France Orders ISPs to Block Access to Polymarket
In May Spain blocked access to Polymarket and Kalshi while it launched a gambling license investigation.
This is a level of stupid that only Microsoft could pull off. Now, why has Microsoft not been charged with treason? Nadella is the definition of greedy bastard.
That’s the argument I heard when a defense contractor about why so many DoD systems specified Microsoft products, particularly Active Directory.
Of course, “following industry standards” relieves one of the responsibility of actually thinking about what you’re buying, including life-cycle costs and security & quality of the products. In that way, DoD was no different than all the other CIOs. Microsoft understood that CIOs were their real customer, and did everything to convince CIOs that Microsoft (regardless of cost) was ‘the least risk alternative.”
Incoming British prime minister Andy Burnham will scrap the government’s troubled plans for a digital ID scheme when he enters office on Monday, a spokesperson for the new Labour Party leader said. Resources devoted to the scheme, deemed a "fiasco" by a cross-party committee of lawmakers, will be redirected to Burnham’s priorities, the spokesperson said…
“All the time and resource that was going to be spent on a national ID scheme will go instead to where it’s most needed, such as helping with the cost of living,” Burnham’s spokesperson said. In November, the Office for Budget Responsibility watchdog estimated the cost of the digital ID scheme at around £1.8 billion ($2.4 billion) between financial years 2026/27 and 2028/29.
The CD has been recontextualized from a functional audio format into an affordable collectible. This behavior underscores that for younger generations, the act of buying physical music is as much about aesthetic ownership and direct financial support for the artist as it is listening to the music on the product itself“Among artists who had a direct impact on the resurgence of CDs, K-Pop icons BTS’ 10th studio album, ARIRANG, was a big seller,” Vice points out in their report on the new data. “However, Luminate also found that, beyond K-Pop’s overall influence, CD sales still increased 6.7% year over year, even if the whole genre was removed from the equation, jumping 16% to 16.3 million units.”
Through the first half of the year, total physical album sales on vinyl, CDs, and cassettes reached 38.2 million units in the United States. This equates to a 7.8% increase.... [I]t seems that younger music fans have been driving a lot of the retro revival. The report shows that in 2026, 60% of Gen Z listeners said they most often listen to music from the 1990s and older. This is a massive increase from the 18 percent marker in 2021.Thanks to Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the article.
The new report also revealed that the way music fans are buying physical media has shifted. Indie record stores have been the largest generator of physical album sales for some time, and they continue to be. However, big-box stores like Target and Walmart took significant strides in the first half of 2026. Collectively, their music sales made up about 30% of the market.
It’s obvious we need new physical media that is cheaper than thumb drives. Someone invent a better solution for dirt cheap write-once media, there’s a huge market for it as long as the data lasts.
There’s something real nice about having a single, physical album and having to take the effort to put it in the player. There are hundreds of great CD players on eBay too. There’s an investment in putting the CD in and experiencing an entire album. I think we’re hardwired to understand that, and it can’t be replaced by digital streaming, no matter how it’s programmed.
Walmart?
Just did a search, indicated I wanted stuff that’s in stock at my local Walmart, and they sell a whole bunch of ONN (their house electronics brand) CD radio combos. Two even have cassette players which I find interesting. Prices are about $30.
There were too many produced to be worth anything. Collect all you want but how valuable could they be, even in or 30-50 years.
Buy stock in storage units, where everyone will surely pack their parents china and other shit they collected but no one wants.
Aside from the homepage, there’s a GitHub repository — but beware, this is separate from the old one, whose repo is still there although the most recent changes were seven years ago. The new project also has a project history giving credit where it’s due. The main man behind the revival is Joe Maloney, known on GitHub as pkgdemon. In case his name rings a bell, we’ve mentioned him before: he put together the Gershwin desktop in GhostBSD. Soon after we covered Gershwin on GhostBSD, he asked the maintainers if he could take over the NextBSD project. He did have a relatively minor role in the original — you can see his list of commits.The Team section of the homepage lists two core developers: Maloney and Anthropic’s Claude Code. “From my perspective, AI is a force multiplier here,” Maloney told The Register. “It is my team of developers, but I am steering the entire thing.”
