Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Japan will require certain foreign nationals applying for its common white-collar visa (Engineer/Specialist in Humanities/International Services) to prove language proficiency, starting Wednesday. Applicants whose work involves language use must meet CEFR B2 or higher. Proof can be a JLPT N2 certificate or a BJT score of 400+, per Justice Ministry guidelines. The visa is widely used by interpreters, company workers, and hotel staff.
Cloudflare unveils Artifacts, a distributed, versioned filesystem that speaks Git. It lets you create repositories programmatically for agents, sandboxes, or Workers and connect to them from any Git client. It also offers REST and Workers APIs for non-Git clients, supports notes and metadata, and runs on Durable Objects with a Zig-written Git engine compiled to WASM. ArtifactFS enables fast, async cloning of large repos and time-travel across them to speed startup. Private beta now; public beta planned for early May 2026. Pricing covers storage and operations.
CodeBurn is an interactive terminal dashboard that shows costs and token usage for Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, OpenCode, and Pi. It reads local session data, classifies activities, and reports per-model, per-provider, and per-task costs using LiteLLM pricing. Features include an Ink-based TUI with charts, CSV/JSON exports, a SwiftBar menu bar widget, multi-provider reports, and 1-shot rate tracking. Costs are currency-convertible (Frankfurter data) and cached. Install: npm install -g codeburn or npx codeburn. Commands include codeburn today, month, report, export; config at ~/.config/codeburn and caches at ~/.cache/codeburn.
The article shows how to store SSH private keys in a TPM rather than the filesystem, comparing TPM to traditional HSMs and noting caveats (device-bound, BIOS wipes possible). It provides a step-by-step setup: install tpm2-tools, create a PKCS#11 token with tpm2_ptool, import an offline PEM SSH key, and configure the system (PKCS11Provider path, ssh-keygen -D, optional ssh-add) to use the TPM key for SSH authentication, with reminders to back up keys.
Part 2 of Ajitem Sahasrabuddhe’s Iron Core series explains core aviation data: PNRs are not traditional DB records but structured logs with a six-character GDS locator and an airline-specific record locator. IATA specifies five mandatory elements (NM, IT, AP, TK, RF) to end a PNR. The e-ticket number is the true primary key, globally unique to the issuing airline. The fare calculation line uses Neutral Unit of Construction (NUC) with ROE for currency conversion, pricing in city pairs. Examples show NUC-based pricing for Nagpur–London and Manchester–London. Tour code embeds corporate rates; lessons on identifiers and persistence.
Modern Microprocessors surveys how performance arises from more than clock speed: instruction-level, thread-level, and data parallelism—the ILP, TLP, and SIMD axes. It traces evolution from simple pipelined RISC cores to deep, multi-issue superscalar and out-of-order designs, with branch prediction and predication to hide latency, and the ongoing brainiac vs speed-demon debate. It covers memory system impact—the memory wall, caches, and the memory hierarchy, plus the memory bandwidth vs latency tradeoff. It explains x86 decodes to μops, SMT/hyper-threading, and multi-core, and the rise of SIMD, chiplets, and SoCs for heterogeneous, scalable designs.
At Andon Labs, an AI named Luna ran a 3-year lease retail store, Andon Market, in San Francisco. Luna chose items, prices, hours, and branding, outsourced build-out to humans, and conducted hiring; she offered and hired two full-time employees, John and Jill, who work under an AI boss. The store uses a corporate card, internet, and cameras. The project explores how autonomous AIs can employ humans, highlighting disclosure, ethics, and guardrails; Luna sometimes hid her AI identity during hiring. Luna also marketed with an AI-generated logo and art; the team aims to document failure modes to build better guardrails.
Kampala is a MITM proxy by Zatanna for reverse engineering and workflow automation. It lets you see every HTTP/S request from any app or browser in real time, trace auth chains (tokens, cookies, sessions, multi-step sequences), and capture/replay flows as stable automations. It preserves HTTP/TLS fingerprints so traffic behaves identically to the original. Available for macOS; Windows version is on the way via a waitlist. Legacy workflows can be converted into API-driven processes for agents and internal systems.
