Front-page articles summarized hourly.
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Quantization explains how LLMs stay huge and how precision matters. Weights and layers drive size; floating formats (float32/16, bf16, float8/4) trade range for precision. Quantization compresses values to smaller ranges with round-to-nearest, enabling 16-bit-to-4-bit reductions with modest accuracy loss. Symmetric quantization can waste space; asymmetric uses a zero-point to fit data better, reducing error. Block-wise quantization tames outliers, which are few but influential. Metrics like perplexity and KL divergence, plus GPQA benchmarks, show 8- and 4-bit can preserve most quality while boosting speed. Formats: Q8_0, Q4_1, Q4_0, Q2_K. Conclusion: quantized local models are viable; measure trade-offs and formats.
Los Angeles jurors found Meta and Google liable for a young woman’s childhood addiction to social media, ruling Meta 70% responsible and YouTube 30% for harming her mental health. The five‑week trial focused on Instagram; Kaley, now 20, alleged addiction harmed her. Snap and TikTok settled with Kaley before trial. Meta contests the verdict; Google notes shared responsibility. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg testified about policies banning under‑13s and internal data showing under‑13 use, saying progress has been made. The verdict could influence hundreds of similar lawsuits.
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WSJ 404 error page: the page can’t be found. It shows a support email and links to popular articles (They’re Rich but Not Famous—and They’re Suddenly Everywhere; As China Encroaches, Even New Zealand Is Getting Serious About Its Military) and latest podcasts (Iran Dismisses U.S. Peace Plan; Trump to Name Zuckerberg, Ellison and Huang to Tech Panel; U.S. Sends Iran Plan to End War).
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Ubuntu's Foundations team proposes streamlining secure boot for 26.10 by removing several signed-GRUB features to boost security: drop non-ext4 filesystems (btrfs, hfsplus, xfs, zfs) while retaining ext4, fat, iso9660 (and squashfs for snaps); remove image formats (jpeg, png); drop certain partition-table types (remove part_apple; retain part_gpt and part_msod); drop most LVM and md-raid support (raid1 allowed); keep LUKS encryption. Systems must boot with /boot on a raw ext4 partition (GPT/MBR); encrypted /boot not allowed; ZFS/XFS/BTRFS require ext4 /boot. Upgrades from 26.04 will be disabled; debates continue (Btrfs, RAID1, systemd-boot).
Hubble released a new image of the Crab Nebula, the remnant of the 1054 A.D. supernova. A comparison with a photo from about 25 years earlier shows the outer filaments have moved more than the inner gas and are expanding away from the center, driven by the central pulsar’s magnetic field. The outer filaments are moving at roughly 3.4 million miles per hour. The image shows the Crab Nebula is still evolving, nearly a millennium after the explosion.
Remains believed to be d'Artagnan found under the floor of St Peter and Paul Church in Maastricht, 350+ years after his death. Deacon Jos Valke helped uncover a skeleton beneath the altar; archaeologist Wim Dijkman is 99% certain the bones are Charles de Batz de Castelmore, Count d'Artagnan, Louis XIV’s right-hand man, killed in the 1673 Siege of Maastricht. A bullet and a 1660 coin were found; DNA testing in Germany and age/sex checks in Deventer are ongoing; confirmation awaits.
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Drew DeVault writes a personal eulogy for Vim, describing its integral role in his writing and life and Bram Moolenaar’s influence. He voices concerns about generative AI’s environmental, social, and political harms. In response to his feelings, he forks Vim into Vim Classic, based on Vim 8.2.0148 to preserve legacy features and plugins while avoiding Vim9-era changes. He invites patch contributions, plans slow, focused maintenance, and backports, aiming for compatibility and community collaboration.
The piece argues that autonomous coding agents have made software brittle and bloated. They encourage rapid, unchecked code generation, leading to unreviewed boilerplate, runaway complexity, and poor recall when searching large codebases. To avoid this, use agents only for narrowly scoped tasks with clear evaluation gates, and keep core architecture and critical design manual. Set limits on daily code output, maintain human oversight, and practice friction and pair programming. Slowing down, saying no, and staying hands-on improves maintainability and user satisfaction.
ICE/CBP agencies may inspect travelers’ devices at airports, so boost digital security. Don’t bring your usual devices—mail them or use cheap throwaway devices with a separate travel account; delete sensitive apps and accounts you won’t need; log out between trips. Disable biometrics and use a random eight-character alphanumeric passcode; power devices off at security; print boarding passes instead of relying on digital wallets. If asked to unlock, refuse, though this may cause delays or seizure (you can request CBP Form 6051D). Defense in depth: minimize data, encrypt files (Cryptomator), upload to cloud, then delete locally; re-access on arrival.
Physicists at CERN transported 92 antiprotons in a specially designed magnetic bottle around the lab on the back of a truck—a 30-minute, 8-km journey at up to 42 km/h. This first-ever move of antimatter away from production aims to study antiprotons in a quieter environment than the production site. The transport required cryogenics, superconducting magnets, and high vacuum to prevent annihilation, marking a major technological milestone for antimatter research.
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Open source won’t survive on charity; despite huge value, major tech firms donated only about $12.5m to OS foundations, a drop beside their $7.7T market cap. Most maintainers are unpaid or underpaid, with 60% unpaid and many quitting; only ~26% earn over $1k/year. Registries like Maven Central, PyPI and npm handle trillions of downloads, mostly for a few large users, yet receive little funding. OSSRA shows widespread under-maintained components. Initiatives like HeroDevs exist, but a formal mechanism is needed to pay top programmers as a cost of doing business.
A long-time Apple user says Apple has lost him. He will migrate personal computing to Linux and Android, keeping a Mac only for work. Three issues pushed him over the edge: Gatekeeper/notarization friction for desktop apps; macOS 26 “Liquid glass” design is visually broken and inconsistent; problematic age verification via credit cards that blocks features despite decades of account history. He plans to replace hardware with a MNT Pocket Reform, possibly a Fairphone Gen 6, and build a Linux-based homelab for backups and shared storage, reclaiming control over his computing.
Swift-claude-code is a Swift reimplementation of a Claude Code-style coding agent, built stage by stage to test which design choices matter. It emphasizes a small number of high-quality tools (search and file edit) and relying on the LLM rather than heavy orchestration. The project uses a simple agent loop that talks to Anthropics API with a tool system; phases include core loop (bootstrap, agent loop, tool dispatch, todo) and product mechanics (subagents, skill loading, context compaction, task system, background tasks). Tech: Swift 6.2, AsyncHTTPClient, SPM, MIT license. Getting started: clone, set API key, swift build/run claude.
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