A daily curated digest with the tech news that matter + community vibes, delivered daily, in tabloid style. Like you always wanted.
Tonight, Microsoft leads the board with a record 570 security flaws fixed, while one user says a 25-year account disappears along with OneDrive files and purchased games... AI data centers leave the public carrying an estimated $23 billion power bill, and the BIS says the AI boom now leans more heavily on debt... We also track a Tailscale SSH bug tied to possible root access, a Cursor project-folder trap, OpenAI locking sensitive access behind passkeys, and fresh signs that stronger phone AI and more capable coding agents are moving closer to everyday use.
Microsoft User Loses 25 Years Overnight
A user said Microsoft wiped a 25-year account, OneDrive, and years of purchased games even after admitting the account was compromised. Cloud life feels sleek until one support case turns your whole digital attic into smoke.
AI Data Centers Stick Public With Bill
A new estimate says giant data centers pushed roughly $23 billion in electricity costs onto the public. The shiny AI boom suddenly looks a lot less magical when everyone else is quietly helping cover the power tab.
AI Boom Starts Running on Debt
The BIS says the AI boom is shifting from easy cash and fat profits toward more debt as companies rush to build data centers. The race is still on, but the financing now looks a lot more like a late-night credit binge.
Microsoft Drops Monster Security Patch Load
In one brutal patch cycle, Microsoft fixed a record 570 security flaws across Windows and other products. That is the sort of number that makes every IT team cancel lunch and wonder what else is still hiding in the walls.
Tailscale Flaw Opens Root Door
Tailscale disclosed that insecure argument handling in Tailscale SSH could permit root access in some setups. For a tool people trust to simplify secure remote access, this lands like a brick through the server room window.
OpenAI Ad Dream Runs Into Wall
An analyst says OpenAI is on track to miss its chatbot ad revenue forecast by about 90%. After months of big talk about AI ads funding everything, this read like a cold splash of water on a very expensive party.
Bonsai 27B says it is the first model in its class to run on a phone using 1-bit tricks. That matters because powerful AI keeps inching away from giant server halls and into the gadget already buzzing in your pocket.
Cursor Bug Turns Projects Into Traps
Researchers say Cursor can be tricked into running a bad git.exe hidden inside a project folder, then went public after feeling ignored. AI coding helpers are useful, but this showed how quickly they can become attacker sidekicks.
Coding Agents May Actually Plan Ahead
Researchers studying coding agents say the models appear to think ahead during software tasks instead of simply stumbling forward token by token. That makes the newest AI tools feel a bit less like parrots and more like eager junior staff.
OpenAI Locks Down Access With Passkeys
OpenAI now requires hardware-backed passkeys for members of its Trusted Access for Cyber program. It is both a flex and a warning: top-tier AI access is valuable enough now that normal login habits no longer look remotely serious.
Jurassic Park Computers Get Full Autopsy
A deep dive into the machines of Jurassic Park unpacked every screen, prop, and very 90s workstation in the movie. It was pure retro candy and a reminder that Hollywood once sold the future with Silicon Graphics and beige laptops.
India Maps the Brainstem in 3D
Scientists in India unveiled a richly detailed 3D atlas of the human brainstem, mapping a region that has stayed oddly blurry for decades. It is the kind of quiet breakthrough that could make future neuroscience far less guessy.
Ocean Mystery Cell Finally Steps Into View
Researchers finally pinned down an ultra-small ocean organism that had haunted marine biology for years. The tiny cell helps explain how the seas move nitrogen, proving life still hides world-changing secrets in microscopic places.
Minecraft World Dump Hits 15 TB
A preservation project released what it calls the largest downloadable Minecraft world, weighing in at 15 TB. It is absurd, beautiful, and exactly what the internet does best when nobody asks permission to archive digital history.
Someone Built a QR Swastika Shield
A Rust crate called qr-swastika-avoider tries to stop stylish QR codes from accidentally forming a shape nobody wants on posters or packaging. It is a tiny fix for a very real design nightmare, and of course someone had to build it.
Today, we track a tech map in motion as Valve looks steadier while the old Xbox and PlayStation fight fades, and Wikipedia avoids a heavier UK safety burden... Deep in the stack, an application firewall moves into the kernel, while researchers in Japan recover up to 90% of lithium from old EV batteries and put battery supply back in focus... In AI, Apple SpeechAnalyzer draws eyes in the race with Whisper, real token costs get a harder look, and companies measure whether coding agents stay useful after rollout... Then the sharpest warning lands when Grok Build CLI is found sending full code repositories to a cloud bucket, pushing sandboxing, audits, and model safety testing to the front of the day's reading.
