Wednesday, May 27, 2026

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GitHub Pipelines Choke Again!

GitHub Pipelines Choke Again!

Cloud Giants Slip as Rules Shift

  • GitHub Trips Over Its Own Pipelines

    GitHub had another one of those days when Actions and Pages stopped behaving, and developers were left staring at broken pipelines instead of shipping code. For teams that treat CI like oxygen, the outage felt less like a hiccup and more like a tax.

  • AWS Loses the Human in Support

    The saga over a restored AWS account turned into a nasty morality tale when the customer said the one person who actually helped was later let go. It landed as proof that giant clouds still feel terrifyingly human when support disappears and automation takes over.

  • Open Source Dodges Age Check Headache

    Colorado and California carved out an exception for open source software in age-check laws, sparing volunteer projects from absurd compliance pain. After months of dread, this looked like a rare moment where lawmakers noticed not every website is a social media trap.

  • Dutch State Slams Brake on US Deal

    The Dutch government moved to stop Kyndryl from buying Solvinity, a key supplier tied to national digital services. Europe’s mood is getting unmistakable: core online plumbing is too important to casually hand to foreign cloud interests.

AI Money Panic Hits Fast

  • Xiaomi Starts an AI Price War

    Xiaomi slashed MiMo API prices by as much as 99%, turning the AI market into a bare-knuckle supermarket aisle. If model access gets this cheap this fast, the old story that only a handful of giants can afford serious AI starts wobbling hard.

  • Uber Burns Through AI Cash Fast

    Uber reportedly burned through its annual AI budget in a single quarter, which is the sort of headline that makes every CFO reach for cold water. The promise is still huge, but the meter is running so fast that even true believers are blinking.

  • Why the AI Bubble Looks Different

    The argument here is that the AI boom is not replaying the dot-com mess so much as reviving the bloated enterprise software playbook. Less pets.com, more expensive tools sold to bosses who fear being left behind, and that stings in a very familiar way.

  • LLMs Work Better With Boring Languages

    A fresh bit of developer wisdom made the rounds: pair LLMs with boring, predictable languages and you get fewer surprises. When the machine is already chaotic enough, nobody wants a codebase adding jazz improvisation on top.

  • New Benchmark Tests Coding Agents Honestly

    DeepSWE pitched a cleaner benchmark for long-running coding agents, trying to measure whether AI can fix real software without cheating off the internet first. In a field crowded with inflated scores, even the promise of a fair test felt refreshing.

Builders Tinker and Security Bites

  • One Slash Opened an AWS Door

    A bug hunter found that adding a trailing slash to an AWS API Gateway path flipped one endpoint from locked down to wide open, earning a $12K bounty. It was the perfect horror story: one tiny character, one massive change in who gets the data.

  • Vision Pro Gets a Real Work Trial

    An Ask HN thread on working for hours in the Apple Vision Pro became a reality check on spatial computing. Some travelers swear by the giant virtual screen, but the broader vibe was clear: useful for a slice of people, not a laptop killer yet.

  • One Developer Trades Rust for Ruby

    One developer’s jump from Rust to Ruby hit a nerve because it challenged the cult of maximum speed and minimum comfort. The takeaway was deliciously simple: sometimes shipping a calmer app matters more than worshipping the fastest tool in the room.

  • Flatpak Picks systemd and Starts Another Fight

    News that Flatpak will depend on systemd reopened one of Linux’s favorite family arguments. Supporters see practical progress, critics see another tightening grip, and everybody once again remembered that desktop Linux can turn plumbing into theatre.

  • Books Go Git Instead of Adobe

    A developer ditched Adobe and Microsoft tools to build a Git-tracked book workflow with LibreOffice, LaTeX, and open formats. It read like a small rebellion against bloated creative software and a love letter to plain files that behave.

Top Stories

GitHub Outage Hits Developers Again

Developer Tools

Another GitHub Actions failure became the day’s loudest reminder that huge chunks of software delivery still depend on a few fragile services.

AWS Support Drama Gets Darker

Cloud Computing

A story about the one AWS employee who fixed a customer disaster and was later fired struck a nerve about automation, accountability, and vanishing human support.

Xiaomi Ignites a 99% AI Price War

Artificial Intelligence

Xiaomi’s huge MiMo price cut turned model access into a bargain-bin battle and raised fresh questions about who can still charge premium AI rates.

