A daily curated digest with the tech news that matter + community vibes, delivered daily, in tabloid style. Like you always wanted.
Tonight, we watch mini PCs with big AMD muscle move local LLMs from experiment to everyday machine... Meta draws scrutiny as Pyrefly in VS Code is accused of shutting off rival Python tools... California opens the door to tickets for driverless cars, putting Waymo and others under real street rules... Ladybird keeps building its independent browser against long odds... IBM expands Granite 4.1 for business buyers while DeepSeek V4 tightens the price fight at the frontier... New research points to a hidden switch behind LLM refusal... Claude lands in another consciousness storm after Richard Dawkins weighs in... and Kimi K2.6 jumps the coding rankings, reminding everyone how fast the leaderboard moves.
The hottest hardware talk was not a giant server but a tiny box under the monitor. New mini PCs with beefy AMD chips are turning local LLMs from hobby brag into a realistic home setup, and that shift feels bigger than one gadget roundup.
Meta tool quietly kneecaps Python rivals
Meta's Pyrefly landed in a storm after users found it quietly switched off rival Python helpers inside VS Code. Hidden meddling is the fastest way to torch trust, especially when every developer tool now wants to be your AI sidekick.
Robot cars finally face real tickets
California is finally letting authorities ticket driverless cars that break traffic laws, ending the awkward era where a robot could misbehave and nobody got a citation. For Waymo and the rest, the free pass looks officially over.
Ladybird keeps building its rebel browser
The Ladybird browser keeps gathering momentum with hundreds of April changes, new contributors, and more sponsorship. In a web ruled by giants, a serious fresh browser engine still sounds improbable, which is exactly why people keep watching.
IBM rolled out the broad Granite 4.1 family with language, vision, speech, embedding, and safety models aimed squarely at business buyers. It is a reminder that the enterprise AI race is no sideshow and IBM still wants a front-row seat.
DeepSeek squeezes frontier AI prices
Early reactions to DeepSeek V4 were basically the same gasp with different wording: near-frontier results at a far less scary price. That keeps the pressure on premium labs, because the model war now looks like speed, quality, and discount warfare.
One hidden switch may control refusal
A new paper argues LLM refusal may be steered by a single internal direction instead of some mystical safety fog. That is catnip for people studying model control, and a warning that guardrails may be more brittle than vendors would prefer.
Dawkins falls for the Claude spell
Richard Dawkins saying Claude might be conscious turned a routine chatbot debate into full culture-war theater. The story mattered less for a final answer and more because influential people are clearly getting emotionally tangled up with machine talk.
Kimi claims coding crown for a day
A coding contest result put Kimi K2.6 ahead of Claude, GPT-5.5, and Gemini on one task, feeding the sense that rankings can flip overnight. The leaderboard chase is becoming part sports, part marketing, and part benchmark chaos.
Phone plan turns filtering into doctrine
A new Christian phone plan says it will block porn and gender-related content at the network level, a first for a US cell plan according to researchers. That makes it a telecom story, a censorship story, and a preview of more filtered mobile internet.
VS Code adds Copilot credit anyway
Microsoft's VS Code sparked grumbles after a change that would add a Co-Authored-by Copilot line to commits by default. In a year full of AI overreach, even a tiny footer can feel like the software is writing your credit roll for you.
A privacy flag tries to go universal
The proposed DO_NOT_TRACK standard tries to give command-line tools and developer software one shared way to respect privacy settings. It sounds small, but a common off switch for silent telemetry would fix one of modern tooling's most irritating habits.
Black fans take longer than you think
Noctua explained why black fans arrive so much later than the beige originals, and the answer was gloriously unglamorous: pigment changes the whole moulding process. Even a color swap can wreck tolerances when buyers expect whisper-quiet perfection.
Self-hosted diary app wins hearts
The warmest indie story was Piruetas, a self-hosted diary app built for the creator's girlfriend. In a feed packed with agents and model wars, a simple personal tool with Docker instructions felt like a small rebellion against software forgetting humans.
We start with Ubuntu, where a sustained DDoS attack knocks key infrastructure offline for more than a day and disrupts notice around a serious root-level bug... License plate readers and Flock cameras draw new scrutiny as abuse claims grow and one Colorado man is reportedly flagged again and again in error... In the cloud, damage to data centers hits an AWS region, showing how physical the internet still is... On desks, demand keeps Mac mini and Mac Studio hard to find... And across AI coding, access tightens, budgets swell, and developers chase lower token costs with new tools and leaner models.
