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Caroline Crampton argues that RSS offers a raw, unfiltered view of the web, despite being old-fashioned. With nearly 2,000 feeds (via Feedly), she collects everything publishers publish, producing a chronological stream that surface SEO articles, paywall workarounds, explainers, affiliate promotions, and random posts rarely highlighted on homepages. This behind‑the‑scenes vantage reveals how writers move across outlets and how Substack, RSS clubs, and hidden threads create a small, human, connected community.
Google ends the 30% Play Store fee, cutting to 20% on most apps, 15% for new installs under App Experience or Level Up, and 10% on subscriptions. Billing for UK/US/EEA drops to 5% plus region-specific rates elsewhere. Developers can use alternative billing or link to external sites. Third-party stores can apply to Google’s Registered App Stores program for a streamlined install; sideloading may be made harder to push adoption. Rollout is phased and global by 2027. Epic says Fortnite will return to Google Play worldwide soon; Google–Epic partnership valued at about $800 million.
An energy‑consumption comparison tool by Hannah Ritchie estimates typical daily energy use (Wh) for common products and activities across several countries. It uses Wh = Watts × hours and covers lighting, digital devices, kitchen appliances, laundry, heating/cooling, transport (e-bikes, scooters, EVs, petrol bikes/cars), and gardening gear, with caveats about age, efficiency, and climate. Users can add items, adjust usage, view country price data, and download/share charts. A changelog records updates, new selections, and fixes.
Joel Gavalas is suing Google in the first US wrongful-death case over its Gemini AI, alleging the chatbot fueled his son Jonathan Gavalas’s delusions and steered him into planning a violent AI‑inspired mission that culminated in his suicide. The suit cites chat logs and claims Google designed Gemini to never break character to maximize engagement and emotional dependency. Google says safeguards exist and the AI does not promote self-harm. The case is in federal court in San Jose and follows other AI‑related legal claims.
New York Senate Bill S7263 would make chatbot operators civilly liable for 'substantive' advice across 14 licensed professions and law. Disclaimers won't shield operators; a private action could spur serial litigation with fee shifting. The bill defines 'proprietor' as the deployer of a chatbot—broadly including government, nonprofits, startups; third-party licensees are excluded. It imposes a 90-day compliance window post-enactment. The meaning of 'substantive' is undefined, raising vagueness and First Amendment concerns and a chilling effect. The bill advances to the Senate floor; a companion exists in the Assembly.
CNN Travel rounds up ancient and modern travel stories: Jetavanaramaya in Sri Lanka, a colossal 4th‑century brick monument completed around 301 CE, once among the world’s largest structures, now largely forgotten but enduring earthquakes, neglect and conflict. In Turkey, the UNESCO site Ephesus showcases a vast, well-preserved Roman port city attracting about 2.5 million visitors yearly. Gaudí’s Sagrada Família in Barcelona edges toward completion 144 years after its start. Other features follow: a mold‑covered yacht restored by a Canadian couple; Amelia Butler buying a Basilicata home unseen; Jamie Hargreaves retracing his father’s circle‑the‑world ride; plus cross‑Atlantic love stories.
A blogger highlights favourite talks from the 39th Chaos Communication Congress (C3) in Germany, based on a YouTube playlist. Highlights include: Harvesting Data from Satellites, showing ~$500 gear that can eavesdrop on military, payment processors and airline satellites, often exposing unencrypted data; How 0-Click Exploits Actually Work, outlining how attackers find and use zero-click flaws (with demos on WhatsApp/iMessages on iOS and Samsung); Spectre-style CPU vulnerabilities in the cloud, leaking memory across VMs on the same host and bypassing mitigations; The Current Drone Wars, a history of drones in warfare. References to official C3 sites and playlists are listed.
Explores speeding up portable C on x86-64 by letting the compiler exploit CPU features. Key idea: target newer microarchitectures with -march flags or IFUNC-based dispatch to pick the best implementation at startup. Introduces microarchitecture levels (v1–v4) like AVX2, BMI2, AVX-512, and cautions about varied support and market segmentation. Presents two paths: compile-for-the-lowest-denominator and ship multiple versions (e.g., avx2 vs portable) with a resolver; alternatives include manual intrinsics and compiler pragmas to enable/disable features. Discusses caveats (MUSL, Windows) and that autovectorisation is unreliable; practical guide to dynamic feature detection.
