Front-page articles summarized hourly.
PCMag reports that iPhones running the iOS 26 developer beta pause FaceTime calls when nudity is detected. A pop-up warns that audio and video are paused and offers to end or resume the call. The feature, initially tied to Family Safety for children, is active on adult accounts in the beta. A disable toggle appears but may not work, suggesting a bug. Apple says analysis is on-device and private. A public beta is expected soon, with a final release in September.
Jailed Kindle Paperwhite used as a clock; author extends it to run Rust and Slint for a dashboard. Cross-compiles Rust for ARMv7 with musl using cargo-zigbuild and Zig; SSH into Kindle via USBNetwork. Builds a hello-world, then a Slint-based UI rendered to the e-ink framebuffer (/dev/fb0) and receives touch from /dev/input/event1 using Linux multi-touch protocol to drive Slint. Publishes a kindle-backend crate on crates.io. Next steps: finish the dashboard (e.g., Home Assistant integration).
Freediving reveals humanity through embodiment: diving without tanks, feeling 3D space, and balancing the urge to breathe with the joy of depth. The UTB sensing CO2 triggers, before oxygen runs out, showing our conservative nervous system. Training splits into two paths: endure suffering or savor the experience, with many adopting a spectrum between the two. Depth diving introduces pressure and equalization challenges (middle ears, mask). The freefall requires relaxation and surrender to water, while tense muscles or thoughts risk injury. Freediving couples safety and trust, with partners preventing blackouts. The author muses on embodiment, humanity, and even non-human intelligence.
An exploration of Labubu, POP MART’s beady-eyed plush, born 2015 and rising to fame in 2024–25. The piece links its appeal to pandemic loneliness, nostalgia, and a culture of kidult/Kawaii, where Labubu serves as a social avatar: worn as jewelry, posed in daily life, posted online, customized, signaling belonging, wealth, or stance. Its success hinges on social media as value creator: unboxings, scarcity, and ‘mystery boxes’ drive addiction-like buying and FOMO. Philosophically, Labubu embodies Baudrillard’s simulacra and fetishism: the object’s worth is social, not use-based, sustaining itself through online culture.
Apple and Google control push: every notification passes through their servers, then is edited on device by summaries and prioritization. Years of intervention moved from per-app toggles to on-device models (Android 8 channels, iOS Focus, runtime permissions) that reduce interruptions and alter content. Unlike email, push lacks an inbox and delivery signals; measurement is limited to acceptance, delivery, and downstream conversions, with the middle of the funnel hidden. Marketers should reserve push for dormant-user re-engagement and time-critical alerts, shifting to owned surfaces in-app. Future agents may act on notifications via App Intents Gemini, changing the meaning of clicks.
YouTube will auto-label videos that use significant photorealistic AI and make AI-generated-content labels more prominent. An internal system will automatically apply AI labels if creators don’t disclose AI use, while manual disclosure remains required for realistic AI. Some labels will be permanent—for content created with YouTube’s own AI tools (Veo, Dream Screen) or that have C2PA metadata indicating full AI generation. The label positions shift: long-form videos show the AI label below the player; Shorts show an overlay. Labels don’t affect ranking or monetization. Creators can dispute flags in YouTube Studio. YouTube also expanded its likeness-detection program.
AI promises to boost productivity via agents like executive assistants, tutors, or “digital gardens,” but real impact depends on a serious context of use. Most people don’t have concrete tasks—e.g., few actually write flashcards or use Anki daily—so AI won’t move the needle. Internal bottlenecks—executive function, intelligence, and knowledge—limit gains; external scaffolds help only up to a point, and true enhancement would require advanced biotech. Consequently, education remains valuable: intelligent, educated people stand to gain most from AI.
Could not summarize article.
Valve has raised Steam Deck prices by $200–$300: the 512GB OLED is now $789 (from $549) and the 1TB model $949 (from $649). Refurbished 512GB OLED and 1TB OLED models are $629 and $759. Both models are in stock with 3–5 day delivery on Steam. Valve cites rising memory and storage costs and global logistics challenges. Memory/storage shortages have also delayed other Valve projects (Steam Machine/Steam Frame), now expected to ship later this year; Valve released the Steam Controller earlier this year.
Germany’s state media regulators are drafting a Media State Treaty to compel social platforms to boost content from government outlets. A leaked paper would designate outlets as 'public value' via the Commission for Licensing and Supervision, and label individual articles as serving the public interest, forcing platforms like X, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok to alter algorithms and possibly meet a legal quota for value content. Critics say the process concentrates influence in a politically appointed regulator network that decides what counts as reliable and disinformation, threatening editorial independence and free expression. The plan could become law within months.
