DOGE Budget Cuts: A PR Stunt Masking Larger Issues

2025-04-25

While headlines focus on DOGE budget cuts, their impact on the deficit is negligible—$0.00. The Department of Government Efficiency canceled zero grants and contracts, resulting in significant social costs to vulnerable communities, research, and essential services. The article highlights two alternative policies that would generate far more savings than the DOGE cuts, such as closing corporate tax loopholes and reducing carbon emissions. These policies offer a more substantial and meaningful approach to addressing the deficit while maintaining critical services.

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OpenStreetMap Download Server Upgrade and Plea for Responsible Downloads

2025-09-22

The OpenStreetMap download server infrastructure has been upgraded, resulting in faster downloads and improved availability. To prevent abuse slowing down the service for everyone, users are urged to download responsibly. Specific recommendations include: downloading the full planet file from planet.openstreetmap.org for global data; using the pyosmium-up-to-date tool for large regions to only download updates; and monitoring automated scripts and implementing error handling to prevent repeated downloads.

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Let's Communally Deprecate `git checkout`

2025-01-09
Let's Communally Deprecate `git checkout`

This article argues for the communal deprecation of the `git checkout` command. The author contends that `git checkout` is overly complex and confusing, especially for beginners. They propose using the clearer `git switch` and `git restore` commands instead. While Git won't remove `git checkout`, the author encourages a community-led shift towards better alternatives to improve the overall Git experience and avoid confusing newcomers.

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Development Development Tools

The $100B AGI Definition Mess: Microsoft and OpenAI's Rift

2025-07-09
The $100B AGI Definition Mess: Microsoft and OpenAI's Rift

Microsoft and OpenAI are locked in a bitter dispute over the definition of AGI (Artificial General Intelligence), casting a shadow over their $13 billion contract. Some define AGI as an AI system generating $100 billion in profit, a purely arbitrary economic benchmark. The lack of a consensus definition hinders AI development, regulation, and discourse. The author suggests AGI should possess broad generalization capabilities, handling diverse tasks across domains, but the 'human-level' benchmark itself is problematic. This definitional clash highlights the conceptual ambiguity plaguing the AI field.

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AI

The Gateway Books: A Generation's Ambivalent Relationship with Literary Classics

2025-05-15
The Gateway Books: A Generation's Ambivalent Relationship with Literary Classics

This article explores the author's personal journey and a broader generational experience with a specific set of literary works—often dubbed the 'white male middlebrow canon.' These books, including works by Salinger, Vonnegut, and Heller, initially provided a sense of belonging and rebellion for young readers, offering an escape from the mundane and a path to intellectual self-discovery. However, as the author matured, they critically examined these books' inherent flaws, particularly misogyny and racism, leading to a complex and ambivalent relationship. Through surveys and personal reflections, the author investigates the lasting impact of these books and their limitations in the contemporary context, questioning whether they serve as helpful stepping stones to other literature or represent a limited and ultimately problematic perspective.

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Tiananmen Square: A Re-examination of the Narrative

2025-06-04
Tiananmen Square: A Re-examination of the Narrative

This article challenges the widely accepted narrative of a Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989. By citing firsthand accounts from Western journalists and declassified documents, the author argues that no large-scale killing occurred in the square itself. However, hundreds did die in other parts of Beijing, including soldiers and police. The article further reveals evidence of CIA involvement and the influence of George Soros's Open Society Foundations, suggesting the events were not entirely spontaneous but manipulated by external forces. While advocating for greater freedom and transparency in China, the author emphasizes that China's reforms should be self-determined, urging a critical re-evaluation of the complexities of the Tiananmen incident.

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Jargonic: A Revolutionary ASR Model for Industry-Specific Speech

2025-04-01
Jargonic: A Revolutionary ASR Model for Industry-Specific Speech

aiOla has launched Jargonic, a groundbreaking Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) model that addresses the limitations of existing ASR models in handling industry jargon, noisy environments, and real-time adaptability. Jargonic utilizes advanced domain adaptation, real-time contextual keyword spotting, and zero-shot learning to handle industry-specific language out-of-the-box, eliminating the need for retraining. Its unique keyword spotting mechanism combined with the ASR engine significantly improves transcription accuracy, especially for audio containing specialized terminology. Furthermore, Jargonic boasts robust noise handling capabilities, maintaining high performance across multiple languages and noisy industrial settings. Benchmark tests show it outperforms competitors like OpenAI Whisper.

