Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Edward Zitron argues the AI industry misleads about data-center buildouts and AI compute demand. Announced capacity (up to 241 GW) vastly exceeds active construction (roughly 5–7 GW under construction globally) and actual online IT load around 3 GW in 2025, implying a massive lag between GPU sales (NVIDIA) and deployment. Power constraints, transmission bottlenecks, and protracted permitting slow progress; many projects may never materialize, raising questions about ROI and debt. The piece also critiques AI coding tools and ‘token burn’ culture, and highlights governance and security concerns around GPUs flowing to China.
ProofShot is an open-source CLI that gives AI coding agents eyes by recording browser sessions to verify UI changes, producing a video proof, screenshots, and error logs for human review. It supports Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, Gemini, Windsurf, Copilot, or any shell-driven agent. Workflow: start, test, stop. Artifacts include session video, interactive viewer, markdown report, and logs, with an option to post results to a GitHub PR as an inline comment. Install via npm; includes sample apps; MIT licensed.
A blog compares data-manipulation workflows across Clojure (Tablecloth), R (tidyverse/dplyr), Pandas, and Polars using the Palmer Penguin dataset. It covers reading data and missing values, basic exploration, filtering, selecting, and sorting; selecting columns by pattern; selecting numeric columns; reshaping with pivot/unpivot; adding and renaming columns; and grouping/aggregating. It emphasizes Clojure's immutability and thread-first macro, differences in handling missing values and type system, and how tablecloth favors functional composition. The piece serves as a translation guide across ecosystems and notes versions.
Arm unveils the Arm AGI CPU, a production-ready silicon on the Neoverse platform designed for rack-scale agentic AI. It targets sustained, high-per-task performance across thousands of cores within data-center power/cooling. Configs include a 1U 2-node blade with 272 cores per blade (8160 cores per 30-blade rack) and a 200 kW, 336-CPU Supermicro system for 45k+ cores. Arm claims >2x performance per rack vs contemporary x86 at scale, enabled by Neoverse V3 cores and high memory bandwidth. Partners include Meta (lead), Cerebras, Cloudflare, OpenAI, SAP, SK Telecom, Positron, Rebellions; orders via ASRockRack, Lenovo, Supermicro. OCP reference server coming.
ARM AGI CPU, announced March 24, 2026, is ARM’s first production silicon for AI infrastructure. It scales to up to 136 Neoverse V3 cores, Armv9.2 with bf16/INT8 AI, and up to 3.7 GHz. The design is dual-chiplet, with 96 PCIe Gen6 lanes, CXL 3.0 Type 3, a 3 nm process, up to 420 W TDP, and up to 6 TB DDR5-8800 memory across 12 channels. SKUs: SP113012 (136-core), SP113012S (128-core), SP113012A (64-core, max bandwidth per core). Server configs include 10U two-node blades (272 cores per blade) and a 200 kW design with 336 CPUs for over 45k cores.
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Markdown-based email template for confirming a user's email address. It presents a confirmation code (DFY-X7U) to enter in the browser to sign in. If you didn’t request the email, you can ignore it. The template includes a header with a logo and a footer with Acme Inc., an address, and an unsubscribe link.
Apple unveils Apple Business, an all‑in‑one platform that combines built‑in MDM, business email/calendar with custom domains, and tools to reach local customers. Available April 14 in 200+ countries, it offers zero‑touch deployment via Blueprints, automated Managed Apple Accounts, app distribution, and a new companion app. It adds fully integrated productivity tools and Ads on Maps (US/Canada from summer) to boost reach, plus brand/location management across Maps, Wallet, and Mail. Apple Business replaces Apple Business Essentials, Manager, and Connect, with automatic data migration. Companion app requires iOS 26/macOS 26.
It's a Cloudflare block page for acm.org, saying access is blocked by a security service; cookies must be enabled, and the block may be triggered by certain input. To resolve, email the site owner with details of what you did and include the Cloudflare Ray ID and your IP.
WolfGuard is wolfSSL's FIPS-compliant refactor of the Linux kernel WireGuard, consisting of the wolfguard.ko kernel module and the wg-fips user tool. Built from the same wolfSSL sources, it can coexist with WireGuard but does not interoperate with it. It remaps WireGuard cryptography to FIPS-approved algorithms (Curve25519→SECP256R1, XChaCha20-Poly1305→AES-256-GCM) and supports optional public-key compression. There are non-FIPS and FIPS-certified build paths; installation replaces WireGuard binaries and uses /etc/wolfguard for configuration, with performance options including potential acceleration.
