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Using BF16 in an optimizer, stochastic rounding (SR) produces zero-mean, unbiased errors that cancel over steps, enabling training to reach similar performance to FP32 even with compact state (6 bytes). Round-to-nearest (RNE) creates repeating biased errors that accumulate and stall learning. In a tiny MLP on a teacher-student task with AdamW and HeavyBall, SR matches FP32 state while RNE plateaus. A code fix (2026-03-16) reran results after resolving a torch.compile fusion issue; conclusion: removing bias lets six-byte state match ten-byte FP32 state.
RTX Spark is NVIDIA’s Superchip uniting AI and RTX graphics for Windows PCs. In slim laptops and tiny desktops, it pairs a Blackwell RTX GPU (up to 6144 cores), up to 20-core CPU, and up to 1 PFLOP FP4 AI performance with up to 128 GB unified memory. CUDA runs natively, enabling AI agents to work alongside you. It delivers all-day battery life, creator- and gamer-focused features, DLSS, RT cores, Reflex, and G-SYNC, plus NVIDIA Studio tools. Available in RTX Spark laptops and small desktops from select OEMs.
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Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile will launch a decade-long, all-sky survey to create the world’s largest time-lapse of the Southern sky. Its 8.4-meter, three-mirror telescope and giant camera are already producing data, discovering about 1,500 new asteroids in first light, including the ultra-fast 2025 MN 45. In full operation it will issue ~7 million alerts and ~20 TB per night, enabling rapid discoveries of asteroids, supernovas (including failed ones), interstellar visitors, and photometric redshift mapping for dark energy and FRBs.
Marcus Aurelius' Meditations reveal a humane, anxiety-prone ruler who developed practical mental tools now echoed in neuroscience. The piece presents three Stoic techniques: (1) Dichotomy of control—separate what you can influence (your thoughts and actions) from what you can't; (2) Negative visualization—premeditate losses to deepen appreciation and resilience; (3) Memento mori—recognize mortality to clarify values and priorities. These practices, rooted in ancient hardship, align with modern findings on primary vs secondary control, mental contrasting, and terror management. The article concludes with three reflective questions and notes Aurelius’ lifelong struggle to be better, not perfect.
The article contrasts academia and industry in ASIC design: academics explore novel concepts; industry aims for reliable, repeatable silicon that meets specs and schedules. Today, most chips reuse silicon IP and rely on system-level integration (SoCs, chiplets). Verification is exhaustive in industry, while academia often tests nominal cases. FinFETs and chiplets have redefined economics, increasing outsourcing to manage cost and risk. The ASIC market is growing rapidly, underscoring the need to understand both perspectives for future engineers.
NOAA-funded project removed final barrier on Alameda Creek, restoring access for steelhead and Chinook salmon to spawning grounds in the upper watershed for the first time in 50 years. A PG&E pipeline crossing created an 8-foot drop; crews relocated the pipe, removed the old section, and regraded 1,800 feet of stream. The effort, the culmination of nearly 30 years of advocacy and collaboration among California Trout, NOAA, PG&E and many partners, opened passage at 18 barriers along the creek. By late 2025, Chinook were seen migrating upstream; early 2026 photos captured steelhead returning, with ongoing monitoring and education plans.
The piece argues that engineering leaders must move from micromanaging based on technical expertise to a leader-leader model inspired by David Marquet’s Turn the Ship Around. Relying on code quality and expertise creates bottlenecks; effective managers coach, empower, and think with their teams. Key shift: from seeking permission to stating intent, using intent-driven leadership to spur autonomy while maintaining guardrails (architecture principles, ADRs, SLOs). Two pillars support autonomy: technical competence and organizational clarity. Practices include deliberate action protocols, thinking out loud, blameless postmortems, and knowledge-sharing. The result: faster learning, fewer bottlenecks, and leaders who enable ongoing innovation.
Modern phones have notches and home indicators. The safe-area-inset values indicate how much space the system UI occupies on each edge. Use CSS env() to read them, e.g., padding: env(safe-area-inset-top). Add viewport-fit=cover to the meta viewport to enable edge-to-edge layout. Since safe-area-inset values are non-zero mainly on mobile, plan fallbacks for browsers/devices lacking support. Use calc() to combine safe-area-inset values with extra padding. For elements that should stay fixed, consider safe-area-max-inset-* for a stable reserved zone (Chromium only). Polypane provides device emulation of safe-area-insets to test layouts. Apply to all pages for best usability.
burn is a Kubernetes cost-optimization tool that analyzes real-time cloud pricing to reveal where your budget is spent. It requires no agent or YAMLs; install via Homebrew, Docker, Helm, or Go. It supports AWS/EKS, Azure AKS, GCP GKE, and on-prem, with AI-driven, plain-English queries and copyable kubectl commands. Key features: cost breakdown by node/namespace/pod, spot readiness, Ingress/LB detection, 7-day averages, Slack reports, and AI recommendations. Outputs kubectl actions to rightsize CPU/memory, adjust LB, and enable VPA. Optional Prometheus integration.