Canada will buy Saab’s GlobalEye early‑warning aircraft to patrol its Arctic territory, shifting away from US suppliers toward Sweden. Prime Minister Mark Carney cited advanced sensors and reduced reliance on Boeing’s delayed E-7 Wedgetail option. The deal could cover about six aircraft, with Saab pledging Canadian R&D investment. The move signals a pivot from American military capability and strengthens Canada–Sweden ties, with Saab also vying to sell Gripen fighters as Canada still plans 88 F‑35 jets from Lockheed Martin.
Explores a browser-based demo that builds container images entirely in-browser using client-side code. Users choose a base image, supply a startup script, and export the final image as a tar for Docker loading. The process treats images as files that can be downloaded, unpacked, modified, and repacked in the browser. It’s a research prototype with public logs and source. The post argues that custom container tooling can yield huge speedups and practical benefits, even if browser builds are mostly a gimmick, and suggests learning container fundamentals for alternative approaches.
Explores non-HTTPS protocols—finger, Gopher, Gemini—as humble, terminal-first alternatives rooted in decentered, DIY web culture. Traces finger (1971) as early user profiles via .plan/.project; Gopher (1991) as a fast hierarchical info system that competed with the Web before being sidelined by licensing; Gemini (2019) encrypted, minimal, no cookies or JS, with gemtext for writing and gemlogs/phlogs for publishing. Highlights Bombadillo (multi-protocol), tildeverse, solarpunk ethos, and a call to build and participate locally, using small, low-resource infrastructure. Offers tools and proxies for access.
Thran explains how to run SimCity 3000 in 4K on Windows 10 with patches and tweaks: install from CD, apply a GOG patched EXE for widescreen and No-CD; tweak mouse acceleration in SC3U.ini; use the D3D Wrapper (dxwrapper.ini) to enable fullscreen/VSync and fix 4K; apply NTCore 4GB patch to SC3K.exe for more RAM; disable the updater with a patched UpdateSettings.ini; patch missing music and copy .xa files from the CD if needed; note possible 8× resolution distortions and hardware caveats. Result: a working 4K SimCity 3000.
An update on Composer and Packagist security outlines measures and plans to curb open-source attacks. Packagist now imports Aikido malware detections and maintains a transparency log of ownership changes and tag modifications to aid incident response. Composer 2.10 will add a unified dependency policy (malware, advisories, abandoned packages) and a minimum-release age; Packagist.org will enforce immutable stable versions and deprecate source fallbacks. MFA will become visible in logs and maintainer profiles; organizational MFA and staged releases (FIDO2) are planned. Private Packagist adds malware feeds, org-level controls, and plugin allow-lists, with long-term goals of immutable build artifacts and SLSA/Sigstore provenance.
TinyCld is a self-hosted, open‑source productivity suite and app platform. It runs in one Docker container, offering a complete mail, calendar, contacts, drive, docs, and spreadsheets stack with native IMAP/SMTP, CalDAV/CardDAV, and WebDAV protocols. It’s free forever, private by default (no telemetry), and can be deployed in ~15 minutes on a small VPS. It lets teams own their data and export easily, while developers can extend via a manifest-driven foundation that supports multi‑org and real‑time sync.
An author describes wiring a comma and a question mark into their macOS terminal to turn plain English into AI-assisted commands and quick answers. The comma command outputs a single shell command (copied to clipboard) for execution, using pi via OpenRouter; the question mark (“q”) prompts Pi for concise answers with tools like read and web_search. Both scripts live in the author’s dotfiles repo. The approach emphasizes safety (copy-only, no auto-run) and uses model selection such as DeepSeek or Gemini via pi.
Simon Willison argues that Anthropic and OpenAI have achieved product-market fit, now scaling into enterprise pricing with heavy use of coding agents (Claude Code, Codex). They’ve shifted to API-token-based enterprise plans (e.g., $20/seat/month plus usage) and released higher-priced frontier models (GPT-5.5, Opus 4.7), locking customers in. Enterprise demand—especially for coding agents—drives revenue more than consumer subscriptions, with large deals (Anthropic’s $1.25B/month Cloud agreement) and big enterprise hiring. November 2025 and April 2026 mark inflection points toward profitability and IPOs.
After Google's push for AI in Search, DuckDuckGo said visits to its AI-free search (noai.duckduckgo.com) rose about 22.7% week-on-week from May 20–25, peaking 27.7% on May 24. DuckDuckGo’s mobile app installs in the U.S. climbed around 18.1% on average, with iOS installs up about 33% and peaking at 69.9%. Google touted AI Mode as beneficial; DuckDuckGo CEO Gabriel Weinberg argued users want choice and privacy, noting DuckDuckGo doesn’t train AI on search data.
PostHog will train models on data inside PostHog to make products smarter and enable new ones like PostHog Code. Aims include scalable session replay analysis and synthetic user testing to automate feedback and improve conversion. Data is anonymized, existing data, trained in-house; EU cloud by default opted out, US cloud by default opted in. Users can opt out via org settings; training starts June 29; no data is sold to third parties. The goal is product improvement, not monetization; they’re hiring AI researchers.
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