Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Designed for a 1939 U.S. Antarctic expedition, the Antarctic Snow Cruiser was a 55 ft by 20 ft, ~34-ton mobile laboratory with four 10-ft smooth tires, a roof airplane, six diesel engines and four electric motors. It aimed to roam thousands of miles inland, but on roads and ice the tires failed to grip and it sank; after a few miles it was abandoned as a stationary hut near Little America. WWII halted operations; the vehicle was later found buried under snow and, by 1958, disappeared. Its current location remains unknown—entombed in ice or sunk in the Southern Ocean.
Bento and Montero offer an explicit string-theory construction yielding a de Sitter–like universe with positive dark energy. Starting from M‑theory, they compactify six extra dimensions on a flat 6D manifold and balance a Casimir‑like energy from restricted quantum fluctuations with fluxes that oppose contraction. They compute a small positive dark energy around 10^-15 in Planck units, though the solution is five-dimensional (not four) and unstable—the dark energy should weaken over a Hubble time. Still, this work opens a path toward explicit de Sitter solutions in string theory.
Channel3, YC-backed, is building a universal product graph—a database of every product—to power agentic commerce. Backend Engineer in NYC ($120k-$200k, 0.5–1% equity), full-time; US work authorization required; no visa sponsorship. Founders: Alexander Schiff, George Lawrence. Progress: 100M+ products indexed; 1,500+ developers on API; pilots with enterprise customers. Role: write code to understand ~1B products using multimodal embeddings; deduplicate across merchants; build fast, cost-efficient search. Office: Flatiron. Investors: Matrix, Ludlow, YC, a16z, Index. Interview process described.
Britain is launching a public consultation on banning social media use for anyone under 16, aiming to protect young people’s wellbeing. Ofsted would gain power to audit schools’ phone-use policies, and schools would be encouraged to be phone-free by default. The government would consider stricter platform age checks and possible removal or limiting of addictive features. The move has cross-party support but faces scepticism from researchers and child-safety groups who say evidence of effectiveness is unclear and warn against blanket bans. Australia already has a similar ban.
Author improved WAT parser performance in wasm-language-tools v0.5 by rewriting from scratch: hand-written parser (vs winnow combinators), reusing well-known green tokens/nodes via precomputed Arc and LazyLock, efficient keyword matching by prefix checks on bytes, using get_unchecked for ASCII tokens, introducing a lightweight Token type instead of rowan::GreenToken, and a single shared Vec with a start-index drain strategy to build GreenNodes. Benchmark shows old parser ~59 µs vs new ~13 µs, about 350% faster.
pciem is a Linux kernel framework that lets you create virtual PCIe devices in userspace to develop and test PCIe drivers without real hardware. It provides /dev/pciem and emulates PCI config space, BAR mappings, interrupts, DMA (IOMMU-aware), and peer-to-peer DMA, while keeping the host PCIe driver logic intact. The architecture splits into a host kernel component and a userspace PCI shim that implements the device. ProtoPCIem runs in QEMU; examples include software-rendered DOOM and simple OpenGL. Licensed MIT/GPLv2.
Stokpan/E80 is an educational 8‑bit CPU in VHDL designed for constructionist learning. It uses a pure VHDL design, a single‑cycle core, 8‑bit data/address, 16‑bit instructions, RAM, and a multiport 8x8‑bit register file plus a stack (SP=R7) and flags (C,Z,S,V,H). The ISA covers MOV/ADD/SUB/AND/OR/XOR, shifts, loads/stores, and many conditional jumps; assembly blends ARM/x86 style with textbook syntax. It ships with complete documentation, examples, and one‑click toolchain support to simulate (GHDL/GTKWave, ModelSim) and synthesize (Quartus/Gowin/Vivado).
Becoming A Whorelord is a first-person, data-informed guide for becoming an independent high-end US escort. It covers: deciding to enter the field; safety vs risk; income potential (avg hourly ~$477; high-end ventures); branding and appearance; building a website; photo sets; pricing, deposits, and “fly me to you” trips; advertising platforms (Eros, Slixa, Tryst, P411, etc.); client screening (two references, employment verification, blacklists); incall/outcall logistics and hotel safety; session structure, consent, boundaries, condom use; dealing with emotions and stigma; taxes and legal/regulation views (favor decriminalization); tours, scheduling minimums, reviews; and personal anecdotes showing both risk and reward.
The Atlantic argues that prediction markets like Kalshi and Polymarket are moving into mainstream media, with CNN and Dow Jones integrating odds into reporting. Desai warns this normalizes treating news as gambling, which could mislead the public and undermine trust, even as such markets claim to quantify collective expectations. Their predictive value is uncertain (studies show performance near chance pre-2024 elections) and they are susceptible to manipulation (historic Intrade example; hypothetical scenarios). The piece cautions about increasing influence by financiers and political actors (Truth Predict, media partnerships) and the risk to journalism and democracy.
