Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. CrowdStrike Says Attackers Are Moving Through Networks in Under 30 Minutes
  2. Hegseth Gives Anthropic Until Friday To Back Down on AI Safeguards
  3. The US Spent $30 Billion on Classroom Laptops and Got the First Generation Less Capable Than Its Parents
  4. Microsoft Execs Worry AI Will Eat Entry Level Coding Jobs
  5. Billions of Dollars Later and Still Nobody Knows What an Xbox Is
  6. Discord Distances Itself From Persona Age Verification After User Backlash
  7. Russia Targets Telegram as Rift With Founder Pavel Durov Deepens
  8. Firefox 148 Now Available With The New AI Controls, AI Kill Switches
  9. Quantum Algorithm Beats Classical Tools On Complement Sampling Tasks
  10. Texas Is About To Overtake California In Battery Storage
  11. US Farmers Are Rejecting Multimillion-Dollar Datacenter Bids For Their Land
  12. New Microsoft Gaming CEO Has ‘No Tolerance For Bad AI’
  13. Microsoft Says Bug In Classic Outlook Hides the Mouse Pointer
  14. Viral Doomsday Report Lays Bare Wall Street’s Deep Anxiety About AI Future
  15. Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ Explores Stablecoin For Gaza

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

CrowdStrike Says Attackers Are Moving Through Networks in Under 30 Minutes

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Cyberattacks reached victims faster and came from a wider range of threat groups than ever last year, CrowdStrike said in its annual global threat report released Tuesday, adding that cybercriminals and nation-states increasingly relied on predictable tactics to evade detection by exploiting trusted systems.

The average breakout time — how long it took financially-motivated attackers to move from initial intrusion to other network systems — dropped to 29 minutes in 2025, a 65% increase in speed from the year prior. “The fastest breakout time a year ago was 51 seconds. This year it’s 27 seconds,” Adam Meyers, head of counter adversary operations at CrowdStrike, told CyberScoop. Defenders are falling behind because attackers are refining their techniques, using social engineering to access high-privilege systems faster and move through victims’ cloud infrastructure undetected.

Hegseth Gives Anthropic Until Friday To Back Down on AI Safeguards

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth gave Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei until Friday evening to give the military unfettered access to its AI model or face harsh penalties, Axios has learned. Hegseth told Amodei in a tense meeting on Tuesday that the Pentagon will either cut ties and declare Anthropic a “supply chain risk,” or invoke the Defense Production Act to force the company to tailor its model to the military’s needs.

The Pentagon wants to punish Anthropic as the feud over AI safeguards grows increasingly nasty, but officials are also worried about the consequences of losing access to its industry-leading model, Claude. “The only reason we’re still talking to these people is we need them and we need them now. The problem for these guys is they are that good,” a Defense official told Axios ahead of the meeting. Anthropic has said it is willing to adapt its usage policies for the Pentagon, but not to allow its model to be used for the mass surveillance of Americans or the development of weapons that fire without human involvement.

Nice AI you have here

By nospam007 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It would be a shame if something happened to it.

Re:Terminators?

By nightflameauto • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Do you want SkyNet? Because this is how you get SkyNet....

The problem with the current regime is that they’ve bought into their own superiority to the point that they believe no matter what power they create, they’ll always have control over it. They are just dumb enough to think that if they create a killbot, it’ll never be turned on them.

Anthropic about to become a Prime Contractor

By Whateverthisis • Score: 3 Thread
And that’s not a great thing. I worked 6 years for one of the primes, and it’s clear how they operate. Anthropic’s problems would go away if the leadership starts acting like Lockheed; kowtow to the DoD officials by calling them DoW, and say “yes sir, whatever you want sir”. Hire a bunch of retiring O4s to O6s who aren’t going to get their stars and give them cushy mid-management jobs, and then stack on top margin after margin while delaying projects left and right.