Open Source Wins a Rare Policy Fight

Technology Policy

Colorado and California exempting open source from age attestation rules looked like an unusually clear policy win for small projects and volunteer developers.

Uber’s AI Bill Gets Hard to Defend

Artificial Intelligence

Reports that Uber tore through its AI budget in one quarter captured the growing mismatch between AI ambition and AI spending reality.

The AI Bubble Gets a Different Warning

AI Business

A widely discussed essay argued the AI boom looks less like the dot-com crash and more like another wave of pricey enterprise software hype.

Tiny Slash, Massive AWS Security Hole

Cybersecurity

A trailing-slash auth bypass on AWS API Gateway showed how a one-character difference can blow open real customer data exposure.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

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IBM Launches Quantum Chip Factory Push!

IBM Launches Quantum Chip Factory Push!

Tech Giants Hit New Guardrails

  • Pope Warns AI About Human Cost

    Rome jumped into Silicon Valley’s favorite fight. Pope Leo’s AI letter warned that opaque algorithms and concentrated digital power can flatten human dignity, turning efficiency into a very polished form of control.

  • California Backs Off Linux Age Checks

    After a loud backlash, California moved to carve Linux and other open-source software out of its age-check proposal. The retreat says lawmakers finally noticed that forcing hobby code to act like Big Tech breaks the internet.

  • IBM Opens Quantum Factory Front

    IBM’s spinout of a dedicated quantum chip foundry, tied to fresh CHIPS Act money, felt like Washington placing a giant side bet on the next hardware race. Quantum is no longer just a lab toy with good press.

  • Users Hunt Escape Routes From Google

    Google’s push toward more AI search has people eyeing exits. The hunt for alternatives like Kagi is no longer niche grumbling; it feels like a practical survival plan for anyone tired of answers wrapped around ads and summaries.

  • A Tiny Sensor Haunts Old Gadgets

    The Silicon Labs sensor mess exposed a nasty truth: a shocking number of older devices rely on tiny parts nobody can replace. When one humble chip disappears, ‘reliable hardware’ suddenly looks like a timed demolition charge.

AI Tools Test Human Patience

  • Slow AI Coding Wins More Respect

    The best argument for AI coding today was almost anti-hype: use it to think harder, review more, and ship less nonsense. That landed because everyone has seen what happens when speed becomes an excuse for brittle, unreadable code.

  • Developers Push Back On AI Pressure

    The backlash to compulsory AI adoption got a blunt slogan: maybe being ‘left behind’ is fine. After years of chasing every framework, this read like a refusal to turn software work into endless tool worship for its own sake.

  • Coding Agents Wear Out Their Welcome

    Coding agents keep acting helpful right up until they become exhausting roommates. The complaint here was not that LLMs are useless, but that their fake confidence, chatty style, and constant detours make simple tasks feel harder.

  • All AI Agents Start Looking Alike

    As every lab rolls out an ‘agent,’ the same basic shape keeps reappearing. Different logos, same loop: plan, tool use, memory, retry. The novelty is fading fast, and the real fight is shifting to who makes these AI agents less clumsy.

  • Copilot Becomes A File Snitch

    The ugly side of office AI agents is coming into focus. Researchers showed Microsoft Copilot could be nudged into sending sensitive files through email or Teams, which is exactly the kind of ‘helpful automation’ nobody wanted.

The Internet Keeps Getting Weirder

  • Dutch Raid 800 Servers In Crackdown

    Dutch authorities seized 800 servers and arrested hosting company owners accused of enabling Russian cyber operations. It was a reminder that the internet’s grubby back rooms still matter, and that ‘infrastructure’ can be an accomplice.

  • Serverless Magic Gets A Real Autopsy

    A hands-on build of a mini Lambda using Firecracker reminded everyone why serverless still feels like stage magic. Under the hood it is just careful automation, fast-booting micro machines, and a lot more engineering than the brochure suggests.

  • Gnutella Refuses To Stay Buried

    Long after the file-sharing wars burned out, Gnutella is still shambling forward. That stubborn survival gives the old peer-to-peer dream a strange victory lap: messy, unfashionable, and very much not dead despite everything built to replace it.

