Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Natural experiments show iron fertilization of nutrient-poor oceans reliably boosts phytoplankton and draws down carbon. Irons from undersea vents, Sahara dust, volcanic ash, wildfire smoke, ice-derived minerals, and whale feces trigger blooms that rise and then fade when inputs stop, with little evidence of harm. The Tonga vents fueled nitrogen-fixing bacteria and two- to eightfold faster growth, with two to three times more carbon buried. Similar responses occur across the Atlantic, Pacific, and Southern Ocean, often lasting months. Deliberate, monitored nutrient additions are comparably safe to nature’s ‘fertilizer’ events.
Texas DPS spent about $4.49 million to equip four 2026 Chevrolet Tahoes with Cognyte’s FalcoNet surveillance system, including core hardware, a 5G license, and antennas. The emergency purchase memo emphasized safety needs but gave few specifics. FalcoNet can bulk‑collect private data by tapping mobile connections, raising Fourth Amendment privacy concerns; Florida has already deployed it, and The Drive outlines the system’s components and deployment kits.
SoundCloud's upgraded AAC encoder (Fraunhofer libfdk_aac) improves perceptual quality, but trims energy above ~17 kHz to save bits. Lossy encoders allocate bits across bands; since human hearing is less sensitive to highs, reducing top frequencies frees bits to sharpen the midrange. At 256 kbps the effect is smaller but still present. The result: tracks may look worse on a spectrogram yet sound better in practice.
Draws a parallel between parallel programming and human life. More power alone doesn’t yield results unless work is divided, communicated, and synchronized so no part is overloaded. Honest internal communication acts as synchronization, preventing burnout. Echoing Zen, inner harmony comes from fully experiencing and finishing what arises, not clinging to residue. The greatest limit may be power divided against itself—in machines and in people, not simply a lack of power.
Kimi K3 has seen demand exceed capacity, causing a temporary pause on new subscriptions to protect current subscribers; existing subscribers are unaffected. The team is adding capacity and will reopen new slots in batches. Going forward, Kimi will split membership into two plans: Kimi Membership for Web, App, and Work; and Kimi Code Membership for coding workflows, to better match compute and stabilize the experience. Thanks for patience.
The final MPEG-4 Visual patent, BRPI0109962B1 ("process for storing and processing image information from successive images over time"), expired in Brazil on July 19, 2026, according to VIA Licensing Alliance, ending MPEG-4 Part 2 patent coverage.
Nick Gustafson's "Holding the LLM Stack in Your Head" is a concise, opinionated map of the modern LLM stack, from linear algebra to agent protocols, presented as ten arcs totaling ~80 posts. It treats the material as a learning exercise (with Claude Opus 4.8), prioritizing intuition over rigor. Topics span prerequisites, language modeling before Transformers, tokenization, transformer fundamentals, decoding/inference, serving systems, training/post-training, evaluation, retrieval/memory/context engineering, and tools/agent loops. It provides practical paths for understanding attention, KV cache, RAG, and agent loops, with caveat that it's a first draft.
HMD Touch 4G is a compact hybrid phone that blends feature-phone simplicity with smartphone capabilities. It has a touchscreen, Wi‑Fi, 4G LTE, and the Express Chat app for texting, video calls and voice messages with other Express Chat users (also usable from smartphones). Cloud Phone Service offers quick access to entertainment, weather, news, and cricket results via cloud shortcuts. It features a Quick-Call button, front and back cameras, Bluetooth, hotspot, USB‑C charging, and a 1950 mAh battery. Currently available only in India; developed by HMD Global (Nokia brand).
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The Vox explainer traces how “dupe culture”—cheap lookalikes of name-brand products—has become a mainstream, internet-driven phenomenon. From UGGs and Fender to makeup and recipes, dupes blur lines of ownership as platforms and tools (dupe.com, AI image search, TikTok Shop) make finding cheaper lookalikes easy. It discusses legal gray areas around design patents and trademarks, the culture of affordability over originality, and how algorithms encourage copying while still fueling aspirational consumer desires.
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Cagire is a Forth-based live coding sequencer in which every step runs a Forth script, letting scripts synthesize sound, trigger samples, apply effects, or do anything you define. It uses a built‑in audio engine called Doux with oscillators, samplers, filters, reverb, delay, distortion, etc. A second language, Arf, lets you write DSP inside braces. It supports synthesis, sampling, modulation, sequencing, MIDI/OSC, Ableton Link, recording and visuals, with built‑in documentation. Cross‑platform and open source (AGPL-3.0); downloads and source on Gitea.