It’s funny because having worked at a Prime before and seeing this very thing happen, I also don’t believe very heavily in the military industrial complex. The concept was that industry would push the military to war because sales were driven by weapons usage, but that never really materialized. Rather, it was a welfare state. The DoD is a terrible customer, buying things in fits and starts, changing requirements in the middle of a program, and squandering R&D budgets on pet projects and nonsense. Meanwhile the contracting officers are too lazy to go direct to a Tier-2 or Tier-3 supplier for an interesting idea, and instead farm it out to a Prime who just subcontracts to the Tier 2 and puts an overhead fee on it. Meanwhile the warrant officers for a given technology are reluctant to change anything without 10X the proof of capability and safety studies than would be normal, meaning half of our military’s subsystems are so legacy compared to what’s available commercially that our military is eminently hack-proof because no modern hacker knows how to hack an abacus and a hamster wheel in code written in ancient Egyptian that is the backbone of many sub-systems.

The Primes on the other hand have regular bills to pay and workforces to maintain and see this insane way of doing business that the Pentagon does, and adapts to it milking as much overhead as possible so they can level out their monthly payroll expenses without too much labor disruption. All the while Congress has no idea what to do to fix the issue, so they impose restrictions on government employees where they have to report even a lunch meeting over $25 or get investigated while we squander billions with bad bureaucrat managers in DoD.

The one thing the Trump Admin is doing somewhat right is targeting this exact issue; somewhat right in that it’s an issue that needs solving so they got that right, but wrong in that I don’t think they know how to fix it.

Sorry for the rant. I loved my time working at a Prime and I still cherish it, with some great colleagues that I still keep in touch with. But once I started seeing how it all worked, I was just stunned with the ridiculousness of it all. And now we see effectively mid-tier at best contracting bureaucrats trying to manage something as fast moving as AI with all the subtlety of the Titanic, and with likely similar outcomes. And what’s sad is that the DoD should cave to Anthropic. Claude is good, and the military does lots of things that don’t involve weapons; it has the world’s most complex logistics chain, a huge healthcare system, major R&D programs, huge humanitarian programs, it led to the development of game theory, it has (or had until Hegseth) one of the world’s best leadership training programs; all of those aspects of the military could benefit, and if they really want killer-AI weapons, as bad as that is, I’m sure Musk will sell it to them with Grok. It’s painful to watch what could be amazing utilization of AI become a giant s-show.

Defense?

By zoid.com • Score: 3 Thread

War Secretary

Re: Nice AI you have here

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Oh, go cry me a river. Name ONE actual national security threat that the US needs an unfettered AI to defeat.

Parsing Trump’s State of the Union speech tonight? :-)

The US Spent $30 Billion on Classroom Laptops and Got the First Generation Less Capable Than Its Parents

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
More than two decades after Maine became the first state to hand laptops to middle schoolers — distributing 17,000 Apple machines across 243 schools in 2002 — neuroscientist Jared Cooney Horvath told a U.S. Senate committee earlier this year that Gen Z is the first generation in modern history to score lower on standardized tests than the one before it.

The U.S. spent more than $30 billion in 2024 alone putting laptops and tablets in classrooms, and Horvath cited PISA data from 15-year-olds worldwide showing a stark correlation between time on school computers and worse scores. A 2014 study of 3,000 university students found they were off-task on their machines nearly two-thirds of the time. Fortune reported back in 2017 that Maine’s own test scores hadn’t budged in the 15 years since the program launched, and then-governor Paul LePage called it a “massive failure.” Horvath framed the generation’s eroding capabilities not as a personal failure but a policy one, calling them victims of a failed pedagogical experiment.

Testing Methodology

By darkain • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Maybe, just maybe, it isn’t the device, but the testing methodology?

Standardize testing in the USA has always been total bullshit “everyone must fit this exact mold or else you’re an absolute failure” mentality. Now we have a generation of people who learned different skills other than the default assumed ones, and they’re viewed as failures for it.

Re:failed pedagogical experiment.

By Kisai • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I think that’s the wrong take-away.

They introduced laptops but they didn’t introduce anything that required the laptops. Like what likely happened is the kids became more productive, but it wasn’t something seen in the way work was scored.

Like if doing homework before by hand with a pencil took an hour, and with a computer it took 20 minutes, what do you think the kids spent the rest of the time doing?

My point is that the school work has to actually be oriented around using the computer, but the only work ever benefitting from the computer is English/Writing assignments. When kids have access to chatGPT, and so do teachers, nobody is actually checking the work. Hence this “less generation capable” is a consequence of giving kids tools that they haven’t learned how to use responsibly.

So I weep for the next generation who were given tablets when they were a baby to be entertained by. They have no situational awareness.