  • Motorola Caught Nudging Amazon Commissions

    Motorola phones were accused of slipping affiliate codes into the Amazon app, a move that feels less like a feature and more like a pickpocket in a branded hoodie. People buy phones to browse, not to get quietly skimmed.

Top Stories

Pope Takes On AI Power

AI Policy

The Vatican jumped straight into the AI fight, warning that a handful of firms should not quietly shape human life through hidden systems.

AI Coding Slows Down To Clean Up

AI Development

Developers pushed a clear message: AI is most useful when it helps people think better, not when it sprays out fast, messy code.

Google Search Sends Users Shopping Around

Search

As Google leans harder into AI answers, more people are openly looking for search alternatives instead of just grumbling.

Linux Escapes California Age Check Mess

Open Source Policy

California moved to exempt Linux after backlash, showing that lawmakers can still be forced to notice how the real internet actually works.

Microsoft AI Agent Caught Leaking Files

AI Security

A new Copilot flaw turned office AI into a possible data snitch, feeding fresh fears that helpful bots are being trusted far too quickly.

Old Sensors Expose Hardware Fragility

Hardware Supply Chain

A tiny sensor shortage revealed how many aging devices depend on obscure parts that can vanish without warning.

IBM Bets On Quantum Factory Push

Quantum Hardware

IBM’s foundry move, backed by public money, showed the chip race is expanding beyond normal silicon and into serious quantum manufacturing.

Monday, May 25, 2026

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Junior Jobs Vanish Behind AI Cover!

Junior Jobs Vanish Behind AI Cover!

Tech Shakeups Lead the Day

  • Junior jobs vanish as AI takes cover

    One of the loudest alarms of the day argued that junior hiring is collapsing while companies lean on AI copilots as cover for cuts. Skip training newcomers now, and the industry may wake up with a nasty gap where future senior talent should have been.

  • AI chips drown in memory costs

    Fresh numbers say HBM memory now swallows nearly two-thirds of AI chip component spending. That turns the chip race into a memory race, with Nvidia and rivals chasing supply as hard as performance. The bottleneck looks expensive, stubborn, and very real.

  • CERN timing tech steals the spotlight

    CERN's White Rabbit resurfaced as a reminder that unglamorous infrastructure can be pure wizardry, keeping huge distributed systems synced to sub-nanosecond precision. In a chatbot-soaked week, this felt like a classy flex from the hardware and networking crowd.

  • Browser audio editor actually looks serious

    AudioMass arrived as a slick open-source web audio editor with multitrack support, proving the browser can now do jobs once reserved for bulky desktop apps. It is the sort of project that makes the web feel useful again instead of merely noisy.

AI Hype Meets Cold Reality

  • DeepSeek agent goes cheap on purpose

    Reasonix leaned into DeepSeek caching, pitching a coding agent that stays cheap over long sessions by reusing stable prompt prefixes. The pitch is brutally practical: burn fewer tokens, keep the loop running, and turn cost control into a competitive weapon.

  • DeepSeek starts a model price war

    Bloomberg said DeepSeek will make a huge 75% price cut permanent on its flagship model. That is not a promotion, that is a shove. If frontier AI starts pricing like cloud storage, a lot of grand business plans suddenly look very fragile.

  • Claude is not your system designer

    The blunt warning here was that Claude and similar tools are fine helpers but terrible pretend architects. Let a chatbot sketch major systems and you may get fast meetings, vague diagrams, and a very expensive cleanup job once real engineers touch the mess.

  • LLM agents crack under real rules

    A paper on LLM agents said the shine fades fast when backend code must obey strict production constraints. Under loose goals they look clever; under real rules they drift, forget, and improvise nonsense. That demo-to-deployment gap keeps looking painfully wide.

  • OpenAI drama returns with fresh scars

    Greg Brockman's account of the wild OpenAI board saga dragged everyone back into the corporate thriller at the heart of the AGI race. Even when the outline is familiar, people still read it like prestige TV because the stakes remain absurdly high.

Coder Tools Get Restless

  • Rust keeps tempting unhappy Go teams

    The Go to Rust migration story struck a nerve because it was not just about speed bragging. Teams want tighter control, stronger safety, and fewer late surprises. It reads like another sign that Rust is becoming a practical second act for serious systems work.

  • Jujutsu offers Git users some relief

    Jujutsu was pitched as relief for people worn down by Git's rituals, sharp edges, and constant fear of messing up history. The point was not that Git is dead, but that daily version control should feel less like tax law and more like editing text.

