Front-page articles summarized hourly.
The text portrays the subway as a living jazz ensemble: each real train is a note, and about eight hundred trains have been playing without pause for over a century. On the platforms they are loud and impatient; the music lies inside the noise, with harmony evolving like a slow chorus. A note falls where the train is along its route; rush hour brings held tones, 3 a.m. lengthens silences. The piece is unique to your location—share your whereabouts and nearby trains intensify, reorganizing the city into a personal sonic portrait.
Floyd's Sampling Algorithm describes how to sample k elements from {1,...,n} and provides a Python-like implementation. It maintains a set s and, for i from n−k+1 to n, selects t uniformly from [1..i] and adds either i or t to s, yielding a k-element subset of {1..n}. Two intuitions: (A) each (k-subset of [1..n], plus a random i) maps to a unique (k+1)-subset of [1..n+1], proving uniformity; (B) it mirrors Fisher–Yates: the last k elements of a shuffled array form a uniform k-sample, Floyd's steps being the last k swaps. The post notes its intriguing, nontrivial intuition.
You can build a SaaS in 2026 entirely on European services, with viable options for every core layer. Hosting: Hetzner or Scaleway; payments: Mollie; CDN: Bunny.net; analytics: Plausible or Simple Analytics; transactional email: Ahasend, Lettermint, or MailerLite. The EU stack is cost-competitive with AWS/Stripe and offers simpler GDPR compliance and fewer cookie issues, plus lower vendor lock-in due to open standards. Some AWS-native services have no exact EU counterparts, but most SaaS needs are covered, and the stack scales to millions of users.
GPS works by turning time into distance: a satellite signal travels at light speed, and the receiver measures travel time to compute distance. Each satellite defines a sphere; with three satellites you get a ring; a fourth fixes receiver clock bias, yielding a unique position (trilateration). Relativity corrections (special and general) are baked in to keep satellite clocks in sync with ground receivers. Modern receivers use 8–12 satellites, cross-constellations (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou) to reduce GDOP. Multipath in cities degrades accuracy; engineers apply filtering. Overall, a few meters of precision result from precise timing and advanced math.
The piece documents a repeatable methodology for extracting struct offsets from stripped XNU kernelcaches to enable kernel read/write exploitation without a debugger. It builds on a kernel primitive and uses cross-referencing with XNU source, anchor points in global data, and analysis of accessor/iterator/constructor functions to map struct layouts. It covers phases 3–8: using accessors, constructors, syscalls, zone validation, and pointer-chain traversal; addresses ARM64, KASLR, and read-only zones. Includes practical tips on hash tables, size hints, and instruction-based offset extraction. Validated on iOS 16.7.12 with Binary Ninja.
Could not summarize article.
The article tours Helsinki's Oodi, an innovative future-oriented library beside the central station. It highlights a multifunctional space: basement with chess boards and a cinema; second floor hosts digital workstations, recording studios, instrument rental, many meeting rooms, a kitchen, game rooms with consoles/VR, and a makerspace with 3D printers, laser cutters, and staff to help. The third floor houses extensive book collections, comfortable study areas, a daylight-filled reading space, an integrated cafe, a dedicated children’s area with ramps and toys, stroller parking, and plenty of power outlets. Robots move books in the basement; virtual tours are available.
Release of Native Raspberry Pi 3B version of Oberon System 3. The latest tag provides a runnable oberon-rpi3.img image to flash to SD cards (dd on Linux; Windows/macOS via Raspberry Pi Imager or Etcher) and a prebuilt toolchain. It also runs on Raspi 2B/Zero 2, with the Pi 3B slated to stay in production through 2028 and Zero 2 through 2030. Previous MVP ARMv7 (QEMU raspi2b) and MVP i386 ports exist; the complete ARM build from source is fast using the author's C99 toolchain.
Relics of the Heroic Age of Manned Space Flight explains that unused Saturn/Apollo hardware was distributed to museums nationwide as relics of the era. Cited by W. David Compton in a footnote to Where No Man Has Gone Before: A History of Apollo Lunar Exploration. The site lists sections: Missions, News, Contact, Space Race, WWII, Missiles, Cold War, Museums, Artifact List, Resources, About.
An HTTP 405 Not Allowed error is reported, repeated, with an error code 54113 and details referencing a Varnish cache server (cache-bur-kbur8200090-BUR).
