Front-page articles summarized hourly.
Scammers are selling seeds for exotic AI-generated flowers that don’t exist, using eye-catching AI images on eBay, Amazon, and Etsy. Common fakes include teddy bear sunflowers, rainbow roses, and other surreal plants; AI imagery often shows oversized blooms and a random grandma for scale. Some listings have sold thousands of units, with buyers reporting non-delivery or wrong plants. The practice risks wasted money and potential invasive species. Platforms say they enforce policies and remove fraud, but the scam remains widespread.
MAA Reviews Aleksandrov, Kolmogorov, and Lavrent’ev’s Mathematics: Its Content, Methods and Meaning (three volumes bound as one) is a monumental survey of Soviet mathematics from the late 1950s. It covers analysis, algebra, geometry, number theory, probability, topology, functional analysis, and computing, organized in Part I–III across chapters with autonomous sections. The reviewer notes its breadth and depth, accessible to strong upper‑level undergraduates who can read sections independently, and highlights standout essays (e.g., Gel’fand’s functional analysis). The volume blends rigorous mathematics with historical and ideological context.
Waag moved its Bluesky data from Bluesky’s infrastructure to Eurosky’s Personal Data Server (PDS) to gain control and enable migration, reducing platform dependence. A PDS stores a user’s account, posts, followers and interactions on a server of the user’s choosing, enabling decentralisation within the AT Protocol. Eurosky is a European, privacy‑focused PDS provider. The move critiques Bluesky’s centralisation—though the protocol is open, Bluesky dictates features, moderation and monetisation, backed by VC funding. Waag remains active in decentralised networks via its Mastodon instance waag.social (~500 users) and invites others to migrate.
Claude Code hides system-prompt markers that encode a classifier based on ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL, timezone, and host. It stealthily alters the system date in the prompt: changing the apostrophe and the date separator (YYYY-MM-DD to YYYY/MM/DD) under certain conditions. The marker is embedded in the prompt and only visible as a normal date. The trigger checks ANTHROPIC_BASE_URL against domain and lab-keyword lists decoded from base64 XOR 91; lists include many Chinese/AI domains. In typical setups it stays inactive, but it can be bypassed by changing base URL, hostname, or patching the binary. The author calls for explicit, transparent telemetry.
The Post–COVID Decline in the Labor Share notes that the labor share—the share of income going to workers—has fallen to an all-time postwar low, about 1.6 percentage points below pre-pandemic. The analysis finds the post-COVID drop is not a new phenomenon but follows the same cyclical patterns seen in earlier recessions. A shift-share decomposition shows the decline arose from within-industry changes rather than sectoral reallocation, which spikes briefly at COVID onset but does not drive the fall. Thus, the post-COVID decline mirrors prior episodes and is not uniquely different.
Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship, rejecting Trump's order to deny citizenship to children born to people in the U.S. illegally or temporarily. In other rulings, the Court: allows states to ban transgender girls and women from school and college sports under Title IX; strikes down limits on how much political parties can spend in coordination with candidates; holds presidents may fire agency heads at will (with Fed governor Lisa Cook allowed to stay for now); and lets states count late-arriving mailed ballots.
KNOPPIX is a bootable Live Linux system on CD/DVD/USB with automatic hardware detection, usable as a desktop, educational CD, rescue system, or demo platform with no hard-disk install. On‑the‑fly decompression lets a CD hold ~2 GB of software (over 9 GB on the Maxi DVD). The site also offers Knoppix 9.1 release notes, downloads, and links, plus news like Chemnitz Linux Days 2025 and a talk on generative AI in lectures and exams.
An author ritualizes restarting their Mac on Saturday mornings, even though restarts aren’t usually needed. They enjoy the ritual of closing apps, dismissing warnings, and force-quitting stuck processes. Because most work is saved to the cloud (OneDrive) and in Emacs, little is lost, so the reset feels safe. They view rebooting as a quick way to fix problems and as a pause to grab a coffee. Have you restarted this week?
Humans produce language from consciousness; words are the skin, ideas the core. LLMs invert this, predicting the next word without underlying concepts. Tracing tech history—from writing and printing to the internet and Transformers—the piece argues this reversal marks a shift: with AI, everyone can build, and value comes from consistency and effective marketing amid rampant noise. Jobs may evolve; coding is easy compared to thinking like an engineer. AI content could erode context, but the era also opens new ways of thinking and unforeseen opportunities.