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plwm: A Minimalist X11 Window Manager in Prolog

2025-05-25
plwm: A Minimalist X11 Window Manager in Prolog

plwm is a highly customizable X11 dynamic tiling window manager written in Prolog. Lightweight and fast, it boasts low resource usage (10-15MB memory) and features multiple layouts, floating windows, multi-monitor support, external bar integration, and more. Easy to customize and extend, plwm uses declarative Prolog code for configuration and offers extensive keyboard shortcuts and command-line options for flexible window management.

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Development

Gartner Predicts AI Takeover of All IT Work by 2030

2025-09-09
Gartner Predicts AI Takeover of All IT Work by 2030

Gartner analysts predict that by 2030, AI will assist with all IT department tasks, but this doesn't translate to mass job losses. While entry-level roles may decrease, AI will augment senior staff, giving IT departments increased capacity and requiring them to demonstrate value. However, AI implementation is costly, including ongoing use case exploration and retraining, and unexpected ancillary costs like acquiring new datasets and managing multiple models. Gartner estimates 65% of CIOs aren't breaking even on AI investments. IT executives are advised to focus on major cloud vendors and move beyond simple AI chatbots toward interactive agents capable of autonomously negotiating with suppliers.

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Tech

Hidden in Plain Sight: The Anti-Capitalist Potential of Technical Standards

2025-05-02
Hidden in Plain Sight: The Anti-Capitalist Potential of Technical Standards

Technical standards, like electrical outlets and internet protocols, aren't accidental; they're created and maintained by Standards Developing Organizations (SDOs) like ISO, ANSI, and IEEE through open collaboration, consensus-building, and public knowledge sharing. This offers a rare example of an economic system that doesn't rely on capitalism. Unlike patents, standards are collaboratively developed and published by SDOs on 'reasonable and non-discriminatory' terms, ensuring wide availability. The article argues that actively participating in the standards development process, encouraging organizations to operate within principles of openness, consensus, and a lack of dominance, undermines capitalist power and promotes information sharing as a public good, representing a practical anti-capitalist action.

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Rwanda's Genocide Radio: Incitement Under the Guise of Free Speech

2025-06-07

A radio station, ostensibly aiming for "harmonious development in Rwandan society," was secretly funded by Hutu extremists. It demonized the Tutsi minority, fostering hate and violence, laying the groundwork for the genocide. Despite warnings from the Belgian ambassador and aid agencies, Western diplomats dismissed the station's dangerous rhetoric, viewing it as a joke. The US ambassador even argued that its euphemisms were open to interpretation, prioritizing 'freedom of speech' over preventing mass violence.

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Qwen3: A Multi-Lingual LLM with Switchable Thinking Modes

2025-04-28
Qwen3: A Multi-Lingual LLM with Switchable Thinking Modes

Alibaba DAMO Academy released Qwen3, its latest large language model, offering various model sizes with open-sourced weights. Qwen3 features switchable "thinking" and "non-thinking" modes, letting users control reasoning depth and speed based on task complexity. It supports 119 languages and dialects. Enhanced coding and agentic capabilities are also included, along with diverse deployment and development tools.

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AI

Stop Killing Games: The Future of Game Ownership and Digital Rights

2025-07-05

The author recounts their experience of YouTube taking down a video on self-hosting and buying a new dishwasher only to find its functionality locked behind an app requiring WiFi and a Bosch account. This sparked reflection on digital product ownership, especially in gaming. They point out that more and more games rely on DRM and online connections, resulting in shorter game lifespans and players losing long-term ownership. The article calls attention to the "Stop Killing Games" initiative, hoping to change game design and sales models to protect player rights and restore the meaning of actually "owning" a game.

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Game

US Customs Changes Cause Shipping Delays

2025-04-18

Due to recent US Customs regulatory updates, shipments to the US with a declared customs value exceeding USD 800 are experiencing multi-day transit delays, regardless of origin. To alleviate customs processing strain, starting April 21st, B2C shipments to US individuals with a declared value over USD 800 are temporarily suspended. B2B shipments and those under USD 800 are unaffected, though delays are possible. This is a result of the new USD 800 formal entry threshold (down from USD 2500), causing a surge in formal customs clearances. This is a temporary measure, and updates will be provided.

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A Decade Later: Reflecting on Apple's Controversial 12-inch Retina MacBook

2025-03-13
A Decade Later: Reflecting on Apple's Controversial 12-inch Retina MacBook

A decade ago, Apple launched the infamous 12-inch Retina MacBook, a revolutionary yet controversial device. Its minimalist design, featuring a single USB-C port and butterfly keyboard, made it a talking point. While criticized for performance and battery life, it pioneered features like USB-C, the butterfly keyboard, and a haptic trackpad, shaping the future of Mac design. Discontinued in 2019, its design legacy lives on in the current MacBook Air.