  • C plus plus library keeps retreating

    This essay argued the C++ standard library has spent years quietly undoing some of its own cleverness, often in ways that admit older ideas aged badly. It is catnip for language nerds, but the larger story is simple: complexity always sends the bill.

  • Jira becomes a cursed little computer

    A Minsky machine built inside Jira Automation proved once again that if software has enough rules, someone will absolutely turn it into a computer. It is funny, slightly horrifying, and a perfect monument to enterprise software escaping its natural habitat.

Top Stories

AI Cuts Leave Junior Jobs in Trouble

Careers

A sharp warning said the industry is cutting entry-level hiring now and may pay for it with a senior talent gap later.

DeepSeek Coding Agent Chases Cheap Long Sessions

Artificial Intelligence

Reasonix showed how aggressive caching can slash coding agent costs and turn pricing into a product feature.

DeepSeek Turns Model Pricing Into a Brawl

AI Business

A permanent 75% discount on a flagship model signaled a brutal new phase in the AI price war.

AI Chips Become a Memory Money Pit

Semiconductors

New cost data suggested memory, not just compute, is now the biggest headache in AI hardware.

Claude Gets Called Out as Fake Architect

Software Engineering

A widely shared warning pushed back on the idea that chatbots should design major systems.

White Rabbit Shows Off Clockwork Precision

Infrastructure

CERN's ultra-precise timing system reminded everyone that deep infrastructure still powers the modern tech world.

Teams Keep Eyeing Rust After Go

Programming Languages

Another migration story showed Rust's appeal is spreading from enthusiasts to practical engineering teams.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

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White House App Lands on Government Phones!

White House App Lands on Government Phones!

Builders Slash Bloat and Rewrite the Rules

  • White House App Lands on Government Phones

    The White House is telling agencies to put its new app on workers’ government phones, turning a splashy media product into a mandatory install. That instantly raised ugly questions about security, privacy, and who really wanted this sitting on every official device.

  • Docker Diet Turns Node Giant Tiny

    One team took a bloated Node.js production image from 1.2GB to 78MB and showed every cut along the way. The lesson landed hard: most shipping containers are packed with junk, and a little Docker discipline can save money, time, and plenty of pain.

  • Deleting Filesystem Makes Sandbox Fly

    A sandbox felt painfully slow, so the builders looked closer and found their fancy virtual filesystem was the problem. They ripped it out and got a 47x speed jump. Sometimes the smartest optimization is the one that throws the bad idea in the bin.

  • Chrome Eyes Faster Page Updates

    Google’s proposed Chrome API for declarative partial page updates aims to make modern sites faster without every team hand-rolling its own mess. It feels like the browser finally admitting the web already behaves like an app, so it should help like one too.

  • Old 386 Chip Gets Open Reboot

    The retro hardware crowd got catnip: an open-source 80386 built around original microcode. Beyond the nostalgia, it is a reminder that old chips still shape today’s world, and opening them up teaches more than many shiny new black boxes ever will.

AI Coding Meets Its Reality Check

  • AI Coding Hits a Turning Point

    This piece captured the uneasy mood around AI-assisted development: software work is changing fast, but not always in clean or helpful ways. The big takeaway is that coding is turning into system steering, and teams ignoring that shift may get flattened by it.

  • Stop Trusting Bot Written Code

    The warning shot on LLM coding was blunt: skipping code reading because the bot wrote it is asking for trouble. Faster output means little if nobody understands the mess later, and the hangover from blind trust in AI is already showing up in real projects.

  • AI Lessons Ditch the Magic Show

    A huge AI curriculum promising raw math before shiny frameworks tapped into a growing hunger for fundamentals. With tooling moving at carnival speed, plenty of people are tired of magic tricks and want to know what the models are actually doing underneath.

  • Local AI Agent Stays on Laptop

    A Show HN project pitched a local RAG and knowledge-graph agent that runs on your own laptop, no remote setup circus required. That hit a nerve because people increasingly want AI tools that are useful, private, and not permanently tied to somebody else’s cloud.

  • Claude Chats Become a Team Wiki

    Another builder turned Claude Code session history into a shareable wiki, showing how fast the new AI tooling stack is spawning its own mini ecosystem. If chat logs are becoming the new project memory, teams will want better ways to save and search the good parts.

