Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Apple WWDC signals Mac OS will process AI locally, reducing cloud LLM reliance and pushing automations to on-device tools, with cloud used only as needed. LLMs democratize development and learning but are probabilistic, not deterministic; reliable tasks require validation, confidence scoring, and human review, which adds cost. The piece cautions against a national-security framing of AI and highlights Apple’s sovereignty approach as value without an arms race. LLMs face a ceiling: rising access costs and narrower real-world use. Expect a shift toward specialized, locally run AI rather than broad AGI, with ongoing governance debates.
Magma is an experimental fork of OrcaSlicer that injects molten plastic into sealed vertical lattice channels during FDM printing to create continuous Z-axis reinforcement without new hardware. The slicer generates a triangle lattice with windows, prints walls, then pauses to extrude into paired tubes, sealing them and forming solid vertical columns interlocked with the lattice. The software pipeline works end-to-end, but real-world prints aren’t yet demonstrated; material melt sealing is the open issue. It supports multi-material setups, many settings, and is CC0 for Magma (AGPL-3.0 upstream).
Real-time UAV detection on RK3588S using YOLOv8n in a three-NPU-core, multi-process pipeline that achieves 46 FPS at 1080p with ~140 MB RAM per stream. It captures live MIPI frames, runs fixed-function ISP/RGA/NPU, and streams annotated output via HDMI/RTSP. A downstream chain runs ByteTrack, temporal features, a presence FSM, and an on-device LLM (Qwen2.5-0.5B) for natural-language summaries of events, all communicating over Unix-domain sockets. Runs on RK3588S boards (e.g., Khadas Edge2), two-camera support, fully hardware-accelerated, open-source under Apache-2.0.
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An issue claims Rio-3.5-Open-397B is not an original model but a direct 60/40 blend of Nex-N2_pro and Qwen3.5-397B-A17B. It presents two independent proofs: removing Rio's system prompt makes the model identify as Nex 79% of the time and Rio 0% of the time, and every weight tensor across all 60 layers matches the 0.6/0.4 Nex/Qwen mix. It argues there was no separate training and that the claimed origin is misleading.
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Researchers analyzed breast milk from Seattle mothers and found widespread contamination with hormone-disrupting chemicals, including BPA, BPS, melamine, cyanuric acid, and triclosan. About 92% of 50 samples contained at least one of these chemicals; prior tests also found PFAS and flame retardants in the same samples. Mixtures of such chemicals may affect infant development even at low levels. While individual substances have known risks, the study notes a small, not fully representative sample. The authors urge stronger chemical protections, noting that exposure is hard to avoid even with careful shopping. Breastfeeding remains healthiest when possible.
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Butterick contends that AI is inherently political: even if it raises material well‑being, its logic will accelerate capital concentration and erode liberal democracy by replacing labor and privatizing public functions as a private AI‑governed 'goodies' economy. Drawing on Winner and Marx, he argues AI acts as a capitalistic instrument that magnifies existing power imbalances, creating a future where citizens depend on Big AI for basic needs and politics tilts toward corporate interests. He warns of a 'resource‑curse' dynamic akin to petrostates, with Norway and Venezuela as contrasts, and urges robust citizen, labor, and regulatory responses.
Perlis' Epigrams in Programming is a collection of aphorisms about software development and computing. It surveys enduring tensions: structure and binding; the perils of complexity, premature optimization, and miscommunication; the value of modularity, top‑down design, and symmetry; recursion, languages, and how code shapes thought; the evolving, often paradoxical nature of computing; and the idea that mastery comes from deep understanding, clear communication, and willingness to revise or rewrite. A playful meditation on the art and science of programming.
Jane Street revisits formal methods, shifting from skepticism to investment. Agentic coding lowers costs and widens who can use formal methods, while two benefits rise: reducing verification burden as models produce code and giving agents stronger feedback through proofs. The firm plans a formal-methods team to make such methods as pervasive as their current type systems, leveraging deep language control and an engaged user base. They aim for near-term improvements and long-term visions, exploring integration with tools like Lean, Dafny, and others, with roles in London and New York.
