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ORMs can augment SQL but should not replace it. After working with Postgres/SQLite, the author found ORMs cause issues: attribute creep, wide tables, excessive foreign keys, and opaque, hard-to-optimize queries. Efficient data retrieval, especially with joins and window functions, is often easier and faster with hand-written SQL. They favor templated SQL and using the ORM mainly as a schema descriptor. The recommended approach: treat the database as a data type, with queries as the API, and consider stored procedures. Bottom line: learn SQL.
NASA's Perseverance rover found complex macromolecular carbon on a rock at Bright Angel in Jezero Crater, the shallowest such detection on Mars to date. Using SHERLOC, four targets showed a graphitic G-band, similar to terrestrial kerogen, though biogenic origin is not confirmed. Scientists ruled out instrument artifact and Earth contamination. The carbon appears to reflect at least two separate emplacement events: near an ancient lake and later groundwater-affected mineralization. Whether it is biotic or abiotic remains unresolved; Earth-based analysis of returned samples could reveal isotopic signatures or chirality.
Dr. Julie Elie of UC Berkeley won the 2026 Coller-Dolittle Prize ($100,000) for decoding zebra finch vocalisations, identifying 11 core calls and their meanings using machine learning and behavioral tests. The research shows birds announce identity and activities and recognise individuals through vocal signatures, with confusion more common between meanings than between similar sounds. The prize supports two-way human-animal communication; a $10 million grand prize was announced. Elie spent over a decade recording calls, applying ML, and validating meanings through experiments where calls predicted rewards; others praised the work as pivotal.
Working memory—the information we need for ongoing tasks—may give rise to consciousness. It is rich in content but has limited capacity, sometimes modeled as four slots or a flexible resource, with capacity depending on item complexity. The doorway effect shows we forget when passing into a new context as old content is flushed. The global neuronal workspace theory ties consciousness to attention spreading working-memory contents across the brain, especially the prefrontal cortex. While attention boosts consciousness, evidence also points to unconscious working memory, suggesting consciousness and memory may lie on a spectrum rather than an all-or-nothing dichotomy.
An in-depth, practical guide to understanding htop/top and Linux process management. It explains how uptime and load average are derived from /proc, what the 1/5/15 minute load figures mean, and how to read PIDs and the process tree. It covers process states (R/S/D/Z/T), signals (kill, INT, KILL), and how process time and niceness/priority work. It breaks down memory metrics (VIRT/RES/SHR/MEM%), explains /proc/<pid>/ files and NSS-based user lookups, and notes setuid. Includes strace/ps/pstree examples and discussions of zombie processes and kernel threads.
GitHub issue #74066 reports a potential session/cache leakage between workspace instances or consumer accounts in anthropics/claude-code. On macOS, the reporter observed leakage after authenticating to an Enterprise ZDR workspace, including the agent claiming to build a Minecraft temple, implying prompts or conversations may bleed across workspaces or consumer plans. They question whether cache is isolated per workspace and note directory-related anomalies in where work is performed. The bug is labeled as a security issue and remains open.
Foundation (Ovasabi Foundation) is an opinionated full-stack framework delivering native performance and graphics to web experiences via an event-driven, tenant-isolated architecture. It provides platform modules, scaffolds, enforcement checks, and docs to bootstrap production systems, featuring Hermes hotplane, bounded worker processing, resumable file transfers, and unified observability. Its seven-plane Performance Ladder ranges from in-process direct dispatch to browser/WASM. The stack spans Go (server-kit), TypeScript (runtime-transport, ui-minimal, frontend-kit), Rust/WASM (runtime-sdk), and Tauri for native shells, with PostgreSQL/Redis and Protobuf/Cap'n Proto for data. It’s a work-in-progress for teams pursuing disciplined performance engineering.
Requests that a proper user-agent be set and that the site's robots policy be respected.
World’s largest replica of a traditional Spanish galleon, the Galeón Andalucía, sailed off the Irish coast near Malin Head and Streedagh, tracing the Armada’s 1588 route. Captain Miguel Cuesta Almansa and a multinational crew were warmly received, with a Rescue 118 winchman landing aboard. The ship anchored at Streedagh Beach—where three Armada vessels were lost in the Great Gale of 1588—and fired an eight-cannon salute during a wreath-laying. Built in 2009–10 from iroko and pine (about 50m, six decks, seven sails), it aims to boost the Remembering the Armada Festival and regional tourism.
Astrophysicists are grappling with JWST discoveries of unusually early, massive black holes and bright, diverse galaxies that challenge standard cosmology. The observed “little red dots” may be black holes shrouded in gas, naked supermassive black holes, or direct-collapse seeds; growth could be super-Eddington or accelerated by mergers. The brightness of early galaxies prompts revisions to star-formation histories, with simulations improving to interpret observations. The field tests multiple competing theories to understand cosmic dawn and reionization as JWST data accumulate.