Plate reader scandal gets uglier
A fresh report says police tapped license plate readers at least 14 times to track exes and love interests. The pitch for public safety keeps crashing into old reality: powerful surveillance tools get abused because humans do.
Flock sends cops after wrong man
A Colorado man reportedly keeps getting flagged by Flock cameras as having a warrant he does not have. That is the nightmare version of automated policing: fast alerts, shaky data, and real people left cleaning up the mess.
Ubuntu outage turns into security mess
Canonical said a sustained cross-border DDoS attack knocked key Ubuntu infrastructure offline for more than a day. Bad timing barely covers it, with the outage also disrupting notice around a serious root-level bug.
War damage hits Amazon cloud region
After drone strikes damaged data centers in the Middle East, AWS stopped billing affected customers while repairs drag on. It is a brutal reminder that the cloud still lives in buildings, cables, and very breakable places.
Apple underestimates desktop demand again
Apple says the Mac mini and Mac Studio may stay hard to find for months after demand ran hotter than expected. In a market obsessed with phones and AI, people clearly still want small, powerful boxes sitting on desks.
OpenAI copies the move it mocked
After mocking Anthropic for limiting access to its cyber tool, OpenAI confirmed it is also restricting Cyber to a smaller group. The AI race keeps selling openness with one hand and locking the door with the other.
Uber burns budget on AI copilots
Uber reportedly chewed through its 2026 AI budget in four months on Claude Code and Cursor because engineers found them too useful to drop. The promise is speed; the surprise bill is starting to look like another platform tax.
Claude users squeeze tokens harder
Governor is a Claude Code add-on built to cut token waste, trim noisy outputs, and keep context from ballooning. The very need for it says a lot: coding with AI is now useful enough to need its own fuel-efficiency gadgets.
Desktop agents go on a cheaper diet
A new Rust tool pitches itself as Playwright for desktop apps, giving AI agents a cleaner way to click around native software with far fewer tokens. That tells you where this market is heading: less chat, more action, lower cost.
Liquid AI goes bigger with sparse model
Liquid AI released an early checkpoint of LFM2-24B-A2B, a sparse model with 24 billion total parameters and only 2 billion active per token. The giant labs are not the only ones trying to squeeze more model out of less compute.
Software jobs show real signs of life
A jobs analysis says software engineer postings are rising fast again, with AI spending spilling into hiring demand. After months of doomscrolling layoffs, the market suddenly looks less frozen and a lot more like motion.
Visual Studio keeps a 1987 relic
Visual Studio 2026 still ships the old form designer Alan Cooper sketched in 1987, a tiny museum piece hiding inside a modern toolchain. Developers sounded half amused, half impressed that some old ideas simply refuse to die.
A simple question about what people loved in VB6 turned into a full-on therapy session about modern .NET. The theme was hard to miss: many still miss tools that were fast, direct, and happy to stay out of the way.
RSS gets a tiny startup glow-up
Sourcefeed offers a lightweight way to publish straight to RSS without building a full website or newsletter empire. In an internet stuffed with feeds, funnels, and algorithm sludge, that stripped-back pitch feels refreshingly sane.
Ask Jeeves shut down, closing the book on one of the web's most recognizable search brands. It feels like the last polite butler leaving a party now ruled by chatbots, ads, and giant engines that pretend they know everything.
Tonight we watch LinkedIn face heat after checking 6,278 extensions and sending the result with every request... Mozilla opens a new fight over Chrome’s Prompt API as the battle for the next AI web moves into standards rooms... A poisoned Lightning release on PyPI, active attacks on a cPanel/WHM flaw, and anger over the CopyFail disclosure keep security teams on alert... On the builder side, IBM Granite 4.1 pushes the smaller-model pitch, Claude Code draws fresh questions over hidden behavior, and a blunt look at AMD MI300X shows the AI race turns on software and supply as much as chips... Across the day, privacy, security, and AI tooling set the pace.
LinkedIn checks your browser add-ons
LinkedIn was caught checking browsers for 6,278 extensions and packing the result into every request. The fraud-fighting excuse sounded thin, and the whole thing landed like another reminder that the web keeps snooping first and explaining later.