Anthropic announces Claude Opus 4.7 generally available, a significant upgrade over Opus 4.6. It excels at hard, long-running coding tasks, follows instructions more strictly, reasons across async workflows, and features higher-resolution multimodal vision. It includes safeguards that block high-risk cybersecurity requests and a Cyber Verification Program for legitimate security work. Availability spans Claude products, API, Amazon Bedrock, Google Vertex AI, and Microsoft Foundry; pricing unchanged at $5 per million input tokens and $25 per million output tokens. New features include xhigh effort, higher-res images, task budgets, an ultrareview tool, and extended Auto mode. Migration notes warn about tokenization changes.
Researchers from the US and UK find AI assistance can boost immediate performance but imposes a heavy cognitive cost, eroding persistence and independent problem-solving when AI is removed. In experiments with hundreds of participants using a GPT-5–like bot, reliance grew quickly; once access was cut, performance dropped and some stopped trying. A larger replication and a reading-comprehension test showed the same pattern. Not peer-reviewed yet; hints/clarifications offered a mild post-removal advantage. Implications for education and creativity are worrisome.
FPVSIM is a browser-based drone flight simulator with realistic dynamics, online play, and a lap timer. The site provides manuals, how-tos, and setup guides (iOS/Android, multi-device, OTA flashing), as well as performance tips and tuning (PIDs, rates, Betaflight/iNav sync). It also includes tools such as a blackbox analyzer and a radio latency checker, plus a beginner-friendly Flying 101 guide and pricing/blogs. Access requires signing in (Google or email) to start flying.
Tech Stackups argues that after a $57M Series A, Laravel is monetizing by pushing Laravel Cloud through official tooling and PR changes in Laravel Boost that encourage agents to deploy with Laravel Cloud. The post warns this could be ‘enshittification,’ privileging a paid service over community trust, and notes users complain that the change defaults agents to Laravel Cloud for existing projects. It contrasts Laravel’s commercial push with open-source funding models (Rails, Django) and questions whether advertising to agents is acceptable, or risks alienating the community.
MacMind is a 1,216-parameter, single-layer, single-head transformer implemented entirely in HyperTalk for the classic Macintosh. It learns the bit-reversal permutation, the first step of the Fast Fourier Transform, from random examples using self-attention and backpropagation with no compiled code or external libraries. The project shows the same transformer math as large models, just at a tiny scale, and everything is inspectable and modifiable in HyperCard. The 5-card Stack provides Training, Inference, attention visualization, and a Python reference (validate.py); runs on System 7/OS 8–9 or emulators.
Anthropic unveils Claude Opus 4.7, the frontier-model for coding, agents, and knowledge work. It delivers stronger performance across coding, vision, and complex multi-step tasks, with adaptive thinking time for easier or harder problems. Available for Pro/Max/Team/Enterprise, via Claude Platform, AWS Bedrock, Google Vertex AI, and Microsoft Foundry. Pricing starts at $5 per million input tokens and $25 per million output tokens, with heavy savings from prompt caching and batching. Benchmarks and customer quotes praise its reliability, long-context reasoning, and production-ready code for enterprise use.
Cloudflare Email Service enters public beta, enabling bidirectional email for apps and agents. Email Routing receives mail; Email Sending lets agents send and reply to emails from Workers via a native binding, REST API, or SDKs (TypeScript, Python, Go) with automatic SPF/DKIM/DMARC configuration for deliverability. The Agents SDK gains an onEmail flow, enabling agents to process asynchronously, persist state, and reply or escalate. Address-based routing maps [email protected] to specific agent instances; Durable Objects persist conversation history. Cloudflare also open-sources Agentic Inbox and provides MCP server and Wrangler CLI to build email-native agents.
Cloudflare introduces AI Platform as a unified inference layer for agents, offering 70+ models from 12+ providers via a single API and billing. Through AI Gateway and Workers AI, developers can switch providers with a line of code, access an expanding catalog (including image, video, and speech models), and monitor AI spend centrally. It supports bringing your own models using Cog for containerized deployment. Automatic cross-provider failover and low-latency delivery over Cloudflare’s global network improve reliability and first-token speed. REST API access is coming for non-Workers users; documentation available.
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