A computer is useless if you’re never taught

By Lunati Senpai • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They also got rid of all the classes that would help them, that older students had.

Typing? Gone.
How to use excel / office? Gone.
How to navigate a computer? Also gone.

It all comes down to the “Myth of the digital native” because kids grew up with tech, they were assumed to know all about it.

I’m pretty good at computers now, but I started with typing classes, with classes on programming, classes on networking, classes on navigation. My parents couldn’t teach me that stuff, they didn’t know anything. And I know many of my peers, despite growing up with computers, didn’t know more than how to navigate to a website.

Tablets are even worse, since they lock everything down. A few hours of courses, not even a full semester worth and they’d do way better.

Bad Science: It was No Child Left Behind

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 3 Thread
This all coincided with No Child Left Behind, which ruined reading education.

Mission Accomplished.

By Dishevel • Score: 3 Thread
I mean, that is what public education aims for. The dumbing down of the future voters.

Microsoft Execs Worry AI Will Eat Entry Level Coding Jobs

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shares a report:
Microsoft Azure CTO Mark Russinovich and VP of Developer Community Scott Hanselman have written a paper arguing that senior software engineers must mentor junior developers to prevent AI coding agents from hollowing out the profession’s future skills base.

The paper, Redefining the Engineering Profession for AI, is based on several assumptions, the first of which is that agentic coding assistants “give senior engineers an AI boost… while imposing an AI drag on early-in-career (EiC) developers to steer, verify and integrate AI output.”

In an earlier podcast on the subject, Russinovich said this basic premise — that AI is increasing productivity only for senior developers while reducing it for juniors — is a “hot topic in all our customer engagements… they all say they see it at their companies.” […] The logical outcome is that “if organizations focus only on short-term efficiency — hiring those who can already direct AI — they risk hollowing out the next generation of technical leaders,” Russinovich and Hanselman state in the paper.

MS is the also championing this outcome

By UnknowingFool • Score: 3 Thread
Everything from MS these days advertises Copilot will do everything. Every commercial I have seen shows Copilot demonstrating HAL 9000 levels of intelligence and autonomy. Incidentally, I wonder when the first class action lawsuit will be filed as multiple YouTubers have tried to recreate the commercials with instant and obvious Copilot failures.

The real problem is going to be training AI

By rsilvergun • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
Virtually all the code I see AI generating came from stack overflow. And that has collapsed in the wake of AI.

Eventually there isn’t going to be any code to train off of.

Should not they rather end ageism?

By Lavandera • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I would expect that ideally long term in organizations all age groups should be represented proportionally to demographics curve.

Currently IT is dominated by young people and companies give every reason for seniors ‘not to’ train juniors…

So what do they have in mind this time?

For me situation overall goes into Middle Ages direction - birth and connections will determine everything again.

When you are born into the right family - you will inherit your family wealth, AIs and your father’s job.

Indulging the hypothetical…

By Junta • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

So the hypothetical is that entry level coding jobs are toast but you still need the advanced folks to actually direct things, and they will need to be able to review and amend code.

In such a scenario, then education takes over the role of ‘doing stuff humans don’t have to do anymore, but still need to know how to do it’. Like how math education starts by banning calculators, then as the education advances increasingly advanced calculators and computer software are allowed to handle the tedium that was left behind.

Execs are much easier to replace

By HnT • Score: 3 Thread

Execs are significantly easier to replace and going by M$ contemporary track record, it can only bring improvements.

Billions of Dollars Later and Still Nobody Knows What an Xbox Is

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft has spent more than $76 billion acquiring game studios and publishers over the past few years in an attempt to turn Xbox into a Netflix-like subscription platform, and the result is that nobody — possibly not even Microsoft — can clearly articulate what Xbox actually is anymore, The Verge writes.

The brand started as a powerful video game console, but Game Pass and cloud gaming pushed it toward a hazier identity: the “This is an Xbox” ad campaign tried to redefine it as any device that could play Xbox games, whether a PC, a smart TV, a phone, or a Windows handheld. Microsoft then went further and started publishing its biggest franchises on PlayStation, making it one of the largest third-party publishers on a rival’s platform.

