Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Understand Anything is a knowledge-graph-based code understanding tool that maps codebases to real business domains, processes, and flows rather than just showing structure. It presents interactive graphs with hierarchical drill-down, fuzzy/semantic search, and community-clustered views across 26+ file types (Dockerfiles, Terraform, SQL, Markdown, etc.). Features include a dependency path finder, guided AI-generated tours, export/share options (PNG/SVG/JSON), and business-knowledge modes that reveal authentication flows, payment pipelines, and user lifecycles. It aims to help AI coding assistants understand codebases, with live demos, community tours, and multi-language/tool support (Claude, Codex, Gemini, etc!).
South London Scientific’s guide and calculator assess whether balcony plug‑in solar is worth it in the UK. It lets you enter postcode, floor, balcony orientation, annual electricity use, kit size (0.4–0.8 kWp), tariff and costs, and self‑consumption. The tool models shading with OS/LIDAR data and PVGIS, showing estimated annual generation and payback, plus caveats about horizon shading. UK rules cap inverter output at 800 W; DIY kits cannot claim the Smart Export Guarantee, so exports earn little. They’re tracking regulatory status and offer email alerts for updates.
Ars Technica reports that the Office of Management and Budget plans new grant rules that would privatize decision-making. Peer review would become advisory; political appointees would decide funding, with grants potentially cancelable at any time if not in the 'national interest.' The rules would ban funding on certain culture-war topics, limit international collaborations, and block publication and conference travel costs without agency approval. They would apply a domestic-first framework, and the OMB is pursuing formal rulemaking after court defeats. Public comment is open.
Locusts: a collection of writings, but no articles were found.
A catalog of Pandoc templates and themes for converting Markdown into PDF, LaTeX, HTML, EPUB, and DOCX. The collection spans academic theses, letters, resumes, IEEE/JASA papers, lecture notes, slides, novels, recipes, invoices, and more, with templates featuring LaTeX or Pandoc tweaks (e.g., Eisvogel, pandoc-letter, Markdown Resume, JHAP templates). Each entry lists author, formats, GitHub link, stars, and last update. The page highlights ongoing growth of the Pandoc template ecosystem as of 2026.
Explores floor, ceil, trunc, and round for floating-point numbers and the special case of denormals. Denormals can be preserved or flushed to zero by platforms, which changes floor/ceil results for tiny values (e.g., -1.175e-38 yields -1.0 or -0.0 depending on preservation). Tests: CPU (Windows x86-64, VS2022) preserved denormals for floor/ceil; GPUs differ: Nvidia RTX 4090 and Intel Arc flush by default, AMD RX 6800 XT flushes unless -denorm preserve. DirectX spec requires flushing on input/output. For deterministic behavior, provides HLSL routines using bit tricks to implement floor/ceil that preserve denormals across platforms.
Fitting his "mediocre man" theory, history is shaped by structural forces and ordinary people who reach power, some capable, some incompetent. Wilhelm II illustrates the point: not a “great man,” but his personal rule centralized power, dictated appointments, and volatile rhetoric helped shape German policy, contributed to diplomatic isolation, and nudged Europe toward war. The Kaiser’s temperament and court politics show how flawed individuals can leave outsized historical footprints alongside broader forces.
Zig devlog 2026 highlights a major build-system overhaul: separate the configurer and maker, cache serialized configs, and faster builds with --watch/--fuzz/--webui; breaking change: removal of run_cmd arguments; 0.17.0 expected soon. Incremental LLVM codegen speeds local builds via -fincremental --watch. Type resolution redesign adds lazy field analysis and clearer dependency-loop errors, plus big incremental-compilation fixes. Experimental IO backends (io_uring and Grand Central Dispatch) via std.Io. Package workflow adds local zig-pkg storage, a global compressed-cache, and --fork to override dependencies. Windows: prefer Native API over Win32; zig libc moves wrappers into Zig with many C sources removed. Ends with protest note.
A Gamedev Mastodon post by Jeremiah Fieldhaven mentions upgrading to rsync 3.4.3 and notes that Mastodon's web app requires JavaScript, recommending native apps as alternatives.
Could not summarize article.
