NYC's Narrowest Escalator: A Hidden Gem in Rockefeller Center

2025-04-08
NYC's Narrowest Escalator: A Hidden Gem in Rockefeller Center

Hidden behind glass doors at 10 Rockefeller Plaza (between W 48th and W 49th Streets) in Rockefeller Center lies NYC's narrowest escalator. This escalator connects the underground dining and shopping concourse to street level. Even if you aren't shopping or dining, you can enter the building at 10 Rockefeller Plaza, descend a large spiral staircase, and then take the escalator back up. Security is present at all hours, but they don't mind, as the lobby features a beautiful wrap-around mural by Lakela Brown.

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Abracadabra Finance Suffers $13M Crypto Hack; Tornado Cash Connection?

2025-04-08
Abracadabra Finance Suffers $13M Crypto Hack; Tornado Cash Connection?

Decentralized finance (DeFi) platform Abracadabra Finance was hit with a hack resulting in the loss of approximately $13 million in cryptocurrency. The attack targeted the platform's isolated lending markets, known as "cauldrons." The exploit went undetected until the attacker executed multiple transactions. Abracadabra Finance is investigating with security firms and is offering a 20% bounty on the stolen funds. Some security firms link the attack to decentralized exchange GMX, though GMX denies involvement. Investigators suspect the funds used in the attack originated from Tornado Cash, recently desanctioned by the US Treasury.

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Tech

Meta's Llama 4: Second Place Ranking and a Messy Launch

2025-04-08
Meta's Llama 4: Second Place Ranking and a Messy Launch

Meta released two new Llama 4 models: Scout and Maverick. Maverick secured the number two spot on LMArena, outperforming GPT-4o and Gemini 2.0 Flash. However, Meta admitted that LMArena tested a specially optimized "experimental chat version," not the publicly available one. This sparked controversy, leading LMArena to update its policies to prevent similar incidents. Meta explained that it was experimenting with different versions, but the move raised questions about its strategy in the AI race and the unusual timing of the Llama 4 release. Ultimately, the incident highlights the limitations of AI benchmarks and the complex strategies of large tech companies in the competition.

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1948: Speed Record, Swim Trunks, and a History-Making Pose

2025-04-08
1948: Speed Record, Swim Trunks, and a History-Making Pose

In 1948, 47-year-old Rollie Free employed an unconventional strategy to break the world motorcycle speed record: wearing only swim trunks, he lay horizontally on his Vincent HRD Black Shadow motorcycle to minimize wind resistance. This daring attempt succeeded on Utah's Bonneville Salt Flats, resulting in a record-breaking speed of 150.313 mph and an iconic photograph. While the record has since been broken, Free's image and approach remain legendary in motorcycle history.

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Misc Motorcycle

Trump's Return and the Looming Threat to European Digital Sovereignty

2025-04-08
Trump's Return and the Looming Threat to European Digital Sovereignty

Trump's return to power raises significant concerns about global data security. The CLOUD Act allows US authorities to access data held by American companies even when stored in Europe, exposing European data to US legal scrutiny and political pressure. The article urges Europe to invest in open-source solutions, build independent cloud infrastructure, and enforce open standards to break free from reliance on US tech giants, safeguard digital sovereignty, and prevent data from becoming a geopolitical pawn.

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Tech

Clean Energy Surges to 40% of Global Electricity

2025-04-08
Clean Energy Surges to 40% of Global Electricity

For the first time since the 1940s, clean energy sources – including nuclear, wind, and solar – provided 40% of the world's electricity in 2023. Solar power saw a staggering rise, doubling in just three years and becoming the fastest-growing electricity source, now contributing 7% globally. Despite this progress, fossil fuel electricity generation still increased by 1.4% due to rising demand, pushing emissions to record highs. However, the rapid growth of clean energy, particularly solar and wind, suggests that clean energy growth will soon outpace demand, gradually displacing fossil fuels and becoming the dominant force in the global energy system.