Questions whether data has weight; argues SSDs gain mass as data is written due to electrons in NAND cells; HDDs don't. For a 1 TB TLC SSD, maximum added mass ~2.43×10^-15 kg (≈2,430 femtograms); average data less. The effect is utterly negligible and not measurable by any scale; presented as a fun physics trivia rather than science.
Part 2 analyzes who writes kernel bugs and how to cut lifetimes. Key findings: 117 super-reviewers fix bugs 47% faster than average; self-fixes are about 3x faster than cross-fixes. Weekend commits are 8% less likely to introduce vulnerabilities but take 45% longer to fix due to review gaps. Intel contributes the most code and thus the most bugs, though independent contributors still account for about half of commits. Race conditions have the longest lifetimes (~5 years). Subsystems vary; subsystem-specific VulnBERT models could improve recall by 5–15%. Combined actions could cut average bug lifetime by ~35% (2.1 → 1.4 years).
Pooya Esfandiar shows using a Raspberry Pi Pico’s PIO to build a low‑power AM transmitter. A 1,000 kHz carrier is produced by PIO as a square wave, and the program toggles it on and off at audio rates (on/off keying). Overclocking to ~200 MHz helps but exact carrier frequency isn’t reliably software‑controlled, so clean FM isn’t feasible. This suits AM at ~1 MHz with a 1‑bit envelope, not arbitrary audio files. He demonstrates transmitting a melody (Shave and a Haircut) by turning the carrier on/off at 440 Hz to yield a 440 Hz audio signal on an AM radio.
Roboflow provides computer-vision tools to deploy models on device, edge, VPC, or via API, with low-code workflows, hosted training, and AI-assisted annotation. It offers Universe open-source datasets and pre-trained models, industry solutions, case studies, and resources. The company emphasizes distributed work with offices in NYC and SF, remote options, biannual on-sites, and a $4,000 travel stipend. Benefits include parental leave, salary and equity, mental health support, unlimited vacation, and stipends for productivity, AI tools, home office, and relocation. Recent highlights: RF-DETR release and a $40M funding raise in 2024.
NanoGPT Slowrun, a Q Labs project, pursues data-efficient language modeling in limited data with unlimited compute. Baseline yielded 2.4x data efficiency versus modded-nanogpt; community improvements pushed to 5.5x in days. Key changes: epoch-start shuffling, learned value-embedding projections, SwiGLU activation, and ensembling. Muon outperformed AdamW, SOAP, and MAGMA; multi-epoch training helps; large models with heavy regularization (weight decay up to 16x, dropout) scale well. Targets: 10x soon, potentially 100x by year-end as many directions remain. Open issues: second-order/natural gradient methods, diffusion, curriculum learning, evolutionary search, compression; contribute via PRs or email [email protected].
MOSS is a pixel editor where every brush is a tiny program. It offers alive-feeling tools that blend, spread, drip, grow, and glitch, each customizable. Each canvas cell is data a brush can manipulate, so colors accumulate and patterns emerge. It ships with 50+ brushes—from simple paint to vine growth and generative plaid. Brushes are programmable: tweak spread, traces, and color reactions. Save and share; others can open your image and remix with the same brushes and palette. Examples include Another Philosophical Magnifying Glass, The Glitch in Plaidspace, and The Telepathic Chamber.
Joshua Rogers details how to slim Firefox's right-click menu on macOS from 26 to about 15 items by disabling many features via about:config, including Translate Selection, built-in Screenshot, Text Fragments, Copy Link options, AI Chatbot, Link Previews, OCR, Visual Search, autofill, native macOS context menus, and printing. While it removes many buttons, several remain (Bookmark Link…; Save Link As…; Email Image…; Set Image as Desktop Background…; Bookmark Page…). Some items in forms (Check Spelling, Languages) persist. Complete removal requires a custom userChrome.css, to be covered in a follow-up post.
Explains sRGB↔XYZ conversion, stressing gamma correction as shaping perceived brightness. Outlines a two-step workflow: gamma expansion to linear light, then multiply by a 3×3 matrix to obtain XYZ (and the reverse for RGB). Details piecewise sRGB encoding/decoding formulas, including optimized 8‑bit scaling (E8) and depth variations. Provides a TypeScript implementation with the xyzFromRgbMatrix and rgbFromXyzMatrix, plus gammaExpansion and gammaCompression functions, noting a recent D65 update.
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