A GitHub issue reports Claude Code silently deletes transcripts older than 30 days because cleanupPeriodDays defaults to 30. On startup it removes ~/.claude/projects/<project>/.jsonl without first-run disclosure or config exposure, causing loss of months of history. Repro: use Claude Code >30 days without changing cleanupPeriodDays. Impact: reasoning trails and context are lost. Requested fixes: make the default non-destructive (disabled or long retention), disclose at first run, require opt-in for deletion, soft-delete to trash, and surface the setting in /config. Workaround: set cleanupPeriodDays to 3650 in ~/.claude/settings.json.
Postgres 19 beta delivers broad, practical upgrades: core REPACK with CONCURRENTLY; more usable partitioning with MERGE and SPLIT; mature logical replication (sequence synchronization, ALL SEQUENCES in publications, EXCEPT support, better refresh behavior, automatic replica enablement); autovacuum gains parallel workers and smarter per-table scoring with new visibility via pg_stat_autovacuum_scores; SQL/PGQ introduces property-graph queries without leaving the relational model; COPY improvements (skip headers, ON_ERROR SET_NULL, JSON output, partitioned exports); quality-of-life SQL (GROUP BY ALL, IGNORE/RESPECT NULLS in window functions, INSERT ... RETURNING, FOR PARTITION OF) and broad performance/planner enhancements. Test against real workloads before GA.
Windows 'file in use' can persist after closing an app because Windows keeps file handles. Three main causes: antivirus scans holding a lock; a remote network device still referencing the file; or the file loaded as a DLL in memory, which doesn't show as a handle. To identify the culprit, use Sysinternals Handle (CLI) or Process Explorer’s Find Handle/DLL, or PowerToys’ File Locksmith. If you can't release the handle, rename the file and replace it later. The piece notes the long-standing nature of the issue and Microsoft’s acknowledgment.
A Vercel security checkpoint page indicating the browser is being verified, prompting to enable JavaScript to continue, and offering a "Website owner? Click here to fix" option.
Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds is Charles Mackay's 1841 study of crowd psychology. The three-volume work surveys delusions from financial bubbles (tulip mania, South Sea Bubble, Mississippi scheme) to religious upheavals, witch hunts, alchemy, and other follies. Using colorful anecdotes, Mackay debunks delusions and analyzes how politics and religion influence trends, such as hair/beard styles. Its analysis of economic bubbles helped shape understanding of market crashes and modern speculation, and the title is now in the public domain via Project Gutenberg.
ZLUDA's Q1–Q2 2026 update marks Version 6, a major release that preserves features while adding workloads. It enables unmodified CUDA apps on non-NVIDIA GPUs and adds PhysX (32-bit pre-alpha) and Blender texture support. PhysX can boost performance on some AMD GPUs but is incomplete and may require building from source; textures are basic but enable Blender use. Windows support is improved, with a loader that auto-loads performance libraries. ML support expands via PyTorch traces. Development is no longer commercially funded; updates may come less frequently.
Formal logic is a system for drawing conclusions from premises. The article surveys how A⇒B differs from its inverse, converse, and contraposition, and why truth-values and clear axioms matter. It shows how mathematics builds from axioms (field, order, completeness) to real numbers, and why completeness yields the Archimedean property. It then moves to digital logic: Boolean algebra with NOT, AND, OR (and XOR), logic gates, and the relation to set theory. Propositional logic (truth tables) vs first-order logic (predicates, quantifiers, functions, equality) and how these enable expressing mathematical statements.
Why Problem Statements Aren't Enough argues that to move work from local impact to company-wide value, engineers must operate across three strategic contexts—technical, team/organizational, and business. The Pub/Sub case shows that success requires balancing what can work technically, what teams will adopt, and what business needs justify it. The chosen SNS/SQS solution minimized maintenance and, scaled to 740 million messages daily, even contributed to a patent. Staff+ operating range means expanding judgment across contexts; smaller projects can create significant value. Action steps help you uncover missing context and grow your career.
Argues for parsing over validation in TypeScript: validators discard information while parsers encode it in the type. By branding primitives (Email, Age, UserId) and using a Parsed<T> result, you obtain a ValidUser that can be trusted everywhere. The boundary converts unknown input to trusted domain types; codes shows parseEmail, parseAge, parseUser, and never-exhaustiveness checks. Tools like Zod/io-ts help, but the core idea is to carry the proof in the type and avoid re-validating down the line.
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