Front-page articles summarized hourly.
In Bristol, amateur radio enthusiasts at the Shirehampton Amateur Radio Club showcase Morse code’s enduring appeal. They set up on hills with antenna wires, call strangers, and, after dits and dahs, start conversations with people miles away. Members call Morse code a “hobby of discovery” and “absolute magic” that keeps people connected even if internet fails. Younger people are drawn to it; Parks on the Air lets operators gain points by contacting different locations. The community emphasizes learning, friendship, and exploration through a simple yet powerful form of communication.
A WIRED investigation shows the SFPD’s Skydio drone program leaked live feeds via an unprotected share link, exposing hours of color and thermal video, GPS telemetry, and pilots’ contacts. Researchers found 60 videos from 20 flights over about 48 hours in mid‑June, with drones tracking a suspect, following vehicles, and filming interiors of a high‑rise and other streets, often without clear justification. The link— tied to Skydio ReadyLinks— had been accessible for months and was not part of the city’s transparency portal. SFPD says the link was improperly obtained; Skydio declined comment. Privacy advocates warn of pervasive, scalable surveillance.
dom-docx converts semantic HTML fragments into native, editable Word documents (OOXML). It provides Node and browser bundles to map HTML elements (headings, paragraphs, lists, tables, links, images) to Word structures via a three-stage pipeline: style resolution, DOM traversal to OOXML, then patching. The default inline path runs without Playwright; server-side computed styles or complex styling can require Playwright/Chromium. CLI and API examples show how to convert HTML to DOCX (e.g., npx dom-docx input.html -o output.docx). It supports images, headers/footers, metadata, table of contents, and is MIT licensed.
AI is changing programming; control ideas, not code. Instead of vetting lines, prompt for designs, evaluate architecture, and rely on QA and high-level thinking. The author argues that LLMs can generate code but excel at outlining designs; use AI to draft Design.md for each data structure and steer implementation by the mental model. While reviewing code remains useful, the future favors idea ownership over code, with a shift away from traditional code-heavy reviews. He cites Redis and local LLM inference experiences and questions how young programmers should learn.
A longtime Photoshop user chronicles a painful decline in both software and experience with Creative Cloud: slow, web-based updates, disrupted services like Synced Files, and stubborn license checks. After exploring rivals, he cancels an annual-paid-monthly plan, battles uninstall hurdles, and manually cleans remnants. Switching to Pixelmator Pro (via Apple’s Creator Studio), he renounces Photoshop with bittersweet nostalgia but relief at a simpler, quieter setup.
The piece presents an in-kernel L7 firewall built with eBPF that runs decisions at XDP using a JavaScript policy. It inspects HTTP/2 header fields (e.g., :authority, User-Agent) and hosts behind trusted proxies, with optional X-Forwarded-For/PROXY resolution. Matching uses a compiled Aho-Corasick DFA; updates swap in seconds via git. Decisions run in kernel (nanoseconds) avoiding userspace overhead, handling fragmentation by reassembling in JS for multi-segment HEADERS. Packaged as a Docker container; deployed in stages with Prometheus metrics and dashboards; roadmap to broader policy support.
Densha is a voxel Tokyo study experience. Ride the Yamanote line through a living, voxel Tokyo that mirrors Japan’s real clock, weather, and seasons. An ambient lo-fi bed plays while N5 sentences are read aloud and appear as drifting subtitles, creating an easy, immersive Japanese study room you just press play into.
Berkshire Hathaway now holds about $397.4 billion in cash and T-bills, after years of net equity selling, signaling readiness to buy only when markets cool. Valuation gauges—the Buffett Indicator (~232% of GDP) and CAPE (~41)—flag overvaluation. Berkshire remains invested in Apple and Alphabet, but its insurance arm faces headwinds from higher claims and premiums. Buffett’s impending exit adds uncertainty as Greg Abel takes the helm. The cash hoard positions Berkshire to pounce if a crash materializes, much like in 2008.
Frieve Vinyl Explained is a microscopic physics simulator of an analog stylus tracing a vinyl groove. It uses Hertz/Winkler contact, viscoelastic damping, and rigid-body dynamics to model groove-stylus interaction rather than visual approximations. It includes a realistic cutting signal chain (pink noise, rumble filter, LF shaping, bass mono, HF cutoff, RIAA pre-emphasis) and drives wall displacements. The model estimates SNR, distortion, and resonance; default roughness 13.17 nm yields SNR 60 dB and DR 72 dB at +12 dB peak. Distortion comes from geometry; validated at 1 kHz, 5 cm/s with THD ~0.6% and wall resonances ~40 kHz.
The piece presents a stark reality: a record sea-surface temperature in the Niño 3.4 region, shown by direct observations rather than models, signaling climate change in action. It explains that El Niño now operates atop a warmer baseline, thanks to human CO2, which intensifies energy in the climate system, bringing stronger storms, heavier rainfall, droughts, and heatwaves. Oceans drive much of this, with ecological damage like coral bleaching and marine heatwaves. The article warns of interacting climate tipping points that could trigger cascading, hard-to-reverse impacts, and calls for urgent action and adaptation to inequality.