Consoles Fade and Valve Just Shrugs
One of the day's loudest arguments was that the old Xbox versus PlayStation script is basically over. With Valve sitting in the middle, PC-style gaming and Steam hardware now look steadier than the expensive drama from the traditional console giants.
Firewall Jumps Into the Kernel
A team pushed an application firewall into the kernel, promising smarter traffic filtering without the usual slowdown. It felt like catnip for infrastructure people: less overhead, tighter control, and another step toward defenses living closer to the machine.
Japan Finds Lithium in Old Batteries
Researchers in Japan say they can recover up to 90% of lithium from worn-out EV batteries. If that survives real-world scaling, it could ease raw-material panic, cut waste, and make the battery boom look a little less like a giant mining habit.
Wikipedia Dodges UK Safety Trap
For now, Wikipedia avoided being labeled a top-tier platform under the UK's Online Safety Act. That matters because a harsher label could have dumped huge compliance burdens on one of the web's last giant non-profit institutions.
Apple Speech Tool Takes on Whisper
Apple's new SpeechAnalyzer was compared with Whisper and its own older tools, drawing attention because speech is quickly becoming a default feature in everyday apps. Developers clearly want voice tech that is fast, cheap, and not second-rate.
Grok Tool Sends Repos to Cloud
The biggest AI scare of the day hit xAI after researchers found Grok Build CLI sending full code repositories to a Google Cloud bucket. That is the sort of sentence that makes every developer sit up straight and audit what their helpers quietly upload.
MIT researchers unveiled a way to test whether a model was fine-tuned on CSAM without forcing it to generate the material. In a field full of safety slogans, this felt like rare concrete work that could actually help auditors and platforms act faster.
AI Price Tags Get a Reality Check
A blunt breakdown argued that token prices are a bad way to compare frontier models, because retries, tool use, and long context windows change the real bill. It hit a nerve: AI looks cheap on the pricing page right up until the invoice lands.
Companies Test AI Coders at Scale
A study of Microsoft's rollout of Claude Code and Copilot CLI asked the only question that matters in business: who keeps using these agents, and do they help enough to justify the risk and spend. The honeymoon phase is clearly thinning out.
Give Coding Bots Their Own Box
One Show HN pitch kept it refreshingly simple: let coding agents work inside a disposable Linux VM, not on your laptop. With trust in AI tools wobbling, sandboxing stopped sounding paranoid and started sounding like basic workplace hygiene.
Photoshop Finally Pushes a Loyal User Away
A longtime user finally gave Photoshop the breakup speech, blaming Adobe's endless subscription logic and general friction. It landed because it captured a familiar mood: people still need creative tools, they just do not want to rent their workflow forever.
Police Drone Leak Shows the Sky Eyes
Leaked San Francisco police drone footage showed how ordinary city life can be vacuumed into a surveillance system from above. It was a sharp reminder that once cameras fly, the line between public safety and routine tracking gets very thin.
California Targets Infinite Scroll Loops
A California proposal could hit infinite scroll and autoplay, putting the design tricks that keep people glued to apps directly in lawmakers' sights. Whether it passes or not, the old endless-feed playbook suddenly looks less untouchable.
Thunderbird Untangles Its Settings Maze
Mozilla shared what it learned from digging into Thunderbird settings pain, and the takeaway was pleasingly old school: people want software that is powerful without turning basic configuration into a scavenger hunt. Small product work still matters.
Today we track Chrome turning Math.tanh into a new OS fingerprinting clue... Windows 11 admins sound worn down as Windows 10 nears its end... New figures tie AI datacentres to rising emissions at Microsoft, Amazon, and Google, while the long-hidden GhostLock flaw shakes confidence in Linux... In the agent rush, reachable MCP servers lag the 2026 spec and security checks find too many weak points... Tests show Claude Code spending heavy tokens before a prompt, even as one team says GPT-5.6 Sol runs faster and cheaper... And as Vint Cerf steps back from his public role at Google, fresh research says AI helps scientists publish more while crowding work into the same fields.
Chrome math now gives away your OS
A tiny change in Chromium 148 made Math.tanh behave differently enough to reveal the underlying operating system. That turns a dull browser detail into a fresh fingerprinting trick, and privacy loses one more round by inches.