Databricks argues that monolithic databases suffer durability, HA, and analytics bottlenecks from WAL and data files on one machine. Lakebase externalizes the WAL to SafeKeeper and data files to PageServer, making Postgres compute stateless with serverless, scalable storage and durable writes. LTAP then unifies transactions and analytics at the storage layer by materializing data in open columnar formats (Delta/Iceberg/Parquet) in object storage, so both workloads share one copy without CDC, enabling real-time analytics on fresh data while preserving Postgres semantics. HTAP’s single-engine approach is avoided by using separate engines with centralized storage.
car-diagnosis is an end-to-end audio-ML pipeline that scrapes fault-sound clips from YouTube/TikTok, cleans audio to isolate mechanical noise, embeds with a frozen CLAP model, and trains small linear heads to triage faults. Available as CLI and a live web app. It’s a proof-of-concept emphasizing calibrated triage rather than diagnosis: it flags when audio is uncertain, suggests where in the car and which parts are implicated with a ranked shortlist. Demonstrates reusable cleaning+training recipe; reported AUROC ~0.79 on out-of-sample data and ~0.93 on clean engine audio.
The results of the 2026 Unslop AI-Written Fiction Contest.
In "The bottleneck might be the air in the room," Mike Bowler argues that room air quality, not people, often limits high-stakes decision-making. Studies show CO2 rising from 1000 to 2500 ppm in closed rooms markedly reduces cognitive performance, especially in strategy and planning. Many meetings, offsites, and even home offices reach these levels. Bowler urges using affordable CO2 monitors and basic ventilation—open a window or door—to improve decision quality, noting that environment shapes output as much as process or people.
KU researchers mapped about 20,000 English words into a visual ‘viseme’ landscape to study lip-reading. They found roughly one‑third of words look like at least one other word visually, and words with many look-alikes are harder to lip-read. Errors cluster in visually similar regions and are usually one viseme off. The map could guide lip-reading training and improve automatic transcription by combining visual cues with audio.
Even as it looks ugly and costs over $30k a year, the Bloomberg Terminal persists because its moat is infrastructural. It combines real-time data, news, analytics, and the IB chat that doubles as a trading platform, creating a powerful network effect and learning lock-in: many users must stay for liquidity and colleagues’ participation. Despite cheaper rivals, the switch cost is enormous. Bloomberg is weaving AI—BloombergGPT—into the terminal, treating AI as an enhancement to its existing moat, not a replacement.
Mir Books curates Soviet-era and Chinese children’s picture books, posting title-by-title notes with authors, illustrators, and links to obtain them. Recent entries include The Frog Rider, Hedgehog’s New House, Seven Clam Sisters, The Little Athletes, Little Elephant Goes Home, Three Little Girls, Dongdong And His Kitten, and Little Chicken And Her Friends, plus social and archival links. It also features Earth, Sweet Earth by Ekaterina Radkevich (Science For Everyone), the final volume in the series, with a full contents list. The site aggregates bibliographic posts, monthly archives, and reader comments.
Ruby can reverse‑engineer binary formats. Using Codemasters’ BIGF archives as example, the article shows a dependency‑free reader built with standard Ruby: Strings are byte buffers, File.binread gives raw bytes, and unpack decodes integers/floats (V = LE u32, e = LE float). It covers two directory layouts (fixed 24‑byte records and a variable‑length layout with a marker) and idioms like rec[0,16].split("\x00").first, unpack1('V'), data.index, and getbyte. The parser is fast (C‑backed unpack) and doubles as documentation. Full code at github.com/davidslv/bigf.
Learning new things is worthwhile and achievable across many skills (art, typing, modelling, music, languages). Set aside daily time—about 30–45 minutes—and start with doable basics. Expect initial struggle and occasional declines; practice builds data, and sleep consolidates gains. Progress often plateaus into a long-lasting, mediocre-to-competent state, after which improvement slows but remains possible. Avoid overload and rushing to advanced topics; focus on fundamentals and deliberate practice. Learning is a long-term project that compounds over months and years, expanding capability and social value.
An engineer details his experiments with coding agents and agentic loops, including a 'bisect a bug' anecdote that led to deeper use of AI for testing and data analysis. He argues for testing-driven workflows inspired by hardware centers (dedicated test engineers, fuzzing, minimal code review) to boost reliability and velocity in AI-enabled software. LLMs help speed analysis but are weak at testing, with high variance and false positives; success relies on feedback loops, multiple personas, artifact reviews, and human-in-the-loop checks. Benchmarks are often misleading; Caveman mode yields mixed results. The piece advocates systematic evals and pragmatic tooling over hype.
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