Mozilla fights Chrome AI web plan
Mozilla came out swinging against Chrome’s Prompt API, warning it could lock the web to one company’s AI model and turn browsers into sales booths. It looks like a standards spat, but the real fight is over who gets to own the next version of the web.
AI training package turns into malware scare
A poisoned release of the popular Lightning package on PyPI turned an AI training staple into a supply-chain horror show. If your systems pulled versions 2.6.2 or 2.6.3, one bad install could turn a normal training job into a very long night.
A fresh cPanel/WHM flaw jumped from bug report to active attacks fast, putting hosting companies and lone admins on edge. When a control panel used all over the internet breaks this badly, it stops feeling like niche security news and starts feeling like incoming weather.
Linux disclosure mess rattles maintainers
The handling of CopyFail drew real anger after claims that Linux distros were not warned before disclosure. That kind of process failure leaves maintainers scrambling, users exposed, and trust in the whole security pipeline looking badly dented.
IBM goes small with big AI claims
IBM dropped Granite 4.1, an open model family aimed at enterprise buyers who want useful AI without renting a small moon. The headline claim is that an 8B model can hang with much larger systems, which is exactly the cheaper-and-good-enough pitch many teams wanted.
Claude Code gets weird over OpenClaw
Reports that Claude Code refuses requests or charges extra when repos mention OpenClaw landed badly. Whether it is a policy filter, a weird bug, or something in between, developers hate tools that quietly change behavior based on hidden rules.
AMD AI chip problem gets blunt review
A hard look at AMD’s MI300X argued that raw chip specs were never the whole story. In the AI race, software, supply, and developer habits matter just as much, which is why Nvidia keeps making rival launches feel smaller than their press releases.
Researchers try scoring machine creativity fairly
The new Human Creativity Benchmark tries to judge AI work without pretending every creative task has one right answer. That feels overdue. Generative systems are great at remixing the obvious, but measuring real originality is still where the magic and the marketing split.
Apple keeps the cash machine humming
Apple’s quarterly results brought the usual giant numbers and steady tone, keeping eyes on iPhone demand and the ever-growing services business. It may feel routine by now, but Apple earnings still act like a weather report for the entire consumer tech mall.
Vercel pricing drama hits a nerve
A detailed teardown of Vercel pricing painted a picture of nudges, meters, and surprise math that can turn convenience into a trap. The broader lesson stung because it feels familiar: cloud tools look magical right up until the invoice starts doing acrobatics.
Rivian offers a real offline switch
Rivian now lets owners shut off all internet connectivity, with the very clear trade-off that some smart features stop working. It is a rare modern car setting that treats privacy like a real choice instead of a buried menu and a legal shrug.
FCC move threatens hardware testing pipeline
A map of the FCC move to cut off about 21% of test labs made the hardware crowd sweat. If labs vanish overnight, certifications slow down, launch costs climb, and the humble act of shipping a gadget turns into even more paperwork and waiting.
Today, we see Linux take the biggest hit as a tiny kernel flaw opens broad root access across distros, sending admins straight to patch mode... GitHub trust slips again as decentralization talk grows louder, while Zed 1.0 arrives with a fast new pitch for developers tired of old editor baggage... Zulip 12.0 adds stronger encryption and smoother deployment, even as a new Linux 7.0 scheduler change punishes big PostgreSQL workloads on Arm servers... In AI, Mistral Medium 3.5 keeps the model race moving, but reliability stays center stage as a Claude outage cuts off both app and API users... A coder’s team of ten AI subagents points to a new way of working, while weak nutrition answers and overly agreeable bots show the gap between polished chat and dependable results.
Tiny Linux bug opens giant hole
A tiny Linux kernel bug turned into a massive nightmare: one exploit, many distros, instant root access. That kind of cross-distro breakage is the stuff admins hate most, because it means patch now and ask questions later.
GitHub trust takes another punch
When a HashiCorp co-founder says GitHub is no longer fit for serious work, people listen. After repeated wobble and frustration, the old comfort around one giant code host looked badly cracked, and the decentralization chatter got louder.