The original NextBSD project was started by FreeBSD co-founder Jordan Hubbard in 2015 — its Wikipedia article has some of the history. The plan was to port some of the components of Apple’s Darwin OS to FreeBSD… [T]he NextBSD plan is to take the FreeBSD kernel, the most capable of the FOSS BSD kernels, but replace FreeBSD’s traditional and server-focused userland with the relevant parts of the publicly available Apple code. The rebooted NextBSD-redux is not based on a fork of the decade-old code. FreeBSD has moved on substantially in that time, and so have macOS and Darwin. This is a new project by a new developer, but it picks up the same overall plan, aims to assemble the same puzzle pieces, and shares the same intended goal.
In places, it does draw on a little of the same code, though. The NextBSD-redux README describes what’s working so far, with a lot more detail in the porting notes. Although there’s no graphical desktop yet, that’s underway as well.... For us, perhaps the key aspect of NextBSD — both the original version and NextBSD-redux — is that it isn’t an effort to build something completely new from scratch. It’s an effort to cherry-pick and combine elements of existing separate FOSS projects, and assemble them into a useful whole.
“I need cold hard return facts,” the “Mad Money” host said. “Or, I, too, will grow more skeptical than I am now....” While Cramer said he remains optimistic about the long-term opportunity, he argued the market needs more evidence that those investments are translating into measurable financial returns for customers. Cramer said one of his biggest concerns this earnings season is that companies adopting AI have largely failed to point to meaningful revenue gains or cost savings from the technology. “We’re still early in the earnings season but already we are not hearing anything material about the use of AI,” he said…
While AI infrastructure companies continue to benefit from the spending boom, Cramer said the same cannot yet be said for many of the businesses buying the technology… Cramer said only a handful of companies, most notably fintech firm Block and web-security provider Cloudflare, have clearly attributed recent layoffs to AI adoption. Block did so in February, while Cloudflare’s job cuts were disclosed in May. Plus, critics argue some companies may also cite AI as a buzzy excuse for cuts, leading to the creation of the term “AI washing.” Ultimately, Cramer said that if more businesses do not begin reporting tangible returns, the AI skeptics will grow louder, with ramifications for the tech industry’s big spenders.
Do you want your doctor to take extra time considering your illness, or make an instant snap decision? Would you prefer to accept an AI’s diagnosis or would you rather have a human do it?
I would like my doctor to spend as much time as needed considering my illness, and to use all the tools at his disposal when doing so — including AI, if appropriate.
How many people, possibly Cramer himself, were saying they wanted to see tangible benefits from all the spending companies were doing back in the early 90s? How much technology was thrown at the internet back then? How long did it take for all that spending to see results?
It’s only been a few years (less than five?) that AI has been truly in the mix. It’s only at the infant stage where it’s learning the basics. It’s taken that long for all the pieces to be juggled and mixed to get something partially useful. Come back in five years and see how it’s progressed. Til then, spending is needed to make that progress happen.
As a tool for those who know how to ask questions.
My productivity has increased tenfold since January. I’m basically botsitting. I don’t need a team anymore, I can do larger non-trivial software projects on my own. Well, not on my own, but definitely with my new colleague AI. Never had such a competent team in form of a chat-stream. I’m just telling him what to do and try to keep track of the code before committing. I feel like a dumb manager now, chasing some poor devs around. Only they’re not human and waaaay more productive than I ever could be.
The kicker of course is right now those gains land in my lap as I’m the one using the AI. Awesome!
The downside of course is that the exact same processes I can now optimize and automate won’t need optimizing and automating anymore quite soon now because those will also be done by AI. I’m a sole developer at a law firm. You should see the faces of the lawyers clueing in on what AI means for _their_ job.
Using AI is basically a new cultural technique such as reading, writing and math and it makes specialized white-collar humans (like me) less needed in the mid- to long term. Anybody who expects that to show up on some monetary balance sheet in the stock market doesn’t understand the nature of the tool. Point in case: a company like Google is worth X on the stock market. The value Google provides to humanity however is 100x or something like that. We run around with SF supercomputers in our pocket that make star trek communicators look like some plastic toy you get as a token prize at a fair-raffle.