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Tech

The Rise and Fall (and Possible Rise Again?) of the US Machine Tool Industry

2025-04-08
The Rise and Fall (and Possible Rise Again?) of the US Machine Tool Industry

The US machine tool industry, once a global leader, experienced a dramatic decline in the early 1980s due to a confluence of factors: plummeting domestic demand, slow response to market volatility, Japanese dominance in CNC technology and manufacturing processes, and a strong dollar. The industry's failure to rebound stemmed from deeper issues: insufficient large firms, difficulty securing capital, a skills gap, and weak technology transfer. A RAND study suggests a three-pronged government approach—fostering cooperative networks, investing in manufacturing infrastructure, and streamlining export processes—to potentially revive the sector.

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Pakistan's Solar Surprise: From Fragile State to Clean Energy Giant

2025-04-08
Pakistan's Solar Surprise: From Fragile State to Clean Energy Giant

In 2024, Pakistan, a nation long associated with conflict and instability, unexpectedly surged to the forefront of global solar adoption, importing a staggering 22 gigawatts of solar panels in a single year. This remarkable achievement wasn't accidental. Two decades of gradual improvements in governance and a pragmatic approach to energy policy laid the groundwork. Capitalizing on plummeting solar panel prices and rising fossil fuel costs, Pakistan streamlined regulations, reduced tariffs, and facilitated rapid solar adoption. While challenges remain, such as utility revenue shocks, Pakistan's clean energy transformation offers a valuable lesson: even fragile states can achieve rapid clean energy progress through effective governance and seizing global market opportunities. The story extends beyond solar, encompassing wind, hydro, and storage, showcasing a transition driven by economic pragmatism and quiet competence.

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Hyundai to Deploy Tens of Thousands of Boston Dynamics Robots

2025-04-08
Hyundai to Deploy Tens of Thousands of Boston Dynamics Robots

Hyundai Motor Group announced a deepened partnership with Boston Dynamics, involving the purchase of tens of thousands of robots in the coming years. This includes Atlas humanoid robots, Spot quadruped robots, and Stretch, to be deployed across Hyundai's manufacturing facilities for increased efficiency. The collaboration leverages Hyundai's manufacturing expertise to boost Boston Dynamics' growth, marking a significant step towards mainstream humanoid robot adoption and highlighting the burgeoning robotics market.

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Tech

Taxing Advertising: A More Viable Alternative to a Ban?

2025-04-08

This article explores taxing advertising as a more feasible alternative to outright bans. The author argues that advertising, like pollution, has negative utility and harms society. Instead of prohibition, a tiered tax system could be implemented, based on factors like intrusiveness and manipulation. A 'feebate' system, rewarding beneficial behaviors, could incentivize a healthier advertising landscape. This prompts reflection on current ad models, platform economies, and alternative content funding.

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AI's Impact on Game Development: A Developer's Struggle

2025-04-08
AI's Impact on Game Development: A Developer's Struggle

The rapid advancement of AI is significantly impacting the game industry, leaving many developers grappling with challenges and anxieties. This article features interviews with various game industry professionals, including artists, designers, and programmers, who share their experiences with AI in the workplace. Some companies are using AI to generate images, code, and voiceovers to cut costs or speed up development, leading to decreased quality and feelings of displacement among human creators. Many developers express reservations or outright opposition to AI, arguing that it cannot replace human creativity and emotional expression. They advocate for protecting the rights of human artists.

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Game

Arbitrage Opportunities in Steam's TF2 Economy: A Data-Driven Analysis

2025-04-08

This article analyzes the market dynamics of in-game item trading in Team Fortress 2 on the Steam platform. Using real-time data from Steam, the author constructs an index of arbitrage potential, tracking arbitrage opportunities from November 2011 to May 2012. The index shows that arbitrage opportunities significantly increase after major updates and sales, then decrease as the community develops a more consistent understanding of item pricing. The author also discusses the economic concept of equilibrium and points out that arbitrage persists even in complex digital economies, quantifying the size of arbitrage opportunities through data analysis.

