Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Trump-era cuts to NIH/NSF funds throttle US science, triggering a brain drain that imperils America's biomedical leadership. The piece cites billions cut, thousands of grants canceled, and more than 1,000 NIH staff fired, leaving labs unable to maintain equipment or hire researchers. Early-career scientists like Ian Morgan face halted lab startups and rising uncertainty; hundreds are leaving for Europe, Australia, and Asia as European programs recruit “scientific asylum.” Training programs dried up, visas tightened, and the US risks losing its next generation of discoveries and economic growth.
Level of Detail (LoD) in 3D rendering—render only what the viewer can discern; as you get closer you swap in higher detail, streaming and culling to avoid waste. The essay maps this to software work: we use low-LoD models to think and debug, abstracting away internals while preserving the silhouette. With LLMs, context is the LoD: too little or too much harms quality; load the right level for the task. AI can generate code rapidly, but the value lies in architecture and pruning—deciding what to keep matters most, especially for the user-facing component.
Gita Jackson argues the idea that the left hates technology is false: leftists love useful tech but resist how capital exploits workers through AI. She critiques hype around AI from Anthropic and OpenAI, notes debates about “understanding” rely on academic terms, and maintains AI is essentially next-token math. The piece contends tech adoption mainly benefits owners, not workers (e.g., rideshares); it rejects techno-optimism and calls for solidarity and Marxian redistribution over flashy promises.
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Ongoing developments and issues in colorectal cancer.
Stop Thinking of AI as a Coworker. It's an Exoskeleton argues that AI works best when treated as a human-augmentation tool, not an autonomous agent. By comparing AI to exoskeletons in manufacturing, military, and medicine, the piece shows how amplification, not replacement, boosts performance and reduces injury. It warns autonomous agents fail due to lacking enterprise context, then presents Kasava’s exoskeleton approach: a product graph that fuses automated signals from code, commits, and user input with human judgment. Build micro-agents, keep humans in the loop, and reveal system seams. The future is amplified, not autonomous.
Google unveils Gemini 3.1 Pro, a smarter model for complex tasks. Building on Gemini 3 Pro, 3.1 Pro boosts core reasoning (ARC-AGI-2 score 77.1%, more than double 3 Pro) and is rolling out in preview to developers, enterprises, and consumers. Access is via the Gemini API, Google AI Studio, Gemini CLI, Google Antigravity, Android Studio; Vertex AI and Gemini Enterprise for business; and the Gemini app and NotebookLM for consumers. It supports advanced problem solving, data synthesis, API integration, and creative coding (e.g., SVG animations, interactive dashboards, generative interfaces). Plans call for broader availability after validation.
Harry McCracken chronicles turning Arctic Adventure, his 1981 TRS-80 BASIC text game, into Arctic Adventure 2026 using Claude Code. After a 2021 web release, he dumped the original BASIC listing into Claude Code, producing a playable web edition with graphics, animations, and five-saved games, plus an undo death, clickable interactions, and a text-only option. The revamp blends nostalgia with AI assistance, treating English as a high-level programming language; McCracken notes mixed feelings about AI-generated art and partial credit, and estimates the codebase at ~20,940 JS/CSS lines versus 141 BASIC lines.
Pragmatic Summit findings: 92.6% of developers use an AI coding assistant at least monthly, ~75% weekly; AI-authored code now ~26.9% of production code, with nearly a third of merged code written by AI. Onboarding time to the 10th PR has halved since 2024. Despite usage, productivity remains ~10% gains. Differences hinge on organizational readiness: well-structured teams gain a multiplier, while struggling orgs expose flaws. Real impact requires company-wide change, not just tools. Success hinges on clear goals, Developer Experience, and fast CI/docs/services; Codex is dominant.
The author recounts a journey from Pascal/C to Rust, building a money-making web app, then migrating to Node.js. While admiring Rust’s memory control, tooling, and safety, he cites long compile times, heavy CI, and web-ecosystem gaps—templating, i18n, and dynamic data handling. He moved to a Rust API + Astro frontend, but maintenance and iteration slowed. Node.js offers mature libraries (zod, kysely, i18n), better async, and easier templates and translations, cutting iteration cost. He concludes Rust excels at CPU-heavy tasks, but for his web app needs, farewell for now.
