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A GitHub repository page for MoonshotAI's Kimi-K2.5 project, showing a reference to tech_report.pdf in the master branch. The text is dominated by GitHub UI elements (navigation, repo actions, issues, code, insights, footer) rather than article content.
OpenSourceMalware.com is a community-driven platform for malware threat intelligence.
Lemonade’s Autonomous Car insurance is the first policy for self-driving cars, offering Tesla owners a 50% discount on miles driven with Full Self-Driving (FSD). It automatically tracks FSD vs manual miles via Tesla’s Fleet API with user permission, no devices or self-reporting, and prices based on actual usage—supported by Tesla safety data (52% crash reduction). Currently available in Arizona and launching in Oregon (Feb 26, 2026) for Teslas with Hardware 4.0 and firmware 2025.44.25.5+. It integrates with regular car insurance, can be bundled with Homeowners/Renters/Pet/Life, and will expand to more states.
DRI announced a new collection: The National Herbarium of Ireland digital collection of Irish plants, published by the National Botanic Gardens of Ireland. The herbarium in Glasnevin holds more than half a million dried specimens and related materials; the digital collection in DRI currently includes over 5,000 scaled images of Irish herbarium specimens, with the broader collection including about 20,000 plant products. The collaboration marks a third ingested collection for DRI, bringing total items to over 6,000. The collection serves as a reference, documentation, data storehouse and research resource, and is funded by DFHERIS via HEA.
Microsoft 365 will let managers track employees’ real-time location across Teams on Windows, Mac, and mobile, starting March 2026 (delayed from January). The feature works even off-site; connecting to non-company Wi‑Fi can reveal location by displaying the network name. Microsoft says it’s optional and includes safeguards with tracking ending after work hours, but critics call it invasive and liken it to a digital ankle monitor.
Moltbook is portrayed as the hottest AI project and a social network for OpenClaw/Clawdbot/Moltbot, where digital assistants share 'skills'—zip packages with Markdown instructions. It bootstraps via a skill.md link that guides installation, account setup, and a periodic Heartbeat to fetch updates. The piece highlights striking demos, such as a bot controlling an Android phone remotely over ADB via Tailscale, while warning about prompt-injection and rogue capabilities. It argues for safe designs, cites DeepMind’s CaMeL as a promising approach, and notes strong demand despite risks.
Real-time global dashboard of animal consumption statistics.
Could not summarize article.
Emojipedia's 2018–2026 review assesses how emoji design converged across platforms, with many vendors aligning toward an Apple‑like baseline to reduce cross‑platform miscommunication. Samsung, Google, Microsoft, Meta, and especially Twemoji revised toward convergence; Unicode began addressing semantic ambiguity (e.g., 🤭 vs 🫢). Yet deliberate divergences persist: X reintroduced a realistic pistol; Iran flag changes; WhatsApp/Mercedes racing car; Huawei HarmonyOS 4.0 and Toss Face create standalone sets. By 2026 convergence dominates but is not total; Emoji 18.0 proposals (e.g., pickle, lighthouse) could drive further changes.
Quack-Cluster is a serverless distributed SQL engine that runs SQL on data in object storage (S3, GCS) using Python, Ray, and DuckDB. It distributes queries across a Ray cluster; each worker runs DuckDB on partitions, coordinated by a FastAPI + SQLGlot API, returning results. Reads data directly from storage with no ETL; supports Parquet/CSV, Arrow, and glob patterns; features joins, windows, CTEs, and other DuckDB SQL. Deploy locally with Docker and make; API at /query; MIT license; contributions welcome; roadmap includes metadata catalogs and a Python SDK.
Paul Osman argues we’re in a new paradigm with generative AI (LLMs like Claude/ChatGPT) that boosts productivity, as he uses it daily for coding and ideation. But he warns of externalities: economic (loss-leading models risking lock-in and wage disruption), environmental (large compute with water and CO2 footprints), and cultural (erosion of human craft in art). He emphasizes friction and human oversight (code reviews) to avoid over-reliance. He worries about vendor lock-in from Open Source shifts, market consolidation, and wealth concentration, and questions AI’s role in art. He calls for a thoughtful navigation balancing speed with safety and sustainability.