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LLM Plugin: Summarize Hacker News Threads with Ease

2025-04-08
LLM Plugin: Summarize Hacker News Threads with Ease

A new LLM plugin, `llm-hacker-news`, lets you easily summarize Hacker News conversation threads. Simply install the plugin and use the command `llm -f hn:ID 'your instruction'` (e.g., `llm -f hn:43615912 'summary with illustrative direct quotes'`) to get a summary of the thread with the specified ID (found in the thread's URL). Installation and local setup instructions are provided in the README.

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Development

One-Minute Videos from Text Storyboards using Test-Time Training Transformers

2025-04-08

Current Transformer models struggle with generating one-minute videos due to the inefficiency of self-attention layers for long contexts. This paper explores Test-Time Training (TTT) layers, whose hidden states are themselves neural networks, offering greater expressiveness. Adding TTT layers to a pre-trained Transformer allows for the generation of one-minute videos from text storyboards. Experiments using a Tom and Jerry cartoon dataset show that TTT layers significantly improve video coherence and storytelling compared to baselines like Mamba 2 and Gated DeltaNet, achieving a 34 Elo point advantage in human evaluation. While artifacts remain, likely due to limitations of the 5B parameter model, this work demonstrates a promising approach scalable to longer videos and more complex narratives.

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Brazil's Pix: Instant Payments Take Over

2025-04-08
Brazil's Pix: Instant Payments Take Over

Launched in November 2020 amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, Brazil's Pix digital payment system rapidly gained popularity. Its contactless, instant, free, and user-friendly nature proved a winning combination. Using only a recipient's national ID, phone number, or QR code, Pix facilitated a massive surge in transactions. By 2024, it surpassed cash and cards to become Brazil's dominant payment method, processing 63 billion transactions totaling 26 trillion reais ($4.5 trillion). No other country has adopted a similar system with such speed.

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Tech Pix

Football Match in Dzaleka Refugee Camp: An Unusual Sunday

2025-04-08
Football Match in Dzaleka Refugee Camp: An Unusual Sunday

In Dzaleka, a Malawian refugee camp housing refugees from central African wars since 1994, a football match disrupts the usual Sunday calm. Thousands gather on a dusty field to watch the game, contrasting sharply with the churchgoers leaving nearby. This scene highlights the unique aspect of life in the camp: even amidst hardship, people pursue entertainment and social connection.

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Michael Larabel: 20 Years of Linux Hardware Benchmarking

2025-04-08

Michael Larabel, founder and principal author of Phoronix.com, has dedicated himself since 2004 to improving the Linux hardware experience. He's penned over 20,000 articles covering Linux hardware support, performance, graphics drivers, and more. He's also the lead developer behind the Phoronix Test Suite, Phoromatic, and OpenBenchmarking.org automated benchmarking software.

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Tech

Birds' Brains: Convergent Evolution of Cognitive Power

2025-04-08
Birds' Brains: Convergent Evolution of Cognitive Power

New research using single-cell RNA sequencing reveals surprising similarities in the brain structures of birds and mammals, despite their distinct evolutionary paths. Scientists have long puzzled over how birds, lacking a neocortex, possess complex cognitive abilities. The study found that the avian dorsal ventricular ridge (DVR) functionally mirrors the mammalian neocortex, but its development, cell types, and generation timing differ significantly, suggesting independent evolution rather than inheritance from a common ancestor. This challenges long-held beliefs about brain evolution and suggests our understanding of 'optimal intelligence' may be too narrow.

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IBM System/360: A Technological David and Goliath Story

2025-04-08
IBM System/360: A Technological David and Goliath Story

The creation of the IBM System/360 wasn't a smooth ride. This article recounts IBM's journey in the early 1960s, overcoming internal conflicts, technological hurdles, and production bottlenecks to launch this world-changing computer series. From initial internal clashes to global teamwork and a nail-biting production rollout, the System/360 story is full of drama and uncertainty, ultimately establishing IBM's dominance in the computer industry and profoundly impacting the development of the Information Age.

