Front-page articles summarized hourly.
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Barlow recounts leaving the physically grounded West for the digital frontier. He describes his cattle-ranch background, the decline of physical labor, and becoming a knowledge worker. He explains discovering the Internet via the WELL, envisioning Cyberspace as a social, political space where 'architecture is politics' and openness and privacy are essential. He cofounded the Electronic Frontier Foundation to defend digital rights, promote networked community, and reframe intellectual property. He anticipates a future where information replaces matter, enabling global collaboration, though privacy, cultural clashes, and lack of body language pose challenges.
Horowitz defines six dimensions—granularity, reactivity, velocity, moldability, bidirectionality, and materiality—to characterize and evaluate live feedback in interactive programming systems. The paper argues that the design space of live feedback is largely unmapped and offers this framework as a first step toward mapping it. It was presented at PLATEAU 2026 (PDF/DOI/Video) and earlier at LIVE 2024; it was also featured on Episode 80 of the Feeling of Computing Podcast.
Leon Edel discusses Henry James’s deathbed, when, during his 1915–16 illness, he dictated Napoleonic‑themed passages to his secretary Theodora Bosanquet. The manuscript, partly published excerpts and later ordered destroyed, was pieced together by Edel in 1937 and published to preserve the record, noting another writer had access. After a stroke on December 2 and subsequent pneumonia, James produced lucid, sometimes fragmentary prose in a ‘last dictation’ that ranged from reflections on art and history to two Napoleon letters to his sister. He died February 28, 1916; funeral in Chelsea; ashes brought to America; he received the Order of Merit.
Classic 7 is a Windows 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC 2021 modification designed to look exactly like Windows 7. It recreates a 1:1 OOBE and includes many Windows 7 features, such as Aero Glass, .themepack support, gadgets, Windows Media Center, and Windows 7 theming. Some Windows 7 features are not restored (3D window animations, Flip 3D); some system apps or gadgets may not work due to compatibility issues. It is a fan project and not affiliated with Microsoft. The page also offers downloads, credits, and donations.
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Go’s abstractions often hurt hot-path performance: generics, interfaces, and closures block inlining and monomorphization, so developers duplicate concrete code. Benchmarks put Concrete fastest, Generic slower, and Interface/Closure slow due to non-inlined calls and repeated argument loads. Go lacks prefetch intrinsics, inline hints, and BCE-relevant tooling; layout decisions also matter. Workarounds include duplication with codegen or hand-written assembly for hot loops, extracting cold parts, and using PGO. The takeaway: CPU-bound Go benefits from specialization over idiomatic abstractions.
Learning Opportunities is a Claude Codex/Code skill offering an adaptive “dynamic textbook” approach for deliberate skill development during AI-assisted coding. After significant work (new files, refactors, schema changes), Claude prompts 10–15 minute learning exercises grounded in evidence-based learning science (prediction, retrieval practice, spaced repetition). It pairs with Learning-Goal (MCII) and can be installed via Codex or Claude Code marketplaces, with optional learning-opportunities-auto prompting and an orient repo orientation tool. Designed to counteract AI-learning pitfalls, it emphasizes active generation, retrieval, deliberate pauses, and metacognition. CC-BY-SA 4.0.
The article argues that two-decade web architecture—state in databases, stateless servers—fails for long-running, interactive agent workflows (LLMs). Three shifts matter: long-running tasks, stateful agent memory, and bidirectional interruption. Durable execution helps reliability but doesn’t solve routing; HTTP/load balancers route to databases, forcing polling to reach a process. The fix: a new routing primitive— a durable, addressable pub/sub channel (not a server) that connects clients to workflow processes. Combine durable execution + pub/sub + stateless HTTP to avoid polling and address processes directly.
Explores numeral encodings in lambda calculus across Linear, Affine, and Non-Linear styles, plus Church, Mackie, Parigot, Mogensen, and Wadsworth systems. Each ⟨n⟩ is a lambda-term encoding that supports arithmetic, with rules for abstraction, application, and binding. The work contrasts linear/affine/non-linear binding, including explicit duplication. Mogensen's approach decomposes n-digit numbers in base b; Wadsworth uses sequences built from K and S combinators. The article includes hand-drawn diagrams and references foundational papers.
WSJ shows a 404 Not Found page, noting the requested page can’t be located and advising URL verification or emailing support. It then lists popular articles (MBA fire sale, hantavirus, quarantined cruise) and latest podcasts on AI, tech, and politics.
