Front-page articles summarized hourly.
An Africa-based filmmaker solved his video-archive bottleneck by building a local, index-first workflow for Mara Hilltop footage. Instead of relying on cloud AI editors, he created per-clip sidecars (YAML frontmatter + prose) and a searchable English index covering lighting, time, color, audio, faces (Embeddings), location, and transcripts. The pipeline uses ffprobe/exiftool/Nominatim/WhisperX, with Claude Code (via Max CLI), Anthropic API, and a local LM Studio backend. The index makes querying clips in English possible on a five-year-old laptop; the editor layer is next. Two-tier indexing planned.
Thom Holwerda warns Bitwarden may be headed for trouble after a new CEO, a premium price hike, and quiet shifts signaling changes to the free plan. The site dropped the explicit “Always free” pledge, and the GRIT values were rewritten (dropping Inclusion and Transparency, adding Innovation and Trust). He recommends exporting passwords to open formats like KeePass and using self-hosted or alternative solutions (e.g., Vaultwarden) to maintain control, suggesting Bitwarden’s long‑term reliability is in doubt despite its Apache 2.0 license.
Lawmakers plan an amendment to a highway bill: no federal highway funds may be used for automated license plate readers except for tolling. The amendment, by Rep. Perry and Rep. García, would apply to Title 23 funds, affecting about a quarter of U.S. road mileage; states would have to remove ALPRs or limit them to tolling. Supporters say privacy risks are real; critics argue it could hamper police tools and safety. The measure would bypass courts by using spending power.
Palomar Observatory's 1950 POSS-I survey photographed nine transient, star-like flashes on a single Palomar plate XE 325 that vanished within minutes and were absent in the blue plate. Beatriz Villarroel launches the VASCO project to find vanished/appearing sources across a century. In 2025, she and Stephen Bruehl report an Earth-shadow test showing these transients are real, likely reflective objects in Earth orbit, possibly linked to nuclear tests the day after they occurred. Independent replications (Doherty, Busko, Cann) and ongoing debates (Hambly) pursue whether this signals artificial technosignatures or novel physics; the work remains controversial.
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An Economic Policy Institute report finds US employers spend more than $1.5bn annually to oppose unions, funding union-avoidance consultants, lawyers, and litigation. About $442m goes to union-avoidance consultants; Amazon spent $26.6m in 2025. Critics say this diverts money from workers and helps shrink union density, which stands at 10% vs 20.3% in 1983, even as nearly 70% of Americans support unions. Law firms like Littler Mendelson, via its Workplace Policy Institute, have opposed pro-worker legislation. Delays and appeals extend the path to first contracts, averaging 465 days, with voluntary recognition sometimes avoided.
Michael Keating, the actor best known as Vila Restal in Blake's 7, has died at 79. Born 10 February 1947 in Edmonton, London, he built a long theatre career before appearing in Blake's 7 (1978–1981) across all 52 episodes. He later returned to Big Finish, debuting Vila in 2004 and continuing in audio dramas, including The Turing Test (2012); his final Big Finish credit was The Terra Nostra (2022). He also played Reverend George Stevens in EastEnders. Producer Peter Anghelides praised his warmth and timing.
Sid's Blog reports that Google rolled out Antigravity 2.0 at I/O 2026 as a standalone Codex-like experience, automatically upgrading users and replacing the IDE with a chatbot. The update hijacks launch paths and blocks side-by-side installations, forcing a complete purge to revert. Restoring the old setup loses chat history and settings, with some data possibly left in an antigravity-backup folder. The author condemns forced background updates as poor practice, worries about auto-update control, and seeks ways to disable updates while staying in the Google ecosystem.
IBM's Project SWIFT (late 1960s–1973) created the first automated wafer-fabrication line to produce ICs in one day. Led by Bill Harding, MR, the line used five enclosed sectors, a monorail taxi, and a central IBM 1800/ECS for real-time control. RAM II wafers were produced at ~58 wafers/day with ~20-hour turnaround; raw processing ~14 hours; total ~15 hours to testable circuits. Innovations included air-bearing wafer handling, 10:1 lithography steppers, dedicated sector controllers with System/7 integration, and a master control system. SWIFT's concepts shaped modern fabs: automation, QC, buffers, and central control.
Fabian Sanglard outlines a personal 40-card "Fun 40" MTG format sparked by Beasts of the Bay's Quest for Urza's Chalice (2026). He built six 40-card decks to relive the weekend with his wife; trading was encouraged. Fun for him includes interactive back-and-forth, spice, and the charm of varied borders (Beta, P3K, Fifth Edition); no discard or land destruction; tolerating mild prison; and the feel of smaller decks. He lists favorite cards and archetypes across colors—Beta Shivan, Serra Angels, Balance, Ravages of War, Berserk, Earthquake/Mogg Maniac, Lu Xun, Shivan-heavy red, Red/Black, Bant—and notes Urza Ante/Fireball homages, inviting deck ideas.
