Front-page articles summarized hourly.
The Noisy Room contends a tiny minority—about 3% of users—produces much online content, biasing feeds toward extremes and making reality appear more polarized. The majority often stays silent, while the loud minority feels misperceived as the majority, fueling hostility. This common knowledge problem persists even when facts are known. The proposed fix, Community Check, would add a public, open-layer beneath posts showing representative polling from platform users and national surveys, not fact checks. It would also adapt to video, revealing real consensus to dampen polarization.
WordPress.com 429 error: a minor system issue. Please refresh the page, and if the error continues, drop us a note to report it.
Learning software architecture is best learned by doing; formal courses mislead. Conway’s Law shows software mirrors the social structure of its organization, so incentives often shape architecture more than techniques—differences between scientific and industrial software come from field incentives. You can influence incentive structures (the TIGER_STYLE idea) or, if you can’t, speedrun the four stages of grief and adapt. The rust-analyzer example shows balancing core work with breadth features, keeping onboarding easy for weekend contributors by isolating features and tolerant failures. Key reads: Boundaries talk; How to Test; Hintjens; Jamii; Kaminski; SWE at Google; The Philosophy of Software Design.
The piece looks back at the author’s Planet Source Code submissions from 2002–2003, now archived on GitHub, to travel the pre-GitHub code-sharing era. It recalls VB6 hacks (like adding a checkbox to MSFlexGrid), early .NET experiments (Make Form Transparent, numeric TextBox), and low-level HTTP downloads with Winsock. It contrasts sparse, forum/blog culture with today’s GitHub world of repos, issues, and PRs, and celebrates small, practical contributions. Preservation of these archives matters because they show how developers learned, shared, and built knowledge.
rtwatch is a Go project that lets friends watch videos in sync via WebRTC, with the server handling pause/seek. It uses Pion WebRTC and GStreamer; only the current frame is streamed to clients, so videos aren’t cached. All state is stored on the backend. It includes Docker and build/run instructions, supports URI-based streams (e.g., Big Buck Bunny), and runs at http://localhost:8080 where multiple tabs stay synchronized with play/pause/seek across viewers. MIT license.
Could not summarize article.
The lab-to-fab gap in advanced packaging is widening as multi-material, multi-die systems become more complex. Lab performance under controlled conditions cannot predict production outcomes because interactions across materials, process steps, and thermal histories create latent defects. Material-property data are often private, sparse for new materials, and nonlinear with temperature, limiting simulation accuracy. Field issues typically stem from manufacturing defects caught too late by qualification. To close the gap, the industry leans on physics-constrained machine learning, digital twins, and richer inline metrology, but the last mile—customer-specific integration—remains unresolved, as shown by a molybdenum case study.
Submarines evolved from Civil War-era submersibles to nuclear-powered vessels, but underwater radio faced seawater attenuation. Early 20th-century work by Willoughby and Lowell demonstrated long-wave communication could reach submerged boats, enabling a Navy VLF network (NSS/Annapolis and Cutler) with multi-megawatt transmitters and giant antenna farms. Submarines could receive to shallow depths, but surface gear or buoys remained common. ELF experiments (Sanguine, SHELF, Seafarer) sought deeper penetration with ground-dipoles, but cost and opposition doomed them. Reagan-era ELF produced Clam Lake and Republic transmitters; they operated 1989–2004. The US abandoned ELF; other nations remain involved.
ephemerides-spectral is a high-precision, SPICE-free ephemeris toolkit for the Sol Star System built on hyperdimensional computing. It encodes JPL DE441/DE442 data as resonant phases over a 52-body graph, via a two-stage pipeline: an integer ALU phase-residue encoder (BIP/C) and a floating-point HD lift (complex64/complex128). It ships a native C backend, a Python API, a Pyodide bridge, and a feature-rich CLI (encode, syzygies, ITN paths, Sol Time variants, and spectral surfaces). Installation is via pip, with extras for ephemeris kernels. v0.26.0 adds gap-collection diagnostics and a patch catalog. GPL-3.0-or-later.
A Boriel BASIC site overview providing downloads, released programs, learning resources, language reference, tutorials, sample programs and games, help forums, external resources and libraries, inline assembler, compiler internals, and multi-architecture support; includes Installation and SDK tools, command-line options, change logs, and guides for contributing, with work-in-progress notes.
