- 425Comet AI browser can get prompt injected from any site, drain your bank account (twitter.com)
- 1Think Fast: Reasoning at 3ms a Token (fin.ai)
- 3Comparing Nitro to Runit (leahneukirchen.org)
- 4From Logic to Linear Algebra: How AI Is Rewiring the Computer (journal.hexmos.com)
- 3Kids Are Alright (bitecode.dev)
- 3LLMs: Common Terms Explained, Simply (newsletter.eng-leadership.com)
- 4South Korean man arrested in Thailand in $50M crypto scam (gizmodo.com)
- 5Some people are non-belonging (theguardian.com)
- 6Good Vibes: A Claude-Code Case-Study (taylor.town)
- 2Vattenfall shortlists Rolls Royce, GE Vernova to build SMR nuclear reactors (msn.com)
- 2PlainApp (github.com)
- 2The World After Wireheading (geohot.github.io)
- 1Gemini in Gmail Is Pretty Well Useless ()
- 208Making games in Go: 3 months without LLMs vs. 3 days with LLMs (marianogappa.github.io)
- 3New Trump design chief aims to improve US Government websites (reuters.com)
- 1Scott Horton: The Case Against War and the Military-Industrial Complex [video] (youtube.com)
- 2Indonesia has a waste problem. Does China have a solution? (globalvoices.org)
- 2Can Solar Farms Save the Bees? (cnet.com)
- 2C language programmer's instant reference card (1985) [pdf] (12000.org)
- 3Ask HN: What's your Supabase stack look like? ()
ask - 2FTC warns tech giants not to bow to foreign pressure on encryption (bleepingcomputer.com)
- 1Bloom patterns: radially expansive, developable and flat-foldable origami (royalsocietypublishing.org)
- 1Comparing Claude and Gemini for SQL Analytics (benjaminwootton.com)
- 1When functions dissolve (rubber-duck-typing.com)
- 1Magic Namerefs in Bash (gist.github.com)
- 96DeepConf: Scaling LLM reasoning with confidence, not just compute (arxiviq.substack.com)
- 2Legitimate Chrome VPN extension turns to browser spyware (infosecurity-magazine.com)
- 2I built an open-source reverse proxy with WAF features (NetGoat) (github.com)
- 3Scientists Identified the Origin of a Powerful Outer Space Radio Wave (wired.com)
- 3I gave the police access to my DNA–and maybe some of yours (technologyreview.com)