Thus are the effects of an ever expanding post-scarcity economy. Expecting something meaningful to show up on the stock market because of that is like expecting a decomissioned steam engine to fix itself when I get a new Tesla car.
The GenAI part for Meta is another one: Content moderation. A VLM can tell them if someone is nude on the image. A LLM can tell them if someone is talking about suicide even when they are using codes like “unalive myself”, because a LLM understands context that text matching (including simpler neural networks) do not understand. Maybe also generation of ads in the long run.
NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft went into a planned hibernation mode on August 7, 2025, and woke up on June 23 using commands stored on its main computer. The mission’s flight controllers at the Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, confirmed that New Horizons is in great shape and ready to transmit a stream of science data gathered during hibernation from its location in the region of icy objects known as the Kuiper Belt.
Pluto is the largest of thousands of frozen, rocky bodies called trans-Neptunian objects, or TNOs, that exist in the Kuiper Belt at the edge of our solar system — remnants from its formation 4.5 billion years ago… The spacecraft is capturing data about the rotation rates, orientations and shapes… The measurements provide insights into how planets are born from dust and pebbles, said Pontus Brandt, New Horizons project scientist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory. “There seems to be more paired, snowman-shaped bodies, like Arrokoth, out there than anyone expected,” Brandt wrote in an email. “Are such binaries the most common planetesimal and is this how larger planets have been built in our own and other stellar systems? These are very deep questions that New Horizons can help answer.”
The spacecraft also measures the distribution of gas in the outer heliosphere, the expansive, protective bubble formed by a steady stream of particles that release from the sun called the solar wind. Meanwhile, an instrument called the Pluto Energetic Particle Spectrometer Science Investigation is measuring galactic cosmic rays, extremely fast particles created when stars explode. The particles pose one of the more severe threats for human activities in space, Brandt said, but the boundary of the heliosphere acts as a shield to protect our solar system from 70% of them. New Horizons’ data could help scientists learn more about how this puzzling shielding works, he said.
Another instrument, the Venetia Burney Student Dust Counter, has collected data that has thrown New Horizon’s team a curveball, Brandt said. The team expected dust abundance to be high within the Kuiper Belt due to the significant presence of small objects. But New Horizons has traveled beyond the known boundary of the Kuiper Belt — and it’s still in a dusty environment.
Wakes Up Again, Starts Doing New Science
Is anyone surprised? It has a real operating system. :-)
Nucleus RTOS
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/…
In November, the Voyager 1 probe will be one light-day away from Earth.
Let us hope New Horizon’s can last as long and provide its own wealth of information.
“Xbox management is required to bargain with the union over the decision of layoffs prior to implementing them during the status quo period, and we are pursuing every available avenue to protect our members,” a Communications Workers of America spokesperson said in a statement to Aftermath… Speaking to Game Developer, CWA Canada president Carmel Smyth elaborated on the unions’ misgivings… “Basically the employer cannot arbitrarily change working conditions while it is engaged in negotiating with the union. We will continue to file legal challenges if necessary, and do all we can to defend the rights of Bethesda Game Studios workers....”
“I’m very proud of the hard work the bargaining committees and CWA staff have put in to evaluate the legality of how the layoffs were conducted,” a current id Software employee and union member told Aftermath. “It’s important, even for the world’s largest and most profitable companies, that there are consequences for violating federal labor law. If we hadn’t explored this avenue to hold Microsoft accountable, it would be a sign to all other game executives that they can break the law and get away with it.”
Legal action is just one part of unions’ larger effort to hold Microsoft accountable for its decision to lay off thousands of workers. This week, CWA also hosted a series of “Save Our Devs” demonstrations outside the offices of affected studios like Zenimax, id Software, Bethesda, and Obsidian.
and you still don’t see the value of unions, I don’t know what to say.