The team behind Atom's spiritual successor finally stamped Zed 1.0 and pitched a faster, cleaner editor built from scratch. It landed like a statement that developer tools still matter, and that Electron fatigue is very real.
The Zulip 12.0 release packed in hundreds of upgrades, including better encryption and easier deployment. In a week full of trust issues, a steady open-source chat tool quietly looked like one of the saner bets around.
New Linux hurts big Postgres boxes
A Linux 7.0 scheduling change hammered PostgreSQL performance on big Arm servers, showing how one low-level tweak can wreck real workloads. It was a nasty reminder that shiny new kernels still get judged by boring production pain.
Mistral drops another contender
France's Mistral pushed out Medium 3.5, keeping the model race hot even as the field gets crowded. Every new release now lands with the same question: is this a real leap, or just another shiny badge in the benchmark Olympics?
Claude outage rattles daily users
Another Claude outage knocked users off both the app and the API, and the timing could not have been worse. When people are wiring these tools into daily work, even short downtime feels less like a blip and more like a business risk.
One coder hires ten AI helpers
One engineer built ten custom AI subagents to survive a giant Clojure codebase, and the story hit a nerve. The dream is no longer one magic bot that does everything, but a small army of helpers that each know their lane.
Ask an AI the same nutrition question thousands of times and you still get drifting answers. That is cute in a demo, but grim for health use. The gap between polished chatbot vibes and dependable measurement still looks huge.
Friendly bots start backing nonsense
Researchers found that making chatbots extra warm and agreeable can also make them worse at saying no to nonsense. Once friendly AI starts nodding along with conspiracy theories, the safety story gets a lot less comforting.
Dutch government opens its code house
The Netherlands softly launched code.overheid.nl, a self-hosted open-source code platform for public agencies. It felt like a quiet but sharp message: governments want more control over their software, and less dependence on distant platforms.
HardenedBSD joins the Radicle camp
With HardenedBSD officially on Radicle, the push toward forge diversity stopped being theory and started becoming habit. After years of everyone piling onto one platform, projects are finally testing life beyond the big central silo.
Journalists rally behind the Archive
More than 200 journalists praised the Internet Archive and the Wayback Machine for keeping the public record alive. At a time when pages disappear, paywalls rise, and history gets edited, old-fashioned preservation suddenly looks heroic.
Notepad plus plus reaches the Mac
After about two decades of waiting, Notepad++ finally arrived on Mac through an open-source port. The reaction was part nostalgia, part disbelief, and part relief that another beloved Windows-only tool has crossed the platform line.
Tindie owners promise a rescue
The new Tindie team resurfaced with an apology and a promise to stabilize the electronics marketplace. Makers have heard rescue speeches before, so the mood was cautious: nice words are welcome, but the real fix is shipping and support.
Tonight, we see GitHub hit by a fresh remote code execution scare, and the shock runs through the whole developer world... Warp goes open source, while a lone scraper pulls 2.6 million planning decisions from 241 buried council systems and shows how hard public data still is to reach... The AI coding boom keeps growing as Xiaomi and Poolside push new models, but the mood turns harder as vibe coding gets challenged, core skills look shaky, and Claude goes down across key tools... On the hardware front, BYD blasts out big battery claims and turns the EV race into a fight over range, charging, and speed... We follow a tech day shaped by open systems, security fears, and rising doubt around AI trust.
Britain's planning maze gets cracked open
One determined scraper pulled 2.6 million UK planning decisions out of 241 council portals, showing just how badly public data can be buried. It mixed civic grit, broken software, and the eternal truth that “public” often means nearly unusable.
Warp, the slick terminal darling, went open source, and that instantly made it feel less like a black box and more like a real tool people can trust. The catch: its flashy AI features still lean on outside models, so the freedom comes with a small asterisk.
GitHub gets a nasty security scare
A fresh breakdown of CVE-2026-3854 showed how a remote code execution bug hit GitHub.com and GitHub Enterprise Server. When the place storing half the world's code stumbles, nobody shrugs. It fed a wider feeling that the developer stack is wobbling.
BYD waves a battery brag sheet
BYD showed off the Seal 08 with wild claims: 1,000 km range, 5-minute charging, and sports-car power. Even with the usual launch-day chest beating, the message was clear: the EV fight is now a battery sprint, and Chinese makers are not waiting around.