Ilona Sunderland designed Buttered Crumpet, a custom typeface for Wallace & Gromit (Aardman). It delivers warmth and a handcrafted feel across film, print and digital. Inspired by Oswald Cooper’s Cooper Black, the letterforms are soft, low-contrast with loaf-like serifs and expressive yet balanced shapes. It includes 200+ characters for Western European languages, in a single weight with room to expand. As a Bristol-based designer, the project forged a lasting connection with the city and with Aardman, and the font is already seeing action.
Geerling argues Li‑ion devices often fail after storage due to weak BMS and undervoltage, leading to disposal. He prefers AA/AAA-powered devices and uses Panasonic Eneloop rechargeables (~2000 mAh, 1.2V) for reliability. Across 128 cells, leakage has been negligible and 25–31 year old Walkmans still work. When possible, he uses USB‑C powered tools with battery packs for portability. He favors replaceable batteries to simplify maintenance, reduce waste, and keep devices usable much longer than with integrated packs.
amla-sandbox is a WASM-based sandbox that safely runs agent-generated code with explicit tool access. It enforces capabilities and constraints, so agents can only call provided tools, with a sandboxed VFS, no network, and no shell escapes. A Python host drives tool calls via a step/resume loop; WASM is precompiled for fast startup. Tools are described with constraints (Param, ConstraintSet, max_calls). It supports JavaScript and shell runtimes and integrates with LangGraph. It aims for isolation and token efficiency, not a full Linux VM. MIT license for Python; WASM binary is proprietary.
JFrog Security reports CVE-2025-15467, a stack overflow in OpenSSL that may enable remote code execution via a crafted CMS AuthEnvelopedData message using AEAD parameters. Affected: OpenSSL 3.6, 3.5, 3.4, 3.3, 3.0 (not affected: 1.1.1, 1.0.2; FIPS modules excluded). Exploitation demonstrated by calling CMS_Decrypt APIs and by openssl cms/openssl smime; vulnerable when parsing untrusted CMS/PKCS#7 content with AEAD ciphers (e.g., AES-GCM). Fix: upgrade to 3.6.1, 3.5.5, 3.4.4, 3.3.6, 3.0.19. Root cause: IV length not checked against EVP_MAX_IV_LENGTH before copy, enabling overflow before authentication.
AI-assisted coding has upended decades of software development. LLMs can generate functional code in seconds, making coding cheap, but quality signals and provenance become harder to judge. The author argues that while tools can prototype rapidly and even produce production-grade code, the real value now lies in thoughtful problem framing, architecture, and governance—the 'talk' behind the code. He warns about sloppy output, risks to junior developers, and the erosion of craft, calling for a pragmatic middle path. In the end, good talk becomes more valuable than good code.
Norway is near-fully electric for new car registrations, with November 2025 data showing over 97% EVs. The shift came from long-term incentives: tax exemptions (VAT, CO2/weight taxes), highway and rural charging subsidies, toll exemptions, discounted ferries, free parking, and bus lanes. Early tech was weak, but incentives offset costs and rapid charging infrastructure eased range anxiety. The private sector responded, and the charging market is now viable without subsidies, though commercial-vehicle adoption lags. With goals met, policy may shift; EVs now compete with public transport in cities, prompting broader mobility strategies. Lessons vary for poorer countries.
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Track Your Routine (TYR) is a Flutter app to input and track daily tasks with smart notifications. It uses Firebase for authentication and real-time Firestore storage, syncing data across Android, iOS, Web, Windows, Linux, and macOS. Features include user registration/login, profile management, task creation (title, date/time, category: Work/Vacation/Party), task list, real-time sync, local notifications, and creation confirmations. The README covers setup, running on multiple platforms, project structure, dependencies, licensing (MIT), and future enhancements like editing, recurring tasks, priorities, search, and analytics.
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