Companies are simply churning through their work force to suppress wages. Over hire, over fire. It’s a toxic culture of pure stress for everyone below the VP level.
and you still don’t see the value of unions, I don’t know what to say.
Companies are simply churning through their work force to suppress wages. Over hire, over fire. It’s a toxic culture of pure stress for everyone below the VP level.
…there’s also the H1-B situation.
[T]he stick shift’s popularity hit multiple new lows in recent years, with no signs of a turnaround, thanks to new technologies and a rapidly changing marketplace. Buyers and automakers increasingly have turned to the sophisticated automatic drivetrains that now smoothly swap gears in fractions of a second and with better fuel efficiency. The average new vehicle today comes with seven gears, thanks to computers, twice as many as in 1980 and more gears than any ordinary driver would want to shift through using a manual gearbox. At the same time, sporty cars — the kind that buyers might demand a stick shift to drive — have fallen out of favor, replaced by interest in hulking SUVs, which are almost always automatics. The stick shift’s demise has been hastened, too, by the rise of electric vehicles and increasingly autonomous vehicles. Neither have any need for a manual transmission…Even Toyota, Honda, and BMW have all reduced the number of cars for the U.S. market with a manual transmission, the article points out — leaving stick shift-loving Americans with a total of about 24 new-vehicle models to choose from. The articles adds that only 60% of Americans know how to drive a manual transmission (according to a survey from auto parts retailer AmericanMuscle): 83% for baby boomers but 39% for Gen Z. “Respondents were about evenly split on whether knowing how to drive a manual is an important life skill.”
Europe has seen a less dramatic decline in stick shifts, with manual transmissions dropping from 91 percent of car registrations in 2001 to 29 percent in 2024 among Europe’s largest auto markets, according to industry analyst JATO Dynamics… Subaru made its name with manual cars. But the Japanese automaker stopped offering a manual Crosstrek with the 2023 model year, having already dropped that transmission from its Legacy, Outback and Forester models. Other automakers have followed the same path. Volkswagen announced that it plans this year to ditch its last U.S. stick-shift model, the Jetta GLI.
“only 60% of Americans know how to drive a manual transmission (according to a survey from auto parts retailer AmericanMuscle)"
1) that seems like 60% of the readers of American Muscle
2) ‘know how to’ is covering a lot of ground here. “Knows how to start a stick, and how to probably get it moving from level ground with 25% of killing it” maybe. Can confidently and reliably drive with a stick, knowing basic techniques? 25% or less, certainly.
Having a stick shift is 100% the simplest security system you can have on a car in the US in 2026. Your car might still get broken into, but they’ll abandon it quickly.
I love manual transmissions. I love the feeling of using all four limbs to control the vehicle. But that’s because I love driving. A manual transmission keeps me mroe involved with the act of driving, and it’s part of what turns driving from a passive into an active activity for me. And no, I don’t drive a sports car (2012 Outback, the last manual in Canada was sold in 2018 here).
There is no conceivable scenario today in which a modern automatic transmission will be outperformed by a manual. Automatics are faster, more fuel efficient (have been for at least ten years now), and even cheaper now, and that one was a long time coming. Their reliability and dependability is at least on par now, and that too took a long time to achieve. There’s just no reason to make manuals anymore, aside from a select few enthusiast cars (case in point the Mustang; the Miata is another example).
But the real reasons? It’s twofold:
1: Fuel efficiency targets. Car manufacturers need to meet efficiency targets based on the entire fleet, and automatics are more efficient. They help bring the entire lineup’s fuel mileage up.
2: Safety features and self driving. Lane assist (for the most part), traffic jam assist, and park assist are all highly requested features that come to mind that simply cannot be offered with a manual transmission. Self drive is right out. Even emergency braking would be considerably tougher with a manual.
But more than that, because they’re more cost effective nowadays, almost nobody, outside of a very few people like myself who take pleasure in their daily drive, actually wants a manual any longer.