Hypura is a storage-tier-aware LLM inference scheduler for Apple Silicon that lets models larger than RAM run by placing tensors across GPU, RAM, and NVMe based on access patterns and bandwidth. It supports three modes: Full-resident (GPU), Expert-streaming (MoE, only non-expert tensors on GPU, 2/8 experts per token), and Dense FFN-streaming (FFN+NVMe streaming). It profiles hardware and auto-allocates: GPU for attention/norms/embeddings, RAM for overflow via mmap, NVMe for remaining layers via on-demand I/O with prefetch. It reads GGUF, provides CLI and Ollama API. Install via cargo; Rust 1.75+ and CMake.
SentrySearch is a Python tool that enables semantic search over dashcam video by embedding video chunks with Google's Gemini Embedding 2 into a local ChromaDB. A text query is embedded into the same vector space and matched; the top result is trimmed from the source and saved as a clip. Features: chunking, overlap, optional preprocessing, still-frame skipping, and cost controls. Requires Python 3.10+, ffmpeg, and a Gemini API key. Commands: init, index, search. Works with mp4s recursively.
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Antonin demonstrates using Swift with Raylib’s C API without FFI: drop raylib.h and libraylib.a, expose via a module CRaylib, and write a SwiftPM project that initializes a window and draws text. The Clang importer handles C headers, enabling a simple Clang-target in Package.swift for macOS and WASM. For WASM he builds with a Swift WASM SDK, adds a tiny WASI stub, and uses emcc to produce index.html/js/wasm with ASYNCIFY. Conclusion: Swift can wrap C libraries easily.
NASA safety reports show pilots repeatedly warned about LaGuardia’s fast-moving operations and limited controller guidance, including a 300‑ft final approach clearance on a crossing runway and a runway-lighting outage. Dozens of anonymous complaints describe near-misses and unsafe conditions at LGA as investigators probe a collision between an Air Canada Express jet and a Port Authority fire truck that killed two pilots and injured 41. The NTSB is reviewing cockpit and flight-data recorders; the runway may be closed for days. The case highlights broader concerns about stressed staffing and aging airport infrastructure.
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Antithesis launches Hegel, a family of property-based testing libraries intended to bring Hypothesis-quality testing to multiple languages via a thin Hegel protocol and a Python-based driver. Hegel for Rust is live; Go, C++, OCaml, TypeScript ports planned soon. Hegel runs Hypothesis to generate data, with strong shrinking, a test database, and rich generators; it helps catch hard-to-find bugs by exploring data spaces and validating model-based tests. It enhances AI-driven development and will be integrated with Antithesis to improve bug finding in distributed systems; future plans include dropping Python, a Rust Hegel server, better concurrency support, and Bombadil integration.
WSJ 404 page: The page can’t be found. Check the URL and email [email protected] if you reached it via the site/search. Popular articles include: “The Hack That Turns Trump Accounts Into Multimillion-Dollar Tax-Free Nest Eggs”; “The Back-Channel Diplomacy Behind Trump’s U-Turn on Iran”; “OnlyFans Owner Leo Radvinsky Dies at 43.” Latest podcasts: “TNB Tech Minute: Tesla Sales Rebound in Europe”; “Are Higher Oil Prices the New Normal?”; “Senate Nears DHS Funding Deal to End Airport Queues.”
Biologists off Japan discovered a hydrozoan jellyfish, Clytia sp. IZ-D, that keeps time with a 20-hour clock and a sunrise countdown for spawning, despite lacking the conserved circadian clock genes. Through experiments with a close relative, Clytia hemisphaerica, researchers show the jellyfish likely uses a hormone-based timing system triggered by light via photoreceptive opsins, with temperature affecting the period. The finding suggests circadian-timekeeping mechanisms beyond the classic CLOCK genes and may reveal broader diversity of biological clocks.
David Noel Ng extends Part 1 by testing whether Repeat Your Self (RYS) relayering generalizes to newer Transformers like Qwen3.5-27B. Using heatmaps and layer-wise probes, he confirms a three-phase architecture (encoding, reasoning, decoding) and shows mid-stack blocks are the primary locus of beneficial duplication. A contiguous block around layers 26–35 yields the best Pareto frontier, offering meaningful gains with modest overhead; sparse single-layer repeats are also useful, especially for math. Beam search and a surrogate model indicate multi-block compositions aren’t strictly additive and overhead grows. RYS variants and code are on HuggingFace and GitHub.
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