Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Democrats face a growing rift over corporate power. Voters are angry about high costs and oligarchic influence. A progressive wing is breaking with the oligarchs, opposing deals like Netflix-Warner and challenging antitrust limits; Senators Warren, Murphy, Sanders, Khanna, Steyer have voiced concerns. Yet party elites—Jeffries, Newsom, Harris—remain entwined with corporate donors and prefer 'private-public' partnerships, focusing on inflation and 'strong floor, no ceiling'. This anti-politics culture and neoliberal history explain the distance between voters and leaders; the 2026–28 elections will decide whether populist pro-democracy reforms prevail.
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Former CIA counterterrorism chief John Kiriakou discusses Vault 7 and warns CIA tools can intercept almost any device—phones, smart TVs, and even cars—and covertly transmit audio, even when TVs are off. The piece contrasts the agency’s official mandate with covert actions, notes oversight challenges, and reflects Kiriakou’s insider perspective from his CIA career and whistleblower stance.
US Tech Force is a White House–backed, two-year program to recruit about 1,000 engineers to build next-generation government tech. Participants work in cross-agency teams on real missions (e.g., Treasury, DoD), receive training, and collaborate with private-sector partners. Upon completion, they can pursue full-time roles with partnering companies, blending civil service with private-sector tech. The initiative aims to accelerate AI adoption and tackle federal tech challenges by attracting early-career technologists and experienced managers, and will function as a centralized recruitment platform for post-employment opportunities.
Hong Kong pro-democracy media tycoon Jimmy Lai, 78, was convicted of colluding with foreign forces under the national security law and of publishing seditious material via Apple Daily. He had pleaded not guilty and has been jailed since December 2020; he faces a life sentence with sentencing expected early next year. The verdict, seen as a test of Hong Kong’s judicial independence, drew praise from Beijing and criticism from rights groups and Western governments, who say the NSL stifles dissent. Lai attended the verdict, appearing calm.
This text describes a Google/YouTube access block triggered by detected unusual traffic from the user’s IP. It asks the user to solve a CAPTCHA to prove they're human, warning that automated requests or malware may be the cause. It notes that shared networks or rapid requests can trigger the block, and provides the IP and time.
Samsung could halt budget SATA SSD production, with an announcement expected January 2026, shrinking cheap SSD options by mid-2026 and potentially raising prices as Samsung focuses on NVMe, HBM4, and GDDR7 RAM. MLID and a retail leak corroborate reduced SATA availability, while SK Hynix warns RAM supply will stay tight through 2028. Existing contracts may delay full disappearance, but budget SSDs could become scarce and pricier in 2026–2027, impacting laptops and budget PC builds.
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PlanetScale Metal for Postgres is now available in smaller sizes and at lower prices, with the entry M-10 at $50/month. The floor drops from 16GiB RAM to 1GiB, with storage options from 10GB to 1.2TB on fast NVMe drives. CPU/RAM can be decoupled from storage, enabling up to ~300GB storage per GiB RAM and flexible sizing—scale storage without more CPU/RAM or add CPU/RAM with minimal storage. Available in AWS regions on Intel/ARM; GCP coming; Vitess later.
A 2026 Missing Semester lecture schedule (Jan 12–23) covering: Course Overview + Introduction to the Shell; Command-line Environment; Development Environment & Tools; Debugging & Profiling; Version Control (Git); Packaging & Shipping Code; Code Quality & Continuous Integration; Beyond the Code; plus a Q&A.
Jurafsky & Martin released the Aug 24, 2025 draft of Speech and Language Processing 3rd edition. Major changes: alignment with DPO post-training; new ASR (Whisper) and TTS (EnCodec, VALL-E) in Chapters 15–16; restructuring: Naive Bayes to Appendix; Logistic Regression for classification; PPMI to Appendix and tf-idf kept in Chapter 11; LLMs introduced in Chapter 7 with Transformer focus; RNN/LSTM moved to Chapter 13 (order optional). Chapter 2 reworked on tokens/unicode. Dialog/chatbot content folded into other chapters; ethics and human conversation covered in the LLM chapter and Chapter 25. Appendix J framing. Drafts and citation info provided; feedback welcome.
Paraquat, a highly toxic weed killer still legal in the U.S., is at the center of thousands of lawsuits claiming exposure causes Parkinson’s disease. Farmers like Michigan peach grower Paul Friday link decades of spraying to their illness, while Syngenta and Chevron deny causation, noting no peer-reviewed proof. The EPA reapproved paraquat in 2021 with stricter safety rules; risk assessment ongoing. More than 6,400 lawsuits are in Illinois MDL, about 1,300 in Pennsylvania, and 450 in California, with some settlements and others headed to trial. Growing political pressure and possible bans remain on the table.
A blogger minted a TLS cert and notes OpenAI seems to scrape Certificate Transparency (CT) logs, evidenced by an OAI-SearchBot hitting robots.txt. In responses, peers discuss CT logs as a way to seed search engines, potential privacy ideas (hash(domain, nonce) in CT, zero-knowledge proofs), and CT’s role in letting observers verify CA policies. They debate domain visibility versus wildcard certs, DNSSEC/NSEC3, and whether CT logs enable domain enumeration. The gist: CT activity reveals which systems pick up new CT entries the fastest.
An analysis of Top Gun for NES reveals the landing mechanics: to succeed, altitude must be 100–299, speed 238–337 (both inclusive), and the plane must end pointed at the carrier. Altitude and speed are controlled by throttle and pitch; heading has no on-screen indicator but the game flags out-of-range. Memory holds speed at $40-$41, altitude at $3D-$3E (BCD), and heading at $FD; a state check at $B6EA writes the result to $9E. The article includes a detailed annotated disassembly of the landing_skill_check routine and notes a Game Genie code AEPETA for guaranteed perfect landings.
An exploration of pastagang, a collaborative coding jam where participants continually edit, delete, and re-create others’ patterns. The piece discusses in-group dynamics, competition, and tension as jammers surgically alter or wipe out work, yet frame it as healthier dialogue than final products. It argues the aim isn’t to produce perfect code but to keep changing in the present moment, embracing repetition and improvisation. The refrain: let code die, delete everything, start from scratch, and focus on making changes rather than building a fixed artifact.
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AI Killed My Job documents how AI devastated copywriting and related fields, with workers across roles reporting layoffs, falling rates, and work shifted to editing or training AI. Outsourcing to India, in-house replacements, and a devaluation of human craft lead many to precarity or alternative work. Some find niche, high-end work or new careers, but the overall trend is a widespread erosion of livelihoods as “good enough” AI content becomes the norm.
SPSA signed a 20-year contract with AMP Robotics to scale AI-based MSW sortation across eight Virginia communities, adding two Portsmouth facilities and an organics-to-biochar plant. The project will process up to 540,000 tons annually to divert about half of SPSA’s waste from landfills and recycle 20% of total waste, extending landfill life, lowering disposal costs, and enabling organics management. It aims to reduce more than 378,000 tons of CO2e annually, create ~100 local jobs, and double regional recycling rates.
An overview of DNA replication, showing how DNA serves as a template to copy genetic information. In the replication fork, helicase unwinds the double helix, producing leading and lagging strands. The leading strand is copied continuously by DNA polymerase, while the lagging strand is synthesized in short Okazaki fragments that are later joined. Single-stranded regions are protected by binding proteins; replication can involve multiple Okazaki fragments. The animation emphasizes that the real process is more complex than the simple double helix image. Duration 2:18; available on YouTube.
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