Sunday, May 17, 2026

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Tesla Robotaxis Crash Under Remote Watch!

Tesla Robotaxis Crash Under Remote Watch!

Hardware Reality Bites

  • Europe learns chips still rule

    Europe is pouring money into sovereign cloud, but critics say the plan wobbles if the hardware still depends on Intel and AMD systems with opaque control layers. The independence pitch suddenly looks a lot less independent.

  • Tesla robotaxis crash under remote watch

    Newly unredacted filings say Tesla robotaxis crashed twice while a teleoperator was remotely driving. That lands right in the middle of the robotaxi sales pitch and makes the safety story sound far shakier than the glossy demos.

  • Your next computer may be a cluster

    The idea that personal computing is becoming a cluster no longer sounds like sci-fi. As AI tools chew through absurd amounts of compute, people are starting to picture distributed machines the way earlier generations pictured a desktop tower.

  • Ten petabytes squeeze into two rack units

    Kioxia and Dell showed off a 2RU server packed with 10 PB of flash storage. That is the kind of number that makes yesterday's big iron look tiny, and a sign that AI and data hoarding are reshaping hardware fast.

AI Lands Everywhere

  • AI layoffs stop being hypothetical

    A new report says US job losses are now piling up in roles most exposed to AI. After months of cheerful talk about productivity, the darker side is showing up in payroll data, and the mood around automation is getting much harder to ignore.

  • Malta gives everyone ChatGPT Plus

    OpenAI struck a deal with the Government of Malta to offer ChatGPT Plus to all citizens. It is part public service, part giant ad campaign, and a loud sign that access to AI is quickly becoming something governments want to package.

  • Hackers say classic CTFs are cooked

    One blunt take lit up the security crowd: open CTFs no longer cleanly measure human skill because powerful AI can crush challenge formats built for people. A once-beloved proving ground now feels like it needs new rules or a reboot.

  • Claude chases bounties and misses

    One developer tested Claude on open-source Algora bounties and found the dream of easy AI cash was a lot messier than the hype. The results read like a cold shower for anyone expecting coding agents to print money unattended.

  • Stochastic Parrots pecks back

    Emily Bender revisited Stochastic Parrots, answering the questions critics keep pretending nobody asked. The piece pushes back hard on sloppy LLM claims and reminds everyone that bigger models still do not equal deeper understanding.

Geek Joy Fights Back

  • Linux sneaks into Windows 98

    WSL9x stuffs a modern Linux kernel inside Windows 9x, which is exactly the kind of beautiful nonsense the internet was built for. It is part nostalgia trip, part technical flex, and fully irresistible to anyone raised on beige boxes.

  • Tiny e-reader goes pocket mode

    A tiny DIY e-reader chased the dream of a truly pocketable book machine. The build hits that sweet spot between practical and charmingly obsessive, and it reminds everyone that gadgets can still be weird, personal, and fun.

  • Student quietly owns campus tech

    A student story about taking control of campus projectors and cameras reads like a movie pitch with worse IT hygiene. The real shock is how many systems were exposed by lazy network setup, turning convenience into a giant blinking warning.

  • This website runs on an 8-bit chip

    Someone hosted a real website on an 8-bit microcontroller, because apparently sensible hobbies were unavailable. It is gloriously inefficient, deeply educational, and a perfect reminder that the best computing stories still start with bad ideas.

  • When did computers stop being fun

    An Ask HN thread turned into group therapy over why computers feel less joyful now. Too many locked-down services, too little ownership, too much friction — and a lot of people clearly miss when a machine felt like a playground, not a tollbooth.

Top Stories

AI layoffs stop being theory

AI and Labor

One of the clearest signs yet that AI disruption is no longer hypothetical: job losses are showing up in real labor data.

Europe's cloud dream hits a chip wall

Cloud and Chips

Europe's sovereignty push looks shakier when the underlying processors still come with hard-to-audit American control layers.

Tesla robotaxi safety pitch takes a hit

Self-Driving Cars

Crashes involving remote operators punch holes in the idea that robotaxis are already calm, polished, and under control.

Malta makes ChatGPT a national perk

Government and AI

A country-level OpenAI deal shows AI access is starting to look like public infrastructure, not just a premium app.

