Front-page articles summarized hourly.
RescueRadar.co.uk provides UK emergency services flight tracking since 2013. Run by SNOEI.NET, a long-running provider of emergency services information apps and sites, it began as a hobby to make public emergency information more accessible. The site displays live helicopter flights (police, coastguard, air ambulance) from multiple bases and offers an embed option for displaying flights on other websites. It also links to related projects (112-nu.nl, 112-nederland.nl) and includes standard policy pages.
An engineer recalls the worst interview: a 90-minute “culture-fit” call at a mental-health startup that devolved into invasive, trauma-focused questions. The non-technical chat drained the candidate emotionally, who was quickly rejected by email, triggering shame and anger. The piece argues culture fit matters but should not force candidates to disclose deep personal traumas, urging founders to adopt gentler, less invasive interview approaches.
At a thirtieth college reunion, the author notes pervasive anxiety about AI, especially LLMs, but also nostalgia for BattleTris, a game he helped create in the 1990s. Reuniting with Adam, he uses Claude (an AI assistant) to port and debug BattleTris to Linux, reviving the game for a night of reunion play. The episode illustrates the paradox of technology: AI raises concerns, yet can enable deeply human moments. The author sees LLMs as tools and promises more BattleTris updates.
The article examines why C array types feel strange. Arrays (T[n]) are distinct from pointers (T*): they are contiguous blocks, but most expressions treat them as pointers, except sizeof. In function signatures, arrays decay to pointers and the length is discarded; passing a by-value array would be clearer, but inefficient. The author considers preserving length with pointers to arrays (T (*)[n]), and even an array-literal syntax via an @ operator (as seen in GDB). He also discusses wide pointers, slicing, and compares arrays to structs; notes functions also decay to pointers but remain callable.
Stack Overflow’s Q&A forum has collapsed in traffic as AI dominates, but the company is thriving financially by monetizing its back catalog. Forum questions dropped to 6,866 last month, yet annual revenue rose to about $115 million and losses fell to $22 million. The business now pivots to enterprise products like Stack Internal—an AI add-on used by ~25,000 companies—and licensing its data to AI firms (over $200 million in 2024). The CEO says the value lies in its trusted, human-curated tech Q&A, especially for complex queries.
The Steinwinter Supercargo was a 1983 German modular, low‑profile tractor designed by Manfred Steinwinter to boost efficiency by reducing drag and enabling versatile configurations—trailer behind, cargo container atop, or even a tour bus. It used an eight‑cylinder Mercedes OM422 diesel (about 276 hp) with a 16‑speed ZF transmission to a single rear axle, and its height was only about half a foot taller than a Lamborghini Huracan. The concept failed due to visibility, handling, and reliability issues, and funding dried up without Mercedes backing; it never entered production and later appeared briefly in TV shows.
OmniDrive firmware lets certain Blu-ray players rip retro game discs (GameCube, Wii, Xbox, Xbox 360) to PC by reading their proprietary formats. Compatible drives use MediaTek MT1959 chipset; compatible models include Asus, LG, Buffalo, Verbatim. Encrypted on PS3/4/5 and Xbox One/Series, but old discs can be ripped via the firmware; a YouTuber Archades Games demonstrated ripping an Xbox 360 game to ISO using Media Preservation Frontend. It reduces complexity vs prior methods but flashing firmware to an unsupported drive can brick it. This could become the norm for retro game preservation/emulation.
Max De Marzi explores VillageSQL, a MySQL change-tracking fork that supports extensions like Neo4j’s unmanaged extensions. He builds a Roaring Bitmap extension (Roaring64) for VillageSQL using protocol 2, starting from the template repo. He details challenges: from_string casting, output buffer sizing, and null handling, fixed by defining a Roaring64 custom type with a string result and operations like add, remove, and intersection. After compiling and testing, there’s no server restart to install/uninstall extensions. He envisions cloud hosting and deeper storage integration to enable custom query plans with bitmaps, inspired by DuckDB.
