Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Fading Maize, a Ripon College band, pairs its 2001 dorm recordings with a 2026 AI-assisted revival. Original songs by Charlie Saponara (lead) with drummer Jacob Graf and guitarist Brad Mott appear alongside AI-assisted reimaginings that keep consent, authorship, provenance, and avoid erasure or displacement. Fans can toggle mid-song between original and 2026 versions. The project preserves the 2001 site and archive, adds recovered videos/photos, and plans ongoing releases and merch. Timeline spans 2000–2026, including a 2025 site relaunch and 2026 editions.
Greg Troxel reports receiving a GitHub email about Code Quality moving to GA on July 20, 2026, with pricing: $10 per active committer per month plus usage-based AI credits, Copilot code review, and Actions minutes. The message claims recipients are “GitHub Sponsors,” but Troxel isn’t sponsored and had left several orgs. He asks if QGIS uses Code Quality, whether others received it, and whether it’s mis-targeted or a potential surprise bill.
An oral history of ILM’s groundbreaking digital work on Terminator 2. A tiny CG team—spearheaded by Dennis Muren—invented and iterated new tools (Make Sticky, Body Sock, MORF, Chan Math) and shading methods (poly-alloy pewter look) to bring the T-1000’s liquid metal to life, while transitioning from practical effects to digital compositing. The piece covers tooling with Alias/Wavefront/RenderMan on SGI hardware, shot-by-shot breakthroughs (pseudopod, morph, healing wounds, head through bars, final melt), and the collaborative, DIY culture that defined early CG at ILM.
Researchers found that marine snail radula teeth (limpets) are the strongest known natural material. Made of goethite nanofibers embedded in a protein matrix, the teeth outperformed spider silk by about fivefold and rival high-quality carbon fibers, though not graphene. In tests, they withstood stresses that would turn carbon into diamond. Diamonds remain strongest overall, especially in man-made nano materials; two natural materials—wurtzite boron nitride and lonsdaleite—can exceed diamond's strength. The finding may inspire new, tough, flexible materials for engineering.
JEPA proposes training by predicting representations across related views rather than reconstructing pixels. An asymmetric setup uses a context encoder (student) and a target encoder (teacher) updated by EMA to prevent collapse; a predictor outputs target-block embeddings from context embeddings. I-JEPA specializes to images using ViT patches and a masking scheme to predict several target blocks from a larger context, trained with MSE in embedding space. Extensions: V-JEPA for video, V-JEPA 2 for prediction/planning; LeJEPA replaces heuristics with SIGReg isotropic-Gaussian regularization. JEPA frames energy-based world models and planning in latent space, guiding autonomous intelligence.
Tim Roughgarden's Ergo course traces computation from Turing's foundational ideas to modern questions about what problems can be solved quickly. It covers the halting problem, the power and limits of algorithms, and the quest for fast shortcuts, including Dijkstra and Karatsuba, and the stubborn Traveling Salesman Problem leading to NP-completeness. The centerpiece is P vs NP and its implications for cryptography, AI, and quantum computing. The course links algorithmic theory to computation's limits and requires no prior background; lectures are available on Ergo and YouTube.
Explores alternative time systems to the conventional 24/60/60 day. The standard and 24-hour clocks are described, with the latter disliked for AM/PM; the decimal clock splits the day into 10 hours, 100 minutes, 100 seconds (seconds ~86.4% of a real second) for easier math. A binary clock updates only on load and has coarse real-time progress; a hexadecimal clock uses 16 hours, 128 minutes, 128 seconds with 1–F labels; and a 36(0) degree clock uses 36 hours with 60/60 subdivisions. The author invites new ideas and notes the code is easy to extend.
QuadRF is a handheld phased‑array RF scanner built around a Raspberry Pi 5 and FPGA. It does beamforming, streams I/Q via Pi MIPI at >5 Gbps, and can visualize RF in 4.9–6 GHz. It can spot drones and detect WiFi through walls, with an AR visualizer and GNU Radio apps in a web UI. The project envisions chaining modules for high power EIRP up to 1.15 MW for Earth–Moon–Earth experiments, but remains a DIY/crowdfunded prototype; in testing it successfully tracked a DJI Mini Pro 4 behind a studio. Basic kit price ~$499; early UI is rough.
An analysis of RCA Victor's 1939 'Sound Service for Schools' ad in LIFE, which pitched a "School Sound System" and "Recorder" to modernize classrooms with educational radio programs, language practice, and recorded lectures. Placed in the broader RCA-Victor merger (1929–30) and Depression-era strategy to create new school revenue as consumer radio slumped. Draws on Victor's school-focused catalog showing music-oriented educational use, and connects to ERPI/Britannica Films as early classroom media, with reflections on parallels to today's online education.