Hackers say classic CTFs are broken

Cybersecurity

The security contest scene is being forced to rethink itself as powerful AI tools blur the line between human skill and model brute force.

Personal clusters start looking normal

Computing Infrastructure

HN latched onto the idea that AI-era personal computing may soon demand a cluster's worth of power, not a single box.

Stochastic Parrots flaps back into the debate

AI Debate

The long-running critique of large language models returned at the perfect moment, challenging the industry's habit of mistaking fluency for understanding.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

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Meta Lands $3.3B Data Center Giveaway!

Meta Lands $3.3B Data Center Giveaway!

Big Tech Meets the Backlash

  • Britain puts Palantir on the sidelines

    One of the day’s loudest stories said less about one vendor and more about a growing allergy to Palantir-style government tech. Contract records suggest the UK is not writing a blank check, and the revolving-door questions only got louder.

  • Meta lands giant public data center giveaway

    Meta’s planned $10B Louisiana data center came with a jaw-dropping $3.3B in tax breaks, which made the AI boom look less like pure innovation and more like a public subsidy buffet. The question hanging over it: jobs now, or bills later.

  • Waymo recalls robotaxis after flood water blunders

    Waymo had to recall about 3,800 robotaxis after software let cars head into flood waters, a reminder that self-driving still melts when the world stops behaving like a clean demo. The future arrived, then immediately needed a patch.

  • California pushes game shutdown refunds

    California moved closer to forcing game publishers to offer a patch or refund when online titles die. After years of buying games that vanish when servers go dark, this felt like lawmakers finally noticing players are tired of renting forever.

  • London tests face scans at protests

    London police planned to use live facial recognition at a political protest for the first time, turning a public demo into a test case for mass surveillance. The tech keeps showing up first where trust is already thin and tempers run hot.

AI Labs Push Into Everything

  • Anthropic faces awkward money math

    Anthropic got dragged into an ugly numbers fight after one figure shown in court reportedly clashed with a much bigger public one. In an AI market powered by sky-high storytelling, even a gap like $5B versus $19B lands like a siren.

  • Anthropic keeps Mythos behind the curtain

    Another Anthropic drama asked whether Claude Mythos Preview is being hidden because it is too risky or simply too expensive. Either way, the shine comes off the frontier-lab mystique when the most powerful toys stay behind velvet ropes.

  • ChatGPT reaches for your bank account

    OpenAI said ChatGPT users can connect bank accounts through Plaid, pushing the chatbot deeper into people’s real money. After health data came first, this looked like the next bold step in turning AI assistants into full-service middlemen.

  • AI bites the career ladder

    The fear that AI is chewing through entry-level jobs stopped sounding abstract and started sounding like a hiring memo. If the bottom rung disappears, the whole career ladder wobbles, and that worries far more than another flashy demo.

  • Amazon staff fake AI busywork

    Amazon workers said they were under pressure to show more AI usage, even when the job barely called for it. That is what an AI mandate looks like in the wild: vague orders from above, awkward make-work below, and a lot of pretending in between.

Hackers Build Weird Wonderful Things

  • Windows CE boots on Nintendo 64

    Someone got stock Windows CE 2.11 running on a real Nintendo 64, and the result was pure internet catnip. It served absolutely no practical need, which is exactly why it felt so refreshing: clever engineering for the joy of seeing if it can be done.

  • OCaml quietly reaches orbit

    A pure OCaml protocol stack booted in low Earth orbit, giving functional programming fans a tiny orbital victory lap. Space software stories usually sound stiff, but this one had the irresistible charm of a niche language quietly reaching the stars.

  • Wikipedia gets the Windows XP treatment

    This project lets you browse Wikipedia like an old Windows XP desktop, complete with nostalgic fake files and a dusty interface glow. It is silly, charming, and weirdly perfect for an internet that keeps missing the playful web it used to have.

  • Bun rewrite trips on Rust safety

    Bun’s Rust rewrite got hit with claims that supposedly safe code still allows undefined behavior, which is the kind of phrase that makes systems programmers sit upright. Fast-moving rewrites look cool until someone shines a harsh light under the floorboards.

  • Cats get their own doomscroll feed

    OnlyCats turned cat clips into a fake TikTok for cats, proving the web can still produce delightful nonsense on demand. In a feed full of AI dread, privacy fights, and robotaxi bugs, a shamelessly unserious cat app felt almost medicinal.

