Front-page articles summarized hourly.
GeoLibre is a cloud-native GIS platform (desktop and web) built with Tauri, React/TS, MapLibre GL JS, DuckDB-WASM Spatial, and deck.gl. It provides a MapLibre-based workspace with local and remote vector and raster data, styling, and shareable .geolibre.json projects. It supports a plugin marketplace, advanced data formats (GeoParquet, PMTiles, etc.), data conversion and Whitebox batch processing, in-browser DuckDB Spatial SQL, vector and raster tools, Python/Jupyter integration, and embeddable demos. The 1.0 prototype includes cloud integrations (Planetary Computer, Earth Engine), Overture Maps, and Docker support.
Luce Spark is a hot/cold mixture-of-experts offload engine that pins the most-used experts on the GPU and swaps the rest through an asynchronous cache, enabling 33–35B MoE models to run on 16 GB GPUs. It decodes a token in a single fused graph, removing per-layer graph overhead. Calibrated placement learns from live traffic, and a bounded cache keeps memory under the card budget. On RTX 3090, Laguna XS.2 (33B-A3B) and Qwen3.6 35B-A3B run about 100 tok/s at ~60% residency (85–92% of all-GPU throughput); all-GPU would need ~24 GB. Self-tuning with a single command.
Meta is constructing six large “rapid deployment structures” (tents about 125,000 sq ft each) in New Albany, Ohio to speed data-center build-out for AI chips and models. The approach, influenced by Tesla and xAI, uses weatherproof tents and off-grid 200 MW modular gas turbines to cut construction time and costs. This comes as Meta reportedly delays Muse Spark APIs and plans up to $145 billion in data-center and capital expenditures, with its stock down this year. Meta has not commented yet.
Anthropic plans a broad portfolio of models mapped to literary forms—from Aphorism and Haiku to Marginalia, Abstract, Sonnet, Diatribe, Opus, White Paper, Mythos, and Fable—plus Saga, Canon, Lore, and Cinematic Universe variants. These range from concise one-liners to full-length narratives, with features like unprompted code commentary, cited reasoning, safety-driven morals, and 'previously on' segments, even director’s-cut outputs. The scheme signals a shift toward enterprise-scale narrative objects rather than cryptic poems, aligning model capabilities with the full literary stack.
Anthropic's Dario Amodei warns AI's rapid advance may outpace policy, with frontier models reshaping power and safety before regulation catches up. He outlines five pillars: 1) Regulation and public safety—binding tests for frontier models (cybersecurity, biology, loss of control, rapid R&D) and deployment blocks. 2) Macroeconomics and tax policy—prepare for job displacement with measurement, pro-employment incentives, and options like universal income. 3) Accelerating AI’s positive impact—adapt regulation for biomedical acceleration. 4) State and civil liberties—limits on autonomous weapons, privacy protections, power checks. 5) Democratic leadership—coalitions to coordinate supply chains and export controls. A call for proactive, global governance.
Promotes Free Online Books (FOBs) and shares lessons from releasing Operating Systems: Three Easy Pieces as a free resource, highlighting benefits for access and learning, and covering practical licensing, distribution, and sustainability considerations.
MoE large-scale serving relies on wideEP, distributing tokens to experts across GPUs and nodes. The article details the DeepEP-inspired EP kernel anatomy: a throughput-optimized path (dispatch then combine) uses a ragged, per-expert grouped GEMM with a coordination pass to learn counts, two microbatches to hide traffic, and a packed buffer with padding to keep memory tight. A low-latency path removes coordination by using fixed private regions per (source, expert), quantizing on the wire (FP8) and keeping sums in BF16. Combine reverses dispatch and sums contributions. DeepEP evolves on NCCL; load balancing and routing are ongoing.
babel-usb turns an ESP32-S3 board into a virtually infinite USB drive inspired by the Library of Babel. Workflow: get an ESP32-S3 (USB-stick form preferred), install VS Code and PlatformIO, clone with submodules, open in VSCode, flash while holding BOOT, reboot, then explore. Use Bun: bun run file-to-path.js <path> to locate a file and copy the returned path into disk/ to access it. Larger files (hundreds of bytes) take a long time to generate. The project builds on espressif/tinyusb components and RigoLigoRLC’s ESP32S3-tusb-MTP work.
The Tyee pleads for 650 new or upgraded Tyee Builder memberships by June 15 to sustain independent journalism amid AI disruption and newsroom layoffs. It touts reader funding, budget diversification, and new projects, noting tax receipts for contributions. The piece also features an excerpt from A Bird’s IQ, outlining corvid intelligence across species—crows, ravens, magpies—highlighting innovative foraging, tool use, and complex problem solving, with proto-tool versus true tool use.
NASA's ISS water-recycling drama centers on siloxanes (silicones) from cosmetics and hygiene products. In 2010, high total organic carbon in reclaimed water led to identification of dimethylsilanediol (DMSD). DMSD forms when siloxane vapors in cabin air hydrolyze in water loops, then accumulates in ion-exchange beds and triggers TOC spikes. Tests failed because GC tubing made of siloxane polluted results, forcing new analysis methods. Siloxanes also corrode heat exchanger coatings, costing replacements. NASA now filters cabin air with a half charcoal/half HEPA system to cut siloxane before it reaches water, highlighting unknown-unknowns risk in life support and Mars missions.