John Loeber argues for idiomatic design—homogeneous interfaces built from common design idioms. In the desktop era (Windows 95–XP), apps shared patterns: File menu, underlined shortcuts, clear labels, and limited iconography. Web apps today are heterogeneous: different date pickers, shortcuts, and UI metaphors, breaking flow. Causes include mobile/touch shifts, modular frontend tooling spreading varied patterns, and weak universal idioms beyond HTML. Apple and Substack show how idiomatic design can work. Advice: follow HTML/CSS and browser idioms, keep internal consistency if you deviate, favor text over icons, learn from sites and books. Dream of universal patterns like date pickers and CTRL-click.
An opinion piece arguing that AI currently sucks at frontend work. It says AI is trained on outdated, generic UI patterns and cannot see the why behind design decisions or control the runtime environment, making it unreliable for complex tasks. While it can generate boilerplate, scaffolding, or simple features, it struggles with bespoke interactions, precise layout and spacing, accessibility, performance, and maintaining context as UIs evolve. The article emphasizes context loss, moving targets (browsers/devices), and the need for 'context engineering.' Overall, AI helps with low‑level drafting but cannot replace frontend craft for complex apps.
Font Awesome explains Gmail deliverability woes: a 99% SendGrid reputation isn’t enough because Gmail uses its own scoring and often flags emails as spam. Gmail punishes both too-frequent and too-infrequent sends, creating a catch-22 that keeps them from reaching many Gmail users. They’re trimming old addresses, slowing sends, and tightening practices while aiming to fix the issue. They urge readers to spread word about Build Awesome Kickstarter, watch the video, and, if missed emails occurred, mark [email protected] as Not Spam.
Pro Max 5x quota exhausted in 1.5 hours on Claude Code (Opus) via WSL2 with moderate usage. Root cause: cache_read tokens appear to count at full rate against quotas, negating cache benefits; with a 1M context window, calls can cost hundreds of thousands of tokens. Background sessions and auto-compact spikes further drain quota. Observed: Window1 heavy development used most quota; Window2 1.5h of moderate use exhausted quota (≈105.7M tokens vs 13.1M effective). Recommendations: count cache_read at 1/10 rate, bill by effective tokens, idle-session handling, real-time quota breakdown, and context-aware estimates.
curl-doom is a Node.js server that streams DOOM frames to the terminal via HTTP using curl. It runs a headless doombinary per session and renders frames as ANSI blocks, downsampling a 640x400 feed to the terminal. Two modes: a one-liner curl | bash (no install) and a pure curl mode with raw input. Requires Node.js 18+, a C compiler, and doom1.wad. HTTP API: /new, /tick, /play, /quit, /health. Configs: cols, rows, fps. Controls: W/A/S/D, etc.
NetBlocks notes that exactly six weeks have passed since Saturday 28 February, while Mastodon tells users to enable JavaScript to use the web app or to use native apps.
Noting that Rust relies on volunteers and the Rust Foundation has limited resources, the author argues supply-chain security isn’t 'Rust’s' job to fix. You, the user, must audit dependencies. Typo-squatting remains hard to prevent; longer crate IDs and direct URLs aren't foolproof. Sandboxing Rust is insufficient; build.rs and macros can access the host, and cargo alone can’t ensure safety. Attempts to perfectly align crates.io with VCS histories are fraught. In short, responsibility lies with users who should leverage lockfiles, cargo vet, and practical sandboxing/inspection tools.
Stewart Brand, co‑founder of the Whole Earth Catalog, argues in Maintenance: Of Everything that maintenance is a driver of progress, not a chore. In a Book Currents excerpt, he highlights three influences: The Perfectionists by Simon Winchester, linking interchangeable parts—from cannon casting to Watt, to Ford and nanometres—to show how precision fuels invention; The Scottish Enlightenment by Arthur Herman, contrasting Diderot’s Encyclopédie with Scotland’s rise as Europe’s first modern literate society and Britannica; and The Beginning of Infinity by David Deutsch, an optimistic case that good explanations enable ongoing problem-solving and progress.
An opinionated survey of humanity's most influential intellectual achievements, arguing that such a list is subjective and incomplete but useful for sparking discussion. The author catalogs a chronological set of foundational advances—from Thales and Pythagoras to Shannon, Freud, Einstein, Gödel, Turing, Coase, and modern AI—across mathematics, philosophy, science, medicine, economics, and social thought, and invites additions and near-future candidates like CRISPR, quantum computing, and predictive processing, with reader comments offering further milestones (internet, human rights, etc.).
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