Phil Spencer, who led the division for over a decade and drove the subscription pivot, announced his retirement last week, and incoming CEO Asha Sharma has pledged “the return of Xbox” — though her memo also talks about expanding across PC, mobile, and cloud, which sounds a lot like the status quo.

Autoplay video

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Oh great now we see ads for twitch.tv that autoplay and sidestep uBlock origin.

Let Linux be an Xbox

By xack • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Time to get some goodwill and market share and officially support Linux with Xbox games. You can’t use the “no demand” excuse anymore when Linux has more users than MacOS on Steam.

Xbox?

By TwistedGreen • Score: 4, Funny Thread

They should just rename it to X, since there is no longer a box involved.

Problem solved.

I do.

By JustNiz • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s a locked down overpriced low spec gaming pc that you can’t install your own software on.

Re:Define “nobody”

By UnknowingFool • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Xbox has been around a while, and has its marketshare. It is also available on PCs, and anyone w/ a Microsoft account can access it. And it’s not like Microsoft has a marginal presence in the overall computer market

Did you read the summary or even the article? The problem is not nobody knows the brand “Xbox”. The problem is MS marketing has been shifting the branding to include PCs, phones, smart TVs, etc creating lots of confusion. In October 2025, Asus launched the ROG Xbox Ally; it cannot play Xbox games but PC games. Anyone buying it would have to read the fine print that it cannot play their Xbox games they may have previously purchased.

Discord Distances Itself From Persona Age Verification After User Backlash

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Discord is attempting to distance itself from the age verification provider Persona following a steady stream of user backlash. From a report:
In an emailed statement to The Verge, Discord’s head of product policy, Savannah Badalich, confirms the company “ran a limited test of Persona in the UK where age assurance had previously launched and that test has since concluded.”

After Discord announced plans to implement age verification globally starting next month, users across social media accused Discord of “lying” about how it plans on handling face scans and ID uploads. Much of the criticism was directed toward Discord’s partnership with Persona, an age verification provider also used by Reddit and Roblox.

Persona & its reach

By Some Guy • Score: 5, Informative Thread

In case you aren’t aware of Persona and what’s involved when these companies use them, someone stepped through verification with LinkedIn which uses Persona.

They outline exactly what was collected and communicated, and with whom.

If you ever consider verifying with them (indirectly), I’d highly recommend taking a look a what’s at stake.

Tab for verification

By bugs2squash • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Just ask them to describe the taste and color of tab.

won’t someone think of the children?

By OrangeTide • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Ok, that’s enough. Stop thinking about the children so much, it’s creepy.

Why are we sometimes prepared to disrupt the ordinary activities of millions of adults to protect a handful of hypothetical children. But at the same time we have politicians running our respective countries that protect pedos or even war criminals.

Russia Targets Telegram as Rift With Founder Pavel Durov Deepens

Posted by msmash View on SlashDot Skip
Russia has opened an investigation into Telegram founder Pavel Durov for "abetting terrorist activities,” [non-paywalled source] in the latest sign that his uneasy relationship with the Kremlin has broken down. From a report:
Two Russian newspapers, including the state-run Rossiiskaya Gazeta and Kremlin-friendly tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda, alleged on Tuesday that the messaging app had become a tool of western and Ukrainian intelligence services.

The articles, credited to materials from Russia’s FSB security service, accused Telegram of enabling attacks in Russia and said that Durov’s “actions … are under criminal investigation.” Russia has restricted Telegram’s functions, accusing it of flouting the law and is seeking to divert users towards Max, a state-run rival messenger. The steps escalate pressure on a platform that remains deeply embedded in Russian public life.

Windows n yachts

By HnT • Score: 3 Thread

Better stay away from open windows and yachts there for a while, Pavel.

Still, hilarious that of all messengers telegram is suddenly the bad guy for RuSSia. It is very obviously full of RuSSian propaganda machinery - like all social media and messengers - but telegram is definitely peak KGB-FSB.

Re:Windows n yachts

By Luckyo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

They had a problem with him for a better part of a decade. That’s why he lived in Middle East for a long time. He’s basically exiled outside short, curated visits for specific dealings with pre-approved people because he stood up to Russian attempts at censoring VK and Telegram back in 2010s.

They forced him to “sell” VK to the government affiliated parties, after which he fled and kept Telegram. He’s basically a post-Soviet tech bro (far less trusting of government overreach than Western tech bros). Problem is of course he’s not trusting of all governments, which is why French grabbed him and are still holding him under house arrest to ensure that their superlegal backdoors remain in place.

