Front-page articles summarized hourly.
More than two-thirds of babies under two use screens, with some exposed to eight hours daily. A third of newborns watch more than three hours a day; about 20% of 4–11‑month‑olds exceed an hour. Government guidance says under twos should have no screen time outside communal activities, but researchers note a 'reality gap.' The study by the 1001 Critical Days Foundation and iAddict used surveys and focus groups (154 online responses, 18 in-person families). Screen time links to obesity, myopia, sleep and behavior problems, and poorer social skills. Tech firms should review ratings; parents need more support.
Hashicorp co-founder Mitchell Hashimoto says GitHub is no longer a place for serious work due to daily outages and plans to move his Ghostty project elsewhere. He has used GitHub extensively, but outages—recently an Elasticsearch incident—disrupted PR reviews and made shipping software difficult. He’ll keep a read-only Ghostty mirror on GitHub while migrating dependencies to other providers and may return if GitHub delivers tangible improvements. Hashimoto notes Microsoft’s GitHub acquisition and the broader AI-driven tooling shift as context, but must code and ship elsewhere for now.
LawVM contends that law is a tree-structured text shaped by incremental amendments from distributed authorities, yet it functions as a graph via cross-references, overrides, and dependencies. Amendments are typed operations targeting specific addresses, not simple text rewrites, so meaning can move independently of the text. The system must handle multiple time axes and path-based addressing, preserving provenance through renumbers and retroactivity. LawVM offers an open replay compiler: it ingests amendments to produce a versioned, verifiable textual substrate for downstream semantic tools, with jurisdictional differences noted.
rip.so assembles a digital memorial of vanished online icons—messengers, social networks, websites, devices, and services. It catalogs ICQ, MSN/Windows Live Messenger, Yahoo Messenger, AIM, BBM, Google Talk/Hangouts, MySpace, Friendster, Orkut, Google+, Path, Vine, Yik Yak, GeoCities and other hosts, Digg, Delicious, FriendFeed, Google Reader, YouTube comments, Netscape, Internet Explorer, AltaVista, Napster, Winamp, Flash, dial-up, Hotmail, Clippy, Palm/BlackBerry/Windows Phone, Habbo, Club Penguin, RuneScape Classic, and more—celebrating their cultural impact while mourning their passing as the web evolves.
Netherlands’ government has soft-launched code.overheid.nl, a government-wide, self-hosted platform for publishing and developing open-source software to bolster digital sovereignty. The pilot uses Forgejo, a European, sovereign alternative to GitHub/GitLab. Not all agencies can use it yet; developers are invited to contribute with the goal of a shared government Git platform. Initiated by the Open Source Program Office of the Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations, in collaboration with DAWO, Opensourcewerken, and developer.overheid.nl. Interested parties can join via [email protected]. More information in Dutch on developer.overheid.nl.
Bundestag President Julia Klöckner urged MPs to switch to Wire to curb phishing, citing its BSI certification, end-to-end encryption, and registration by email (no private number or public email visible). The Bundestag administration offers Wire as an alternative to WhatsApp/Signal. The BSI approved a Wire Bund version for VS-NfD data until 2028, though post-quantum security is not yet available. Critics say it isn’t a panacea; phishing can still target official addresses. Some CDU/CSU MPs call for banning Signal, but experts emphasize digital education and responsible use to advance digital sovereignty.
Germany’s Rheinmetall chief says Germany now outproduces the U.S. in ammunition, with medium-caliber rounds production quadrupled and artillery ammo at about 1.1 million, up from 70,000. A new plant will become Europe’s largest ammunition factory. The surge comes as European NATO members boost defense spending and stockpiles for Ukraine and potential conflicts with Russia, with Germany aiming to have Europe’s strongest conventional army by 2039, signaling greater European ammunition autonomy amid a U.S. focus on the Indo‑Pacific.
Could not summarize article.
Rocky is a Rust-based control plane for warehouse data pipelines that provides a trust system with branches, replay, and column-level data lineage, plus compile-time safety and per-model cost attribution. It can work alongside Databricks or Snowflake by managing the DAG. The project includes an engine (Rust core), Dagster integration, a VS Code extension, and playgrounds demonstrating schema drift detection, data-contract enforcement at compile time, and column-level lineage. It supports docs, releases, and is Apache-2.0 licensed. Install via scripts and run rocky compile/test/run.
HardenedBSD is now on Radicle and usable, though with edge cases. A basic integration in the ports tree allows downloading distfiles from a radicle-httpd, but more work is needed. Performance can be an issue; configure large repos by setting node.limits.fetchPackReceive to at least 3GB in ~/.radicle/config.json. Current repos: HardenedBSD-src, -ports, -pkg (browse at radicle.network/nodes/rad.hardenedbsd.org). Migration will continue (secadm next). Steps: connect seed VM, seed src (repeat for ports), monitor ~/.radicle/storage, then rad clone. Donations: ~$19,369 raised toward a $15,000 goal.