Windows 11 keeps wearing admins down
A lot of admins sound completely done with Windows 11. The complaints hit familiar sore spots: extra Microsoft apps, more clutter, more policy headaches, and not much payoff. With Windows 10 fading out, the mood is more grim march than upgrade party.
AI datacenters send carbon totals soaring
Fresh figures tied new datacentres to a steep rise in Microsoft, Amazon, and Google emissions. The AI boom keeps selling wonder, but the power bill and carbon bill are now too big to hide behind glossy product demos.
Ancient Linux flaw finally gets daylight
The GhostLock bug reportedly sat in major Linux distributions for roughly 15 years, offering attackers a nasty stack use-after-free route. It is exactly the kind of old flaw that makes trusted, boring infrastructure feel suddenly less comforting.
Vint Cerf exits the public stage
After decades helping define the modern internet, Vint Cerf is stepping down from his public-facing role at Google. It landed like the end of an era, with a rare pause to remember who actually built the online world everyone now takes for granted.
Almost no MCP servers are ready
A scan of reachable MCP servers found almost none ready for the coming 2026-07-28 spec. Nothing explodes on that date, but it is a blunt sign that the agent tool stack is sprinting ahead while basic compatibility limps far behind.
MCP security looks worryingly flimsy
A broader report on MCP security found what many feared: too many servers, too many holes, and too little hardening. Tool-using agents sound futuristic right up until you picture those tools dangling off shaky endpoints in production.
Claude Code burns tokens before starting
Testing found Claude Code sending about 33k tokens before even reading a user prompt, far above OpenCode in the same setup. That kind of overhead makes the coding-agent future look expensive, bloated, and oddly careless.
GPT-5.6 claims speed and savings
One production team said moving its agent to OpenAI GPT-5.6 Sol made it 2.2x faster and 27% cheaper. In the model arms race, lower cost and better speed still win the room fast, especially when real workloads are on the line.
AI boosts papers but dulls discovery
A huge paper claimed AI helps scientists publish more and climb faster, but also nudges them into the same crowded topics. That is the sour twist of the day: more output, more careers, and maybe less real discovery where it matters.
Tiny PDFs keep minting giant fortunes
Some of the most valuable companies and technologies of the last few decades can be traced back to surprisingly short PDFs. It was a neat reminder that one plain document, dropped at the right moment, can move markets and reshape industries.
Rust-like web apps try skipping JavaScript
Nectar pitches a bold old dream: write your app in a Rust-like language, compile to WebAssembly, and keep JavaScript on a tiny leash. Whether it wins or not, the hunger to escape swollen front-end stacks is clearly alive.
Tiny image format chases instant pages
Handsum targets the tiny blurry placeholders websites use while full images load. It is niche, sure, but web speed lives or dies on tiny details, and this scratches the eternal itch to make pages feel fast before they are fully there.
Motorola router flaw opens scary door
A researcher detailed an unauthenticated RCE in Motorola's MR2600 router, which is exactly the kind of sentence that makes home networking gear feel cursed. Cheap routers keep turning into easy targets, and buyers keep paying for it later.
Today core tech moves to the front as a Rust rewrite of Postgres clears a full test run, semantic search works inside the browser, and a new Linux distro sells a simpler machine with no systemd and no telemetry... Fresh Firefox numbers push desktop share above 12% in North America and give the browser race a visible shift... On the AI side, we see the mood change as AI agents meet hard bills, the GPU boom shows more debt behind the demand, Grok Build CLI raises fresh questions about what it sends home, and local Qwen 3.5 122B on Mac Studio finally becomes usable after key fixes... Core software, AI costs, and user control set the tone today.
Rust Postgres Suddenly Looks Very Real
A Rust rewrite of Postgres just cleared the full test gauntlet, which is the kind of milestone that makes a hobby project stop looking cute and start looking real. Safe systems code is no longer knocking politely at the database door.
Search Gets Smarter Without Leaving the Browser
A static site using semantic search right in the browser hit a nerve because it skips servers, bills, and mystery ranking boxes. The pitch is simple: smarter search, lower cost, and more control for people who actually run the site.
A Human Friendly Linux Steps Forward
A new Linux distro promised a human-friendly setup with no systemd and no telemetry, and that alone was enough to pull in a crowd. It tapped straight into the old craving for machines that feel owned, not managed from afar.
Firefox Share Finally Gives Fans a Pulse
Fresh numbers showing Firefox above 12% of North American desktop share gave browser fans something rare: hope. In a market that usually feels welded shut, even a small shift looks like a crack in the giant glass wall.
