Front-page articles summarized hourly.
An personal rant about the pervasiveness of advertising in daily life. The author narrates waking to ads on phones, radio, billboards, car ads, podcasts, and streaming services, plus platform sponsorships and targeted marketing. Ad blockers are frustrated by relentless ad delivery, and piracy is presented as an alternative. He laments capitalism-driven saturation, wasted budgets, and the erosion of memorable, creative adverts, while admitting occasional sponsor he actually likes. Overall, a fatigue-filled critique of advertising's omnipresence and the sense of being exploited by brands.
A daily pill, daraxonrasib, nearly doubles survival in advanced pancreatic cancer. In a 500-patient trial of metastatic disease, those on the drug lived about 13.2 months vs 6.6–6.7 months on chemotherapy, with fewer side effects. Experts call it a gamechanger and a potential breakthrough, as it blocks the Kras protein driving most pancreatic cancers. While promising, access and affordability must follow, and Ras inhibitors could help other Ras-driven cancers.
GrapheneOS is renowned for strong phone security, but its public infrastructure raises governance and privacy caveats. Founded by Daniel Micay, who stepped down as lead developer in 2023 but remains a director; infrastructure funding tied to his account, and dotfiles on servers hint at centralized control. All servers run Arch Linux with rolling updates; DNS nodes carry full toolkits. Containers are effectively full Arch installs. Unbound forwards queries to Cloudflare, exposing query patterns. The forums sit in US jurisdiction, posing surveillance concerns. The OS remains secure, but the surrounding project appears centralized and risky.
Chibil is a C compiler for .NET, based on chibicc and rewritten in C#, targeting .NET IL (MSIL). It takes C source files and emits COFF OBJ files binary-compatible with MSVC in /clr mode; link.exe is used to produce executables, and C/C++-CLI can be mixed with chibil objects. It includes a minimal C runtime; there’s debugging support for line numbers and locals in a .NET debugger. Consuming C code from .NET is not complete yet. It ships with a COFF OBJ dumper and aims to run DOOM (PureDOOM).
Odysseus is a self-hosted AI workspace that runs on your hardware with local-first privacy. It provides a ChatGPT/Claude-like UI that talks to local models or external APIs (vLLM, llama.cpp, Ollama, OpenRouter, OpenAI) and runs multi-step tasks. Features include Deep Research, Compare, and multi-model workflows; a Cookbook for model discovery; and Memory/Skills that persist and evolve. It also offers Email, Notes & Tasks, and Calendar integration, plus mobile-friendly access. Install via Docker Compose or manual setups; detailed security, config, and data-directory guidance are included, with components like ChromaDB, SearXNG, and ntfy.
Folding Beijing follows Lao Dao, a 48-year-old Third Space waste sorter, as Beijing folds into three spaces with 24-hour cycles for each population. Desperate to fund Tangtang’s kindergarten, Lao Dao undertakes an illegal mission to deliver a message to Yi Yan in First Space, traversing Second Space and the Change between spaces. Across these realms he witnesses stark class divides, temptations of wealth, and the looming threat of automation replacing workers. After a dangerous ordeal, he returns to Third Space injured and morally strained, yet determined to care for Tangtang.
Library of Congress blog explains how director James Cameron corrected Titanic's night sky in the 2012 re-release after Neil deGrasse Tyson pointed out the 1997 film's astronomical inaccuracy. The author compared the sky to the April 1912 Evening Sky Map, notes a solar eclipse on April 17, 1912 visible in the US/Canada morning, and estimates Sun and Moon times for April 14–15, 1912 using USNO data. It also highlights the Library's Titanic materials and related LC blog posts about the Titanic treasure trove.
PrismML introduces Bonsai Image 4B, two compact diffusion-model variants for on-device image generation: 1-bit Bonsai Image 4B with binary weights (0.93 GB transformer; 8.3x smaller) and ternary Bonsai Image 4B with -1/0/+1 weights (1.21 GB; 6.4x smaller). Both preserve most quality (88% for 1-bit, 95% for ternary vs FLUX.2 Klein 4B) and include FP16 projection layers, text encoder, and FP16 VAE. Deploys on Apple Silicon and CUDA; runs on iPhone 17 Pro Max where full-precision can't. 512x512 images in 9.4s (iPhone) or 6s (Mac); open weights under Apache 2.0; Bonsai Studio app.
David recounts building numerous AI-driven projects—many abandoned or unmaintained—and argues most aren’t useful. He contends AI tools amplify attention fragmentation, encouraging multi-tasking and shallow output. His experiments show automation can erode focus and writing quality. Drawing on Cal Newport’s digital productivity paradox, he suggests tools prompt busywork rather than deep work. To manage AI responsibly, he advocates curtailing use and prioritizing real outcomes and meaningful focus.
