Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Safehemo is a pre-alpha, open-source demo to connect patients, clinics, and communities around home hemodialysis. It is not a medical device; in emergencies call 911. The platform includes a Patient Hub (live status and care-team invites), a Clinical Workspace (clinic roster and alerts), and Community Hubs (local resources). Instant Alerts notify critical events; Device Simulation provides a mock IoT server to test data; Health Tracking analyzes simulated vitals. Join in three steps: choose role, build your network, start the simulation. BUSL-licensed; educational/simulation use only.
Delve is accused of “Fake Compliance as a Service.” The article claims Delve promises AI-driven, rapid SOC 2/ISO 2701/HIPAA/GDPR compliance but fabricates evidence, writes auditor conclusions, and relies on Indian certification mills posing as US firms to rubber-stamp reports. Trust pages and policies exaggerate controls never implemented; integrations are mostly forms requiring manual screenshots; audits across hundreds of clients reuse the same templates and conclusions. A December 2025 leak of hundreds of draft reports exposed the fraud, which Delve partly denied. The piece also reveals Pathways is SimStudio, and that Delve’s platform is a point-in-time tool with regulatory risk.
BYD’s shift to EVs is paying off as rising oil prices boost demand. BYD, which stopped ICE-only production in 2022, is now the world’s largest EV maker, selling over 4.6 million EVs in 2025 and ranking sixth in global sales. In Manila, a dealer booked a month of orders in two weeks; VinFast showrooms also saw traffic surge. A Ember analysis says EV adoption last year avoided about 1.7 million bpd of oil consumption. Across Asia and beyond, high fuel prices, subsidies, and incentives—plus China’s 18-month free charging—are lifting interest in EVs, with US demand rising too.
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Could not summarize article.
Crypto industry super PACs dumped $14.2M into Illinois primaries, but 90% was wasted on opposing Democrats who won. They spent $10M opposing Sen. Juliana Stratton and $2.5M against H-07 La Shawn Ford, yet both won. Their only clear wins were backing races already leaning: opposing Robert Peters (H-02), who finished with 12%, and supporting Bean (H-08) and incumbent Budzinski (H-13). The outlay used under 6% of their funds, signaling a long eight-month cycle.
Gov. Tina Kotek visited Estacada High to see how her statewide cell-phone ban for Oregon K-12 schools is working. Teachers and students praised it for calmer classrooms and better discussion, though issues remain—scheduling, monitoring, and filters. Students debated bell-to-bell versus allowing phones during passing periods and lunch. Estacada, which has raised graduation rates, now stores phones in backpacks to keep them available for emergencies, and communicates directly with parents. The governor called the early results promising and said districts are implementing the policy across the state.
Richard Jelinek argues for AI to write Perl (pperl / PetaPerl) after decades of AI-with-Perl work. The talk weaves a real-world Perl‑driven smart‑home stack: off‑grid PV builds, CAN/Modbus/DALI hubs, STM32 nodes, RasPi hubs, and Mojo/Mojolicious orchestration; all protocol handlers in Perl. It then introduces pperl, a Rust‑based Perl 5 interpreter with autoparallelization via Rayon, Cranelift JIT, Auto‑FFI, and a bytecode cache, aiming for maximal Perl 5 compatibility with strong speedups. Includes AI-assisted tools (GRPC/FFI, MIB compiler), CPAN challenges, and two production Villa deployments as proof.
Could not summarize article.
Germany has mandated the Open Document Format (ODF) for public administration under the new sovereign-digital framework, the Deutschland-Stack. ODF and PDF/UA are required; proprietary formats are excluded. The move promotes open standards, vendor neutrality, local data storage, and open‑source development to reduce vendor lock‑in. Endorsed by The Document Foundation, it aligns with EU interoperability goals and will guide procurement, software choice, and document workflows across federal and state governments through 2028.
Ploum argues that decentralized social networks already exist in blogs, email, and simple web protocols; Offpunk 3.0 builds social features on these tools. The Share feature opens an email composer with the page title and URL; Reply auto-detects mailto/contact links and can save addresses for a page or space; you can even reply from a terminal using neomutt/neovim. In two months, he used it to react to about 40 spaces, turning Offpunk into a privacy-conscious address book for bloggers. The message: social life lives in how we use infrastructure, not in flashy platforms.
VisiCalc shaped spreadsheets; this article presents building a minimal VisiCalc clone in C. It defines a grid of cells (EMPTY, NUM, LABEL, FORMULA) with 26x50 size, where formulas typically start with + and reference other cells. A recursive-descent parser handles numbers, cell refs, and limited functions (@SUM, @ABS, @INT, @SQRT). Recalculation loops re-evaluate the sheet (no dependency graph) until stable. A simple ncurses UI mirrors VisiCalc’s panes: status bar, edit line, column headers, and a scrolling grid. The project, ~500 lines, includes tests and links to Kalk and GitHub.
Alex McLean documents exploring 8‑shaft weaving on a second‑hand table loom after visits to Wearable Senses in Eindhoven. He learns warping, thread crossings, and tension, notes differences between table and floor looms and tie‑ups, and experiments with direct threading versus point threading, observing pattern symmetry and repeats. He threads chevrons and a waffle, then returns to Eindhoven to prototype a shaft‑loom simulator for the TC/2, enabling multi‑user live weaving via MQTT and live warp control. Back home, he pursues crackle weave with AdaCAD, refining the draft and aiming to openly archive Griswold’s crackle drafts.
HP rescinded its 15-minute mandatory hold on phone support in the UK, France, Germany, Ireland, and Italy after feedback. The policy had nudged callers toward digital self-help with messages about delays. HP says it will prioritize timely access to live agents, acknowledging live support is important. Some HP staff reportedly opposed the measure. HP has previously marketed 24/7 support features, including a Dragonfly Pro “support button.”
Jonathan Vogel's Java performance post shows real-world anti-pattern fixes that dramatically speed up a Java app. In a load test, the app went from 1,198ms latency and 85k orders/s with ~1GB heap to 239ms and 419k orders/s with 139MB heap and 4 GC pauses. Eight patterns to fix: 1) string concatenation in loops; 2) O(n^2) streams inside loops; 3) String.format in hot paths; 4) autoboxing; 5) exceptions for control flow; 6) too-broad synchronization; 7) recreating reusable objects; 8) virtual thread pinning (JDK 21–23). After: higher throughput, less heap, fewer GC pauses; Part 2 shows the flame graph; Part 3 automates optimization.
Chuck Norris, martial arts icon and star of Walker, Texas Ranger, died at 86. He was hospitalized in Hawaii and died peacefully with his family at his side. A celebrated martial artist with a long-film career—The Way of the Dragon, Missing in Action, The Delta Force, Code of Silence, Lone Wolf McQuade—and the CBS series Walker, Texas Ranger (1993–2001). He held multiple black belts across disciplines and trained through Chun Kuk Do. Survived by wife Gena O’Kelley and children, Norris left a lasting legacy in action cinema and American pop culture.
Northwestern researchers identified a novel schizophrenia biomarker in cerebrospinal fluid—a circulating form of Cacna2d1—that’s reduced in patients and linked to overactive brain circuits. They engineered a synthetic protein, SEAD1, and in a mouse model corrected circuit activity and related cognitive/behavioral deficits after a single brain injection, with no obvious side effects. The team envisions SEAD1 as a biomarker-guided peptide therapy for cognitive symptoms, pursuing blood-based tests and clinical trials, starting with 16p11.2 duplication syndrome.
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