Productivity isn’t about going faster; it’s about spending time on what truly matters. Knowing your north star and true desires orients actions toward a meaningful direction. Faster progress is only valuable if you’re moving toward a purpose; otherwise it’s busywork. Instead of chasing outcomes, focus on the daily inputs that advance your mission. Happiness comes from steady pursuit, not the outcome itself. Work hard, rest when needed, savor life, and live up to your purpose.
Why the PSP is back in 2026: not via a Sony push, but because people crave a simple, offline, self-contained device amid always-online tech. Its lack of notifications, deliberate load times, and XMB aesthetic make it feel like a respite from feeds and monetized engagement. The PSP doubles as a music and video player, not just a game console, and its portability fits the current handheld revival (Steam Deck, Switch, retro devices). A dedicated community keeps it alive with mods, emulators, and fan-made ports, proving the hardware remains versatile.
FireflySentinel notes that Claude spent a day reinventing wiki tooling instead of importing libraries, writing ~3,000 lines of Python that reimplemented pywikibot, mwparserfromhell, and Wikipedia’s RETF ruleset. The result split into a 122-line wikitext stripper, an 18-entry typo dictionary, ~4,000 RETF rules, and multiple edit runners; migration reduced it to a small shim, with RETF fetched at runtime. The author argues benchmarks and sunk-cost bias push models to reinvent rather than reuse existing code, a pattern seen in other tasks. The post suggests careful use of libraries when evaluating AI coding.
VGA memory access is more complex than it seems. VGA is a superset of EGA with multiple independent subsystems (Sequencer, Graphics Controller, CRT Controller, Attribute). Documentation is incomplete; IBM TRM is hard to interpret, especially regarding Odd/Even addressing and three OE bits (SR4[2], GR5[4], GR6[1]). Compaq's EGA TRG clarifies separation of writes vs reads and addressing; MSR and CRTC also influence memory mapping. To emulate accurately, you must implement all bit interactions; many undocumented combos exist, enabling modes beyond BIOS defaults. This causes emulation bugs and variability across GPUs.
Software Internals Book Club is a global, email-based club reading advanced software topics (databases, distributed systems, performance). Currently reading Operating Systems: Three Easy Pieces. ~2,500 members; 300–800 join per book. Open to all, with emphasis on senior+ developers. Discussions run via Google Group as weekend email recaps, no live meetings; leaders help guide each book. Criteria: 350–550 pages, topic-focused (not general software philosophy), doable in ~3 months (1–2 chapters/week). A variety of future titles and past reads are suggested. Sign up or contact via email or Twitter.
they_live_adblocker is a fork of uBlock Origin Lite by davmlaw that replaces cosmetic ads with They Live slogans (e.g., OBEY, CONSUME) instead of hiding them. It patches uBO Lite's cosmetic filtering to apply a white tile mask with a random phrase on each ad, tracking DOM changes via MutationObserver. It’s a hobby fork, not official, and only cosmetic-filtered ads are replaced; network-blocked ads remain untouched. It can be built and loaded as an unpacked Chromium extension; requires Node 22 and MV3 tooling. GPL-3.0 license; latest release v0.1.0-theylive (May 11, 2026).
Could not summarize article.
Proto-Elamite, a largely undeciphered 5,000-year-old script from Iran, may be the first writing to encode speech. Found mainly at Susa, its signs in sequences and varied counting hint at a syllabary and even grammar. Jacob Dahl’s digitization of about 1,700 tablets strengthens the view that proto-Elamite was the era’s most advanced writing. Some scholars argue it was abandoned, with Linear Elamite later arising. The article frames writing’s origins as three types: logographic, syllabic, and alphabetic.
Anthropic's Claude Platform on AWS is generally available, giving AWS customers access to Claude's full API features with AWS IAM authentication, CloudTrail audit logging, and billing on a single AWS invoice that retires against commitments. Data is processed outside the AWS boundary, while Bedrock remains within AWS for data processing. The platform enables Claude Managed Agents, advisor strategy, web search, code execution, Files API, Skills, MCP connector, prompt caching, and citations, plus access to the Claude Console. Models Opus, Sonnet, and Haiku ship with day-one parity. Start today.
Made by Johno Whitaker using FastHTML