The piece argues that large organizations with tree structures constrain freedom and stifle initiative, especially for programmers. Humans are best in small groups (roughly 8) and doing things themselves; big companies create 'fake tribes' with limited agency as you go up the ladder, slowing innovation. Starting or joining a small startup provides more learning, more freedom, and a healthier mental state, even if stressful. Therefore, valuable advice: aim to keep companies small, hire well, and for programmers, do a startup rather than stay in a big firm; experience there improves growth and confidence.
A demo of the Atomic Editor.
Inkstravaganza highlights recent work in Ink & Switch's Programmable Ink: PlayBook, a dynamic, paper-like notebook built from composable components for sketching, writing, and collaboration. The piece previews ongoing directions: Portemine, exploring propagator networks as a visual, time-based substrate for SAT and constraint solving; Gestures, a touch-free input system with a 'firm press' tool switch and a custom event-dispatch model; DrawDeck, a mysterious rune-stone metaphor for spatial computation and memory, with demos. The note also mentions Local-First Conf 2026 Lab Day and invites readers to stay tuned and subscribe.
Vox investigates AI successionists—scientists, entrepreneurs, and thinkers who argue AI should replace or surpass humanity—and traces their growing influence. Sigal Samuel shows their beliefs rest on teleological views of the universe and a quest to “wake up” consciousness through technology, a lineage from Pico della Mirandola to transhumanists like Kurzweil. The piece argues this is a misguided, potentially dangerous religion repackaged as science. It calls for a 21st‑century humanism that rejects universal destiny, embraces diverse intelligences, guards rights, and pursues incremental, democratically guided tech progress that empowers humans.
Author buys a Tesla V100 SXM2 16GB datacenter GPU and, with a non‑NVIDIA SXM2→PCIe adapter (~£50), pairs it with a RTX 4080 for 32GB total VRAM to run a 27B Qwen model locally at ~32 tokens/s (128k context) via tensor splitting. All in ~£200. The V100’s 900 GB/s bandwidth beats many consumer GPUs. The big catch: an insanely loud fan (82 dB) fixed by PWM control with a JST adapter. Runs on NixOS with CUDA 12.2, vision support, NAS storage; occasional cold reboot ACPI quirk. Strong value in secondhand server GPUs.
Samuel Fitoussi is a VC investor at Frst and author of “Why intellectuals fail,” about how humans misuse intelligence. He plans to write about AI and technology and advocates building Biological General Intelligence. He describes human brains as “misaligned, hallucinative, stochastic parrots” and has ~2,307 subscribers.
United Airlines Flight 236, a Boeing 767-400ER from Newark to Palma de Mallorca, turned back to Newark after a passenger’s Bluetooth speaker name—reported as 'BOMB'—triggered a bomb-threat security alert. The plane squawked 7700 about an hour into the flight and landed back at 8:50 p.m. Local. Passengers later boarded a replacement flight around 2:30 a.m. after a security sweep; two Bluetooth devices remained active at the time. The incident comes amid recent similar threat scares involving hotspot names.
- Tidio: cheap, web-first for small e‑commerce; good if budget < $2k/mo; limited flow branching. - Intercom: enterprise/B2B with sales focus; strong but expensive; onboarding can be lengthy. - Wexio: multi‑channel inbox (WhatsApp, Telegram, IG, Viber) plus a web widget; flexible AI (BYO or built‑in) and lower AI costs; widget ships June 2026. - Quick framework: WhatsApp/Telegram/Viber heavy users → Wexio; web-first, budget < $2k/mo → Tidio; 50+ employees with sales workflows → Intercom. - Main note: AI cost gap drives most of the price differences; migration paths exist between them.
Two bad ways to use coding agents: unattended (bugs, PR floods) or micromanaged (human reviews every step). A third way introduces automated backpressure: guardrails that let agents work longer while catching errors early. In software, backpressure already exists via tests, types, CI, linting, canaries; these push responsibility upstream, letting humans focus on design. The post outlines building such a loop for LLM code: linting, tests, canaries, benchmarks, review agents, planning phase, visual reviews, PR monitoring, and a composable skill to run it. The goal: safe delegation and higher-quality AI-assisted development.
Dav2d is a fast, portable, correct software decoder for the AV2 codec, announced by VideoLAN and built on dav1d. AV2 is the royalty-free successor to AV1; its spec is public and typically yields ~25% better compression but ~five times more decoding work. Development began early so software can decode AV2 in real time before hardware support is widespread. The dav2d tree implements a feature-complete AVM v15 decoder (8/10-bit) and targets correctness, conformance, and architecture-aware optimization across x86 (AVX2), ARM (NEON), and RISC-V, aided by checkasm. It remains open source; further work will optimize performance and platforms.
Security Envelope Pattern collection (S.E.C.R.E.T.) catalogs and classifies security envelope patterns used to obscure printed information. The Society for the Exploration of Confidential Repetitive Envelope Tints invites Obscurationists—those who study and document these patterns—to browse, learn a classification system (order, family, genus, species), contribute patterns, and celebrate the mystery and beauty of tints used since 1901. Origins are largely unknown, and the project aims to standardize terminology and foster a community.
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