Front-page articles summarized hourly.
A federal court in Ohio issued a default judgment and permanent injunction against Anna’s Archive at the request of OCLC, aiming to halt its scraping and distribution of WorldCat data. The order bars the site operator and any parties in active concert with it from storing or sharing WorldCat data (including torrents), requires deletion of all such data, and cites trespass to chattels and breach of contract (browsewrap) as the basis, with no damages awarded. The injunction could empower hosting providers and registrars to sever service, worsening Anna’s Archive’s domain troubles.
Podcasting has ballooned to 4.5M shows and a $40B industry, but most are inactive and the field is top-heavy, dominated by pre-2020 incumbents. AI editing and seamless repurposing produce polished yet shallow content, creating a sea of indistinguishable shows. YouTube’s rise makes clip-ability the focus, eroding the medium’s intimate, deep-dive potential. The author calls for a reset or pruning and urges creators to offer something truly distinctive, or consider blogging instead.
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NN/g reviews show that for normal-vision users, light mode generally yields better visual-acuity and reading performance, with dark mode offering no clear fatigue benefits and potentially hindering small-font reading in low light. Long-term exposure to light mode may be linked to myopia. For some with impaired vision, especially cloudy ocular media like cataracts, dark mode can help. Ambient lighting matters; daytime reduces polarity differences. Recommendation: provide an option to switch to dark mode and use OS dark-mode APIs for long-form reading apps; avoid forcing a default.
This Bay Area knife-hunter’s memoir explains how flea-market values for vintage culinary knives shifted—from cheap, utilitarian finds in 2005–2008 to inflated prestige after Sabatier sparked a wider craze. With estates liquidated and online pricing driving demand, good kitchen knives became scarce and sought after. The narrator recalls the daily market frenzy, his rules of thumb (avoid cheap Forgecraft/Old Hickory unless necessary), and a reevaluation of Forgecraft after seeing re-handled examples. He concludes that interest in old culinary knives endures despite fads and market quirks.
Claude for Life Sciences (Opus 4.5) boosts figure interpretation, computational biology and protein understanding. The AI for Science program gives researchers free API credits and makes Claude a lab-wide collaborator—from planning experiments to data synthesis. Stanford’s Biomni centralizes hundreds of tools for Claude to rapid-fire analyses (e.g., GWAS in 20 minutes; studies rivaled postdocs). Cheeseman Lab’s MozzareLLM automates gene-cluster interpretation with confidence scores. Lundberg Lab tests Claude-driven hypothesis generation to pick targets. Overall, Claude is increasingly a versatile partner speeding discovery.
Requests setting a user-agent and honoring the robots policy, with related links.
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Héliographe notes a Mastodon post suggesting that reversing Apple icons changes their appearance.
London Underground now has mobile coverage via a neutral network run by Boldyn Networks under a 20-year TfL concession. Equipment sits in data centres (“hotels”) and cables run to stations where signals are distributed through cabinets and antennas; in tunnels, leaky feeder cables broadcast the signals. The project, four years in, faced space, safety and timing hurdles in ageing stations. About half the tunnels and stations are live (62 stations so far); full rollout expected by mid-2027. Nine hotels power coverage across London; ESN uses 400 MHz; consumer networks use higher bands.
FIRST LEGO League is entering a reimagined era with LEGO Education Computer Science & AI hardware, wireless components, embedded game models, semi-cooperative matches, and four roles (Driver, Operator, Technician, Specialist). Age bands are updated to two US/Canada groups (Ages 5-7; 8-14) and International (Ages 5-7; 8-16). From 2026-2028, two editions run in parallel: Founders Edition (SPIKE-based) and Future Edition (CS&AI), with edition names retired by 2028-29. The Discover division ends in 2025-2026; students can advance to FIRST Tech Challenge or FIRST Robotics Competition.
MIT 6.566 Spring 2024 is a systems security course covering isolation, privilege separation, buggy code handling, networked/distributed systems, and privacy. The schedule pairs lectures (LEC 1–24) with labs (Labs 1–5) and weekly readings, including modern security papers. Topics span OS/VM isolation, software fault isolation, trusted hardware, CPU side-channels, data center security, mobile/web security, symbolic execution, verification, secure channels, TLS/certificates, and anonymous communications. Assessments include Quiz 1 and a final exam; guests include Russ Cox, Daniel Weitzner, and Max Burkhardt; labs are due throughout; contact via Piazza/6566-staff; final at Johnson Ice Rink.
An NYT columnist and analysts warn OpenAI could run out of cash by mid-2027, given rapid datacenter spending. A report projected OpenAI burning $8B in 2025 and $40B by 2028, even as it pursues profitability by 2030 and contemplates a $1.4 trillion datacenter bill. Sebastian Mallaby argues AI economics—free or low-cost services and heavy growth—make sustained profitability unlikely for many startups, though incumbents with existing profits may weather the crunch. The piece frames a looming cash gap before monetizable AI becomes dominant.
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Reversing Apple icons makes it look like a designer’s growing portfolio of icon design.
Tithe Maps were created after the reform of tithes in Britain. A notorious case in Oddingley—where Rev. Parker’s tithe demands spurred murder—helped spark reform. In 1836 the Tithe Commutation Act replaced tithes with Corn Rent, a cash levy based on seven-year national price averages. To implement this, parishes were surveyed across England and Wales (Scotland/Ireland excluded). The resulting Tithe Maps show precise property boundaries and field layouts; each map carried a Tithe Apportionment detailing landowners or tenants, cultivation, land name, acreage, and the due Corn Rent. Some maps were certified for use in deeds and later aided infrastructure planning.
Texas A&M has rolled out a policy requiring president approval of syllabi to scrub “problematic” content on race and gender. Definitions label “gender ideology” as self-identified gender distinct from sex, and “race ideology” as content that shames a race or promotes activism over instruction. An AI audit reportedly led to hundreds of course cancellations, revisions, or loss of credit across religion, film, ethnic studies, sociology, and literature. Critics warn that Plato’s “Myth of the Androgyne” readings could be barred, limiting discussions of Holocaust, sexuality, and minority topics. The policy is tied to federal funding pressure from the Trump era.
AI is making software development obsolete while software engineering thrives. The author argues the real disruption isn’t which model you use but the process: a capable model with the right workflow outperforms a superior model with no process. He chronicles “Ralph” and other power-user techniques that can clone complex products in hours, not months. In practice, he’s been ‘Ralphing’ a Bloomberg-like terminal for Polymarket in two hours and building an accounting app to prove the approach. Software development becomes design of higher‑order systems; teams shrink as individuals with the right skills flourish. It’s the Industrial Revolution of software.
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