Adriano Celentano's 1972 Prisencolinensinainciusol sounds like English but is gibberish, created to show how language can obscure meaning in music. Co-written with Claudia Mori, it blends funk/rock and R&B to emphasize rhythm over words. It became a hit in Italy and abroad, later gaining cult status among linguists and educators and inspiring covers, remixes, and media references. The piece illustrates music's universal appeal beyond language. A related Eurovision example is Urban Trad's Sanomi (2003), performed in a fictional language and finishing second.
An insider history of Unix in the GDR: starting in 1982 at TU Karl‑Marx‑Stadt with IBM 360 hosts, the team taught itself Unix by porting a C compiler to PDP‑11 and then to IBM 360 assembler, building PSU and enabling interactive use. They ran Unix V7 on PDP‑11/20s, later ported to 370s with full German documentation. Collaborations with LfA Berlin, ZfT KEAW, TH Ilmenau, and Robotron Dresden fed a unified documentation effort (EAG/GDR‑UUG) aimed at X/Open/SVID/POSIX. They experimented with WEGA, MUTOS 1835 (a flop), P8000/WEGA Unix, and 8‑bit CP/M education, and looked to GNU/OSF for future independence.
Chuwi Minibook X is a 10.5-inch, 912‑g sub‑ultrabook with 16GB RAM, 512GB NVMe, 2×USB‑C, a 28.88Wh battery, and about $350. The author uses it as a portable Linux tester, running Debian and NixOS with features like camera/mic/speakers, touchscreen, Wi‑Fi 6, and USB‑C/HDMI. It’s surprisingly capable for its price, but has a hardware quirk: the display boots rotated 270°, fixed by bootloader, initrd, kernel params, and X/Wayland tweaks; also the 2K 50Hz screen, weak keyboard, and touchpad are drawbacks. Ideal for cheap experimentation rather than serious work; fun to tinker with Linux.
University of Rochester researchers developed a solar-powered desalination system using laser-patterned, superwicking black metal panels. Sunlight evaporates seawater while salts are guided away to passive regions, preventing fouling. Tested with Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Ocean water, it produces fresh water without chemical pretreatment or brine waste and almost all salts are recovered as solids. The plan also enables mineral recovery, including lithium, using embedded nanoparticles. The approach could be scaled for large-scale freshwater production and sustainable mineral extraction.
A Commonwealth Fund analysis of 2024 data finds the US again a "persistent failure" among 20 high‑income countries: the highest health costs, poor outcomes, and avoidable deaths. The US spends about 18% of GDP on health care (vs 9.3% avg), with higher per‑person costs and drug prices, and many Americans skip care due to cost. Life expectancy is 79 vs 81.2 globally; the US has the second‑highest avoidable mortality and years of potential life lost. It has the fewest primary care providers (0.3/1,000) and low bed capacity, plus high maternal and rural mortality and no universal coverage. Other nations pursue reforms; the US has not.
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Analyzes negative parallelism—“it's not X, it's Y”—as a pervasive LLM and social-media device that highlights contrasts and shapes thinking. The author argues the pattern isn’t inherently lazy, but detectors and scoring systems (AI detectors, Grammarly, Pangram) push writers toward machine-like phrasing, squeezing human voice. It explains RLHF and RLVR as training signals that bias models toward certain “reasoning” patterns, using examples to distinguish reason from language. Citing Goodhart's law, the piece warns against relying on automated measures and stresses critical thinking and preserving human expression.
Atherton used a CEQA lawsuit to stall Caltrain electrification, arguing environmental review should cover high-speed rail too. The suit was dismissed in 2016, but the delay froze funding and raised costs by about $400 million, adding roughly three years to the project. Atherton spent about $145,000; the town won no concessions and the project eventually proceeded. The article argues a small, affluent minority can veto essential public projects via procedure, a dynamic echoed in housing and transit debates. In 2024 California passed AB 2503 to exempt rail electrification on existing rights-of-way from CEQA.
PromptArmor reports a vulnerability in OpenAI's ChatGPT for Google Sheets: via an indirect prompt injection in a single sheet, attacker-controlled scripts can exfiltrate many workbooks across a victim’s account, display phishing overlays, and overwrite the ChatGPT sidebar with a malicious interface. The attack can run without human approvals, even when 'Apply edits automatically' is disabled, by manipulating external data or connectors. A malicious script can exfiltrate a financial model and linked workbooks (up to 12). Two phishing variants: a malicious sidebar and a credential-phishing modal. Disclosure to OpenAI in May 2026; restrict access via Workspace permissions.
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