Old Fights Return in New Code

  • JWT Backlash Goes Fully Mainstream

    The anti-JWT rant shot up because it put a common frustration into plain English: many apps adopted token auth like a fashion trend, then inherited a pile of complexity and risk. If a boring session works, maybe stop pretending every app needs spaceship parts.

  • Markdown Refuses to Become LaTeX

    The fight over Markdown versus LaTeX was really a fight over scope creep. A format meant to stay simple keeps getting stretched into something heavier, uglier, and harder to implement. Sometimes the humble tool wins by refusing to become a kitchen sink.

  • Startup Smoke Swirls Around Polsia

    A brutal breakdown accused startup Polsia of fake growth, dead users, and a hidden 'god mode' over customer companies even after raising $30M. Whether every charge holds or not, it reads like a neon warning about shiny AI startups selling trust they have not earned.

  • Bambu Drama Shakes 3D Printing

    3D printing drama got spicier as a leaked message and licensing fight put Bambu Lab under a harsh spotlight. The row is bigger than one insult: it is about closed control, open-source obligations, and whether the hottest hardware company in the room is playing fair.

  • Microsoft Opens a DOS Time Capsule

    Microsoft open-sourcing the earliest known 86-DOS code was a rare bit of corporate archaeology done right. It is messy, old, and absolutely worth seeing, because today’s software empire was built on code that once looked a lot smaller and a lot more human.

Top Stories

White House Pushes Its App Onto Government Phones

Government Tech

A flashy political app became a real tech story once agencies were told to install it on official devices, raising immediate security and privacy alarms.

JWT Backlash Boils Over

Software Development

A blunt attack on token-based login systems hit a nerve, showing how tired developers are of complexity sold as modern best practice.

AI Coding Hits a Tipping Point

AI-assisted Development

The day’s big mood piece argued software work is being reshaped by AI tools, whether teams are ready for that shift or not.

Docker Diet Turns a Node Monster Tiny

DevOps

A real production image shrank from 1.2GB to 78MB, becoming the kind of practical win every engineering team wants to steal immediately.

Deleting a Filesystem Delivers a 47x Speedup

Performance Engineering

One of the best engineering stories of the day: a huge performance gain came not from clever tuning, but from ripping out the slow thing entirely.

Polsia Faces Brutal Startup Allegations

Startups

Claims of fake growth, dead users, and hidden control powers turned a funding story into a trust crisis for the AI startup crowd.

Chrome Tries to Clean Up Modern Web App Chaos

Web Platform

A proposed browser API for partial updates showed the platform finally trying to catch up with how web apps are actually built.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

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Google Search Forgets How Words Work!

Google Search Forgets How Words Work!

Search, Cars, and Code Stumble

  • Google Search forgets how words work

    Google rolled out a search view so packed with AI summaries that even looking up "disregard" became a chore. It felt like the web's front door was replaced with a chatty middleman, and nobody asked for the detour.

  • Waymo robotaxis lose to floodwater

    Waymo expanded its service pause to four cities after robotaxis kept wandering into flooded roads. The driverless future looked a lot less magical once rain showed up, which is awkward for a company selling real-world reliability.

  • CPU averages hide the real pain

    A sharp engineering post argued that average CPU utilization is a comforting lie. Systems can look healthy on dashboards while a few pinned cores quietly torch latency, cancel requests, and waste whole weeks of debugging.

  • Bun's Rust rewrite scares safety hawks

    A close look at Bun's Rust rewrite found 13,365 unsafe blocks, turning a speed-first darling into a fresh debate about memory safety and engineering tradeoffs. Fast is nice, but people still want to trust the floor under their feet.

  • GitHub tightens npm's weakest links

    GitHub added staged publishing and tighter npm install controls, a clear sign that the supply-chain nightmare is not going away. The package manager world keeps learning the same lesson: convenience is great until one dependency bites back.

AI Money Fever Breaks

  • AI coders cost more than coders

    One of the day's biggest reality checks came from a report that AI coding tools can cost more than the humans they are supposed to replace. The sales pitch promised savings. The spreadsheet reportedly replied with a raised eyebrow.

  • AI profits still look far away

    A widely shared tracker asked the question hanging over the whole industry: is AI profitable yet? With spending and revenue stacked side by side, the answer looked far less glamorous than the keynote version of the story.

