includes an embedded pie chart and asks whether this is the wealth reality Americans live with, noting rounding.
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