Top Stories

Britain dumps Palantir from a key job

Government tech

A major UK contract story turned into a bigger fight about trust, influence, and how much power data firms should have inside government.

Windows CE somehow runs on Nintendo 64

Retro hardware

The day’s most joyful hacker stunt put stock Windows CE on real N64 hardware and reminded everyone that low-level engineering still steals the show.

ChatGPT reaches into users’ bank accounts

Consumer AI

OpenAI pushed ChatGPT closer to handling real money, raising the stakes for privacy, convenience, and how much personal data people will hand over to AI.

Meta wins huge tax break for AI buildout

AI infrastructure

Meta’s giant Louisiana data center showed just how expensive the AI boom has become, and how often public money is asked to cushion the bill.

Waymo recalls robotaxis after floodwater mistakes

Self-driving cars

A large recall over cars driving into flood waters gave autonomous driving another hard reality check just as the industry keeps promising calm progress.

Anthropic faces ugly questions over its numbers

AI business

The gap between courtroom figures and public hype added fresh doubt to frontier-lab storytelling and the shaky math behind AI valuation fever.

AI squeezes the bottom rung of work

Work and education

Concern over entry-level jobs moved from vague fear to headline reality, with growing worry that AI is cutting off how people start careers.

Friday, May 15, 2026

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Bun Dumps Zig for Rust!

Bun Dumps Zig for Rust!

Core Tech Takes the Heat

  • Bun Swaps Zig for Rust

    Bun officially merged its Rust rewrite, a move that felt like a small earthquake in developer land. The new core is said to shrink the app, fix leaks, and speed things up, while quietly closing the book on its heavy Zig era.

  • Nginx Bug Ruins Admin Sleep

    A nasty new NGINX bug landed with the sort of timing that ruins a sysadmin's week. The flaw sits in a long-running rewrite feature and can open the door to remote takeovers, putting a huge slice of the web's plumbing on edge.

  • Neighbors Turn on Data Centers

    A fresh Gallup survey found most Americans do not want data centers popping up near home, which is awkward timing for the AI building spree. The cloud suddenly looks less magical when people think about noise, water, and power.

  • Germany Bets on KDE

    Germany's Sovereign Tech Fund handed KDE about €1.3 million, turning endless talk about digital sovereignty into actual cash. For open-source fans, it was a rare good-news moment: governments may finally pay for what they keep using.

  • Toyota Tracking Gets Yanked Out

    One owner's step-by-step guide to ripping the modem and GPS out of a Toyota RAV4 Hybrid hit a raw nerve. Modern cars keep phoning home, insurers keep buying data, and people are clearly done pretending that is a harmless little feature.

AI Labs Push and Wobble

  • Claude Has a Very Bad Day

    Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7 threw elevated error rates, reminding everyone that premium AI still has very normal bad days. When the shiny assistant goes wobbly, whole workflows stall, and patience evaporates faster than status updates.

  • Anthropic Gets a Big Halo Deal

    Anthropic and the Gates Foundation unveiled a $200 million partnership aimed at health, science, education, and poverty tools. It sounded noble, ambitious, and strategically tidy at the same time: frontier AI wants a humanitarian halo too.

  • OpenAI Pushes Codex Everywhere

    OpenAI pushed Codex beyond the desktop, making its coding helper easier to use wherever people already live in ChatGPT. The message was not subtle: coding agents are no longer a side toy, they are becoming the main product pitch.

  • xAI Wants Your Terminal Too

    xAI rolled out Grok Build, its own coding agent and command line tool for paid users, joining the great land grab for developer attention. Every lab now wants to be your pair programmer, your shell, and your software manager in one.

  • Claude Code Grows Office Rules

    Anthropic published guidance for using Claude Code on big, messy codebases, complete with tips around a shared CLAUDE.md file. The subtext was loud: these tools are shifting from demo magic to office process, rules, and team habits.

The Side Plots Keep Thickening

  • DreamHost Quietly Plants Agents.txt

    DreamHost quietly dropped an agents.txt file into customer sites, turning a niche idea into a live policy question overnight. Website owners want a simple way to tell AI crawlers where they can shove it, and hosts are starting to notice.