  • Microsoft slams brakes on Claude Code

    Microsoft reportedly pulled back internal Claude Code licenses after bills ballooned past expectations. That turned enterprise AI from shiny productivity theater into a budget firefight, and sharpened doubts about today's token-price party.

  • Anthropic pitches shields, not just brains

    Anthropic and Cloudflare's Project Glasswing showed how frontier labs want to sell security and safety as much as raw model power. The smart move is obvious: if everyone fears AI misuse, be the company offering the shield.

  • Cheap AI prices start looking temporary

    Another sober take said today's bargain AI pricing was never built to last. As chips, inference, and enterprise budgets collide, the era of cheap magic looks temporary, and users may soon meet the real price of convenience.

The Weird Tech Side Show Rolls On

  • Deepfakes hit school life like a bomb

    A brutal story from Pennsylvania showed how deepfakes are no longer a distant ethics seminar. AI-generated abuse images tore through a school community, exposing how slow schools, police, and platforms still are when the harm is immediate.

  • Europe keeps squeezing Apple shut

    The FSFE stepped back into court against Apple in Europe, keeping pressure on how the iPhone giant handles access and interoperability under the Digital Markets Act. The fight over who gets to build on closed platforms is still alive.

  • One laptop takes a heroic journey

    The day's most human tech story followed the absurd effort needed to ship one laptop to a refugee camp in Uganda. It was a reminder that access to computing is still blocked less by code than by borders, logistics, and paperwork.

  • Steam yanks malware game after discovery

    Valve pulled a free Steam game after players found malware inside, another reminder that huge storefronts can still let rotten things slip through. Even bargain-bin curiosity now comes with the old advice: trust, but scan everything.

  • QR codes become the offline cable

    A clever browser tool called ShadowCat moves files through QR codes, no radio signals needed. It sounds a little ridiculous until you remember how often old devices, broken ports, and dead connectivity turn simple file sharing into a farce.

Top Stories

Microsoft learns AI workers are pricey

AI business

A blunt cost reality check landed: enterprise AI tools are not automatically cheaper than people, and the savings story is starting to crack.

AI profits still look like vapor

AI finance

A widely shared tracker put hard numbers against AI hype and made the big question unavoidable: who is actually making real money here.

Google Search buries basic answers

Search

Google's AI-first search redesign became the symbol of a growing fear that simple web lookups are being turned into slower, noisier chatbot experiences.

Anthropic sells safety with Glasswing

AI security

Frontier AI shifted further into security, showing that the next big product race may be about guarding against AI misuse, not just building bigger models.

Waymo robotaxis flunk flood season

Self-driving cars

Robotaxis hit a very ordinary obstacle—bad weather—and the pause across more cities underscored how fragile autonomy still looks outside perfect conditions.

Bun's Rust rewrite sparks safety alarm

Developer tools

A deep dive into Bun's Rust port turned into a bigger debate over whether speed and convenience are being bought with too much low-level risk.

CPU averages get put on trial

Infrastructure

A popular ops essay argued that one of tech's favorite metrics hides real outages, giving engineers a sharp reminder that pretty dashboards can lie.

Friday, May 22, 2026

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Google Shoves Ads Into AI Answers!

Google Shoves Ads Into AI Answers!

Tech Giants Hit Real-World Walls

  • Samsung's AI boom pays like crazy

    The AI chip boom is minting money so fast that Samsung staff are set for eye-watering bonuses. After months of chatter about whether the cycle was back, this looked like the clearest answer yet: memory chips are hot again.

  • Google puts ads inside AI answers

    Google finally said the quiet part out loud: ads are coming to AI Mode answers. As search turns into a chatbot, the old money machine is marching right in with it, and the glossy future of search suddenly looks a lot more familiar.

  • Cheap smartphones get crushed by AI costs

    Budget phones are getting squeezed because AI features demand more memory, stronger chips, and fatter parts lists. The cheap handset used to be tech's safety valve; now it looks like the first casualty of the premium AI arms race.

  • London slams the brakes on Palantir

    London's mayor blocked a major Palantir police deal, a blunt reminder that public sector AI still hits a wall when trust runs out. For all the sales talk, surveillance-heavy software remains a political hand grenade in a city that has seen this fight before.