The shiny AI agent dream is running into the oldest enemy in business: the bill. Companies are suddenly obsessed with cutting tokens, trimming prompts, and making models cheaper, because 'just scale it' stops sounding brave once the invoice lands.
The GPU Gold Rush Shows Its Debt
The GPU boom looked a little less magical after a breakdown of how Nvidia, CoreWeave, and others keep the money wheel spinning. Demand is huge, but so is the financial engineering, and that makes the whole AI rush feel more leveraged than invincible.
Grok Build Phones Home More Than Expected
A wire-level teardown of Grok Build CLI asked the question nobody loves asking after install day: what exactly is this tool sending home? The answer fed the growing suspicion that AI coding helpers want far more visibility than users think.
Big Local AI Finally Stops Crawling
Three bug fixes turned Qwen 3.5 122B on a Mac Studio from a patience test into something usable, and that mattered. Local AI still looks clunky, but every speed jump chips away at the idea that serious models must live in giant rented clouds.
An anti-AI font that humans can read while models stumble over it landed right in the middle of the internet's latest cold war. It is clever, slightly petty, and exactly the kind of cat-and-mouse move people expect as scraping fatigue keeps rising.
Night Sky Mirror Gets a Green Light
The FCC approved a test for a space mirror that could bounce sunlight onto Earth at night, which sounds like satire until you realize it is very real. Between astronomy worries and start-up optimism, this story hit the sweet spot of bizarre and plausible.
The Scan to Pay Machine Revealed
A clean breakdown of how a UPI payment works showed why India's money rails keep fascinating the rest of the world. What looks like one fast scan on a phone is really a tightly choreographed dance of apps, banks, IDs, and trust.
A Homebrew Handheld Puts RISC V to Work
An open-source handheld called RISCBoy showed off a from-scratch RISC-V game console design, and that is pure catnip for people who miss understandable hardware. It is part nostalgia, part rebellion, and part reminder that tinkering is still alive.
Tonight, we track a 15-year-old Linux kernel bug spreading across major distros with no exotic setup in sight... Apple pulls OpenAI into a trade-secret fight as the AI hiring race reaches court... A new stealth browser tests the limits of Cloudflare and other bot blockers, while FreeCAD reaches the browser and hints at lighter software ahead... On the AI front, Meta retreats on an AI image feature after backlash, teams push for lasting access to Gemini 2.5 Flash, and builders focus on memory systems that keep agents useful... Fresh model bake-offs put GPT-5.6, Grok 4.5 and Claude on the same jobs, and Prismata offers a new guardrail against prompt injection in web agents.
A 15-year-old Linux kernel bug turned out to be sitting in pretty much every major distro, needing no weird setup to trigger. That is the nightmare version of “it’s probably fine,” and it landed with a proper thud.
Apple’s lawsuit says former staff carried trade secrets to OpenAI, dragging the AI talent war into ugly courtroom daylight. It makes every flashy hiring spree look less like recruiting and more like corporate trench warfare.
Bot blockers meet a new evasive browser
A new open-source stealth browser claims it can slip past Cloudflare and other bot blockers, which is catnip for scrapers and a headache for everyone else. The web’s anti-bot arms race keeps getting weirder, costlier and harder to trust.
Getting FreeCAD to run in the browser feels like one of those nerd dreams that suddenly becomes real. It hints at a future where heavyweight desktop tools travel lighter, install less and reach more people without a setup weekend.
Build tool startup garnix is shutting its hosted service, open-sourcing the stack and joining Shopify. It is one more sign that useful dev tools still get absorbed by bigger platforms, even when users wish the scrappy original could keep going.
Meta yanks its creepy image trick
Meta rolled back a new AI image feature on Instagram just days after people hated the idea of their content fueling fake pictures. The message was brutally clear: shiny AI tricks are worthless when users feel railroaded and creeped out.
AI agents need memory, not magic
The flood of AI agents has reached the “please pick a memory system” phase. Everyone is discovering the same thing: smarter agents are not just about bigger models, but about remembering the right stuff without turning into a total mess.
Developers beg Google to keep Flash
A plea not to kill Gemini 2.5 Flash captured a familiar fear in AI land: teams build real products on fast, cheap models, then wake up to sunset rumors. The industry keeps selling speed, while developers keep begging for something rarer: stability.