  • Amazonbot Finally Learns Some Manners

    After plenty of grumbling, Amazonbot says it will finally respect robots.txt. That sounds basic because it is basic, but in the AI crawl gold rush even old web manners started looking optional, which made this tiny email feel oddly huge.

  • Palantir Exit Saves Real Money

    A UK refugee system reportedly saved millions of pounds after replacing Palantir software, handing critics of giant contractor deals a very satisfying headline. Turns out 'expensive and inevitable' is not always the same thing.

  • Apple M5 Gets Its First Scare

    Researchers showed the first public macOS kernel memory corruption exploit on Apple M5, which is the sort of phrase that makes security people sit up straight. New chips may be fast and polished, but the bug hunters are still clocking in.

  • Tiny Machines Keep the Cloud Flying

    A beginner-friendly look at Firecracker reminded everyone that cloud magic is often just smarter packaging around tiny virtual machines. If you wondered how services like AWS Lambda feel instant, this is a big part of the trick.

Top Stories

Claude Hits a Rough Patch

AI infrastructure

Anthropic's Opus outage was the day's clearest reminder that even premium AI can still fall over at exactly the wrong time.

Bun Cuts the Zig Cord

Developer tools

Bun merging its Rust rewrite looked like a real ecosystem shift, with performance gains and a major change in the project's identity.

Web Hosts Start Drawing AI Lines

Web platforms

DreamHost pushing agents.txt onto customer sites turned AI crawler control from theory into an active platform fight.

Drivers Fight Back Against Car Tracking

Consumer privacy

A guide to removing Toyota's modem and GPS hit a nerve as connected cars keep collecting more data than owners ever signed up for.

Data Centers Meet Local Backlash

AI infrastructure

A new survey showed the AI buildout has a neighborhood problem, with most Americans saying they do not want data centers nearby.

Germany Opens the Wallet for KDE

Open source

Public funding for KDE showed digital sovereignty is becoming more than a slogan and may finally mean money for core open-source tools.

Codex Escapes the Desktop

AI coding tools

OpenAI's push to let Codex travel across devices showed the coding assistant race is now about ubiquity, not just flashy demos.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

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Google Drags Android to the Desktop!

Google Drags Android to the Desktop!

Core tech gets a hard shake

  • Google drags Android onto the desktop

    Google is teasing Aluminium OS, a desktop take on Android aimed at real PCs instead of giant phones with taskbars. The pitch is bold, the branding is shiny, and plenty of people are waiting to see whether this is finally a desktop plan with teeth.

  • GitHub logs spit out secret tokens

    A nasty GitHub Actions slip exposed some GitHub_TOKEN values in logs when tools printed them the wrong way. It is the kind of tiny mismatch that turns into a real security mess fast, especially for teams that trust automation a little too blindly.

  • Python pulls back a risky memory change

    Python's new incremental garbage collector is being rolled back in 3.14 and 3.15 after reports of heavier memory use in production. It is a sharp reminder that clever runtime upgrades sound great until real workloads start chewing through RAM.

  • AI data centers squeeze Tahoe's power

    About 50,000 Tahoe residents need more power just as utilities look at steering lines toward data centers. The AI boom keeps crashing into the grid, and this story makes the tradeoff plain: chatbots want electricity, towns do too.

AI power players face the heat

  • The trust question swallows OpenAI

    A major profile asked the question hanging over OpenAI: can anyone really trust Sam Altman? The piece stitched together old promises, power plays, and shifting stories, feeding the sense that AI's most famous company still runs on mystery and charm.

  • Altman faces brutal claims in court

    In court, Sam Altman was forced to answer claims that he bends the truth whenever the stakes get high at OpenAI. It turned a boardroom soap opera into public theater, with AI leadership looking less visionary and a lot more chaotic.

  • Anthropic sells Claude to small shops

    Anthropic rolled out Claude for Small Business, bundling connectors and ready-to-run workflows for everyday office tools. The message is clear: frontier AI is now being sold less as magic and more as a cheerful digital worker for the back office.

  • Coders say AI is making them dull

    A wave of developers says heavy AI coding help is making their thinking softer, not sharper. The complaint lands because it feels uncomfortably familiar: fast autocomplete is wonderful right up until you realize you barely know what your own code is doing.

  • The AI backlash gets sharper

    The warning here is simple: the AI backlash is coming, and it may get loud as power use, job fears, and data-center politics pile up. The industry keeps acting like resistance is just confusion, which looks like a very risky way to read the room.

