Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Context Is Software, Weights Are Hardware argues activations in transformers are shaped by both the KV cache (context) and the model’s weights; context runs software on frozen hardware. Weight updates redesign the hardware, enabling new computations and representations, especially for long-tail tasks. Longer context windows can imitate learning, but their influence is temporary and costly at inference (O(n) attention) and less composable. Von Oswald et al. show ICL’s activation shift ~ one gradient step; KV cache is a transient update. Both memory systems are needed: context for quick adaptation, weights for persistent learning.
Meta has rolled out an internal AI training tool that records US employees’ computer activity—mouse movements, keystrokes, and screen content—for training its AI models. It’s limited to work apps (Gmail, GChat, Metamate, VSCode) on company laptops, not phones, and there’s no opt-out. Employees voiced privacy concerns; Meta says safeguards exist and data won’t be used for other purposes. The program, called Model Capability Initiative, is part of broader Meta AI initiatives (Muse Spark, AI pods).
The piece argues that AI agents are going async, decoupled from single HTTP requests, which creates transport and state challenges. Traditional chatbots use HTTP request-response with token streaming, but that fails for long-running or multi-user tasks. OpenClaw demonstrates an async, chat-based agent that works through external messaging channels. Anthropic, Cloudflare, and Cursor address durable state (often via polling or hosted sessions); they don’t fully fix transport. The author, from Ably, advocates a durable transport built on realtime messaging to pair durable state with continuous, multi-device sessions for long-running agents.
The text notes that Windows 9x Subsystem for Linux enables running something, while Mastodon’s web app requires JavaScript; it suggests using native Mastodon apps for your platform as an alternative.
Across waves—callbacks, promises/futures, async/await—async programming addressed the thread-per-connection problem but at new costs. Callbacks solved blocking IO with event loops but created inverted control flow, scattered error handling, no cancellation. Promises improved composition and error consolidation, yet are one-shot, fail to model streams, and cause a color-like split between sync/async and awkward combinators. Async/await reads like sequential code, improving ergonomics, but reintroduces the coloring tax and ecosystem fragmentation (Tokio vs async-std; deadlocks like futurelocks) and hides parallelism, inviting manual refactoring with Promise.all. The pattern shows: fix symptoms, not structure.
MuJoCo (Multi-Joint dynamics with Contact) is a general-purpose, high-performance physics engine for articulated-body simulation with contact, used in robotics, biomechanics, graphics, and ML. It provides a C API, Python bindings, and a Unity plug-in, plus OpenGL visualization and utilities. Documentation is at mujoco.readthedocs.io. Get started by running the simulator or via Colab tutorials (Model Editing, Rollout, LQR). Available as prebuilt binaries or from source; Python bindings install via pip install mujoco (Python >=3.10). Versioning follows semantic versioning; contributions welcome. Cite the MuJoCo paper; code is Apache-2.0; docs CC-BY-4.0. Not officially Google product.
Tanum’s Bronze/Iron Age rock carvings date 1700–300 BCE, hammered into rock with pounding stones. Motifs include cup marks, ships, humans, and animals; many images reflect power and ritual rather than daily life. There are over 600 known sites; post-glacial rebound left some panels 9–17 m above sea level, others higher. Dating combines artifact chronology, radiocarbon dating, and analysis of overcuts to establish relative ages. First noted in 1751; by 2023 Bohuslän records ~4,200 carvings. Visibility is aided by painting about ten sites and oblique lighting or wet surfaces for viewing.
Raymond Chen explains why zeroing a register on x86 often uses XOR R, R instead of SUB R, R. XOR R, R encodes smaller than MOV R, 0 and avoids a constant. The x86 has no dedicated zero register. SUB, R, R costs similar cycles but clears AF, whereas XOR leaves AF undefined. Early compiler usage, plus perceived cleverness, helped XOR win. Intel added xor‑r detection in decoding; some CPUs recognize SUB, but XOR prevailed. Itanium lacks the trick but provides a true zero register.
Researchers developed a soft, electronics-free contact lens with embedded microfluidics for real-time glaucoma monitoring and drug delivery. The all-polymer lens uses microchannels and a silk sponge reservoir to sense intraocular pressure (via a red fluid) and deliver medicine through pressure-triggered reservoirs. A smartphone app with a CNN reads pressure with about 94% accuracy. The device can hold enough drug for ~two weeks and demonstrated comparable efficacy to eye drops in rabbit tests, with good biocompatibility over 14 days. Limitations: non-continuous readings and need for smartphone, but could complement electronics-based systems. Potential for other eye diseases.
kuri is a Zig-native browser automation and web crawling toolkit for AI agents. It replaces heavy runtimes with a small, Node-free stack and four modes: kuri (CDP server), kuri-fetch (standalone fetcher with QuickJS), kuri-browse (interactive terminal browser), and kuri-agent (scriptable Chrome automation for security testing). Features include token-efficient CDP snapshots, HAR recording, a fast binary, and an HTTP API with optional auth, proxy support, and anti-detection patches. It emphasizes low per-cycle cost for agent loops and easy installation/build from source.
