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The History of "Prisencolinensinainciusol"

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.

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Unix in East Germany (GDR) (1990)

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.

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Chuwi Minibook X: the netbook we deserve

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.

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New solar desalination breakthrough makes fresh water without toxic brine

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.

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US healthcare still stupidly expensive, with pathetic outcomes, study finds

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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New Beam Spring Keyboards

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It's Not Just X. It's Y

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.

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Atherton spent $145K to delay train electrification. The rest of us paid $400M

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.

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ChatGPT for Google Sheets Exfiltrates Workbooks

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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The Four Programming Questions from My 1994 Microsoft Internship Interview (2023)

Casey Muratori recounts his 1994 Microsoft internship interview, where four classic, increasingly difficult programming questions were asked — two focused on performance. The questions: 1) copy a rectangle between buffers in C, 2) copy a null-terminated ASCII string, 3) detect whether a byte-packed CGA pixel contains a given color, and 4) outline a circle via a provided Plot function. He notes the interview was a new, enjoyable experience and that answers would be revisited later in a series, with modern takes and reader discussions on optimization.

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'Backrooms' Stuns with $81M Debut

Box office dominated by two horror films and a weak showing for Star Wars. A24’s Backrooms opened to $81 million domestically, a record for the studio and one of the strongest indie horror debuts; world total $118 million so far. Focus Features’ Obsession jumped to $26.4 million in its third weekend, pushing domestic to $106 million and worldwide to $148 million on a $1 million budget. Disney’s The Mandalorian and Grogu plunged 70% in its second weekend, finishing third with about $25 million. The Breadwinner and Pressure underperformed; expectations for a hot summer persist.

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What if remote working, not AI, is to blame for weak junior hiring?

Could not summarize article.

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Linux/M68k

Linux/m68k is a Linux port for Motorola 68020/68030/68040/68060 CPUs. It’s source-compatible with other Linux ports. Current releases are stable on Amiga, Atari, many Macintosh models, and various VMEbus SBCs; ports are underway to HP 9000/300, NeXT (black hardware), Q40, Q60, and Sun 3. The site includes News, Information, Distributions, Getting Linux, plus mailing lists, newsgroups, books, mirrors, FAQs/HOWTOs, installation guides, and FTP/CD-ROM information. Maintained by Chris Lawrence (webmaster).

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Steam Deck sells out in North America within 24 hours of price hike

Valve’s Steam Deck OLED sold out in North America within 24 hours of a price increase to $789, while Europe, Australia, and parts of Asia remain available for now. The price hike boosted Deck sales to the top of Steam’s 24-hour revenue list, though stock remains intermittently limited due to memory/storage shortages. Valve’s broader hardware shipments and a planned Steam Machine rollout could affect supply, with alternatives like Lenovo Legion Go S and ROG Ally (often sold at or below MSRP) available.

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Re: [PATCH] OOM_pardon, a.k.a. don't kill my xlock

Discussion of a 2004 Linux kernel patch “oom_pardon” to spare certain processes (like xlock) from the OOM killer, potentially via a sysctl. The thread frames the problem with a parable about an aircraft company using an out-of-fuel mechanism that ejects passengers to save fuel, illustrating the difficult, ethical choices involved in selecting victims during memory shortages.

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Show HN: Streambed – Stream Postgres to Iceberg on S3, Supports Postgres Wire

Streambed is a CDC engine that streams Postgres WAL changes via logical replication, writes Parquet files to S3 and commits Iceberg metadata, offloading analytical queries from production DB. It decodes inserts/updates/deletes, buffers per-table rows, and periodically flushes them to Iceberg on S3; updates/deletes use copy-on-write against Parquet data. A built-in query server (DuckDB) exposes Iceberg tables over the Postgres wire protocol, so you can query with psql. Quick start: docker-compose up, streambed sync, then connect to the query port; supports resync, cleanup.

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Websites have a new way to spy on visitors: analyzing their SSD activity

Researchers reveal FROST, a new browser-based side-channel attack that uses JavaScript to measure SSD contention via OPFS timing to infer which websites a user has open and what apps are running. By reading a large OPFS file and analyzing SSD latency traces with a CNN, attackers can fingerprint host activity across tabs and browsers without user interaction beyond visiting the malicious site. Limitations include needing a very large OPFS file on the same SSD; attacks could be mitigated by limiting OPFS size. No real-world exploits yet; research to be presented at DIMVA 2026.

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Avoiding Death on the Yellow Brick Road

The essay argues the AI app layer isn’t dead; labs excel at horizontal models (the Yellow Brick Road) but the Rest of Oz—vertical, workflow-centric companies that embed agentic AI into complex tools, with strict guardrails, data flywheels, and end-to-end systems—will endure and win. Labs drive raw model quality; rest-of-Oz firms own the workflow, data, governance, and customer P&L, customizing models per use case, managing compliance, evaluation, and cost. Success comes from focusing on outcomes, handling high-complexity problems, and building system-level products rather than generic AI copilots. Both paths can prosper; the next enterprise software era is 'off the road'.

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Deflock hits 100k ALPRs Mapped in USA

Could not summarize article.

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The Speed of Prototyping in the Age of AI

AI has sped prototyping, turning ideas into working prototypes faster. The author’s recent repos—Sakoa, Kato, Seal, Karabiner, Plim—now run, with tests and some near-real projects. AI shifts planning to holistic specs, boundaries, and better delegation, widening what’s doable. He’s ~4x more productive, able to try ideas previously parked as “nice to have.” Yet velocity risks eroding coding chops, so he keeps manual work (end-to-end builds, reading source, debugging). Benefits include more time for exploration and real impact at work (automation; codespace boot times cut ~50%). He’s cautiously optimistic and continues prototyping.

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