Arena AI Model ELO History tracks how flagship AI models evolve, exposing nerfs like censorship, quantization, or behavior shifts over time. It contrasts raw API performance with consumer UIs that add prompts and filters. Data comes daily from the LM Arena Leaderboard on Hugging Face, built on thousands of blind, crowdsourced evaluations. Each lab has one curve for its flagship lineage, staying with the top-rated model at each moment, merging -thinking/-reasoning variants, marking new releases, and revealing degradation. © 2026 Erwin Mayer. View on GitHub.
Tom's Hardware reports Chaotic Eclipse’s zero‑day chain, including YellowKey, a BitLocker exploit that lets attackers open BitLocker‑protected drives by copying files to a USB stick and rebooting into Windows Recovery Environment. A GreenPlasma variant offers a local privilege escalation for SYSTEM access. The attack can leave exploit files on the USB and appears effective against Windows and Windows Server 2022/2025, but not Windows 10; Microsoft has not issued an official response. Context notes recent exploits BlueHammer/RedSun.
Clough et al. show that dry-contact glove residues (stearates) from nitrile/latex gloves contaminate microplastic analyses, creating many false positives in infrared/Raman spectra (roughly 2000 per mm2). They recommend using nitrile cleanroom gloves (about 100 false positives/mm2) and provide workflows to distinguish glove-derived stearate signals from real microplastics, aided by stearate spectral libraries. A case study demonstrates reduced false positives, especially for particles smaller than 10 μm.
Joe Warren discusses testing Waterfall-CAD, where outputs are 3D models and hard to test. He added SVG support to enable visual regression testing, treating it as a form of Golden/Snapshot Testing. Using tasty-golden, DiagramGoldenTests.hs compares two SVG renderings: repo diagrams vs code output, converts both to JuicyPixels images via Rasterific-SVG, ensures equal size, then checks per-pixel differences within a Manhattan tolerance and writes a diff image on failure. He deliberately failed a test by changing the color of hidden lines to show the diff. An open-source library to automate this exists; he’d consider it if there’s demand.
Nibble is a C-like systems programming language implemented in ~3000 lines of C that generates LLVM IR without malloc or external dependencies. It supports defer, recursion, primitive types, structs, pointers, function pointers, branching, loops, type checking, and basic C interop with generic pointers. It ships four graphical demos (must install SDL2 and Clang, then make) showing shader-toy renditions, a red-black tree, and a simple game-programming setup. The compiler compiles top-down in one pass and allocas freely, which can cause stack overflows under some clang optimizations; author deems the project momentarily complete.
Anthropic introduces Claude for Small Business, a package of connectors and ready-to-run AI workflows that embed Claude into tools small businesses use (QuickBooks, PayPal, HubSpot, Canva, Docusign, Google Workspace, Microsoft 365). It offers 15 agentic workflows and 15 skills across finance, operations, sales, marketing, HR, and customer service to automate tasks like payroll planning, monthly close, invoice chasing, and campaign prep, with user approval before actions. It emphasizes trust and data security (no default training on customer data) and offers an AI Fluency for Small Business course with PayPal. A Claude SMB Tour starts May 14 in Chicago.
Anonymous researcher Nightmare-Eclipse/Chaotic Eclipse disclosed two new Windows zero-days after Patch Tuesday: YellowKey (BitLocker bypass) and GreenPlasma (privilege escalation to SYSTEM). YellowKey requires loading USB-delivered files to gain unrestricted shell on BitLocker-protected PCs, a serious risk for stolen laptops despite needing physical access; mitigations include BitLocker PIN and BIOS password. GreenPlasma has a partial exploit with no full PoC yet and could enable post-exploitation privilege escalation. Disclosures follow several earlier zero-days this year, underscoring ongoing Patch Tuesday security concerns.
An iterative painting app uses LLMs to propose each stroke with visible reasoning, testing if stepwise generation yields more sincere, accessible art than one-shot results. The piece contrasts Tolstoy’s ideas of accessible, united art with sincerity. Findings: models are mixed; bigger models help, smaller struggle; batch size matters; iterative edits often derail paintings, illustrating fragility akin to codebases. While some results verge on earnest art, many feel derivative. The author shares demos, a frontend, technical write-up, and code links.
Cisco reports Q3 FY26 revenue of $15.8B, up 12% year over year with double‑digit growth. It will reduce about 4,000 roles (fewer than 5% of staff) in Q4, with notifications starting May 14 and local-law compliance. Impacted employees will receive pro‑rated FY26 bonuses, plus placement services and one year of access to Cisco U courses. Cisco will continue strategic investments in silicon, optics, security, and AI across the company. Departing employees are thanked; a Cisco Beat on May 21 will address questions.
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