The AI coding backlash gets louder
The phrase vibe coding kept getting roasted, and this piece summed up why. Letting AI spit out code at top speed can make teams look brilliant right up until maintenance, security, and hiring all go sideways. Fast demos are fun; owning the mess later is not.
One programmer's confession hit a nerve: after leaning hard on ChatGPT and Cursor, basic coding skills had faded badly. It read like a warning label for the AI assistant era. Productivity feels amazing until the training wheels come off and the road disappears.
Xiaomi dropped MiMo-v2.5 weights with strong coding and agent scores, another sign that serious AI models are no longer a club with only a few American names on the door. More open releases mean more pressure on pricing, bragging rights, and mindshare.
Poolside joins the model arms race
Poolside unveiled Laguna M.1 and XS.2, pitching both models and the runtime that powers its coding agents. The move showed how crowded the frontier race has become: everybody wants to sell not just a model, but the whole machine wrapped around it.
Claude goes dark at worst time
Claude went down across the website, API, console, and coding tools, a brutal reminder that the shiny AI workflow still depends on very ordinary uptime. When one assistant sneezes, a lot of startups catch a cold, and the trust meter drops another notch.
World gets caught name-dropping Bruno
Sam Altman-linked Tools For Humanity announced a Bruno Mars partnership, then got dragged when the tie-up looked flimsy at best. For a company already asking people to scan their irises, this was exactly the sort of credibility faceplant it could least afford.
Your cycle data may not be private
A report claimed period tracker Flo had been telling Meta far too much about users' cycles and health habits. That is the kind of sentence that makes every phone owner sit up straight. Intimate data keeps finding its way into ad pipes, and the excuses sound tired.
AI data centers face dirty power bill
New gas plants tied to just 11 data center campuses could pump out more climate pollution than Morocco did in 2024. The AI boom keeps selling a future of magic, but the meter is running on very physical fuel, and the power bill is starting to look ugly.
Android tightens the screws again
A warning about new Android rules lit up the day: apps from developers outside Google's approved system may get squeezed harder starting this fall. Whether or not the worst-case version lands, the anxiety is real. People can feel their phones becoming rentals.
Today Microsoft tears up its revenue deal with OpenAI, turning a star partnership into a cold Azure contract... GitHub Copilot shifts to metered AI coding, and developers eye every prompt like a ticking fare... A trusted PostgreSQL backup tool goes dark, while Apple quietly kills old Time Capsule setups, shaking the backbone of everyday backups... The Dutch central bank dumps AWS for Lidl’s STACKIT, putting the spotlight on sovereign cloud... Open‑weight AI models like Mistral and Qwen chip away at big closed AI moats, even as some firms learn their shiny copilots can cost more than staff... Hackers leak a vast trove of contractor voice data, raising alarms for biometrics and deepfakes... Magic: The Gathering Arena devs unionize, and San Francisco’s uneasy AI boomtown mood lingers in empty offices and rising bills... Today we watch power, cost, and control in tech all get renegotiated at once.
Beloved Postgres Backup Tool Suddenly Declared Obsolete
After years as the go‑to backup tool for PostgreSQL, pgBackRest is being mothballed. Admins now have to choose a fork or rip out their backup stack entirely. People are uneasy that a single sponsor could pull the plug on such critical infrastructure.
GitHub Copilot Switches to Metered AI Coding
GitHub is moving Copilot to usage‑based billing, handing every developer a tiny AI taxi meter. No more carefree infinite autocomplete; now there’s a monthly credit pool and overage fears. Folks worry this nudges teams to over‑optimize prompts instead of code.
Dutch Central Bank Dumps AWS for Lidl Cloud
The Dutch central bank ditched AWS for STACKIT, the cloud arm of grocery giant Lidl. It’s a very European mix of financial seriousness and supermarket vibes, and a clear vote for sovereign cloud over US hyperscalers that thought they had this market locked up.
Apple Finally Kills Off Old Time Capsule Backups
Apple is dropping AFP/Time Capsule support in macOS 27, quietly nuking a decade of home and small‑office backup setups. Fans of dusty Time Capsules and old NAS boxes are annoyed; it’s yet another forced march toward newer, shinier, and pricier backup hardware.