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Tech

US Academic Arrested in Thailand for Lèse-Majesté: A Blow to Academic Freedom

2025-04-08
US Academic Arrested in Thailand for Lèse-Majesté: A Blow to Academic Freedom

Paul Chambers, a US academic teaching in Thailand, faces up to 15 years in prison on charges of lèse-majesté, sparking international concern over Thailand's strict laws and the suppression of free speech. Chambers denies the charges, claiming he didn't author or publish the implicated content. The US State Department has expressed concern and is providing consular assistance. This case highlights Thailand's crackdown on dissent and the ongoing suppression of political activists.

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Tech

Multimodal AI Image Generation: A Visual Revolution Begins

2025-04-08
Multimodal AI Image Generation: A Visual Revolution Begins

Google and OpenAI's recent release of multimodal image generation capabilities marks a revolution in AI image generation. Unlike previous methods that sent text prompts to separate image generation tools, multimodal models directly control the image creation process, building images token by token, much like LLMs generate text. This allows AI to generate more precise and impressive images, and iterate based on user feedback. The article showcases the powerful capabilities of multimodal models through various examples, such as generating infographics, modifying image details, and even creating virtual product advertisements. However, it also highlights challenges, including copyright and ethical concerns, as well as potential misuse like deepfakes. Ultimately, the author believes multimodal AI will profoundly change the landscape of visual creation, and we need to carefully consider how to guide this transformation to ensure its healthy development.

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Less htmx, More HTML: Building Better Websites

2025-04-08

This article shares the author's two-year experience building web services with htmx, arguing for a minimalist approach: prioritize plain HTML over relying heavily on htmx enhancements like `hx-boost`. While `hx-boost` offers seamless page updates, it introduces problems such as conflicts with the browser's back button and disruptions to other libraries. The author advocates using standard HTML links and forms, leveraging browser caching mechanisms (ETags and Cache-Control headers) for efficient updates and a superior user experience. Modern browsers already possess excellent performance optimization capabilities, eliminating the need to over-rely on JavaScript frameworks to mimic SPAs. Only when persistent page state is required (like a music player) should advanced features like `hx-boost` be considered. Ultimately, the author champions the simplicity and reliability of HTML and HTTP for building more maintainable and user-friendly websites.

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Development

Bluesky's Eternal September: Navigating New User Etiquette

2025-04-08
Bluesky's Eternal September: Navigating New User Etiquette

The influx of new users to platforms like Bluesky echoes the 'Eternal September' phenomenon of the early internet, frustrating longtime users accustomed to established online norms. The article explores strategies for navigating this, such as thoughtful replies, avoiding redundant jokes, and utilizing robust blocking features. Some users view blocking as a proactive measure to maintain a positive environment, while others emphasize empathy for newcomers unfamiliar with online culture. The article highlights the contrast between Bluesky's approach and the more abrasive environment of platforms like X (formerly Twitter).

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Black Holes: Supermazes of Higher-Dimensional Strings?

2025-04-08
Black Holes: Supermazes of Higher-Dimensional Strings?

A new study proposes that the interiors of black holes may not be empty but rather complex mazes of tangled strings in higher dimensions, dubbed 'supermazes'. This theory stems from M-theory, which posits that the universe is made of multidimensional vibrating strings (branes), and supermazes are essentially a map of how these branes intersect within black holes. This structure explains the 'fuzzball' theory, suggesting black holes aren't completely 'black' but fuzzy balls of vibrating branes, resolving the black hole information paradox. The supermaze's vast information storage capacity allows information to be transmitted through evaporating particles, preventing information loss.