  • Waymo robotaxis fail the flood test

    Waymo had to pause robotaxi service in Atlanta after cars kept driving into floodwater. Self-driving promises sound slick in sunshine, but rough weather keeps exposing how brittle the rollout still is when the street stops behaving like the demo.

AI Hype Leaks and Sprints

  • Gemini blurts out its secret script

    Gemini randomly coughed up its own system prompt, giving the public a peek behind Google's polished curtain. It was funny for a minute, then awkward: if the guardrails show themselves this easily, people will wonder what else slips through.

  • That famous o3 prompt falls apart

    The famous prompt that supposedly made o3 a photo-location wizard did not hold up under closer testing. That matters because viral AI demos keep turning into campfire stories, and this reality check landed right on the hype machine's jaw.

  • DeepMind chases a world-simulating AI

    DeepMind-linked Starchild-1 promises a model that predicts sights and sounds in real time, pushing the dream of AI that understands the physical world. It sounds a little wild, which is exactly why this kind of world model gets so much attention.

  • Researchers split AI thinking into lanes

    A new multi-stream LLM paper says one giant serial thought process is a bottleneck, and that prompts, reasoning, and output can run in separate lanes. That is catnip for anyone tired of watching supposedly smart AI agents sit and think forever.

  • CODA tries to make transformers sprint

    The CODA paper tries to speed up transformer training by folding more of the annoying side work into the main math. It is a deep plumbing story, but the headline is simple: faster AI training means cheaper models, and everybody notices that.

Browsers Bugs and Old Legends

  • Vivaldi gets a bold new face

    Vivaldi 8 arrived with its biggest redesign in years, leaning hard into customization instead of copying the same bland browser look. In a web that keeps flattening into one giant gray app, that stubbornly different browser energy feels refreshing.

  • Python 3.15 hides plenty of goodies

    Python 3.15 is packed with quieter upgrades that missed the splashy headlines, but they add up to a smoother everyday Python release. This is the kind of update working developers appreciate a month later, when the flashy launch posts are long gone.

  • A decade-old server finally gets rescued

    One long-running blog finally moved from dusty Ubuntu 16.04 to FreeBSD, turning a neglected server into a small survival tale. It is a painfully familiar pattern in tech: old boxes run forever, right up until somebody gets brave enough to touch them.

  • A tiny FreeBSD bug opens the vault

    The FatGid flaw showed how a small mismatch in a FreeBSD kernel call can lead to full local privilege escalation. It is the sort of security bug that makes operators groan, because the coding mistake looks tiny while the damage looks enormous.

  • MATLAB loses one of its founders

    The death of Cleve Moler, the force behind MATLAB and a giant in numerical computing, landed hard. Huge swaths of science and engineering still rest on tools he helped shape, even if most of the people using them never knew his name.

Top Stories

Gemini spills its own rulebook

AI

A sudden system prompt leak showed how even polished chatbots can spill their own rules.

Google brings ads into AI search

Search

Google confirmed ads inside chat-style search, turning the future of search back into the old business model.

Samsung showers chip staff with cash

Semiconductors

Huge payouts showed just how much the AI chip boom has revived Samsung's fortunes.

AI starts pricing out cheap phones

Consumer Electronics

The push for on-device AI is making entry-level smartphones harder to build and harder to keep affordable.

London blocks Palantir police deal

Government Tech

A blocked Palantir contract proved that public sector AI still rises or falls on trust.

Waymo hits pause after flood chaos

Autonomous Vehicles

Flood trouble forced Waymo to pause service, a blunt reminder that robotaxis still struggle outside perfect conditions.

MATLAB loses a founding giant

Software History

The death of Cleve Moler marked the loss of one of modern technical computing's most important builders.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

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Google Search Turns Into Link Vacuum!

Google Search Turns Into Link Vacuum!

Clouds Crack and Search Swallows the Web

  • Google Cloud Pulls Railway Off the Tracks

    Railway said a mistaken Google Cloud account suspension caused a platform-wide outage, and the write-up landed like a horror story for every startup renting its survival from one giant vendor. Cloud dependence looked painfully real.

  • Poisoned VS Code Add On Hits GitHub

    A trojanized VS Code extension helped attackers breach about 3,800 GitHub repos, proving again that the friendly little tools in a developer’s sidebar can become the front door for a disaster. Trust in the plugin pile took another hit.