> The biggest deterrent: Girlfriends and/or wives. They don’t know how to operate one
I can counter this with one anecdotal, funny story: my good friend Brian and his (then) new 2010 Corvette ZR1. Only available with a manual (I had one, too). His wife brought him to the dealer in her SUV so he could pick the new car up and drive it back home. But: he’d not driven a manual in a very long time and was way, WAY out of practice.
Stall. Stall. Jerky take offs and shifting, all the while his wife is behind him in her SUV. She finally has enough of the show and calls him, “Hey. Let me drive that thing back home. You’re embarrassing me!”
All these years later, he’s still not lived that one down.
I’ve always said that if I lived in a desolate area, or my job was at the opposite end of a racetrack, I’d love a manual. In my real-world daily drive, it would be useless.
I recently got a new vehicle with a manual shift mode on the automatic transmission. I tried it out thinking I might like to engine brake, or maybe I could get a more responsive shift when passing someone. Not worth it at all, having to juggle another set of responsibilities when trying to drive in a dynamic environment. People talk about being “connected to the car” but it just makes you distracted from the road.
Compared to manual mode, much more preferable to flip the car into “Sport mode”, which keeps you in a lower gear and can be flipped on/off at will.
As smoke from hundreds of burning wildfires spread across Canada and the United States, the first three operational satellites in the Google-backed FireSat program successfully launched into orbit. The satellites will begin providing wildfire detection capable of spotting even small fires in the United States, Australia, and Europe before the end of the year. The launch of the microsatellites aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on July 7, 2026 marks a transition to “initial operational capability” for the FireSat constellation managed by the nonprofit Earth Fire Alliance. After a three-month testing period, the three satellites will begin actively providing data to fire agencies while covering every fire-prone region on Earth at least twice per day.
FireSat represents the first satellite constellation purpose-built for detecting wildfires, including spotting smaller fires that other satellites may miss. The satellites were designed by California-based satellite manufacturer Muon Space and have received over $15 million from Google to support initial deployment. Other notable financial supporters include the Bezos Earth Fund that committed $26 million. Each satellite is equipped with multispectral imaging that can peer through smoke and clouds and detect fires as small as five by five meters — about 16 by 16 feet. That capability was proven by a FireSat Protoflight satellite that launched in March 2025 and collected more than one million images, while showing it could detect low-intensity blazes invisible to existing satellites.
The "early adopter” organizations that will start using FireSat data this year include fire agencies in California, Colorado, Australia, and Portugal. As more satellites launch, the FireSat program aims to provide the latest imagery anywhere in the world on an hourly basis by 2029. Such imagery would eventually become available every 20 minutes once the full constellation of more than 50 satellites is launched by the early 2030s. Detection of small wildfires before they burn out of control could prove extremely helpful. The Earth Fire Alliance has projected that even an hourly revisit rate by the FireSat constellation could help save more than $1 billion in fire damage costs and prevent nearly 22 million tons of carbon emissions, along with protecting 3,500 homes and 1.3 million acres of land.
To assist with that capability, Google Research plans to use the company’s AI models to compare operational FireSat data with historical images in order to accurately identify very small fires and to inform predictive modeling of wildfires. Google celebrated the launch of the first operational FireSat satellites by describing the event as “another tangible step forward in putting practical AI to work for climate resilience.”
Hmm, I read that more as they’ve been monitor the situation for 3 months as testing and now they are ready to use them in production. They must feel they can trust the data and are now releasing it to the fire agencies. Presumably, they were not releasing data before this because they were still in the testing phase.
Frankly, I’m surprised this hasn’t been done already.
We have a solution already. Trump will tariff the smoke away. I mean Canada sent firefighters when America was sending smoke, but maybe tariffs will be just as effective, no one knows until we try right?
40% of Canada’s land area is covered in forests. It is simply impossible to “manage” that much forest, and it’s utterly fucking absurd to suggest otherwise. And to try to take climate change out of the equation is just a way of misdirecting away from the actual fucking cause; GHG emissions raising surface temperatures.
When will humans stop buying the most trivially fucking moronic red herrings? What a disreputable idiotic species.