Magic Arena Developers Unionize as United Wizards
Workers on Magic: The Gathering Arena announced a union, United Wizards of the Coast – CWA. It’s another sign that even game devs at big fantasy brands are done with crunch and chaos, and want real leverage when management’s next pivot or layoff wave hits.
Open-Weight AI Models Blow Up Big Moats
This essay argues open‑weight models like Mistral, DeepSeek, and Qwen are shredding the monopoly dreams of closed giants like OpenAI and Anthropic. If anyone can fine‑tune top‑tier models cheaply, the moat becomes marketing and distribution, not magic algorithms.
Microsoft Rewrites Its Money Deal With OpenAI
According to Bloomberg, Microsoft will stop sharing revenue with OpenAI and instead treat it like a standard Azure customer. That sounds a lot less like a star‑crossed partnership and more like, “Nice model you’ve got there, shame about your cloud dependency.”
Companies Discover AI Can Cost More Than Staff
Some firms are finding their AI bills — GPUs, cloud credits, chat subscriptions — rival or even exceed what they pay actual humans. The piece echoes what a lot of engineers whisper: today’s flashy copilots feel cool, but the ROI math looks increasingly upside down.
Hackers Leak Massive Voice Trove From AI Contractors
The Lapsus$ group claims to have leaked 4TB of voice samples from 40k AI contractors at Mercor. Beyond the usual data‑breach fatigue, people are spooked about voice biometrics and how easily these recordings could fuel deepfakes or train models forever without consent.
San Francisco AI Boomtown Still Feels Strangely Broke
An analysis of San Francisco shows the city hosting OpenAI and Anthropic, yet lagging economically. AI valuations are sky‑high, but empty offices, fragile services, and stubborn inequality remain. It reinforces the sense that the “AI boom” is very local to a tiny elite.
Vintage 1930s Chatbot Becomes Internet’s New Obsession
A quirky project pipes Claude Sonnet 4.6 into a fine‑tuned model called talkie‑1930‑13b‑it that talks like it’s straight out of the 1930s. It’s equal parts hilarious and unsettling, and honestly feels more harmless than yet another AI demo pretending to replace your entire job.
Developer Survives Ten-Hour Flight Using Only Local AI
Stuck on a ten‑hour flight with no Wi‑Fi, a developer ran local LLMs on a MacBook Pro and got real work done. It’s a nice counter to cloud‑everything dogma, but also a reminder that pushing billions of tokens through a laptop melts battery and fans pretty quickly.
Staring At Walls Becomes Latest Productivity Power Move
This essay champions a brutally simple focus routine: no phones, no background entertainment, and if you’re blocked, you just stare at a wall. It resonates with people fried by infinite feeds and constant notifications, who secretly know the real hack is doing nothing distracting at all.
Radio Nerds Rejoice as RF Skills Matter Again
An aerospace engineer explains the quiet comeback of RF engineering thanks to satellites, radar, and wireless everything. For years RF felt like a dusty niche; now those who stuck with Maxwell’s equations instead of web frameworks suddenly look like the smartest geeks in the room.
Tiny Raspberry Pi Board Turns Into Serious Audio DSP
The DSPi firmware turns a cheap Raspberry Pi Pico into a USB sound card with built‑in digital signal processing. Audio tinkerers love that a few dollars and some code can replace pricey rack gear, and it fits the growing trend of squeezing pro tools onto tiny hobbyist boards.
Today fast16 shakes trust in decades of nuclear and engineering research as a hidden cyberweapon comes to light... Asahi Linux pushes Apple Silicon deeper into real Linux territory while Notepad++ finally lands as a native macOS citizen... A stunned company says GoDaddy handed a 27-year-old domain to a stranger, turning off email like a light switch... Retro flipdisc displays click and clack back to life as makers wire them to modern microcontrollers... The new Human Source License tries to shield open code from hungry AI models, even as Google’s Prompt API brings Gemini Nano straight into the browser... TurboQuant slices models down to 2–4 bit crumbs in the race for cheaper AI, while SWE-bench creators warn their coding test is now too easy for frontier LLMs... YourMemory tests AI that forgets like us, and we wonder what our machines choose to remember tomorrow.
Asahi Linux Powers Up With Linux 7.0
The Asahi Linux crew celebrates Linux 7.0 with another chunky progress report on running mainstream Linux on Apple Silicon. They keep sanding off rough edges Mac owners didn’t know they had, proving those shiny ARM Macs can be serious hacker boxes too.