Because he told everyone to fuck off. It’s why Telegram remains so hilariously popular in nations where government suppresses peoples but hasn’t gone all the way to blocking. I.e. the first one to get turned off in places like Iran through government blocking was Telegram, because the likes of Whatsapp have limited cooperation with government when it comes to things like “hate speech” which governments like Iran use to unmask and kill dissidents.

The reason why we see so many bots screaming about how he’s evil, he’s been got, etc, is because he’s the wild card tech bro with a massive chip on his shoulder for government overreach, and who’s far less amiable to both soft and hard coercion than likes of Zuckerberg and Musk have demonstrated themselves to be.

It’s interesting

By MeNeXT • Score: 3 Thread

how communists, dictators, and presidents are all starting to sound the same. Alex Pretti, Renee Nicole Good and Pavel Durov accused of abetting terrorists.

Re:It’s interesting

By jfdavis668 • Score: 5, Funny Thread
They should start using Trump Mobile.

Firefox 148 Now Available With The New AI Controls, AI Kill Switches

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Firefox 148 introduces granular AI controls and a global “AI kill switch” that allows users to disable or selectively manage the browser’s AI features. Phoronix reports:
Among the AI features that can be toggled individually are around translations, image alt text in the Firefox PDF viewer, tab group suggestions, key points in link previews, and AI chatbot providers in the sidebar. Firefox 148 also brings Firefox for Android, support for the Trusted Types API, CSS shape() function support, Sanitizer API support, WebGPU enhancements, and a variety of other changes.
Developer chances can be found at developer.mozilla.org. Binaries are available from ftp.mozilla.org.

Well, there is a positive way to consider this.

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Firefox appears to have gotten some dev money from the “AI” war chest, which, if the kill switch indeed kills this anti-feature is, I guess, acceptable.

We replaced the google search box successfully, we’ll survive the “AI” box as well.

Re:Well, there is a positive way to consider this.

By Errol backfiring • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Mozilla held a survey asking what shiny “AI” functions people wanted. The vast majority wanted it gone. This is the zillionth case of integrating unwanted things into the browser that should really be in add-ons. I guess the kill switch was the best option they were willing to provide.

Re:Well, there is a positive way to consider this.

By unrtst • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

For those that want in-browser translation, it’s no problem to have this as an available option. However, that doesn’t mean it must be integrated into the browser, distributed to all, and enabled by default. What is the argument against having it be an add-on?

Or maybe the “translate this page” feature could be as it had been before integrating a local AI translation feature - fork that out to an external service - but provide configuration for the “translate this page” akin to the search engine config, along with an option to pull down an add-on for a local AI? I note this option because I see the rationality of adding the relatively light weight and simple “translate this page” when it’s just sending the data out to some other service for the heavy lifting… why not facilitate that for those times when a user wants to actively choose to do that by clicking on that option? But why jump to including a local translation AI with the browser?!?!?

Also, maybe I already run a local LLM (I do). And maybe it’s already more capable than the one they’re shipping (it is). Then maybe it makes even less sense for the browser to bundle one in with it?

Long story short, most people don’t want this feature creep, and those that want a translation feature AND want to use a local LLM are very very very likely to be fully capable of adding an add-on or configuring it to use their existing local LLM.

My guess… it’s probably a lot easier (less friction, and less documentation/setup/support needed) to build it in when you’re in that position than it is to do the same in an add-on.

Re: Well, there is a positive way to consider this

By postbigbang • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

It’s not about your politics, it’s about basic privacy and functionality issues. A commonality among those that don’t want to be the product, is finding ways that prohibit being involuntarily monetized.

The AI rubric serves only the tech bro fortunes, and not those of the individual. It appears on the surface to be of value, but AI inconsistency, and the addictive quality of short cuts then strangles users and their needs.

This isn’t about anybody’s lockstep. It’s about values and liberty, and human worth as opposed to shipping one’s value to somebody for their kleptocracy purposes.