According to paper co-author Mike Zolensky, a meteoriticist at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, analysis of the Hillsborough meteorite found fragments that were more extensively altered by water on the meteorite’s parent asteroid than is typically seen in CM2 carbonaceous chondrites. The analysis classified the specimen as a CM1/2 carbonaceous chondrite, an intermediate classification between petrographic types CM1 and CM2. […] Zolensky and colleague JangMi Han found small salt-rich CM1 fragments within the Hillsborough meteorite, suggesting they originated from a near-surface region of the parent asteroid where liquid water evaporated and concentrated salts. They are now working to identify the salt minerals for comparison with similar phases found among samples returned to Earth from asteroids Ryugu and Bennu.The findings have been published in the journal Science Advances.
The high concentration of salt in briny fluids can potentially create molecules crucial to life on Earth. Brines allow phosphate to remain in solution and can catalyze chemical reactions between organics and precipitate minerals. “Isotope studies of carbon and nitrogen suggest that primitive carbonaceous chondrites, including CM types, delivered organic matter to the early Earth,” said cosmochemist Queenie Chan of Royal Holloway University of London, England, and biogeochemist Nana Ogawa of the Biogeochemistry Research Center at the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology. “The Hillsborough meteorite contained 1.8% by weight of carbon and 0.07% of nitrogen, and had carbon and nitrogen isotopes typical for CM-type meteorites.”
The meteorite contained a wide variety of soluble organic compounds, and its compositional range confirms that the Hillsborough meteorite was more altered by water than most other CM-type meteorites. “A high fraction of compounds were the product of organic chemistry with minerals,” said organic mass spectrometry specialist Phil Schmitt-Kopplin of Technical University Munich. “We do not know if these magnesium organic compounds were contributed by brine chemistry or were simply left over from earlier impact shock processes.” In living organisms, organometallic compounds are found in blood and used in photosynthesis. Among the soluble organic compounds were many amino acids, similar to those found in more moderately altered CM2 chondrites.
Astrobiologist Danny Glavin of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and his team in Goddard’s Astrobiology Analytical Lab concluded that the delivery of amino acids, carboxylic acids and other soluble organic molecules by CM-type bodies may have contributed to the prebiotic organic inventory that preceded the emergence of life on Earth. Their analysis suggests the complex distribution of amino acids observed in the Hillsborough meteorite formed within the parent body, likely assisted by brine fluid chemistry.
Australia will require large data centers powering artificial intelligence to generate as much power as they consume, and ensure that creative professionals retain control over work that may be used to train A.I. systems, as the government sets up guardrails over the rapidly growing industry. The announcements on Wednesday in a speech by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese came as Australia draws significant interest from A.I. companies because of its size and the availability of renewable energy, and as resistance to data centers builds in many parts of the United States and Europe.
Major A.I. companies have opened offices or announced investments in Australia in recent months. The Australian government is trying to balance capitalizing on the A.I. boom with setting parameters on a fast-changing industry that has sparked backlash over environmental impacts, energy use and lack of contribution to local economies. “Every country on earth is grappling with these challenges right now. Australia will be the first country in the world to bring these issues into a single, national framework,” Mr. Albanese said Wednesday, laying out the standards his government will pursue.
The details of what exactly the requirements will look like and how they will be enforced remain to be seen, and the government will need to secure the backing of individual states for its plan. The government said it would introduce legislation on the standards early next year, and establish an “Office of A.I.” directly reporting to the prime minister to coordinate implementation. The “Australian Standards for A.I.” will include a “legal obligation” for companies to ensure they do not drain the power grid and be as water efficient as possible, the government said. Mr. Albanese also said creators of books, music, art or news in Australia should retain control of the price and value of their work when used to train artificial intelligence systems. “Anything less is theft,” he said. “No country has got this right yet.”
as Australia draws significant interest from A.I. companies because of its size and the availability of renewable energy, and as resistance to data centers builds in many parts of the United States and Europe
So it’ll be the same as polluting manufacturing being fradually outsourced to countries that can’t fight back, once the AI sloppers get squeezed out of more and more first-world countries they’ll move to third-world ones where they can bribe or coerce their way in. Nigeria with its oil/gas reserves for power generation and eminently flexible approach to regulation would be a good place to set up shop.