Adam Scovell traces Withnail’s coat from Andrea Galer’s design for Withnail & I, where its dramatic, moving silhouette embodies sprezzatura. The tweed coat—Heather Brown from Liberty’s, echoing a pre‑war aristocratic look—was cut to look aged and worn. After production, the coats vanished into archives, then spawned replicas; Harris Tweed revival, aided by Prince Charles, enabled Galer to reproduce the fabric. The coat’s fame grew via charity auctions (Withnail for Waterford; Scrubs Glorious Scrubs) and later patrons like Reece Shearsmith wearing replicas. The piece became a modern cult icon beyond the film.
Author Raleigh Adams argues that the internet used to be a place you visited—a physical, embodied Web 1.0 experience with neighborhoods (GeoCities), a clear doorway, and explicit arrival and departure. Since around 2006, with infinite scroll and pervasive platforms, the web has become an omnipresent panopticon in our pockets—always on, always watched—eroding rootedness, attention, and private/public boundaries. A healthier digital culture requires boundaries: designating rooms for devices, intentional login times, screen sabbaths, and cultivating embodied community. Envision the internet as a neighborhood you enter and leave on human terms, not an endless everywhere.
Number Trail is a Hamiltonian-path puzzle on a square grid: draw a path visiting every cell exactly once and touching clues in order. Built with plain HTML/CSS/JS, no frameworks. Puzzles are plain-text files with id, title, description, a grid of digits and dots, and a walls section; a small parser validates input and renders the board as a CSS grid. The path shows a central dot with four arms; drag or click updates it. Validation requires all clues visited in order. Random puzzles use Warnsdorff’s heuristic, with a snake fallback; walls on non-path edges. Files are Python-generated with IDs.
Canonical disclosed 44 CVEs in uutils, the Rust rewrite of GNU coreutils. All bugs occurred in production Rust code and none were caught by the borrow checker, clippy, or cargo-audit. The audit highlights boundary bugs where Rust APIs re-resolve paths across syscalls, enabling TOCTOU. Lessons: anchor on a file descriptor, resolve paths before use, create_new for creation, set permissions at creation, prefer bytes/OsStr over String for paths and inputs, avoid unwraps and discard errors, and preserve bug-for-bug compatibility. Rust reduces classic memory-safety bugs but boundary safety remains critical.
Physicists from NIST spent a decade refining Big G by replicating a 2007 BIPM Cavendish-type experiment. They built an eight-mass torsion balance with copper-beryllium ribbon, ran two datasets (gravitational torque and an electrostatic torque), and compared copper and sapphire masses to rule out material effects. The resulting value is G = 6.67387×10^-11 m^3/kg·s^2, about 0.0235% lower than the BIPM result. The work doesn't resolve the discrepancy in G, but adds a new data point and advances precision metrology; as co-author Stephan Schlamminger put it, measuring G brings order to the universe.
An autonomous hardware-design loop tests a 5-stage RV32IM core. The orchestrator runs rounds; the agent proposes architectural hypotheses in YAML, an implementation agent edits rtl/, and a verifier pipeline checks correctness via formal checks, cosimulation, and CRC validation. Over ~9.5 hours, 73 hypotheses were tested; 10 were accepted, including predictors and ALU/memory changes. The final run reached 2.91 CoreMark/MHz (577 iter/s) at 199 MHz, vs 2.23 CoreMark/MHz baseline, with LUT4 ~5,944. The verifier, not the planner, is the bottleneck; next steps: population search and broader workloads.
An anti–AI music manifesto inviting readers to join the “Fuck Off AI Music” movement. The text argues AI-generated music should be rejected and the speaker repeatedly refuses to engage with AI music or related events. A FAQ discusses whether AI music can be good or useful, but the speaker remains reluctant or unavailable due to their stance. Overall, the tone asserts AI has no place in music, though it acknowledges some people create with AI.
Mendral reports that upgrading to a frontier model (Opus 4.6) cut CI-failure triage costs. They split work: a cheap Haiku sub-agent analyzes logs and narrow-errors, while Opus decides when to escalate to a full investigation. They avoid flooding prompts with 200k+ lines; instead, logs live in ClickHouse with materialized views, and queries are guided by the agent. Semantic search plus exact matches detect duplicates; four out of five failures never reach Opus. Sub-agents fetch precise error messages; the orchestrator curates context and keeps rounds finite. The approach scales to other high-volume event streams; Mendral is offered to try.
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