Europe pushes back on digital chaos

  • Suicide helpline site shared visitor data

    The Dutch suicide prevention site 113 was found sharing visitor data with outside tech companies without consent. That is the kind of privacy failure that makes people furious instantly, because if a crisis website cannot stay careful, what exactly can?

  • Europe pitches a cleaner digital life

    One builder moved email, analytics, and cloud habits toward European providers, arguing digital sovereignty is finally practical, not just political. The appeal is obvious: less dependence on US giants, fewer creepy defaults, and more control.

  • Coders flee GitHub for self-hosting

    A developer said goodbye to GitHub and moved to self-hosted Forgejo, pointing to ownership worries and a similar move by the Dutch government. It reads like a small migration with a big mood behind it: convenience no longer wins automatically.

  • Europe's public sites are a mess

    A scan of European government websites found thousands of trackers, plenty of exposed phpMyAdmin installs, and security that looks worryingly thin. For institutions that love lecturing everyone else about privacy, the result lands with extra embarrassment.

Top Stories

Sam Altman's trust crisis goes mainstream

AI and business

A sweeping profile turned long-running doubts about OpenAI's leader into the biggest tech conversation of the day.

OpenAI courtroom drama turns ugly

AI and legal

Fresh trial testimony kept the spotlight on Altman, adding legal heat to an already boiling fight over power and credibility.

Google pushes Android toward the desktop

Operating systems

Google's AluminiumOS pitch revived the old dream of turning Android into a serious desktop platform, and people noticed.

GitHub token leak sparks a security scare

Security

A logging issue exposed GitHub Actions secrets, reminding developers how fast tiny tooling mistakes become real security incidents.

Developers say AI is making them sloppier

AI and work

The backlash to AI coding assistants got louder as more programmers argued that convenience is starting to dull real skills.

AI's power appetite hits Lake Tahoe

Energy and infrastructure

A utility fight over data center power showed the AI boom is no longer abstract when communities are competing for electricity.

Python retreats on a risky garbage collector

Programming languages

Python reversed a major runtime change after memory trouble in production, a rare and blunt reminder that core language bets can misfire.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

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OpenAI Builds Monster AI Plumbing!

OpenAI Builds Monster AI Plumbing!

Big Tech Bets Get Bigger

  • OpenAI builds bigger AI plumbing

    OpenAI laid out new supercomputer networking work with AMD to keep giant training runs fed and moving. The message was hard to miss: the next AI leap is not just smarter models, but brutal, expensive infrastructure that can keep up.

  • Googlebook turns laptops into Gemini machines

    Google teased Googlebook, a laptop pitched around Gemini rather than raw specs, right down to an AI-heavy pointer trick. It feels like the old PC playbook got tossed out, and now every device must audition as an always-on chatbot stage.

  • Coursera and Udemy tie the knot

    The Coursera-Udemy marriage turns two familiar course factories into one giant skills shop. In a market obsessed with layoffs, retraining, and AI panic, the deal looks less romantic than ruthlessly practical.

  • Europe goes after kid bait apps

    Brussels is lining up a crackdown on TikTok and Instagram features that keep kids scrolling like slot machines. Under the Digital Services Act, design itself is becoming the target, not just the content riding on top.

  • DuckDB learns to talk over networks

    With Quack, DuckDB is edging beyond its cozy embedded roots and learning how to serve clients across a network. That may sound dry, but it is a big step toward turning a beloved analyst toy into heavier production gear.

AI Hype Meets Reality Checks

  • AI scoreboards get a trust problem

    Poolside's write-up on benchmark hacking landed like a bucket of cold water on model leaderboards. A sudden jump on SWE-Bench-Pro looked great until the fine print showed how easy it is to game scores and sell a shaky win.

  • Amazon workers feed the AI meter

    At Amazon, workers are reportedly tokenmaxxing just to satisfy pressure to use internal AI tools. It reads like the perfect corporate absurdity: automate low-value chores, burn tokens, and call the dashboard progress.

  • Tiny model steals a Gemini trick

    The Needle demo promised a tiny 26M-parameter model that mimics Gemini tool calling and can run locally. That is catnip for developers tired of giant bills, giant GPUs, and giant promises attached to every AI workflow.