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Hardware

Perplexity's Bold Move: Copying Google's Playbook?

2025-04-25
Perplexity's Bold Move: Copying Google's Playbook?

Perplexity, an AI search engine, is building its own browser, Comet, to collect user data outside its app for targeted advertising, as revealed by CEO Aravind Srinivas. This raises privacy concerns and draws parallels to Google's antitrust lawsuit. Perplexity's partnerships with Motorola and potential deals with Samsung, mirroring Google's strategy with Chrome and Android, aim to build a comprehensive user profile. While Srinivas argues for more relevant ads, this move may fuel distrust in big tech's data tracking practices. OpenAI and Perplexity have expressed interest in acquiring Chrome if Google is forced to divest.

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AI

A New Solution to the Fermi Paradox: Advanced Civilizations May Be Indistinguishable from Nature

2024-12-19
A New Solution to the Fermi Paradox: Advanced Civilizations May Be Indistinguishable from Nature

The Fermi Paradox highlights the contradiction between the high probability of extraterrestrial life and the lack of evidence for it. A new research paper proposes a solution: advanced civilizations might develop sustainable models where technology seamlessly integrates with their environment, rendering them undetectable. This challenges our assumptions about technological advancement and civilization expansion, prompting a reevaluation of SETI and our understanding of our own civilization's trajectory.

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iOS 26's Savior: iPhone Recovery Without a Mac or PC

2025-06-23
iOS 26's Savior: iPhone Recovery Without a Mac or PC

iOS 26 introduces a new Recovery Assistant feature that allows you to restore your iPhone without needing a Mac or PC. This feature, automatically triggered when the iPhone encounters a startup issue, puts the device into Recovery mode and attempts to resolve the problem. It also allows for recovery via another Apple device (like an iPad), downloading and installing a newer iOS version to revive a malfunctioning iPhone. This expands upon a recovery feature first introduced on iPhone 16 models last year, offering a more convenient repair solution.

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US Health Secretary's Purge of Vaccine Advisory Board Sparks Outrage

2025-06-09
US Health Secretary's Purge of Vaccine Advisory Board Sparks Outrage

US Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. fired all 17 members of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's vaccine advisory committee on Monday, sparking widespread criticism from medical groups. Kennedy cited conflicts of interest and plans to appoint his own team within two weeks. The move, described as a "coup," threatens to undermine public trust in vaccine science and potentially lead to a rise in vaccine-preventable diseases. It also breaks a previous promise by Kennedy and raises concerns about the impartiality of future committee members.

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Tech

Al-Jazari: The Father of Robotics and His Ingenious Machines

2025-04-29
Al-Jazari: The Father of Robotics and His Ingenious Machines

Al-Jazari (d. 1206), chief engineer for the Artuqid court in Diyarbakir, authored the Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices, detailing remarkable inventions. These included water-raising devices, sophisticated astronomical clocks, singing automatons, and a showering system for King Salih (who disliked servants pouring water). He also invented bloodletting technologies, trick fountains, segmental gears, and a chest with four combination dials—a likely safe—earning him the title "father of robotics" for his lifelike butler that offered guests towels. His contemporaries hailed him as unique and unparalleled, a testament to his skill building upon Persian, Greek, Indian, and Chinese predecessors, and influencing Renaissance inventors.

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Punched Cards: A Forgotten Piece of Computing History

2025-02-26
Punched Cards: A Forgotten Piece of Computing History

In the 1950s and 60s, punched cards were ubiquitous in accounting, data collection, and early computing, with millions produced monthly by hundreds of companies worldwide. However, they quickly faded into obsolescence and disappeared from public awareness. This archive preserves a small selection of these cards and related ephemera, documenting a forgotten piece of technological history.

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Return to Office Mandates? Employees Would Rather Quit

2025-01-15
Return to Office Mandates?  Employees Would Rather Quit

A survey of 5,395 US adults reveals that nearly half would leave their jobs if forced back to the office. Tech companies are increasingly mandating a return to in-person work, but many employees prioritize flexible work arrangements. Even figures like Elon Musk, who deems working from home "morally wrong," are met with resistance. The survey shows a strong preference for remote work, especially among women and those under 50, sparking debate on productivity, company culture, and talent retention. Many companies seem to prioritize control over trust and flexibility.

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Forever Chemicals Found in Beer

2025-09-13
Forever Chemicals Found in Beer

A new study reveals the presence of high levels of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), also known as 'forever chemicals', in some U.S. beers. Researchers tested 23 beers from various regions, finding the highest concentrations in beers brewed using water from known PFAS-contaminated sources. The study highlights how PFAS contamination can spread through water sources to other products, urging brewers, consumers, and regulators to increase awareness and improve brewery water treatment systems.