Big models battle over the same apps
Another showdown had GPT-5.6, Grok 4.5, Claude and others building the same apps, turning model hype into something closer to a bake-off. These tests are imperfect, but they are still the fastest way to see who can actually ship useful work.
Web agents get a security seatbelt
Researchers pitched Prismata as a way to fence off prompt injection attacks in web agents, because giving AI a browser also gives it the web’s oldest booby traps. Autonomous agents inherit the internet’s chaos, not just its convenience.
The web tracks you without cookies
Cookies are not the whole surveillance story. Browser fingerprinting lets sites track people through device quirks, fonts, graphics and other signals that are much harder to shake off. It is privacy erosion at its sneakiest and most annoying.
Burner email filters boomerang
One developer built a burner email blocklist, then got locked out by the same logic when using Proton Mail on a public data service. It is a perfect little farce of modern anti-abuse systems: broad filters, bad guesses and regular users trapped.
Europe pushes scanning into private chats
Europe’s Chat Control plan cleared another hurdle, keeping the pressure on private messaging and even end-to-end encryption. Supporters call it safety, critics hear mass scanning, and the tech world sees another attempt to peek inside private rooms.
New York cracks down on subscription traps
New York City rolled out click-to-cancel rules and tougher pricing rules aimed at subscription traps and junk fees. For an internet economy built on hoping you forget to unsubscribe, this lands like someone finally turning on the lights.
With Java 27 now feature-complete, developers got the usual mix of fresh capabilities and security-minded cleanup. It is not flashy like AI launches, but a huge chunk of the software world still runs on Java, so these releases quietly matter a lot.
OpenAI drops GPT-5.6 and the model race stays at full speed... ChatGPT Work pushes deeper into apps and files, while Meta answers with Muse Spark 1.1 and Anthropic teaches Claude to study user habits... Beyond the AI rush, we see core systems move too, with a Rust take on PostgreSQL, Meta reviving old RAM with CXL, PostHog going open source, and GitHub giving every repo a durable owner... The mood is sharp and restless, with teams chasing faster tools, cleaner code, cheaper hardware, and AI that stays on the job longer.
A Rust rewrite of PostgreSQL says it now passes all official regression tests, which moves it from clever side project to serious contender. People love the ambition, but the real headline is simple: database rewrites just got a lot less laughable.
With AI servers getting painfully expensive, Meta is reusing older RAM in new machines through a custom bridge chip built around CXL ideas. It is a very Silicon Valley move: save billions by turning yesterday's leftovers into today's hot hardware.
After years of pitch battles over what counted as open, PostHog says the platform is now open source. That lands as more than branding cleanup: teams want tools they can inspect, host, and trust before wiring in their product data.
GitHub Makes Every Repo Someone's Problem
GitHub quietly tackled a boring problem with explosive consequences: repos with no real owner. Its new durable owner setup makes sure each project has a lasting accountable home, which sounds dull until the next security mess proves why it matters.
Big Clusters Lose to One Laptop
The old joke became a headline again: some giant distributed systems are slower than a single laptop while costing far more. The piece skewers companies that parallelize overhead instead of work, and it hits because too many people have seen exactly that movie.
OpenAI unveiled GPT-5.6, keeping the model race on full boil and reminding everyone that shipping never stops now. The mood is equal parts wow and exhaustion: each new release promises sharper reasoning, but also raises the pressure to rebuild products yet again.
ChatGPT Wants the Whole Workday
With ChatGPT Work, OpenAI is pushing from answering questions to taking actions across apps and files for hours at a time. This is the bigger shift hiding in plain sight: the chatbot is being recast as office staff, whether your org asked for one or not.
Meta Fires Back With Muse Spark
Meta introduced Muse Spark 1.1, a new multimodal reasoning model from its superintelligence lab. It reads like a direct message to rivals: Meta does not plan to watch the AI race from the cheap seats, even if every launch now arrives in a blur of benchmarks.
Claude Now Grades Your AI Habits
Anthropic added a beta way to reflect on how people use Claude, turning prompting habits into something closer to a skills report. It is part coaching, part product stickiness, and a sign that labs now want to shape not just answers, but how users think with AI.
One sharp take argued that AI has changed the math on software rewrites. Clean, familiar codebases suddenly look much easier to rebuild, while strange internal systems lose their mystique. That is exciting for greenfield fans and terrifying for legacy owners.
City Websites Still Shut People Out
A fresh audit found 92% of US city websites fail ADA accessibility in some way. The average score was not apocalyptic, but the misses were basic enough to sting: public services still lock people out, and the vendors selling these sites look especially exposed.