Ray Myers argues Anthropic’s push to end software engineering is a marketing narrative backed by huge capital. He analyzes Bun’s move from Zig to Rust—acquired by Anthropic, Bun’s agent-driven rewrite aimed at speed and publicity, not pure technical necessity—triggering blunt critiques from Zig’s Andrew Kelley. The piece contrasts competing stories: Anthropic’s, Bun’s, and pragmatic engineering reality. Myers cautions that AI agents won’t replace skilled engineers; emphasizes transparent decision-making (motivation, options, trade-offs), sustainable work practices, and cautious modernization (TigerBeetle, style guides, agentic review). Calls for human-centered design and a tempered view of AI in coding.
Margin surveys cookieless identity options and presents their approach: a day-scoped, server-side hash computed in your app’s ingest handler. The digest = SHA-256(day + site + IP + userAgent); only the first 16 hex bytes are sent to Margin, and raw IP/UA never leave your stack. No cookies, localStorage, or fingerprinting. This yields daily uniques with no cross-day linkage unless the user is signed in (session ID available). Pros: privacy-friendly, fewer consent issues. Cons: shared IP and browser churn undercount; GDPR considerations apply since data is pseudonymised.
An optimization of encoding selection in a domain-specific compressor shows the loop j = next_j[i][j] is latency-bound due to dependencies. By inserting a conditional that only updates j when j != next_j[i][j] and forcing a branch misprediction to resolve, throughput improves. In synthetic tests this drops time from ~320 μs to ~80 μs (~4x); in real runs about 2x due to LLVM codegen. Since the compiler may remove the branch, a volatile cast is used to pretend independence and force separate memory access. A bitmask rewrite could speed things further but may slow bit tests.
Terence Eden and his wife undertook a 7‑week Interrail journey, covering 6,379 km across 13 countries with two ferries (one overnight) and about 40 hours on trains. They used a 15 travel‑day package, booked 1st class, and visited cities from London to Paris, Berlin, Milan, Helsinki, Tallinn, Riga, Vilnius, and Warsaw. The trip had rail snags (construction delays, a tricky refund process, passport checks) but also lounges and vegan options. They found rail travel greener and city‑center friendly, though tiring and not very spontaneous, and they’re considering another trip with more prep or a mix of flights.
Sam Neill, the New Zealand actor famed for Jurassic Park and The Piano, has died aged 78 in Sydney. He had battled angioimmunoblastic T‑cell lymphoma diagnosed in 2022 and was cancer‑free at times. Over five decades he starred in films and TV—from Sleeping Dogs and My Brilliant Career to The Hunt for the Wilderpeople and Peaky Blinders—most famously as Dr. Alan Grant in Jurassic Park. Knighted in 2022, he is survived by four children and eight grandchildren. Tributes poured in from New Zealand and Australia praising his impact on cinema and culture.
The piece summarizes MIT’s Alex Pentland findings: group success hinges on conversation patterns, not content. Idea flow—how ideas circulate, reach everyone, and move beyond a central figure—predicts performance. The three dynamics are energy (quantity/quality of exchanges, especially face-to-face), engagement (direct exchanges, not through a hub), and exploration (gathering outside perspectives). Hub-and-spoke structures hinder thinking; web-like patterns outperform them. Informal time—coffee breaks, side conversations—drives thinking and productivity. Design for idea flow: longer breaks, satellite spaces, mixed seating, and intentional cross-group interaction. Citizenship means actively building the conversation network.
Backtrack-free cursive. The author loves cursive but finds English writing burdensome due to backtracking, unlike Cyrillic. They quantify the issue by comparing Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment in English and Russian: about 51% of English words require backtracks (0.68 per word) versus 6.4% in Russian (0.066 per word). Lifting the pen helps but interrupts flow; digital undo is stroke-based. The writer designed a backtrack-free variant inspired by SmithHand with Russian influences, letting most lowercase letters be one stroke except x, t, i, j. They describe fixes for t and i and ligatures to improve fluency.
An exploration of achieving extremely fast color conversion in JavaScript, purportedly around 6 billion operations per second, by Dima Kryaklin.
Musician and retro-tech fan Chris Graue photographed Jupiter with a Game Boy Camera mounted to the Mount Wilson Observatory’s Hooker Telescope via a 3D-printed adapter. He’s now releasing the adapter’s 3D-printable schematics for free along with a short tutorial video. The tube fits a standard 1.25-inch eyepiece, letting the Game Boy Camera capture Jupiter even without a powerful telescope. The piece notes Game Boy cameras have a history of DIY uses, from mirrorless cameras to webcams and telephoto lenses.
BeavisUltrasound is an open-source clone of the Gravis Ultrasound PnP ISA sound card. The README describes a board designed around the AMD InterWave (AM78C201) with full schematic and reverse-engineered GAL source. The card measures 8.2 x 4.2 inches, 4-layer, with suggestions for edge plating. BOM allows LM833 or JRC5532 op-amps, +/-8V supply. It documents optional ferrite beads, unused components (JPR12/13, U100). Key components: IW78C21M1 1MB ROM, 93C66 EEPROM with plug-and-play data (ultrasound_pnp.bin), and GAL at U14 (gr_gal.jed or GR_GAL.PL2).
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