Makes perfect sense to me. I don’t know why more countries, particularly here in the USA, don’t do more of this. If you want to add a new datacenter, you need to plan on how you will power it using 100% renewable power. You also need to either have a 100% recirculating water source, or if you’re going to expend water directly for cooling, then you need to come up with a plan to replenish that water. E.g. buy replacement water from a desalinization plant. No plan = no permit.
To me this is simply logical. If you’re going to dig a mine, you need to plan on how you’re going to clean up the site when you’re done. If you’re going to dig an oil well, you need to plan on how you’re going to seal it when you’re done. And you need to post a bond for the amount of the capping/sealing/cleanup to an escrow account that earns interest equal to the cost of inflation. No digging wells, failing to cap them and letting them leak methane, then declare bankruptcy or sell your assists but not your liabilities to another company. No dumping your problems on the government or citizens. If you don’t like it and don’t want to build your datacenter here and prefer to build it somewhere else, no problem. Yes, it will raise the cost of doing business which will get passed on to the consumers. But now they’re paying the fully loaded cost of the project, not part of it and then having it getting dumped on the government, which is just the people’s money anyway, later.
“This deployment in a working school district represents a landmark moment for both AI and humanoid robotics,” said Andrew Kiguel, CEO of Realbotix, which is currently building the robot. "[Salamanca City Central School District in Western New York] marks the beginning of a new era where humanoid robots and intelligent AI assistants become standard tools in STEM education.”Realbotix’s classroom robot has drawn scrutiny because the company is connected to RealDoll, the longtime maker of hyperrealistic sex dolls and sex robots. Realbotix acquired RealDoll’s parent company in 2024 but says the education-focused operation has separate employees, payroll, facilities, and technology, with plans to formally separate the businesses at the ownership level.
The female robot, named Sally, will have a “lifelike appearance” with silicone skin and long brown hair, Kiguel said in an interview with New York Focus. It will be stationary in a seated position but have a wide range of upper-body movements and facial expressions. […]
Salamanca plans to introduce the robot and avatar in its high school AI and robotics courses, which use curriculum developed by Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak to prepare students for high-demand tech jobs. The district plans to expand it to high school students in other classes if the pilot is successful.
Students exploit AI teacher’s backdoor. News at 11.
Just think how much control we’ll have over what gets taught.
Accidentally I found myself reflecting on some parts of this topic as America and Israel start another round of war crimes. If there are any historians in the future, and I’m increasingly skeptical there will be, I think they will probably say that the high point of America, at least in moral terms, was probably when the nation accepted the reality of Vietnam and took the loss for higher morality…
Appealing to the YOB’s sense of morality will be the joke, perhaps the terminal joke, in referring to America’s current situation. But the teaching bots will be able to say whatever with a straight face. And the kids will never know any better. If there are any kids?
Putting aside the sexbot jokes, does anyone seriously think putting lifelike robots into classrooms will help anyone learn better? Even if you think technology and AI are the key to better education, an avatar on a computer screen would work just as well at much lower cost. But of course, it’s becoming clear that technology in classrooms is more of a distraction than a benefit. The current movement is to reduce technology and get back to physical books and interacting with real people in real life.
I just don’t see what problem anyone thinks this solves.
His presence at the gathering, attended by scores of tech and government leaders, conveys a potent signal of China’s ambitions to dominate a technological sphere with the potential to revolutionize industry and economies — an effort that’s shot to the top of the nation’s agenda. Chinese models are winning over companies worldwide, with their share of US firms’ AI usage nearing a record 60% on the popular marketplace OpenRouter.Earlier today, the Beijing-based AI company “Moonshot” released a massive new model that reset the AI race overnight, immediately vaulting into the top tier of global AI, beating Anthropic’s Fable 5 and OpenAI’s GPT-5.6 Sol in front-end coding tests.