Ploum rethinks exams for the Chatbot era at École Polytechnique de Louvain. He makes exams stress-free: unlimited resources, no fixed time, allowed on-topic discussion, and even student-written questions. He experiments with letting students use chatbots under rules: declare usage, share prompts, justify mistakes; chatbot errors count against them. Of 60 students, 57 avoided chatbots; four usage groups emerged, with grades correlating to group. He also piloted a 'stream of consciousness' write-up: 55 of 60 submitted, revealing reasoning and helping some students. Conclusion: chatbots help when used transparently; the key is adapting teaching.
IQAir's World Air Quality Index page shows the 2024 live ranking of 126 global cities by PM2.5 (AQI). Lahore leads (411), followed by Delhi (323) and Kolkata (257) as the most polluted, with city AQI scores and follower counts. The page links to the 2024 World Air Quality Report, news, and related air-quality products and services.
Explores turning QR codes into stylized images rather than random dots. Cites Kevin Kelly’s Recomendo idea that many QR-code dots are superfluous and can form a picture. Highlights QArt Coder, a free tool that generates a QR code for a URL using a supplied image (photo or logo), producing a picture-like QR code. Short URLs and high-contrast images work best. When you point a phone’s camera at it, you’re taken to the linked site.
An exposé of the unnecessary complexity behind Shadcn's radio buttons. The author finds that using <RadioGroup> and <RadioGroupItem> built on Radix creates multi-file, dependency-heavy code with a styled button, ARIA roles, and a hidden native input. He argues you can achieve the same appearance with simple CSS on a native input[type=radio], and that relying on Shadcn/Radix adds JS, size, and cognitive load without benefiting users. The takeaway: prefer native HTML controls and simple CSS over heavyweight component libraries for basic UI like radio buttons.
An experienced AI coder explains why they swapped from Cursor to Claude Code 2.0. Claude Code 2.0’s improved UX, flexible harness, and RLHF-optimized Opus 4.5 let you test behaviors rather than micromanage files, enabling rapid, AI-driven projects (visualizers, simulators, etc.). The author uses a dual setup: Claude Code for planning, generation, and large refactors; Cursor for learning loops and pixel-perfect UI. The guide blends planning modes (plan mode, sprint lists), context management (subagents, context transfer/compacting), verification (interface tests), debugging, and a command toolkit (setup-claude-code, setup-repo, etc.). The key is closing the loop, verifiability, and scalable abstraction.
Nicole documents building a portable, ergonomic laptop rig 3D‑printed with OpenSCAD, using a split Keyboardio Model 100 and a laptop slot. She reviews earlier heavy, hard‑to‑adjust setups and outlines a dream: light weight, adjustable keyboard width, proper screen height, durability for travel, easy setup, accessory mounts, reproducibility, and a polished look. The PETG prototype (~280 g) prints in hours and assembles in ~15 seconds, working well but needing tweaks (lighter mounts, non‑slip feet, rails, more rigidity, modularity). She argues 3D printing makes personalized, travel‑friendly solutions feasible.
Explains x86 prefixes and escape opcodes as a flowchart. It covers how instructions are grouped by length into legacy maps (1-byte: map 0; 2-byte: map 1; 3-byte: maps 2/3), with operand types selected by mandatory prefixes (none, 66, F2, F3). It shows promoted legacy instructions (map 4) encoded via EVEX for APX, and AVX-512 (maps 5/6). Prefix families described include REX (1- and 2-byte), VEX (2- and 3-byte), and EVEX (4-byte), plus details of fields that extend registers, operand size, vector length, and instruction maps.
Google blocks access to the YouTube video after detecting unusual traffic from the user’s IP. To continue, the user must complete a CAPTCHA to prove they are not a bot. The block may be caused by malware, a browser plug-in, or scripted requests; on a shared network, an administrator should check. The block ends when traffic stops. CAPTCHA prompts can occur with fast or robotic requests. The message also lists the user’s IP and timestamp.
Advocates setting a user-agent and respecting the robots policy, with links to the policy page and a related Wikimedia task.
X-algorithm powers the For You feed on X by merging in-network (Thunder) and out-of-network (Phoenix Retrieval) posts and ranking them with a Grok-based transformer. The system uses Home Mixer to orchestrate stages: Query Hydration (user history and features), Candidate Sourcing (Thunder and Phoenix), Hydration, Pre-Scoring Filtering, Scoring (Phoenix predictions for multiple actions, then Weighted and Diversity scorers), Selection, and Post-Selection Filtering before delivering a ranked feed. Key design: no hand-engineered features, candidate isolation during ranking, hash-based embeddings, and a composable Candidate Pipeline. License Apache-2.0; Rust/Python mix.
An interactive cellular growth simulator. Starting from one cell, cells may grow or split based on adjustable Grow and Split probabilities. Splitting yields a new cell in a nearby direction; a smaller max turn angle makes growth straighter. Only the youngest cells can grow or split; a percentile-based age threshold governs activity. Cells emit signals at birth to mark occupied spots, with higher signal decay speeding regrowth but increasing overlaps. A maximum age kills cells. A 'Show signals' control toggles visibility of emitted signals.
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