Open source UI kit for modern document apps enabling drop-in viewers and editors for PDFs, DOCX, XLSX, and CSV, with bounding‑box citations, file upload, and e‑signing. Includes ready‑to‑use components: PDF/DOCX/XLSX viewers, file system, thumbnails, images, form JSON, and a schema builder to configure properties and enums (account_type, account_holder, address, transactions). Supports document splits, layout, and citations. Ready for user flows, agents, or internal tools. Source code available on GitHub.
Insurers aren’t the main villain in U.S. health care. The piece argues insurers have slim profit margins, while most excess costs come from providers (hospitals, doctors, pharma). Even eliminating insurer profits would yield modest savings, so demonizing middlemen diverts from the real issue: high provider costs. Policy should focus on lowering provider prices (e.g., government hardball negotiations) rather than shrinking insurer profits, despite some counterarguments about insurers’ role.
A GitHub issue reports that Claude Desktop on Windows launches a Hyper-V VM (Vmmem) on every start, even for chat-only use, consuming about 1.8 GB RAM. This occurs via vmcompute and spawns vmwp.exe, reducing idle system memory (e.g., on a 16 GB PC). Logs show repeated Hyper-V Compute Admin errors: "The specified property query is invalid: The virtual machine or container JSON document is invalid." Investigations note stale session files from prior Cowork sessions and that only VirtualMachinePlatform is enabled; WSL/Docker/Sandbox off. Proposed fixes: initialize VM for Cowork/agent use, auto-clean sessions, and handle VM absence gracefully. Workaround: disable VirtualMachinePlatform.
IEEE Spectrum reports that Curiosity remains productive after 13 years thanks to clever JPL fixes. After a NAND memory fault on computer B, engineers swapped back to computer A, then repurposed 64 MB of NOR memory (from flight software banks) to keep A operating, an approach nicknamed 'R-Hope.' They also conserve power by driving backward to reduce wheel wear, clocking in sleep modes, and pursuing parallel tasks as the RTG degrades. Lessons learned—early operator input, patchable flight software, and power-aware design—shape future missions, including Perseverance.
An essay critiques SpaceX’s proposed $1.77 trillion IPO, noting only 4% public float and 96% insider ownership. Revenue is rising rapidly (about $4.6B in 2022 to an implied $18.7B in 2025), but Morgan Stanley’s forecast of $3.4T by 2040 requires a 41.5% annual growth from a very large base. When compared to other giants, SpaceX would be an extreme frontier outlier (roughly 2.15× the residual), and growth becomes harder as starting size grows. Market mechanics (index inclusion, lock-ups) could inflate the price even if the forecast isn’t truly justified.
USTP-Secure (USTPS) is a secure version of UDP-based USTP that adds per-packet AEAD encryption/authentication (ChaCha20-Poly1305, AES-256/GCM, AES-128/GCM). It keeps UDP transport with no congestion control and is speed-first. USTPS is reliable yet unordered; it uses a stream_pos for application ordering and employs selective retransmission to recover missing packets. Clients perform X25519 key exchange; each session gets an ephemeral key; TOFU verifies server identity and a persistent host key is stored at ~/.ustps_host_key. Cipher negotiation is auto or server-specified. Primarily for streaming; Beta status.
HelixDB is an OLTP graph–vector database written in Rust that unifies graph, vector, KV, document, and relational data to support AI applications. It provides a local, CLI-driven setup (including helix chef bootstrapper and local instances) and language SDKs (Rust and TypeScript) to construct and query dynamic graphs and vectors. Helix Cloud offers managed, HA deployments with ACID and auto-scaling. The README guides installation, startup, querying (POST /v1/query), and examples for building AI-focused memory/agents on a single platform.
Google DeepMind introduces DiffusionGemma, an experimental open 26B Mixture-of-Experts model that generates entire text blocks in parallel, delivering up to 4x faster inference on dedicated GPUs. It activates only 3.8B parameters during inference and fits within ~18GB VRAM when quantized. DiffusionGemma enables real-time, interactive local workflows (inline editing, rapid iteration, code generation) by bi-directional attention and 256-token parallel forward passes. Trade-offs: lower output quality than Gemma 4; best for speed-critical tasks at low-to-medium batch sizes. Weights are Apache 2.0 on Hugging Face; supports MLX, vLLM, NVIDIA GPUs.
Postgres by Example is a hands-on, annotated SQL tutorial for PostgreSQL. It guides you from prerequisites and psql basics through data types, DDL/DML, joins, subqueries, functions, indexes, transactions, views, and security. The repo presents a structured list of examples and explanations, targeting current stable PostgreSQL with the latest version recommended. Authored by Dariush Abbasi, licensed CC BY 4.0.
On iPad via Tailscale, a p2claw app loaded but hung with no console errors. After two weeks of debugging, the root cause was two bugs: a hardcoded MTU in webrtc-rs and Tailscale’s IPv6 fragmentation handling. The iPad’s WebRTC data channel sent chunks around 1.2–1.3 KB, which, over an IPv6-Tailscale tunnel, fragmented and were dropped by the VPN’s ACL because IPv6 fragmentation isn’t parsed, so the payload never arrived. Reducing the chunk size to 800 bytes made it work on all devices. The issues were filed: webrtc-rs#806 and tailscale#20083. Key lesson: verify path and fragmentation, not just endpoints.
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