Don Marti argues that micropayments could restore direct revenue for news sites amid fragmented readership by turning untapped reader demand into incremental income, while supplementing subscriptions and advertising with verifiable, human-audience data. He proposes practical rollout ideas—subscribers receive coins or free gifts for non-subscribers, and coins help access—aimed at reducing friction and boosting UX. The piece also highlights declining advertiser ROI, the need for trustworthy attribution beyond Big Tech, and a careful, staged adoption to avoid user pushback.
IRS’s IT wing has undergone a sweeping reorganization—the biggest in two decades—amid a Trump-era federal reshaping. The agency lost about 40% of its IT staff and nearly 80% of tech leaders, shrinking from ~8,500 in Oct 2024 to 7,135 in Oct 2025. About 1,000 tech workers were redirected to frontline tax work. The CIO says the goal is cross-functional, end-to-end teams with a single scorecard, with AI to aid but not replace staff. Digitization delays risk the 2026 filing season.
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Two DOGE-era officials, Nate Cavanaugh and Justin Fox, allegedly terminated National Endowment for the Humanities grants after feeding grant descriptions to ChatGPT and asking if they were DEI-related. They used a 120-character prompt, with no effort to align AI interpretation with DEI definitions, and NEH staff were blocked from challenging the terminations. They sent mass emails to 1,400 grant recipients from a private server, while Acting NEH Director Michael McDonald denied involvement. A complaint by the Authors Guild portrays a culture-war-driven, unqualified culling of grants, revealing governance failures and risks of AI-driven decisions.
South Korea’s former president Yoon Suk Yeol was sentenced to life imprisonment with labour for leading an insurrection after his December 2024 martial-law declaration. The Seoul court said his aim was to disrupt the constitutional order by sending troops to surround the National Assembly and arrest lawmakers, though the plan was not meticulously executed. The verdict, broadcast on TV, follows months of rulings tightening penalties for the insurrection. Yoon plans to appeal; he faces additional trials, and parole could be possible after 20 years.
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Wall Street Journal 404 Page Not Found: The requested page can’t be found. If you typed the URL, verify it; if you reached this page via search, please email [email protected]. The page also highlights popular articles and latest podcasts, including The Accomplice Who Was Going to Testify Against Jeffrey Epstein—Then Went Dark; U.S. Gathers the Most Air Power in the Mideast Since the 2003 Iraq Invasion; Iran Is Getting Ready for War With the U.S. and podcasts on Walmart’s ranking, Tata/OpenAI data centers, and a UK royal arrest.
Don't judge a language by its syntax; semantics matter more. The article argues that declaration syntax only affects ergonomics and what semantics are possible, not the core meaning. Using Odin as example, different declaration styles and optional semicolons change readability and tooling but little else. It also covers Go/Python-style ASI, first-exposure bias, and how syntax decisions should serve semantics. For designers, ignore petty syntax complaints and prioritize clear, coherent semantics and readability.
This piece argues applicant-tracking systems are structurally broken by design: misaligned incentives, compliance-driven buying, and a buyer–user split that underinvests in product quality. Pricing and enterprise inertia keep HR tools mediocre, while “AI-native” add-ons fail to address the root cause. The author proposes a better architecture: move from a 2D to a 3D model with parent jobs, postings, and openings; support multi-board publishing; deduplicate candidates; and treat candidates as leads in a recruiting CRM. A monorepo and shared data models enable scalable, recruiter-friendly workflows and AI-ready context. Building anew is worth it; incumbents won’t self-correct. Demo at ahire.com.
Chaos Studies by Field Bureau + Werkstatt is an interactive art app (iOS, macOS, Playdate) that presents a living, touch-responsive structure powered by chaotic attractors. Swiping, pinching, and turning (or cranking on Playdate) morph the form as thousands of particles leave glowing trails and colors. Sound is inseparable from motion and mood. It’s described as a calming, distraction-free meditative tool, with nine attractor presets; developers note it’s still in development.
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