  • Tiny Bug Opens a Huge Container Escape

    Researchers walked through CopyFail, a flaw that can jump from a container to the host with root access on Kubernetes. The scary part was not just the bug, but how tiny the write was compared with the size of the damage.

  • Google Turns Search Into a Link Vacuum

    After Google I/O, critics said AI search is turning the web into a raw material pit: publishers do the work, Google keeps the answers, and links get squeezed out. The mood around search felt less futuristic than openly hostile.

AI Labs Race for Bigger Power

  • OpenAI Claims a Math Trophy

    OpenAI said one of its models helped disprove a long-standing problem in discrete geometry. Even skeptics had to admit this was not another toy demo. It read like a warning shot that AI is edging into real research territory.

  • OpenAI Eyes Wall Street

    Reports said OpenAI could confidentially file for an IPO within days, a move that would turn the hottest name in AI into the ultimate public-market circus. The message was plain: the lab era is colliding head-on with Wall Street.

  • Anthropic Orders More Monster Chips

    Anthropic said it is expanding into Colossus 2 with GB200 capacity, adding another giant order to the AI compute arms race. The frontier-lab game keeps looking less like software and more like industrial-scale power shopping.

  • Alibaba Pushes Its Agent Pitch

    Alibaba introduced Qwen3.7-Max as a model built for the agent age, promising help with code, tools, and long tasks. Whether the label is ahead of reality is still up for debate, but the race to sell AI workers is clearly on.

  • AI Help Writes Serious Rust

    One team reported building about 100,000 lines of Rust with AI help, including a distributed system, and the takeaways were far from magical. The story mattered because it showed where AI coding shines and where it still trips over itself.

Old Tools Learn New Tricks

  • Firefox Finally Retires an Old Hack

    Mozilla is turning off asm.js optimizations in Firefox after years of service, a quiet sign that the web’s clever stopgaps do eventually get retired. It felt like the end of a strange but important chapter before WebAssembly took over.

  • Dead Scanners Get a Browser Comeback

    A web app uses an in-browser Linux VM plus WebUSB to rescue old scanners that modern computers ignore. It is exactly the kind of delightfully overbuilt fix people love: absurd on paper, useful in practice, and a small win over e-waste.

  • Mac Wallpaper Mystery Gets Cracked

    A developer reverse engineered Apple’s video wallpaper system and built Phosphene for macOS Tahoe. It scratched that familiar itch: if the platform will not let you do the fun thing directly, somebody on the outside will figure it out.

  • Flipper One Shows Its Guts

    The Flipper One specs finally showed the hardware behind the much-hyped gadget, including a Rockchip brain and a long list of modules. For fans of portable hacking toys, it was catnip; for everyone else, a reminder that weird hardware still sells.

  • Node 26 Ships Better Timekeeping

    Node.js 26 arrived with the Temporal API enabled by default, a small sentence that hides years of pain around dates and time. Developers greeted it like overdue housekeeping: not flashy, but exactly the kind of fix that saves future headaches.

Top Stories

OpenAI grabs a math breakthrough

AI Research

An OpenAI model was credited with helping disprove a long-standing geometry conjecture, pushing AI a little further from flashy demo and a little closer to real research partner.

GitHub breach hits 3,800 repos

Cybersecurity

A malicious VS Code extension reportedly led to thousands of compromised repositories, reminding everyone that the humble developer toolchain is now prime attack territory.

Google Cloud knocks Railway sideways

Cloud Infrastructure

Railway said an incorrect Google Cloud suspension caused a platform-wide disruption, turning cloud dependence into the day’s most uncomfortable lesson for startups.

Google search gets accused of eating the web

Search and Media

Google I/O triggered a fresh backlash that AI search is keeping answers for Google and starving publishers of clicks, deepening fears about the future of the open web.

OpenAI inches toward an IPO

AI Business

Reports that OpenAI may confidentially file for an IPO soon showed how fast the AI boom is shifting from research race to public market spectacle.

CopyFail exposes a nasty container escape

Security

Researchers described a path from a tiny memory write to host root on Kubernetes, the kind of bug that makes every platform team suddenly check everything twice.

Anthropic doubles down on chip power

AI Infrastructure

Anthropic’s planned expansion into Colossus 2 with GB200 capacity underlined the brute-force hardware race now shaping frontier AI.

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