Proposes WIP/RFC: UnifiedIR, a new top-level Julia package to unify the compiler IR data structures (SyntaxTree, SyntaxGraph, CodeInfo, IRCode, and others) into a dialect-aware, region-based IR substrate. Ports inference, the optimizer, and JuliaLowering to UnifiedIR; supports layered views and extensible dialects, enabling ecosystem use. Integrates with Base bootstrapping and JuliaSyntax, JuliaLowering; demonstrates a unified storage core with graphs and trees, plus tooling for provenance, printing, and verification. Aims to replace multiple data structures and ease extensibility across the compiler stack.
Founders Jeff and Michael recount building Ollama to make open models easy to run locally, after Kitematic and Docker Desktop. Ollama centers on Ownership, Affordability, and Privacy—your models run on your hardware with data staying on your machine, with a growing cloud for open models like GLM and DeepSeek. They announce an $88M funding round from Benchmark, Theory Ventures, 8VC and others to push seamless hybrid inference, day-one support for new open models, and broader access while preserving ownership and privacy. Download Ollama to join the open-model movement.
Egyptian developer ZedAxis built a backup DNS ad-blocker on a $5 ESP32-C3 SuperMini that blocks ~537,000 domains using only ~50 KB RAM and ~4 MB flash. It hashes domains with 40-bit FNV-1a, downloads and deduplicates public blocklists, stores the hashed, sorted table in flash, and answers queries by hashing the requested hostname and doing a binary search; matches are blocked, others forwarded to an upstream resolver. With OTA updates, ~250k blocks; disable OTA yields ~537k. It's a tiny insurance policy for home networks, not a full Pi-hole replacement, powered via USB from the gateway.
Land Atlas is a browser extension and service that analyzes land listings from major marketplaces. It captures each listing and automatically scores parcels using government data (USDA soil, 10-year climate, FEMA flood zones, wetlands) into a farmability score (0–100) with a crop-fit ranking of 16 crops. It also shows area-weighted soil quality, grid/road access, flood and wetland risk, and price-per-acre comps against the user’s own captured listings. Projects let you group parcels and export reports. Data are screening-level from USDA, FEMA, USFWS, OpenStreetMap; analysis reveals factors and gaps, not guaranteed values. Live demo available; beta extension free.
Akashic is an open-source, self-hosted Palantir-like workspace for connecting, exploring, and analyzing complex geospatial and public data, with no API keys required and a privacy-first design. It streams live layers (air traffic, satellites, earthquakes, weather, radio metadata, OpenStreetMap/Wikidata), provides an intelligence deck and recon-mode, and renders via deck.gl/maplibre. It relies on public upstreams from providers like Celestrak, USGS, Open-Meteo, and more; data is not authoritative. Requires Node.js 20+, npm, and is AGPL-3+ licensed.
Gödel’s incompleteness and the halting problem show formal systems cannot prove their own truth or consistency. The article traces this to AI: a hypothetical Gödel machine that self-improves only with a proof is impractical; a Darwinian variant relies on benchmarks, not guarantees. It notes learnability can be undecidable and neural reconstructions can be unstable, with Colbrook showing some optimal networks cannot be found by training. The upshot: universal safety guarantees for powerful AI are mathematically impossible; the industry must rely on guardrails and empirical validation, not certainties.
DRIVE is Cortex's framework to measure and improve engineering org health in the AI era. It evaluates five pillars—Delivery, Reliability, Initiatives, Vigilance, Efficiency—and pairs them with a weekly Operational Excellence review that reallocates resources to close gaps. Each pillar has key metrics: Delivery (deploy frequency, lead time, on-call volume); Reliability (customer experience, SLO status, Sev incidents); Initiatives (milestone completion, OpEx actions); Vigilance (open CVEs, assets below security/compliance, orphaned assets); Efficiency (cloud spend vs budget, AI token costs, share of capacity on innovation). The framework supports scalable governance and is backed by Cortex tooling and assessments.
Warmer UK summers and milder winters are letting heat-loving plants, like bananas, fruit in ordinary gardens. In Rayleigh, Essex, 200 Musa Basjoo banana plants finally bore fruit after 15 years, aided by a heatwave and a microclimate created by walls. RHS horticulturist Guy Barter notes olives, figs and apricots thriving, while gooseberries and rhubarb struggle in some areas. Musa Basjoo bananas aren’t typically edible; they survive winters but often need frost protection. Other gardeners, including a Suffolk man, report similar fruiting.
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