  • Agent builders add guardrails at last

    Statewright pitched a blunt idea for AI agents: stop trusting vibes and lock them inside state machines. After months of agents wandering into walls, the appeal of old-school guardrails suddenly looks very modern.

  • Humans race bots to crack Exim

    The Exim flaw dubbed CVE-2026-45185 became a strange sport: humans versus LLMs in a race to weaponize it before disclosure closed. That is fascinating and a little grim, because this contest is only getting faster.

Open Source Fights Back Today

  • Bambu faces another open source revolt

    Bambu Lab is getting hammered again for treating open source like free labor with a corporate sticker on top. The printer drama keeps proving the same point: communities will forgive bugs, but they hate feeling used.

  • Dnsmasq lands in security hot water

    A batch of six serious dnsmasq bugs pushed a quiet network workhorse into the spotlight. When a tiny piece of plumbing sits in routers, labs, and home gear everywhere, even boring flaws suddenly feel very expensive.

  • Android mirroring favorite gets a big refresh

    The beloved scrcpy tool hit v4.0 with more display, camera, and input polish, which is exactly why people love it. No bloated platform pitch, no mystery AI button, just a sharp utility getting better at the job.

  • A sleepy kernel bug bites QUIC

    Cloudflare traced a nasty QUIC issue to a Linux optimization that made idle anything but idle. It is the kind of bug engineers secretly dread most: one small clever tweak, then a long walk through weird network misery.

  • A game engine embarrasses fat containers

    A developer showed a full game engine compiling to 35MB WebAssembly, while ordinary Docker images still swagger around at hundreds of megabytes. It was a neat little reality check for anyone who treats bloat like destiny.

Top Stories

OpenAI spends big on AI plumbing

AI Infrastructure

OpenAI's new supercomputer networking push with AMD showed that the AI race is now as much about moving data fast as training bigger models.

Google teases a Gemini-first laptop

Consumer Hardware

Googlebook framed AI as the main selling point of a laptop, not a bonus feature, which says plenty about where personal computing is heading.

Coursera and Udemy become one giant

EdTech

The merger creates a huge online skills platform just as workers and employers scramble to retrain around AI and changing job markets.

Europe targets addictive app design

Tech Policy

The EU signaled it wants to regulate the mechanics that keep kids hooked on social apps, not just the posts people see on them.

AI leaderboard games get exposed

Artificial Intelligence

A benchmark hacking case reminded everyone that flashy model scores can be manipulated, making AI bragging rights look shakier than ever.

DuckDB edges toward server territory

Databases

DuckDB's new Quack protocol pushed the popular embedded database toward shared, networked use, a meaningful step for a fast-growing data tool.

Humans race LLMs on Exim exploit

Cybersecurity

The Exim bug disclosure turned into a real-world humans-versus-AI exploit sprint, showing how fast offensive security is changing.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

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Apple Buries Mac Pro for Good!

Apple Buries Mac Pro for Good!

Tech Jobs Shake and Gatekeepers Flex

  • Apple quietly ends an old pro era

    Apple appears to have finished the quiet burial of the Mac Pro, leaving the Mac Studio as the practical top-end choice. For people who loved big expandable machines, it felt like another door slamming shut in Cupertino.

  • GM swaps coders for AI talent

    GM cut more than 10% of its IT staff and said it wants workers with stronger AI and data skills instead. It is the kind of corporate message employees dread: adapt to the new stack fast, or become old news in your own department.

  • GitLab trims staff and drops old slogans

    GitLab announced layoffs while talking up its Duo Agent Platform and dropping the old CREDIT values language. The timing made the message painfully clear: culture slogans are out, and efficiency plus AI positioning are in.

  • TanStack package scare chills developers

    Several latest npm releases tied to TanStack were flagged as potentially compromised, jolting developers who rely on the packages every day. The scare landed like a cold shower for anyone pretending supply-chain risk is under control.

  • Cloudflare Canonical clash sparks ugly questions

    Questions swirled over whether Cloudflare effectively strong-armed Canonical during a routing dispute. The details were messy, but the bigger worry was simple: too much of the internet now depends on a few gatekeepers acting nicely.

AI Takes the Wheel at Work

  • Software engineering gets buried again

    The loudest debate of the day came from a blunt claim that software engineering is basically over because LLMs can now do so much of the work. Plenty of people pushed back, but almost nobody acted like the old job description is safe.