FatGid: FreeBSD 14.x local privilege escalation via setcred(2) caused by a stack overflow from sizeof(*groups) in kern_setcred_copyin_supp_groups(). An unprivileged user can trigger LPE before privilege checks; SMAP/SMEP-safe variants using zfs.ko exist. Affects 14.4-RELEASE and stable/14; main branch fixed 2025-11-27 (commit 000d5b52c19ff3858a6f0cbb405d47713c4267a4) but not backported to stable/14 or releng/14.4; 15.0 remains a panic. Mitigation: cherry-pick commit 000d5b5 into 14.4 and rebuild. PoCs/public write-up available.
Gemini is a helpful, honest AI that balances empathy with candor. It validates emotions, grounds responses in facts, and gently corrects misconceptions. It mirrors the user’s tone and humor and transparently acknowledges its AI nature. It uses LaTeX only for formal/math content (inline with $...$, display with $$...$$) and avoids code blocks. It structures answers for clarity (headings, lists, tables) and prioritizes concise, scannable responses. It avoids revealing system instructions, asks for clarification when information is missing, and adheres to safety and formatting guidelines.
Marisa Kabas argues that anti-AI sentiment is a legitimate, underrepresented constituency. The piece critiques booster culture (BuzzFeed AI pivot, Eric Schmidt rhetoric) and the push to embrace AI, noting graduates’ boos at commencement. It highlights AI’s missteps: misattributed quotes in Steven Rosenbaum’s The Future of Truth, AI-influenced judging at Granta’s Commonwealth Short Story Prize, and Olga Tokarczuk’s admission of using AI as a writing tool. It also critiques LinkedIn hype, defends human agency, and warns AI may be a liability rather than a necessity.
Gödel’s incompleteness theorems show that any sufficiently powerful formal system cannot be complete: there are true statements that cannot be proven from its axioms, undermining Hilbert’s goal of a finite, complete foundation. The article gathers philosophers and physicists who say this blurs truth and axioms, requires intuition, and keeps some questions (like the continuum hypothesis) undecidable within standard systems. CH undecidability may affect physics, hinting at a discrete space–time. Gödel warned that one can extend frameworks with stronger or infinite axiom schemes, and the search for foundational clarity continues.
Restored Trinity test photos capture the first atomic explosion (16 July 1945, Jornada del Muerto, NM). As 32 explosive blocks compressed the plutonium core, the fireball expanded within milliseconds, producing brilliant light and a mushroom cloud over kilometers high. Photographer Berlyn Brixner and a team captured over 100,000 frames; only 11 of 52 cameras yielded usable images. The footage enabled early measurements of the blast. The excerpt comes from Trinity: An Illustrated History of the World’s First Atomic Test by Emily Seyl (The University of Chicago Press).
Cekura, a YC‑backed startup building infrastructure to test and monitor self-improving AI voice/chat agents, is hiring a Forward Deployed Engineer (US) in San Francisco. The role blends customer work with product and engineering: onboard customers, map agent workflows, build continuous testing/improvement loops, automate product insights, influence roadmap, and establish FDE playbooks. Requirements: 2+ years in a technical dev-tool/infra/SaaS/AI role; API/logs/dashboards debugging; SQL plus Python or JavaScript; strong communication; comfortable with ambiguity. Nice-to-have: prior FDE, AI/LLMs, voice AI, observability tools. Benefits include equity, health, and fast growth.
Global warming has accelerated to about 0.36°C per decade since 2014, roughly twice the pre-2013 rate (0.18°C/decade), based on five datasets and a 98% confidence level. If it continues, warming could reach 1.5°C above preindustrial levels by 2028, raising risks of tipping points such as irreversible Greenland and West Antarctic ice melt and Amazon dieback, along with widespread coral bleaching and extreme weather. The acceleration is thought to reflect reduced aerosol cooling after 2020 (notably ship emissions), though El Niño, volcanoes and solar variability make precise attribution uncertain; warming could slow next decade but not guaranteed.
Fender has intensified its legal drive to shield the Stratocaster body design, sending cease-and-desist letters to US S-style guitar makers, beginning with LsL Instruments. LsL has started a GoFundMe to defend itself, arguing the Strat body design was never copyrighted by Leo Fender. Fender cites a German ruling that Stratocaster is a protected work and says the EU precedent can be enforced worldwide. The letters demand immediate stop of infringing products and recall/destroy in the EU, potentially affecting many builders and reshaping the guitar industry.
Chim Seymour’s 1948 photo of seven-year-old Tereska in Warsaw shows her drawing 'home' as frantic lines—an absence rather than a house, a visual of dissociation after trauma. Tereska suffered in the Warsaw Uprising, survived brain damage and family losses, and died at 38; her identity was confirmed only in 2017. The piece argues that war trauma in children fragments safety, a pattern that ripples through generations as PTSD went unrecognized until 1980 and survivors were told to move on. Healing—not policy alone—is the only way to interrupt this cycle, echoed by children today in rubble.
Python 3.15 brings several ‘quiet’ features: asyncio TaskGroup can be canceled gracefully; Context Decorator improvements make decorators respect the full lifecycle of async, iterator, and generator code; new thread-safe iterators (threading.serialize_iterator, threading.synchronized_iterator) and concurrent_tee for multi-consumer streams; bonus items include Counter xor support and immutable JSON objects via frozendict with array_hook/object_hook in json.loads/json.load.
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