Imec presented a world-first quantum dot qubit device made using High NA EUV lithography. Silicon quantum dot spin qubits are patterned with ~6 nm gaps between gates, in a CMOS-compatible, 300 mm fab environment, enabling scalable, manufacturable quantum hardware. This demonstrates that High NA EUV can drive dense, reliable qubit integration and supports silicon-based qubits as industry-ready for large-scale quantum computing.
Could not summarize article.
Stewart Raceway hosts HO-scale slot-car racing in the Santa Cruz Mountains with regular events like the Thursday Night Under the Lights and the 50/50 and Xtreme Racing Series. Recent race reports highlight Team Jolly Rogers' success in May 2026. The venue emphasizes affordability and accessibility—novices can race with provided cars and gear. The site catalogues cars, series, results, standings, photo/video galleries, and community forums.
OpenRCT2 v0.5.1 “Swamp Castle” released. New features: plugin hooks for ride-breakdown; show/hide gridlines; guests entertained statistic; higher-res Android icons; initial window scale/toolbar for Android. Change: limit new station styles in preparation for flexibility. Dozens of fixes across rendering, crashes, keyboard, connectivity, path/tiles, and plugin behavior. Breaking change: last official support for Windows 7/8 runners; upgrade recommended. Overview video by Deurklink. Download: Windows 35.8 MiB, signed. Thanks to contributors and sponsors (Digital Ocean, Backtrace, JetBrains, Github, SignPath); join Discord and GitHub Sponsors. Happy building!
An informal explainer of algebraic effects: a language feature that lets code perform effects (IO, data fetching) and handle or resume them later, unlike ordinary exceptions. Using a toy ES2025 syntax with perform and handle, it shows resumable continuations and how effects decouple what to do from how to do it, beyond try/catch and async/await. The piece notes purity, typing, and potential JavaScript/React relevance (Suspense, useState), but acknowledges it’s not production-ready. Benefits include modular effect handlers, testability, and the possibility of richer abstractions without boilerplate.
Shopify's ZJIT now has a global, SSA-based register allocator using a linear-scan approach (inspired by Christian Wimmer). It tracks live ranges across entire methods (not just per block) to keep values in registers across block boundaries, reducing spills and aiding inlining. Previously ZJIT used a local allocator from YJIT that only handled single basic blocks. The allocator computes lifetimes by backward dataflow, and while an interference-graph approach was considered, linear scan was chosen for speed. Future work includes handling lifetime holes to reuse registers more aggressively.
VT Code is an open-source coding agent delivering LLM-native code understanding with strong shell safety. It supports multiple LLM providers with automatic failover and efficient context management. Core features include a Skill system and subagents (foreground and optional background), multi-provider support (OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, Ollama, Atlas Cloud, etc.), GitHub Copilot integration, ACP/A2A interoperability, Anthropic API compatibility, and Open Responses plus ATIF trajectory export. It emphasizes OAuth 2.0 authentication, configurable vtcode.toml settings, a Ghostty VT runtime with sandboxing, a TUI, and editor integrations (VS Code extension and ACP-enabled editors).
IEEE Spectrum profiles Leontien Talboom’s year-long Cambridge University Libraries project "Future Nostalgia," which preserves floppy-disk data as the media deteriorates and tacit knowledge fades. By consulting the retro-computing community, the team learned disk quirks (e.g., doughnut magnets) and navigated the toughest barrier— deciphering aging file systems on varied disks (Amstrad, ZX Spectrum, BBC Micro; 3-inch and 5.25-inch formats). The work uses hardware readers, emulators, and targeted migrations to newer formats, with ongoing monitoring to prevent bit-rot. The project concluded January 2026.
Math-To-Manim is a pipeline that converts math/physics prompts into Manim videos plus a full traceable artifact bundle that records intent, prerequisites graph, curriculum, math packets, storyboard, scene specs, generated code, validation, render results, and review notes. It emphasizes inspectability from question to animation, enabling backward-reasoning planning and a Prime Intellect RL repair loop where models revise generated Manim code to fix render issues. The repo outlines the architecture (pipeline stages, artifacts), run bundles, and how to run tests and render locally, with a focus on reproducible, auditable explanations.
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