Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Malawi’s poverty isn’t explained by a single factor. Despite peace, democracy, and donor aid, it remains poor while Rwanda and others grow. A survey of theories—institutions, geography, colonial history, trade, agroecology, political settlements—finds none fully explain the outcome. The key driver is a political economy equilibrium: a median-voter coalition of smallholder maize farmers, chiefs over land, and maize subsidies (FISP) that deter diversification. Unless the political settlement shifts, agritech alone won’t spur growth; forecasts should specify the mechanism.
OpenAI now lets ChatGPT connect bank accounts via Plaid, granting it access to balances, transactions, subscriptions, investments, and debts. Pro users get a spending dashboard and personalized advice; the feature cannot change accounts or view full account numbers. Users can disconnect, delete saved financial memories, and opt out of training. OpenAI may use data for training and has up to 30 days to delete it after disconnection. Critics warn about privacy, long-term data use, and the commercial value of detailed financial profiles, with unclear safeguards.
image-blaster converts a single image into a full 3D scene in minutes using Claude skills, World Labs, and FAL. It outputs 3D models (.glb/.obj) for dynamic objects, a Gaussian-splat environment (.spz), and ambient looping sounds plus object-specific SFX (.mp3). It can be embedded in Unity/Unreal/Godot, Blender/3DS Max/Maya, or Three.js/web apps. Quickstart: clone, cd image-blaster, install Claude, provide World Labs/FAL API keys, place an image in input/, and tell Claude to blast it. Advanced options include Hunyuan models, image-edit defaults, and adjustable parameters like --face-count, --enable-pbr, and --generate-type.
Project Gutenberg is a long-running digital library offering 75,000+ free eBooks (epub and Kindle) in the public domain, with focus on older works whose U.S. copyright has expired. Volunteers digitize and proofread texts; books can be downloaded, read online, or accessed via reading lists and search by author, title, subject, language, or popularity. It features new releases, popular titles (e.g., Frankenstein, Moby-Dick, Pride and Prejudice), and audio options via LibriVox and other collections. The site requires no fees or registration; donations support digitization. It also links to self-published works and FAQs.
Scott Alexander argues that calling AI progress a guaranteed sigmoid is misleading. Exponentials can persist longer than expected; many forecasts fail not because the trend is unsustainable, but because the underlying process is misunderstood. He cites mispredictions in UN birthrates, solar deployment, and AI capability curves, where trends continued or changed course after forecasting a slowdown. The takeaway: without a clear model of the dynamics, default to Lindy’s Law that a process lasts as long as its past; or otherwise provide explicit mechanism-based predictions. Likely a few more years of rapid growth, with large uncertainty.
An in-browser PPO training UI for tinyppo-snake. It provides training controls, environment grids (1×1 to 3×3), and live metrics (avg/last 500 episodes, best window, rollouts). Status indicators include idle, waiting for first snapshot, initializing 3D renderer, and no tensor loaded. Users can configure runs with presets, seeds, and learning-rate sweeps (and custom options), start/stop training, reset environments, and compare multiple runs.
Zenith Tech Summary is a real-time sky viewer that zooms in to reveal Earth's rotation, making star motion appear faster. The field of view is the sky turned in 30 seconds—about a grain of rice at arm's length (~180x magnification, ~4.3 arcmin). It uses Pan-STARRS images (2010–2014) served by STScI, with Leaflet for tiling and SIMBAD for names; location is computed client-side. The project aims to show rotation; oversaturation and edge artifacts are challenges. Telescopes use an equatorial mount to counteract motion.
An author laments fake AI-generated claims and the risk of citing dubious, misinformation-heavy data. He cites a misleading headline about crows and a falsified SmartBear/Cisco study figure (87%/28% defect detection by PR length). In reality, the paper contains no such numbers; it discusses inspection rates per hour and infers rather than directly measuring defect detection. AI often hallucinates: if no data, numbers are invented. The piece argues writers must read sources, verify data, and maintain credibility, warning that outsourcing data research to AI erodes trust.
Could not summarize article.
AI is automating many entry-level tasks, blurring the line between classroom learning and work and widening the experience gap for new entrants. Hiring managers say most recent hires aren’t fully prepared, and internships—once essential—are increasingly hard to secure even as they help job prospects. Colleges must redesign how experience is delivered: embed hands-on learning in the curriculum (simulations, projects), deepen employer partnerships (co-ops, apprenticeships), and measure outcomes to show workforce readiness. Success requires education, employers, and policymakers working together as AI reshapes the first rung of the ladder.