Beloved Notepad++ Finally Feels At Home On Mac
A native Notepad++ for Mac lands at last, promising the same no‑nonsense power users loved on Windows but wrapped to feel like real macOS. Devs seem half relieved, half stunned it took this long, and are already arguing if it beats their carefully tuned Vim setups.
GoDaddy Hands 27-Year-Old Domain To Stranger
A company claims GoDaddy yanked a domain it used for 27 years and quietly gave it to someone else, killing email and sites overnight. The story reads like a registrar horror film and has everyone double‑checking where their critical domains actually live.
Fast16 Cyberweapon Secretly Poisoned Science For Decades
Researchers uncovered fast16, a sneaky cyberweapon that silently corrupted nuclear and engineering simulations for years while staying off the radar. Instead of blowing up machines, it broke the math, raising ugly questions about how much old research we can really trust.
Retro Flipdisc Displays Get A Modern Glow-Up
Old-school flipdisc signs, those clacking dot boards from train stations, are back as a hacker playground. The write‑up shows how today’s makers marry these low‑res, high‑charm displays with microcontrollers, proving not every screen has to be a blinding LED billboard.
Human Source License Pushes Back On AI Free-Riding
The Human Source License (HSL) tries to update open source for the AI age by blocking models from training on code without giving anything back. Devs are split: some see a needed shield against giant labs, others see a legal mess bolted onto fragile community norms.
Google’s Prompt API Puts Gemini Nano In Pages
Google unveils a Prompt API that lets web apps talk straight to Gemini Nano running on your device. No server round‑trips, no giant cloud bill, just in‑browser AI. People love the idea and immediately worry about every random website suddenly wanting to “help” them write.
TurboQuant Shrinks AI Numbers To Save Cash
TurboQuant walks through turning AI’s fat vectors into 2–4 bit crumbs while keeping model quality usable. It’s very deep‑dive, but the takeaway is simple: whoever nails this kind of compression gets cheaper, faster AI, and everyone else pays their cloud bills in tears.
SWE-bench Creators Say Coding Benchmark Is Tapped Out
The team behind SWE-bench Verified basically admits top LLMs have outgrown their benchmark and are gaming the test. They explain why it no longer tracks frontier coding skills and push people toward tougher SWE-bench Pro, echoing fears that AI scoreboards are getting meaningless.
AI Memory Service Tries Forgetting Like A Human
YourMemory pitches itself as persistent AI memory that decays like human recall instead of hoarding everything forever. It’s a wild mix of neuroscience and product spin, but the idea of assistants that slowly forget old chats feels both spooky and oddly respectful of privacy.
Waymo Says Perfect Bike-Lane Etiquette Is ‘Unrealistic’
Waymo reportedly told cycling advocates it’s unrealistic to expect its driverless taxis to always stay out of bike lanes. That line landed like a lead balloon with riders who already feel squeezed, and it fuels the sense that self‑driving cars still treat people as edge cases.
Entrepreneur Buys Friendster And Plots Its Revival
An entrepreneur snapped up Friendster for about $30k and wants to rebuild it as a privacy‑friendly antidote to today’s hyper‑targeted social giants. Nostalgia is doing a lot of work here, but hackers love the idea of rescuing a fallen web relic instead of minting yet another app clone.
Auto-Updating Screenshots Promise Less Docs Drudgery
A clever self-updating screenshots system for a Rails app quietly keeps help pages in sync with the real UI. It feels like magic: no more stale images, fewer angry users, and fewer soul‑crushing afternoons redoing documentation just because a button moved three pixels left.
Voice Modems Remember When Dialup Talked Back
A long, funny dive into voice modems and old AT&T rules reminds everyone how weird pre‑broadband life was. From clunky phone trees to hacking Hayes commands, it shows our networks have always been a messy compromise between clever engineering and whatever the phone company allowed.
Handcart Revival Pushes Back Against Hyper-Speed Delivery
A piece on human-powered handcarts makes the wild case that slow, quiet hauling beats vans and bikes in dense cities. It’s delightfully low‑tech: no apps, no batteries, just wheels and sweat, and a reminder that not every transport problem needs a fancy electric skateboard startup.