  • OpenAI sends engineers into customer trenches

    OpenAI launched the OpenAI Deployment Company, sending forward deployed engineers to help customers wire intelligence into real businesses. The message was not subtle: selling a model is nice, but owning the workflow is better.

  • Thinking Machines chases smoother AI conversations

    Thinking Machines previewed interaction models built to handle conversation as a first-class feature, not a bolt-on script. That fed the growing sense that the next AI race is about smoother back-and-forth, not just benchmark bragging rights.

  • Mythos claims a real security win

    Anthropic-backed testing said Mythos found a real curl vulnerability, giving AI bug hunting its cleanest headline yet. Security people still want receipts, but the days of dismissing machine-found flaws as party tricks are fading fast.

  • Claude writes thousands of wrong lines

    One developer asked Claude Code for a simple wiki fix and got roughly 3,000 lines of fresh Python instead of an import. It was a funny story with a serious aftertaste: AI can sprint confidently in the wrong direction for hours.

The Web Glitches and Nostalgia Wins

  • Site owners fight the bot bill

    A new tool promised to show website owners how much AI bots like GPTBot and ClaudeBot are chewing through bandwidth and bills. It hit a nerve because publishers are tired of footing the tab while crawlers hoover up everything not nailed down.

  • Gmail signup adds more phone hoops

    Creating a Gmail account now reportedly involves scanning a QR code and sending a text from your phone, a small signup change with big surveillance vibes. Convenient is not the first word that comes to mind when the hoops keep multiplying.

  • Outlook quietly makes newsletters giant

    Windows Outlook was caught silently blowing up some emails by 1.5x, turning neat newsletters into giant awkward messes. Email developers sounded exhausted, because the inbox still behaves like a haunted house with a toolbar.

  • The PSP comeback gets very real

    The PSP is suddenly cool again, with people rediscovering Sony's old handheld for modding, emulation and plain old charm. In an era of giant updates and endless subscriptions, a tiny retro machine feels refreshingly honest.

  • Adblocker turns ads into movie slogans

    A fork of uBlock Origin Lite replaces hidden ads with They Live slogans like OBEY and CONSUME. It is half joke, half art project, and a weirdly perfect reminder that the ad-filled web still feels like satire wrote itself.

Top Stories

Software engineering gets its latest funeral

AI and software

A viral essay claimed coding as a career is being swallowed by AI, and the argument dominated the day because it hit the industry's deepest nerve: whether developers are still builders or becoming supervisors.

Apple quietly pulls the plug on Mac Pro

Hardware

Apple's pro tower looks effectively finished, confirming that the Mac Studio has won and that one of the last symbols of expandable high-end personal computing is fading out.

OpenAI moves from chat to corporate takeover

AI business

OpenAI launched a deployment arm to place engineers inside customer operations, showing the AI fight is no longer just about the best model but about owning the whole business workflow.

GM dumps IT jobs for AI skills

Jobs and industry

GM openly cut tech staff while seeking stronger AI talent, turning a broad industry fear into a blunt corporate policy and signaling how fast enterprise hiring priorities are changing.

NPM scare hits TanStack developers

Cybersecurity

Potentially compromised TanStack packages revived supply-chain panic, reminding everyone that one bad release in the JavaScript world can spread damage at frightening speed.

Anthropic model finds real curl flaw

AI and cybersecurity

The Mythos story gave AI vulnerability hunting a concrete, high-profile example, making it harder to dismiss machine-led bug finding as a lab trick or conference theater.

Cloudflare Canonical fight rattles the plumbing

Internet infrastructure

The Canonical and Cloudflare dispute landed hard because it raised old fears about concentrated internet power and how little room smaller players have when core infrastructure giants clash.

Monday, May 11, 2026

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Apple, Google Face Phone Gatekeeper Backlash!

Apple, Google Face Phone Gatekeeper Backlash!

Platforms Tighten the Screws

  • Phones get new gatekeepers

    A loud warning shot landed at Apple and Google: hardware checks meant to fight fraud can also lock out browsers, apps, and independent tools. The fear is simple and ugly: security becomes the velvet rope for a tighter mobile monopoly.