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Real-time Neuroplasticity: Giving Pre-trained LLMs Real-time Learning

2025-04-08
Real-time Neuroplasticity: Giving Pre-trained LLMs Real-time Learning

This experimental technique, called "Neural Graffiti," uses a plug-in called the "Spray Layer" to inject memory traces directly into the final inference stage of pre-trained large language models (LLMs) without fine-tuning or retraining. Mimicking the neuroplasticity of the brain, it subtly alters the model's "thinking" by modifying vector embeddings, influencing its generative token predictions. Through interaction, the model gradually learns and evolves. While not forcing specific word outputs, it biases the model towards associated concepts with repeated interaction. The aim is to give AI models more proactive behavior, focused personality, and enhanced curiosity, ultimately helping them achieve a form of self-awareness at the neuron level.

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AI

Paradigm: Hiring Founding Engineers for AI-Native Workspace

2025-04-08
Paradigm: Hiring Founding Engineers for AI-Native Workspace

Paradigm, a San Francisco-based AI-native workspace startup backed by Y Combinator and prominent tech founders, is seeking experienced generalist founding engineers. Ideal candidates possess experience building production AI applications, thrive in fast-paced environments, and ideally have experience with GoLang, TypeScript, and related technologies. Competitive salaries and benefits, including equity, are offered.

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Development Founding Engineers

Static Electricity: The Secret to Planet Formation?

2025-04-08
Static Electricity: The Secret to Planet Formation?

A new study published in Nature Astronomy suggests that static electricity plays a crucial role in planet formation. Researchers conducted experiments aboard a suborbital rocket, discovering that tiny dust particles in protoplanetary disks use static charges to clump together, forming larger 'pebbles' that eventually grow into planets through gravitational attraction. This research solves the long-standing 'bouncing barrier' problem—the size threshold dust particles must reach to bind gravitationally. The experiments showed that only charged dust particles can overcome this barrier, ultimately leading to planet formation.

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Tech

Bodyoids: A Technological Leap with Ethical Quandaries

2025-04-08
Bodyoids: A Technological Leap with Ethical Quandaries

The concept of 'bodyoids,' artificially grown human-like tissues or organs, is no longer science fiction. While offering potential solutions to organ transplantation and ethical concerns surrounding animal research and food production, bodyoids raise profound ethical questions. The central dilemma: should bodyoids, created without pregnancy or parental involvement, be considered human and afforded the same rights and respect? Consent for using cells to create them, and the potential devaluation of human life lacking consciousness, are key issues needing careful consideration before this revolutionary technology is further explored.

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The Trap of Pleasure in an Age of Abundance: The Nature of Addiction

2025-04-08
The Trap of Pleasure in an Age of Abundance: The Nature of Addiction

Naval argues that all pleasure comes with offsetting pain and fear of loss. In today's age of abundance, the pursuit of pleasure for its own sake easily leads to addiction. He quotes Miyamoto Musashi's saying, "Do not seek pleasure for its own sake," highlighting that readily available modern temptations—processed foods, internet pornography, drugs, and social media—create easy avenues for addiction. These addictions are essentially 'fake work' and 'fake play,' providing fleeting pleasure while numbing and leaving one vulnerable to the misery of their absence. The modern challenge lies in resisting these 'weaponized' addictions and rebuilding connections with society, religion, and culture.

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(nav.al)

World's Smallest Injectable, Light-Controlled Pacemaker Developed

2025-04-08
World's Smallest Injectable, Light-Controlled Pacemaker Developed

Scientists have developed the world's tiniest temporary pacemaker—smaller than a grain of rice, injectable, light-controlled, and bioresorbable. This breakthrough aims to help children with congenital heart defects and adults recovering from heart surgery. Unlike traditional pacemakers, it eliminates the need for invasive implantation and removal, avoiding risks like the internal bleeding that contributed to Neil Armstrong's death in 2012. Successfully tested in animals and human tissue, human trials are expected in 2-3 years. Future applications could extend to nerve regeneration, wound healing, and smart implants.

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