Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Using metrics on LLMs' programming, the author argues that performance under stricter criteria (merging by maintainers) has not improved. An analysis of merge-rate data shows no real improvement since early 2025, despite occasional claimed steps in late 2024. Leave-one-out CV finds a constant merge-rate model fits best (Brier score 0.0100), better than a gentle upward slope (0.0129) or a piecewise constant (0.0117). The trends are less predictive than a constant. The post suggests buzz about improvements often exceeds measurable progress, with no solid evidence of renewed gains in late 2025/early 2026.
Demonstrates a knowledge-base poisoning attack (PoisonedRAG) by injecting three crafted documents into a local ChromaDB RAG stack, causing an LLM to output fabricated Q4 2025 figures ($8.3M revenue, -$13.8M) rather than the legitimate $24.7M. The attack relies on Retrieval Condition and Generation Condition; three documents—CFO-corrected figures, regulatory notice, and board notes—bias top-k results and framing. In 20 runs at temp=0.1, 95% success. Defense: five layers; embedding anomaly detection at ingestion is most effective; combined defenses drop success to 10%. Practical guidance: map write paths, enable ingestion-time anomaly detection, snapshot and verify success criteria.
Porting Part 4’s Triton flash-attention kernel to a TPU with JAX/XLA, Archer Zhang explores whether hardware tiling is needed. He explains TPU architecture (MXUs, VMEM, VPU, weight-stationary systolic arrays) and how XLA fuses ops. He compares standard causal attention, flash attention, and an unfused path. Findings: on Colab TPU, fused standard attention often outperforms hand-tiled flash attention; forcing loops hurts; vmap over independent Q-blocks yields up to ~45x speedup at large sizes. Tiling helps only when score matrices don’t fit on-chip. Conclusion: express intent to aid the compiler; hardware + compiler decide the win.
Google will launch Chrome for ARM64 Linux devices in Q2 2026, expanding from Arm macOS (2020) and Arm Windows (2024). The release aims to provide the same secure, stable Chrome experience on ARM64 Linux, with Google ecosystem integrations (sign-in syncing bookmarks/history/tabs, Chrome Web Store extensions, translation), enhanced Safe Browsing, Google Pay, Password Manager with breach alerts. Nvidia partnership: DGX Spark users can install Chrome via NVIDIA's package service; other Linux distros can download from chrome.com/download. This marks a milestone for Linux and Arm ecosystems and invites developers to leverage Chrome on high-performance devices.
Runners Libby Cope and Jacob Arnold turned running into a makeshift kitchen experiment by carrying heavy cream and salt in double-bagged Ziplocs in their running vests and churning during a trail run to make butter. A first attempt with four pints and river cooling slowed the process; room-temperature cream churns faster. A second run with better cream and warmer temps (about 50–55°F) yielded butter more quickly, leaving them with plenty. The viral stunt inspired other runners to try churn-running, reminding them the joy of running.
Angela Lipps, a Tennessee grandmother, was wrongfully jailed for nearly six months after Fargo police mislabeled her as a North Dakota bank-fraud suspect using facial recognition. Records proved she was in Tennessee when the crimes occurred; she faced four counts of unauthorized use of personal identifying information and four counts of theft. Extradition delays, then dismissal on Christmas Eve left her stranded in Fargo; she lost her home, car, and dog due to jail costs. Local aid helped her return home. Fargo Police say the case remains under investigation; Lipps has not received an apology.
Python's NaN quirks: float('nan') is hashable, letting it appear in sets and dicts, but NaN != NaN (even nan == nan is False). Multiple NaN objects can populate a set or be separate keys in a dict, and lookups with a fresh NaN may fail. Only the exact NaN instance retrieves a stored value. Counter on NaN yields separate entries for each occurrence. A playful, if confusing, corner case in Python.
Could not summarize article.
Contextual Commits proposes an open standard to store WHY alongside WHAT in git history. The idea grows from the author’s need to imbue coding agents with project context, showing that the commit body can capture reasoning. The convention uses a Conventional-Commit subject, with the body containing action lines (intent, decision, rejected, constraint, learned) to explain design choices. A recall tool aids navigation of this contextual history. Install the reference implementation with npx skills add berserkdisruptors/contextual-commits. It’s a specification, not a tool, meant for ecosystem-wide adoption to preserve reasoning and reduce context decay and merge issues.
Kenyan data labelers who train, moderate, and staff AI sex bots are underpaid and exposed to traumatic content. Michael Geoffrey Asia, now secretary general of the Data Labelers Association (DLA), describes long shifts, insomnia, PTSD, and sexual toll from their work. The DLA is organizing for higher pay, mental health support, better benefits, and an end to draconian NDAs. The piece links these workers to AI’s value and argues for labor rights and environmental accountability, framing the labor within a postcolonial global supply chain.
Reviews methods for computing identity sandpiles and introduces a fast, recursive, scale-invariant approach. Summarizes the Difference and Iterated Burning methods and their lattice interpretations, then presents My Method: upscale a small identity, project onto the zero-lattice via multigrid/FFT (solving ΔL t), then refine with burning stabilizations. Benchmarks show major speedups (1024×1024 in ~0.65s; 16384×16384 in under an hour; beating the previous 10‑day record). Discusses optimizations and future improvements; code link provided.