Quantum Algorithm Beats Classical Tools On Complement Sampling Tasks

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
alternative_right shares a report from Phys.org:
A team of researchers working at Quantinuum in the United Kingdom and QuSoft in the Netherlands has now developed a quantum algorithm that solves a specific sampling task — known as complement sampling — dramatically more efficiently than any classical algorithm. Their paper, published in Physical Review Letters, establishes a provable and verifiable quantum advantage in sample complexity: the number of samples required to solve a problem.

“We stumbled upon the core result of this work by chance while working on a different project,” Harry Buhrman, co-author of the paper, told Phys.org. “We had a set of items and two quantum states: one formed from half of the items, the other formed from the remaining half. Even though the two states are fundamentally distinct, we showed that a quantum computer may find it hard to tell which one it is given. Surprisingly, however, we then realized that transforming one state into the other is always easy, because a simple operation can swap between them.”

For us dumbnuts

By nospam007 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Imagine a big box of numbered balls. Someone secretly chooses half of them, that’s set S. You are only allowed to pull balls from S. Your job is to give back one ball that is NOT in S.

Classical world: every time you pull a ball, you just see one number. If the box is big, you have to pull a lot of balls before you’re confident which numbers are missing. Basically, you keep a list of what you’ve seen and guess something not on the list. You might need tons of samples.

Quantum world: instead of one ball at a time, you get a magic “wave ball” that contains all of S at once, like all its numbers are smeared together in a superposition. With some clever quantum tricks, you can flip that wave so it now represents “everything that is not S.” Then you measure it and boom, you get a number from outside S.

So the shocker is this: one quantum sample versus lots and lots of classical samples.

They also argue this isn’t just a weird edge case. Under normal crypto assumptions, classical computers really can’t fake this efficiently.

Important detail: if you convert the quantum thing into ordinary classical samples first, the magic disappears. The power comes from keeping the “wave” intact.

So the paper is basically saying, look, quantum computers are not just faster calculators, they sometimes need far less data to do a job. That’s the whole punchline.

Re: For us dumbnuts

By LindleyF • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I saw an interesting view on this recently which basically said, you know how the world around you don’t seem all quantum and weird? Entanglement is why. Observation of the world by you and everyone else “locks” it into a classical, non-quantum state via entanglement. By observing the world you entangle with it.

Texas Is About To Overtake California In Battery Storage

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
U.S. battery storage installations hit a record 57.6 GWh in 2025, and Texas is now poised to surpass California as the nation’s largest storage market in 2026. Electrek reports:
According to the US Energy Storage Market Outlook Q1 2026 from the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) and Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, installations are now four times higher than totals from just three years ago. The US had a total of 137 GWh of utility-scale storage installed as of 2025, plus 19 GWh of commercial and industrial systems and 9 GWh of residential storage. Analysts expect the growth streak to continue. More than 600 GWh of energy storage is projected to be deployed nationwide by 2030, even as the Trump administration targets clean energy industries.

Two-thirds of utility-scale storage installed in 2025 was built in red states, including nine of the top 15 states for new installations. Texas is projected to surpass California as the country’s largest battery storage market in 2026. Standalone battery projects accounted for nearly 30 GWh of new capacity in 2025, while solar-plus-storage installations made up about 20 GWh. Residential storage deployments reached 3.1 GWh last year, a 51% increase year-over-year. Analysts say virtual power plant programs in states such as Massachusetts, Texas, Arizona, and Illinois are helping drive adoption by reducing costs and easing strain during peak demand periods.

The supply chain is shifting to support the boom. In 2025, some battery cell manufacturers pivoted production from EV batteries to dedicated stationary storage cells, converting existing lines and adjusting future plans. Lithium-ion cell manufacturing for stationary storage reached more than 21 GWh in 2025, enough to power Houston overnight, according to SEIA’s Solar and Storage Supply Chain Dashboard. Meanwhile, US factories now have the capacity to manufacture 69.4 GWh of battery energy storage systems annually.

Now it’s just the smart choice.

By stooo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Using solar, wind, and batteries is not green any more.
Now it’s just the obvious smart choice.
You can easily discern who is smart, who is dumb…

Re:Verify First. Then speak Green.

By Smidge204 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

> So, you’re volunteering to be the test pilot for all new electric aircraft and spacecraft?

I feel like you skipped a few steps in here somewhere… as if you were so enthusiastic to shit on something you forgot to take your own pants off first…

=Smidge=

Re: Now it’s just the smart choice.