Europe’s three largest unions, representing about 12.6 million workers in 40 countries, urge the European Commission to legislate heat protection at work. They propose maximum temperatures of 30C for high‑intensity outdoor/indoor work and 32.5C for low‑intensity tasks, with penalties for non‑compliance and a mandate to suspend work when thresholds are exceeded. Research estimates up to 130 million workers face heat stress annually, causing thousands of injuries and hundreds of deaths. The UK’s Trades Union Congress is pursuing similar maximum-temperature protections.
Benjamin Piouffle argues that blocking burner email domains at signup is counterproductive. He distinguishes public, short‑lived burners (e.g., mailinator, yopmail) from personal aliases (permanent forwarding addresses like Firefox Relay, Apple Hide My Email). Blocklists that lump them together harm privacy and post‑breach tracking; determined abusers can bypass blocks. Email verification does not prove a real user. Use blockers as one signal in a broader risk score, not a hard rejection, and split upstream lists accordingly. Burnex was deprecated and its ownership transferred.
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The author reconsiders flashcards, arguing that when used with spaced repetition (Anki) and built from solid understanding rather than rote memorization, they aid deep learning, especially in math. She emphasizes making your own cards, capturing intuition and problem-solving steps, linking to source materials, and integrating with note-taking. Flashcards are not a replacement for real study; they are a tool for retention and practice. She notes drawbacks of shared decks and LLM-generated cards, and keeps sessions light (1–30 minutes).
Unified memory pools RAM across CPU, iGPU, and NPU, letting a ~$2k mini PC with 128 GB run a 70B model that GPUs can't fit. Speed is limited by memory bandwidth, not compute: decoding tokens is bandwidth-bound; prompt processing is compute-bound; MoE models help by reading far less data. NPU offload offers little local-LLM gain. For interactive dense 70B, mini PCs are slow (single-digit tokens/s); MoE 30B on 64–128 GB boxes can reach tens of tokens/s; frontier-size models require Mac Studio M3 Ultra (up to 512 GB) or cloud/API. Choose the box to fit the model, not the TOPS.
Robin Berjon proposes running ActivityPub atop an AT Protocol Personal Data Server to bridge two open-web models. ATProto offers user-controlled, pluggable identity and credible exit, while ActivityPub’s URL‑driven federation enables broad interoperability. A practical bridge is plausible: actor documents can reference ATProto endpoints, and identities could resolve via DIDs and link back to ActivityPub data. Challenges exist (inbox method variants, endpoint alignment, handle/DID integration) but are solvable with small changes. The idea is a design provocation to reduce silos by combining the strengths of both standards.
Runloom is a Go-style stackful coroutine runtime for CPython 3.13t+ that enables free-threaded, multi-core execution by running many fibers across hub threads with an M:N scheduler, netpoll, and Go-like channels. It monkey-patches blocking stdlib calls so blocking operations yield to the scheduler, allowing 64 concurrent fetches to overlap on real cores. It exposes Python APIs (fiber, runloom.run) and an asyncio bridge, implemented as a C extension plus Python layers. Install via pip install runloom. Requires free-threaded CPython 3.13t (3.11+ frames); not a core-speedup, but higher multi-core throughput; empty fiber ~8.8 KB, ~3.3x Go memory.
Geohot laments that modern hacker/streamer culture has become spectacle and ego, with streams no longer truthful reflections of self but audience-pleasing predictions. He critiques AI-mediated marketing of identity, hollow profiles, and the internet’s uniformity that fosters isolation. The machine absorbs culture and repackages it as junk, eroding authentic self. He frames AI as the atomic bomb in a long information war, where revolutions fail to fix things and the future priorities inner reality over bullets—leading him to consider stepping away from streaming.
After 7 years using Haskell in Scarf's production, Avi Press explains Scarf reluctantly moved new API work to Python due to AI-driven development and high costs of Haskell's build/caching in parallel agent workflows. While Haskell delivered reliability and strong type safety, long compile times and ecosystem friction hinder rapid AI-enabled iteration, especially with multiple workstreams. Scarf kept Haskell in production but shifted off new features to Python, reimplementing auth, DB access, tests, etc. He urges the Haskell community to focus on AI-friendly improvements—build times, onboarding, docs, tooling, agent workflows—and fund more engineering work, to avoid stagnation.
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