Finnish KDE/OSS developer Akseli Lahtinen denounces advertising in commits, calling out "assisted by blabot," "co-authored-by: slopgpt," and similar lines as blatant promos. He argues ads don’t belong in commit history or emails and that AI-tool usage should be disclosed in merge requests rather than embedded in logs. He urges avoiding tools that insert advertising and states a strong anti-ad stance, linking to his broader AI programming views.
MiMo-V2.5 API pricing is permanently reduced up to 99%. Token Plan usage now supports 5–8× more, with all existing quotas reset at 00:00 May 27, 2026 (Beijing Time) under new billing rules; Apache Foundation member benefits unaffected. The Quadrillion Token Creator Incentive Program concluded, distributing 100T tokens early; surprises for some expired-plan users to be announced. Inference improvements include SWA-based caching with HiCache, higher KV-cache efficiency, and better throughput. MiMo-V2.5 is open-sourced and Orbit 100T token plan launched.
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Software developer D. J. Speckhals describes a Git-tracked, open-source book production pipeline that bypasses Word/InDesign/Adobe and Kindle ecosystems. Starting from Word DOCX, he moved print formatting to InDesign and EPUB management to Calibre, then adopted Standard Ebooks’ strict style guide for clean, linted EPUBs stored as XHTML in Git. For print, he tried LibreOffice and Scribus but settled on LaTeX, converting ODT to TeX via a custom script so the master source remains an Open Document. The result is a semi-automated, version-controlled workflow using ODT as source, with semantic Writer styles improving accessibility.
Rosalind is a deterministic genomics engine in Rust that runs whole-genome workloads in under 100 MB RAM. It partitions work into √t blocks, uses a height‑compressed merge tree, and recomputes history to achieve O(√t) space with bit-for-bit determinism. It streams SAM/BAM/VCF without large intermediates and runs on edge hardware (8–16 GB). It offers CLI, Rust APIs, and Python bindings with plugin extensibility for bespoke workflows. CI enforces space bounds; designed for clinical, field, and education use, enabling on-site genomic analyses without cloud infra.
Renting isn’t simply throwing money away; owning hides many costs. Turner’s case study shows loan setup around $12,778; first mortgage about $2,329.92/mo (mostly interest), plus taxes $515.50/mo, insurance $111.17/mo, and escrow. PMI may apply if down payment is small. Maintenance can be high (roof, skylights, windows, etc.), improvements add cost, but DIY can save. Selling can cost ~10% of value. Utilities typically rise in larger homes; annual maintenance around 1% of home value. If you’ll stay long in a decent area, buying can pay off despite the costs.
Marcin Wichary surveys several modern pixel fonts. Analog Mono (Andrew Gleeson) fixes the 1990s' low-baseline problem. Coral Pixels (Kumiko Yoshida, Google Fonts) adds nostalgic color fringing, echoing subpixel rendering. Two Slice (Joseph Fatula) is a two-pixel-tall font that remains readable. Geist Pixel (Vercel) is not gimmickry but a system extension designed to preserve texture while fitting typographic rigor, addressing production problems like scaling, metrics, and extra glyphs. The piece notes many so-called pixel fonts are vector fonts pretending to be pixel fonts, and stresses the invisible work (kerning, metrics, metadata) behind them.
Colorectal cancer is rising in younger generations, yet the causes are uncertain; most proposed factors (obesity, inactivity, ultra-processed foods, microbiome changes, early-life antibiotic exposure, environment) lack consistent temporal evidence. More broadly, several cancers are increasing across generations. CRC is especially notable because it’s detectable and highly curable when screened, making screening the crucial public-health response; the data suggest rising risk in youth and in later generations, though attribution remains unresolved.
Bob Nystrom riffs on a straw-man language where every function has a color (red=async, blue=sync) and calls must match color. The rigid rules make higher-order functions painful and mirror real-world async programming woes: callbacks, promises, and async-await split code into two worlds, complicating composition. He ties this to JavaScript/Node, Dart, C#, and others, arguing that these pains persist despite modern constructs. Languages like Go (and Lua, Ruby) avoid per-function color by using threads, making concurrency a program-model choice rather than a color-coded constraint.
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