Nick Fitzgerald presents safe-gc, a Rust garbage-collection library with zero unsafe code, no unsafe in API or implementation, and a forbid(unsafe_code) pragma. It provides Gc<T>, Root<T>, and a Trace trait for safe edge reporting, plus per-type Arenas and a RootSet. The heap uses mark-and-sweep with per-type mark stacks; GC is driven by a root set; objects are traced via ArenaObject. It avoids finalization footguns, prevents memory-unsafe behavior even with dangling references, and discards a copying collector for heterogeneity. Focus: safety over peak performance.
Moof! in Mind! traces the dogcow’s Apple origins in the 1980s, from Susan Kare’s Cairo dog to its Page Setup redesign as the dogcow. The name emerged after Scott Zimmerman’s joke in 1987, and the sound Moof! spread through internal memos and developer culture. Dogcows known are Clarus, Moofo, and Lackey; Tech Note 31 codified the lore. Moof! in Mind signifies a playful, cutting-edge mindset for software made on a Macintosh.
Secret management for agents is painful; API keys are powerful and risky. Traditional secret rotation is hard; OAuth is often complex and inter-service secrets can leak. A practical solution is an HTTP proxy that injects authorization headers, so services never see the key themselves; the proxy becomes the source of truth for secrets and access. Exe.dev’s Integrations enable cloud-managed proxies, tag-based VM access, and automatic secret provisioning for agents, with a GitHub App to handle OAuth and plans for more integrations.
A 403 Forbidden error indicating you lack permission to access the resource on bitsavers.org; server: Apache/2.4.59 (Debian) on port 443.
An investigation of a rare 'NULL assignment detected' warning in EtherSlip uncovers a decades-old bug in the ARP reply path. When a packet needed to be resent, EtherSlip simulated an ARP reply by copying the ARP request into the response buffer. A buggy sequence incorrectly moved DS into ES and used REP MOVSB, so ES pointed into the data segment and corrupted six bytes (the MAC) in the receive buffer. This caused memory corruption that showed as a NULL-write detection at the end. The fix removes the DS->ES move; patch in EtherSlip_v11.8.zip. Masking in small memory models explains longevity.
Iku Bio founder Sterling Hooten built a microfluidic bioreactor embedded in a printed circuit board, enabling massively parallel, real-time cell-culture experiments for media optimization in biologics manufacturing. By using lithography-based PCB microfluidics, sensors and control, it delivers ~10,000x throughput at about $8 per lane versus ~$20k for traditional systems. Media is the key lever—the nutrient-rich environment also acts as the communication channel—and synthetic media replaces fetal bovine serum. The device provides temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, flow, impedance sensing, with aims for real-time antibody readouts, federated learning, and deployment in CDMOs/pharma.
NASA’s Curiosity rover has identified more than 20 organic compounds in rock samples from Gale Crater, including a nitrogen-bearing molecule linked to DNA-building blocks, suggesting Mars can preserve complex organics for billions of years. The findings, from a 2020 experiment in the Glen Torridon clay-rich area using the SAM instrument and the chemical TMAH, indicate ancient conditions could have supported life and guide future biomarker searches. The study, published in Nature Communications, does not prove life existed, but shows long-term preservation of organics on Mars.
The page warns of unusual traffic from the user’s network and blocks access to YouTube until a CAPTCHA is solved and JavaScript is enabled. It says automated requests, malware, or browser plugins may trigger the block, and sharing a network can cause the issue; the block will expire once traffic stops. It lists the IP address and timestamp of the request.
Nearly a dozen nuclear- and space-defense scientists tied to NASA, SpaceX, and Blue Origin are dead or missing since 2022. The House Oversight Committee has asked FBI, DOE, DOD, and NASA for briefings to determine if cases involve classified information or foreign actors. The FBI is investigating; White House says it’s reviewing patterns but no clear national-security threat yet. Cases include JPL’s Monica Reza (vanished 2025) and Maj. Gen. William McCasland (disappeared 2026), plus others from Caltech, MIT, and Los Alamos, some linked to current defense programs.
VictoriaMetrics presented retroactive sampling at KubeCon Europe 2026 as a more efficient OpenTelemetry tail sampling alternative. It sends only lightweight attributes (about 33 bytes) to a central collector to decide which traces to keep, while buffering full spans on edge agents via an on-disk FIFO. When a trace is sampled, full spans are retrieved; unsampled spans are dropped. Benchmarks show ~70% less outbound traffic and 60–70% CPU/memory savings versus tail sampling; disk usage ~1.7 GB vs 4 GB. Open-source plans and VictoriaMetrics agent integration are in the works.
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