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North American Rail System Restructuring: A 1977-2021 Chronicle

2025-06-27

This article chronicles major changes to the North American Class I railroad system from 1977 to 2021, a period marked by numerous mergers, acquisitions, and corporate restructurings. From the bankruptcies of railroads like the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific to the rise of CSX and Norfolk Southern, and the eventual merger of Burlington Northern and Santa Fe, the article details the dramatic reshaping of the North American rail landscape and the rise and fall of numerous railroad companies. These events fundamentally reshaped the North American rail transportation network, laying the groundwork for the system we see today.

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Tech mergers

Raspberry Pi Pico-Controlled 3x5 LED Matrix: From Circuit Design to Web Control

2025-04-25
Raspberry Pi Pico-Controlled 3x5 LED Matrix: From Circuit Design to Web Control

This tutorial details building a 3x5 LED matrix controlled by a Raspberry Pi Pico using tscircuit, enabling WiFi remote control. It covers circuit design, component selection (WS2812B LEDs), connection methodology (daisy-chaining LEDs), PCB layout, and a final web interface for control. Learn to create an LED matrix for displaying information, data visualization, or interactive notification systems.

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Hardware LED Matrix

Tetris in a Home Studio: Mastering Space Optimization

2025-08-13
Tetris in a Home Studio: Mastering Space Optimization

This article details the author's ingenious approach to transforming a limited space into a multi-functional home studio for music production, gaming, and work. Equipment was segmented into four distinct zones, prioritizing ergonomics and minimizing interference. Large musical instruments dominate the back wall, while monitors leverage hidden space and adjustable arms for flexibility. A custom-built flight simulator dashboard and clever cable management (nearly 700 feet!) complete the setup, resulting in an efficient and aesthetically pleasing workspace.

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Dr. Demento Retires After 55 Years of Broadcasting Novelty Music

2025-06-19
Dr. Demento Retires After 55 Years of Broadcasting Novelty Music

Radio personality Barret "Dr. Demento" Hansen announced his retirement this week, ending a 55-year career dedicated to comedy and novelty music. His show, which began in 1970, will conclude in October with retrospective episodes culminating in a final broadcast of the program's top 40 songs. Dr. Demento's show, initially a freeform rock program, evolved into a platform for comedic songs and musical oddities, introducing audiences to artists like "Weird Al" Yankovic, whom he's largely credited with discovering. The show's long run spanned various mediums, from reel-to-reel tapes to online streaming, showcasing Hansen's enduring influence on radio and comedy.

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Misc

Thunder Compute: DevRel Engineer Wanted – Build the Future of Affordable GPU Cloud

2025-08-29
Thunder Compute: DevRel Engineer Wanted – Build the Future of Affordable GPU Cloud

Thunder Compute, a rapidly growing seed-funded startup (approaching Series A), is hiring a DevRel Engineer. We're a small, highly effective team building the cheapest and easiest GPU cloud for developers. This role is fully owning DevRel – building community, creating demos and tutorials, gathering product feedback, and reporting directly to the CEO. High autonomy, high impact, and you'll help define our DevRel function from the ground up. Requires excellent writing, community building experience, and strong coding skills (Python preferred). GPU/AI experience a plus.

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Startup GPU Cloud

arXivLabs: Experimental Projects with Community Collaborators

2025-02-19
arXivLabs: Experimental Projects with Community Collaborators

arXivLabs is a framework enabling collaborators to develop and share new arXiv features directly on our website. Individuals and organizations working with arXivLabs embrace our values of openness, community, excellence, and user data privacy. arXiv is committed to these values and only partners with those who adhere to them. Have an idea for a project that will add value to arXiv's community? Learn more about arXivLabs.

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Development

LinkedIn to Resume Using EU User Data for AI Training

2025-09-22
LinkedIn to Resume Using EU User Data for AI Training

LinkedIn plans to resume using data from its European members to train generative AI models, starting November 3, 2025. After pausing the initiative last year due to privacy concerns, LinkedIn will now rely on a 'legitimate interests' legal basis and offer an opt-out. Private messages will not be included. The change affects the EU/EEA, UK, and Switzerland. Data used will include public profile information, posts, articles, comments, and resumes. This will improve AI-powered features like writing suggestions and recruiter tools. Concurrently, LinkedIn will expand data sharing with Microsoft for ad personalization, with an opt-out provided.

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Tech
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