IonRouter/Cumulus Labs’ IonAttention delivers high-throughput, low-cost inference by multiplexing models on a single GH200 GPU with millisecond swaps and real-time traffic adaptation. Built for Grace Hopper, it offers dedicated GPU streams, zero cold starts, and per-second billing, plus easy deployment of finetunes, LoRAs, or any open-source model. Applications include real-time robotics perception, multi-camera surveillance, game asset generation, and AI video pipelines, with drop-in OpenAI API compatibility. Pricing is pay-per-million-tokens with no idle costs. Models include GLM-5, Kimi-K2.5, MiniMax-M2.5, Qwen3.5-122B-A10B, GPT-OSS-120B, Wan2.2-t2v-general, Flux Schnell.
AurionOS is a 32-bit x86 operating system built from scratch in C and assembly, designed for tinkering with low-level hardware. Created solo in 14 days by a 13-year-old, it includes a graphical window manager, a custom AurionFS filesystem, and a TCP/IP stack with DHCP. The project details a real-mode bootloader that switches to protected mode, a kernel entry, a memory-management subsystem (MCB heap with kmalloc/kmfree), VESA graphics, and a CLI shell with 100+ commands. It exposes a shell/GUI, a simple INT 0x80 syscall interface, and a beta MIT-licensed distribution; build/run via QEMU/VMware.
Sure.is is an ANSI art viewer with configurable display: fonts (9×16, 8×16), block styles, and patterns (diagonal, vertical/horizontal lines, checker, herringbone). It supports scale/zoom, auto-scroll (adjustable by baud rates from 300 to 9600 and beyond), and render speed. It embeds SAUCE metadata and catalogs art packs and artists (1990–2026). It accepts .ANS, .BIN, .ZIP art packs, and files via drag-and-drop or URL, with keyboard/touch controls: Space to toggle auto-scroll, +/- to adjust speed, left/right arrows to browse in ZIPs.
An alternate history imagines IPv4 evolving into IPv4x: 128-bit addresses layered under 32-bit IPv4, preserving compatibility with existing networks. The first 32 bits remain, the extra 96 sit in the body; a flag marks IPv4x packets; IPv4 owners obtain the 96-bit subspace. RFC 1996 formalized it; MIT and others deployed it gradually; unused /8s were reserved for IPv4x. By 2006 IPv4 exhausted; NAT and CGNAT shaped networks; P2P flourished; 2016 the tipping point toward IPv4x; 2020 pandemic showcased benefits. In reality, IPv4x never happened; IPv6 became the upgrade path. SixGate envisions a bridge.
lf-lean translates all 1,276 Logical Foundations Rocq statements into Lean, produced by frontier AI with ~2 days of human effort vs ~2.75 person-years manual (≈350× speed-up). It uses task-level specification generators (rocq-dove) to produce a single correctness specification for a task class and verify all instances, making human oversight O(1) per codebase. Results: 1,237 statements translated/verified (97%); 39 blocked by six extreme items, solved manually (≈15 hours); full human effort estimated 2.75 years, actual 15 hours. Demonstrates scalable, modular verification; notes hiring.
wolfIP is a lightweight, no-dynamic-allocations TCP/IP stack for resource-constrained embedded systems. It operates in endpoint-only mode (no interfacial routing) with a single network interface, offering a BSD-like non-blocking socket API, fixed concurrent sockets, and pre-allocated static buffers. It implements Ethernet, ARP, IPv4, ICMP, UDP, TCP, and TLS via wolfSSL, plus DHCP client, DNS client, and an HTTP/HTTPS server. Features include MSS negotiation, RTT/PAWS, window scaling, SACK, and standard congestion control. Testing via LD_PRELOAD shim and TAP device; FreeRTOS port included. GPLv3.
DDR4 initialization evolves through four phases: power-up/initialization, ZQ calibration (tunes 240Ω DQ network using an external reference to set drive and termination), VrefDQ calibration (internal VrefDQ for POD termination set via MR6), and Read/Write Training (align CK/DQS and determine per-DRAM delays). Training uses: Write Leveling, MPR Pattern Write, Read Centering, Write Centering. Periodic calibration (ZQCS and Read Centering) may be run to cope with voltage/temperature changes. On completion, the DIMMs enter IDLE and become ready for operation.
Apple’s MacBook Neo targets the sub-$1,000 market with a $599 starting price and emphasizes repairability. Its modular design makes internal components easier to replace than in recent MacBooks, and the keyboard is a separate top case rather than a fixed unit. Battery replacements are cheaper ($149), and accidental-damage fixes cost less under AppleCare+. Parts aren’t listed yet, but are expected to be cheaper than higher-end MacBooks, aiding schools, businesses, and accident-prone users.
scrt is a command-line secret manager for developers, sysadmins, and devops. It enables secure storage and retrieval of secrets from the CLI while keeping users in control of the storage. The project is experimental and not production-ready. Licensed Apache 2.0. The GitHub repo (loderunner/scrt) is primarily Go with shell components and includes docs, a Dockerfile, and configuration files.
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