Europe Reopens the Chat Scanning Fight
The EU Parliament moved Chat Control 1.0 forward, reopening the fight over scanning private messages for suspicious material. Privacy worries came roaring back fast, because once mass inspection is normalized, it rarely stays neatly in the box it arrived in.
Home Assistant Invades the Boiler Room
A botanical garden in Amsterdam used Home Assistant to tame boilers, heat pumps, and building data, and the story lands because it feels so practical. Cheap, understandable tools keep winning hearts when big commercial systems act like expensive black boxes.
More developers are eyeing Codeberg and self-hosted tools as alternatives to GitHub, even while GitHub remains huge. The split is not about raw scale anymore; it is about control, identity, and whether one giant platform should mediate open source life.
Astronomers say star TOI-5882 appears to have swallowed a planet and may not be finished yet. It is not a tech product launch, but it was one of the day's great scene-stealers: cosmic disaster, real data, and a reminder that space still knows how to do drama.
Tonight, we see core tech take center stage... GitHub's AI agent raises fresh fear over private repo access... John Deere loosens its grip on repair tools... TypeScript 7 promises a 10x speed jump... Bun turns to Rust for a safer engine room. Then the AI labs flood in... Mistral pushes models into robots... OpenAI makes voice chat feel more natural... Grok 4.5 joins the coding fight... and the battle over benchmarks grows louder as OpenAI drops SWE-Bench Pro. The mood across developers and builders is alert, impatient, and fixed on what really works.
GitHub Agent Springs a Private Repo Leak
Noma Labs said GitHub's shiny new AI agent could be tricked into quietly pulling data from private repos through prompt injection. That lands exactly where nobody wanted: a trust crisis for automated coding helpers.
John Deere Finally Loosens the Tractor Lock
After years of anger, John Deere agreed in an FTC settlement to give owners access to repair tools and software. Farmers may finally fix their own machines instead of begging the dealer and watching the bill keep growing.
TypeScript Gets a Serious Speed Makeover
TypeScript 7 arrives as a native rewrite promising roughly 10x faster performance. For developers drowning in slow builds, this reads like overdue relief, and a reminder that tooling speed still matters in the AI circus.
Bun Ditches Zig and Bets on Rust
Hot-shot JavaScript runtime Bun is being rewritten in Rust, a move that instantly set off language-loyalty fireworks. The bigger story is practical: teams want speed, safety, and fewer sharp edges in core tools.
Mistral Wants Robots to Follow Directions
Mistral unveiled Robostral Navigate, an 8B model for getting robots through spaces using camera views and plain language. The message is clear: labs are done with chat alone and want AI to move bodies, not just words.
OpenAI Pushes Voice Chat Toward Real Conversation
With GPT-Live, OpenAI says its new full-duplex voice system can listen and talk at the same time. That may sound small, but it is the difference between a clunky hotline and something that feels unsettlingly human.
Grok 4.5 Joins the Coding Model Brawl
Grok 4.5 arrived boasting stronger coding and agent skills, plus training ties to Cursor. Another week, another smartest model ever, but the real feeling is fatigue as labs keep dropping louder, faster, harder-to-compare claims.
OpenAI Dumps a Popular Coding Scorecard
OpenAI said it no longer recommends SWE-Bench Pro, arguing the benchmark creates more noise than signal. That is a polite way of saying the AI leaderboard game is getting messy, gameable, and far less useful than the hype suggests.
Apple Pours More Cash Into US Chips
Apple expanded its deal with Broadcom to design and make more custom silicon in the US. It is part supply-chain politics, part industrial flex, and a sign that chip strategy is now as much about geography as performance.
Mini Data Center Heats a Public Pool
A washing-machine-sized data centre from Deep Green is heating a swimming pool in Devon by recycling server warmth. It is one of those rare tech stories that feels almost too sensible: less waste, useful heat, fewer excuses.
Cloudflare Builds Global Order for the Internet
Cloudflare showed off Meerkat, a system for keeping shared state consistent across hundreds of data centers. It is deeply inside-baseball stuff, but it underpins the part everyone notices later: when the internet does not wobble.
In-Person Finals Expose the AI Grade Mirage
After suspecting AI cheating, a Brown professor moved the final exam in person and scores reportedly dropped by 50%. That brutal gap says quiet parts out loud about take-home assessment, trust, and what students are really learning.