Behind the rhetoric, Beijing is grappling with the balance between openness and national security as models grow more capable. Chinese officials recently discussed with companies including Alibaba — developer of the popular Qwen models — how to mitigate the security risks posed by their increasingly powerful models, people familiar with the matter said. The talks are early, with no enforcement planned, but restricting foreign access to top models was among the options raised, the people said. Reuters previously reported that Beijing was weighing curbs on overseas access.
I’m surprised that search engines are even still around as almost anything works better.
There is an uncomfortable truth here: trojan horse LLMs.
It is possible to use data poisoning to insert special keycodes into an LLM, such that the presence of the keycode will totally change its behavior, throw off its guard rails, and motivate it to do things that harm users to benefit the LLMs creator.
Here is an article about a tool designed to detect precisely this. Though the recommendations leave me feeling like this tool is not guaranteed to find them. There may be clever ways to make them hard to find.
This is still very much emerging tech, so reputation is going to play a role in adoption. A modern version of the red scare could be enough to prevent widespread adoption of Chinese models, and keep people (or at least Americans) using models made by American businesses.
No, hurting the US economy is antithetical to his goals. Remember that the main threat to his position is an internal uprising or coup, not the US fighting or winning a war against them. The more stable the international economy, the more stable the domestic one, and the less reason people have to rise up against him.
If you read up on Confucian government philosophy, it’s very obvious what he wants is stability above all else.
No, hurting the US economy is antithetical to his goals. Remember that the main threat to his position is an internal uprising or coup, not the US fighting or winning a war against them. The more stable the international economy, the more stable the domestic one, and the less reason people have to rise up against him.
If you read up on Confucian government philosophy, it’s very obvious what he wants is stability above all else.
Xi may feel that:
A) The international economy can’t be stabilized under the current US regime
B) Even if the States reversed course tomorrow they couldn’t get their shit back together fast enough, and
C) Doing everything possible to shore up and cushion the rest of the world at the expense of Uncle Sam is the safest way forward.
I think the rot at the heart of the US military-industrial complex, (which has merely been exposed and exploited by the current regime) - along with the rate at which the rest of the world is rushing to distance and decouple from the US - makes banking on American financial stability a long shot at best.
An open issue on the AWS Health Dashboard (archived copy at the time of writing) popped up at 1:33 am Pacific time on Friday informing users that Cost Explorer was “reflecting inaccurate estimated billing data.” As of writing, the issue is still unresolved despite AWS trying several different things to get it fixed. The company apparently identified the root cause within an hour and a half of beginning its investigation, only describing it as “an issue with unit pricing within the estimated billing computation subsystem.”
AWS followed up by pausing estimated bill updates, saying customers would continue to see the inflated figures already displayed, but that those estimates would not increase further. “The displayed billing estimates do not reflect actual usage and charges,” AWS explained, noting that customers don’t need to take any action, like, we imagine, flooding the help portal with tickets telling them what they already know, for instance.
“Once the issue has been mitigated, we expect full resolution to take multiple hours as we work through recomputing the estimated billing data,” AWS added. After we first published this article, Amazon updated the issue page to indicate that it had identified the root cause and mitigated the underlying issue. The company says that it’s begun backfilling data in the Cost Management Console to correct billing numbers, and that all customers should see corrected amounts by Saturday, July 18 at noon pacific time.
I woke up this morning to an alert that my tiny static web site had incurred $3 million in S3 storage charges. Is that what “going viral” feels like? No thanks.
It was a good reminder to review what protections I have from liability should some script kiddie ddos me.
Well, when your entire business is on someone else’s server, this is the risk you run.
… I avoid automated fund transfers to make payments. No matter how much businesses beg. If there’s a human in the loop, there’s always the opportunity to look at an error like this and say “WTF?”
When the Y2K issues rolled around, a number of people asked me (based on my previous utility experience) whether the lights would stay on. My reply was: “The power company made it through the Year 1900 and not much has changed since then. Sure, you might get a bill for 100 years of consumption. But humans look at this stuff and nobody is going to hold you to that or cut your power.”
Unfortunately, humans are increasingly out of the loop.
Good thing you didn’t have auto-pay enabled…
You’re not paid for situational awareness