Scientists have long studied a North Atlantic “cold blob” that cooled while nearby waters warmed. A new study links the cooling to a weakening Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), not surface atmospheric effects, suggesting changing ocean heat transport as the AMOC weakens from warming and freshwater input. Some researchers warn a tipping point could be reached this century, with impacts including faster U.S. East Coast sea level rise, European winters in deep freeze, and African monsoon droughts. Evidence grows, but data gaps keep uncertainties.
Postgres DELETEs are expensive under MVCC: deletes create dead tuples, trigger vacuum and replication overhead, and rarely free OS space promptly. Drops and truncates are far more scalable: they acquire an AccessExclusiveLock but remove files and sweep cache, freeing space immediately with zero dead tuples or vacuum debt. For a one-off cleanup, lock the table, build a temp table of kept data, TRUNCATE, then reinsert; or swap via triggers. For ongoing deletions, partitioning lets you age out data by dropping old partitions. Design schemas to avoid bulk deletes; use batched deletes if needed.
Alibaba Qwen3.7 is fading from the frontiers due to its proprietary stance, being supplanted by Minimax M3 and Rio 3.5 397b, developed by Rio de Janeiro’s municipal IT company.
UK government to announce a plan to ban under-16s from major social platforms (TikTok, Instagram, X, Facebook, YouTube, Snapchat, Reddit) and impose stricter age checks, potentially extending limits to chatbots and daily use for under-18s, following Australia. Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy says a ban is not a silver bullet but part of a wider “basket of measures.” The plan follows a government consultation with around 116,000 responses. Backers include IPPR and NEU; critics warn enforcement challenges and urge broader reform of tech design.
Gabriel Weinberg argues that contrary to headlines, most people aren’t using AI for everything. Based on surveys and usage trackers, about one-third of Americans use AI at least monthly, another third use it occasionally, and roughly one-third avoid it entirely. Use has been largely stagnant, and concerns—jobs, privacy, and misinformation—fuel skepticism about AI’s usefulness, with many advocating safety regulation. The piece compares AI adoption to meat consumption to show diverse preferences and notes privacy-friendly options like private AI as alternatives.
Phoronix reports a second wave of malware in Arch Linux AUR after an earlier incident affecting 1,500+ packages. The new malware is more sophisticated, using code obfuscation to conceal actions and infects Node.js packages, Plasma 6 applets, Firefox packages, the Aura browser, LibreWolf extensions, a NeoVim plugin, and other packages. Developer a821 flagged it; cleanup followed, then Nicolas Boichat found more malware using an AI model (Gemma E2B). The strain is described as more elaborate in obscuring the Bun command. Calls for stronger safeguards or a possible temporary AUR shutdown are discussed.
KPMG pulled a report titled "Redefining excellence in the age of agentic AI" after several organizations said its claims about AI usage were untrue. GPTZero cited AI hallucinations as the cause. UBS, the UK's National Health Service, Swiss Federal Railways, and Transport for London said the report's claims were false or misleading. KPMG removed the report and launched an internal investigation; a spokesperson urged responsible AI use with human oversight. EY also withdrew a loyalty‑program report with fake footnotes and AI hallucinations.
Brent explains teaching his six-year-old about functional programming by turning functions into “machines” that take inputs and produce outputs, with a type-based sense of what fits. He coins a “function machine” game: the child suggests inputs, Brent reveals outputs, then the child guesses what the function does. The tale explores ideas like constant functions, higher-order functions, and outputs that ignore inputs, noting parallels to Zendo-style guessing. The post argues playful exploration can illuminate FP concepts for both kids and adults.
CapeFearAdvisors finds SpaceX’s S-1 shows about $235B in known cash commitments through 2030, while the IPO is expected to raise $50–75B gross. After $20B debt repayment and other uses, net funds are likely $30–$50B, leaving a gap 3–5 times the raise. Commitments are itemized across sections and not aggregated, and the S-1 gives qualitative warnings on funding risk without quantifying how to bridge the gap. Possible sources include a Tesla deal, government contracts, further equity, or the Cursor stock-for-debt option, but none fully closes the gap.
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