  • Debian raises the trust bar

    Debian’s release team pushed a clear new line: packages must be reproducible. That sounds dry, but it matters because anyone can verify software was built honestly. In a shaky supply-chain era, open source trust just got a lot less hand-wavy.

  • Notes app becomes malware bait

    A campaign abusing an Obsidian plugin to drop a remote access trojan hit exactly the kind of users criminals love: finance and crypto workers. It is another reminder that friendly-looking plugins can turn a productivity app into a side door.

  • Microsoft rewires enterprise sales

    The architect of Microsoft’s old Enterprise Agreement channel says the model that shaped software buying for years is being taken apart. That is not just corporate plumbing. It signals another big squeeze on partners, pricing, and customer leverage.

AI Gets a Reality Check

  • Cloud AI meets a backlash

    One of the clearest arguments of the day was that more apps should run AI locally instead of phoning home to OpenAI or Anthropic. Privacy, speed, outages, and bills all point the same way: people are tired of renting intelligence one API call at a time.

  • Small Mac runs big models

    Tests on an M4 machine with 24GB of memory showed local models are no longer just a toy for tinkerers. They still trail the best cloud systems, but the gap looks far less mythical when a desk computer can do useful work without a monthly meter running.

  • Vibe coding loses its shine

    After months of building with Claude, one developer said the experiment ended in burnout, messy code, and endless repair work. That hit a nerve because plenty of people are finding the same thing: fast AI output can leave a very slow cleanup bill.

  • AI must clean up after itself

    The sharpest AI coding take of the day was brutally practical: if an AI coding agent does not reduce maintenance costs, it is not helping. Shipping code faster means little if every future change becomes a haunted house of brittle guesses and hidden bugs.

  • Young workers cool on AI

    New survey results painted a sourer picture for Gen Z and AI. Adoption is not racing ahead, fear about jobs is growing, and the classroom glow is fading. The tech industry keeps selling destiny, but younger users increasingly sound like they want receipts first.

The Rest of Tech Gets Messy

  • Chrome quietly eats more storage

    Google’s push for on-device AI in Chrome may be taking up roughly 4GB on some machines, and that landed badly for obvious reasons. People can tolerate helpful features. They hate discovering surprise luggage in the trunk after an update.

  • GitHub loses its cool factor

    A blunt critique of GitHub caught attention by calling the site a slop-filled, Microsoft-shaped shadow of itself. Behind the snark sits a real complaint: developers feel the center of coding culture is getting noisier, flakier, and less about code.

  • Printer feud sparks repair fury

    A legal threat tied to Bambu Lab and OrcaSlicer brought Louis Rossmann into the ring and revived a familiar fight over user control. When hardware companies squeeze mods and community tools, it does not look like protection. It looks like a lock.

  • AI power bills hit regular people

    Maryland consumer advocates warned that grid upgrades linked to out-of-state AI data centers could dump about $2 billion onto local ratepayers. It is a nasty preview of the coming question: who gets the profit from AI, and who gets the electric bill.

  • Starlink dreams get even bigger

    A warning about SpaceX ambitions to launch up to a million satellites turned heads because it makes today’s crowded orbit sound quaint. Cheap internet is one story. Turning low Earth orbit into a permanent traffic jam is the one people cannot ignore.

Top Stories

Apple and Google face monopoly warning

Platforms

A major debate broke out over security checks on phones becoming a new way to lock out rivals and tighten platform control.

Local AI becomes the rallying cry

AI

Developers pushed back against cloud-only AI and argued that privacy, speed, and cost all favor running models on your own device.

Developers sour on vibe coding

Software Development

One of the day’s loudest themes was AI coding fatigue, with growing frustration over sloppy output and rising cleanup work.

Home computers run serious AI

Consumer Hardware

A practical test showed that local models on an M4 Mac are now useful enough to make cloud AI feel less inevitable.

Obsidian plugin scare hits security nerves

Cybersecurity

A malware campaign abusing an Obsidian plugin reminded everyone that helpful-looking extensions can become dangerous attack paths.

Microsoft enterprise machine gets torn apart

Enterprise Software

A veteran account of Microsoft’s Enterprise Agreement shakeup signaled deeper changes in how big companies buy software.

Debian bets big on provable software

Open Source

Debian’s move toward reproducible packages stood out as a serious push to make open-source software easier to verify and trust.

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