RevSwap.ai is a satirical, parody site presenting itself as a 'peer-to-peer revenue laundering' platform for SF startups. It features fake live swaps and mocked deal screenshots (ACME↔ZENITH, FORGE.io↔Nimbus, Vertex↔Oak, Pine↔Mercer AI) with inflated ARR numbers and quotes. The 'how it works' section describes uploading fake invoices, matching with peers, and swapping money to book ARR, with a 2% fee. It emphasizes the service is a meme, not real revenue, with a disclaimer and a Cayman-based server.
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TTI bought Milwaukee in 2005 and invested heavily in R&D and ecosystems (ONE-KEY, PACKOUT, MX FUEL), fueling growth and keeping distinct brands. SBD, by contrast, pursued mass acquisitions (Craftsman, Porter-Cable, Metabo) and then centralized control, cut costs, and narrowed product lines, triggering plant closures, layoffs, and eroded brand trust. The article argues enduring value comes from private, independent brands that resist consolidation, a pattern echoed across industries.
Project Zero reveals a 0-click exploit chain for Google Pixel 10, extending the Pixel 9 chain to root from zero-click. They updated offsets for Dolby CVE-2025-54957 and replaced __stack_chk_fail with the VPU init path (dap_cpdp_init) due to RET PAC, exploiting unpatched devices (SPL ≤ Dec 2025). BigWave is absent on Pixel 10; a new WAVE677DV/Chips&Media driver (/dev/vpu) exposes MMIO to userspace, and a flaw in mmap remaps kernel memory, enabling arbitrary read/write and kernel code execution with minimal code. Patch issued Feb 2026; triage improvements noted, but driver security needs strengthening.
Turso is retiring its bug bounty program that paid $1,000 for bugs causing data corruption. The team cites a flood of low-quality, bot-driven submissions ("slop") that wastes hours and undermines open-contribution goals. The program aimed to validate a strong testing regime against SQLite and reward contributors who uncovered issues beyond automated tests; five people were rewarded. However, AI-generated submissions overwhelmed the process. Turso has implemented a vouching gate and will discontinue monetary incentives, seeking new governance while preserving open community involvement.
The essay argues the US-led technopoly built by the global software industry is eroding. Drawing on Kuhn, Gramsci, and personal moments, it claims revolutions are gradual, with old and new models coexisting. Shocks like Hormuz, tariffs, and Greenland expose the fragility of US dominance and speed the old order’s end. Software’s value shifts from making tools to wielding political and economic power, including AI, leaving an uncertain, hard-to-predict path for what comes next.
Could not summarize article.
Two artists sprayed paint on neglected potholes to force attention and repair, using action over complaint to show citizens can move the system. The stunt drew attention, prompted media coverage, and, within weeks, the municipality fixed the holes. The idea spread to Sofia, Bulgaria, where a similar campaign received TV coverage and repairs. ARTivism frames art as a tool for change, not decoration. The playbook: pick a small target, get one ally, document, and demonstrate that small, visible actions can mobilize others to act.
Radicle is an open-source, peer-to-peer code collaboration stack built on Git, offering a sovereign, decentralized code forge with no central authority. Repositories mirror across peers; users control their data and workflow. It uses cryptographic identities, Git data transfer, and a custom gossip protocol. Local-first, censorship-resistant, and offline-capable, it supports COBs (issues, discussions, code review) as Git objects. The modular stack includes CLI, Web, and TUI clients plus Radicle Node/HTTPD, licensed MIT/Apache-2.0 and installable on Linux, macOS, and BSD.
An evidence-based look at why Anthropic restricted Claude Mythos Preview through Project Glasswing: security concerns about autonomous, real-time zero-day discovery and potential misuse, plus real compute/cost constraints. Mythos can find undisclosed flaws and is expensive to run; access was invitation-only for ~40 vetted orgs with substantial credits. Public docs and coverage show a posture emphasizing safeguards, while near-term capacity constraints—Google/Broadcom and CoreWeave deals, planned chips—explain the economics. The author concludes both factors matter (roughly 70–85% security, 15–30% compute), with governance via Glasswing as a prudent compromise.
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