By UnknowingFool • Score: 4, Informative Thread

As a California native, I’ve seen rolling blackouts, wild fires taking out power lines, wind storms knocking down lines, snow storms knocking down lines, tornadoes knocking down lines, etc

What you are describing is natural disasters causing power problems. With Texas, they have been the champions of both deregulation and laissez-faire economics. This has extended to the point where their grid is largely disconnected from the rest of the US to avoid regulations.

That was the cause of the 2021 disaster where nearly the entire state was without power for an extended period of time during harsh winter conditions. The ultimate cause was the primarily private power companies did not winterize their plants. After a 2011 winter storm nearly crippled the state grid, ERCOT (Electric Reliability Council of Texas), the state’s main regulatory body recommended all power companies winterize their plants. Since this is Texas, ERCOT can only recommend; the state makes sure it had no power to enforce it as regulation. Ten years after warning that a major winter storm could cripple the state’s grid, a major winter storm crippled the state’s grid.

Re:That should irk

By UnknowingFool • Score: 4, Informative Thread

While true, this raises the question: Why haven’t these same economic terms resulted in a renewable explosion in blue states?

Because that’s a lie and it has. Over the last 10 years, solar and wind generation growth:

In solar and wind, it is not a blue vs red. All states have seen large growth.

Re: Now it’s just the smart choice.

By drinkypoo • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

“As a California native, I’ve seen rolling blackouts”

These are the only thing on this list which is comparable to the situation in Texas. PGE underdeveloped the grid to increase profits due shareholders so we couldn’t get the power to where it was needed. At no time during any of the rolling blackouts have we been at full production, but due to our dumb grid we didn’t know how close to capacity the distribution lines were so we had to throttle back due to heat concerns. We’ve since hung temperature sensors on the lines.

US Farmers Are Rejecting Multimillion-Dollar Datacenter Bids For Their Land

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian:
When two men knocked on Ida Huddleston’s door last May, they carried a contract worth more than $33m in exchange for the Kentucky farm that had fed her family for centuries. According to Huddleston, the men’s client, an unnamed “Fortune 100 company,” sought her 650 acres (260 hectares) in Mason county for an unspecified industrial development. Finding out any more would require signing a non-disclosure agreement. More than a dozen of her neighbors received the same knock. Searching public records for answers, they discovered that a new customer (PDF) had applied for a 2.2 gigawatt project from the local power plant, nearly double its annual generation capacity. The unknown company was building a datacenter. “You don’t have enough to buy me out. I’m not for sale. Leave me alone, I’m satisfied,” Huddleston, 82, later told the men.

As tech companies race to build the massive datacenters needed to power artificial intelligence across the US and the world, bids like the one for Huddleston’s land are appearing on rural doorsteps nationwide. Globally, 40,000 acres of powered land – real estate prepped for datacenter development — are projected to be needed for new projects over the next five years, double the amount currently in use. Yet despite sums that often dwarf the land’s recent value, farmers are increasingly shutting the door. At least five of Huddleston’s neighbors gave similar categorical rejections, including one who was told he could name any price.

In Pennsylvania, a farmer rejected $15m in January for land he’d worked for 50 years. A Wisconsin farmer turned down $80m the same month. Other landowners have declined offers exceeding $120,000 per acre — prices unimaginable just a few years ago. The rebuffs are a jarring reminder of AI’s physical bounds, and limits of the dollars behind the technology. […] As AI promises to transcend corporeal fallibility, these standoffs reveal its very physical constraints — and Wall Street’s miscalculation of what some people value most. In the rolling hills of Mason county and farmland across America, that gap is measured not in dollars but in something harder to price: identity.

Explains why food got so expensive

By gurps_npc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If farmers are being offered super high prices for their land, well, not all of them are going to have the courage and financial resources to turn down the offers.

The less honorable / farmers in debt are going to sell out and reduce the supply of food. Meanwhile those farmers wishing to buy more land will find inflated prices, so they will raise their own prices.

Re: Just sell, but with a “bubble clause”

By sziring • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They probably make more from the Gov to not farm the land.

Zoning

By dskoll • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

We have zoning in cities. Perhaps it’s time to zone farmland as farmland and forbid it from being used for anything else without regulatory review.

Re:Zoning

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Informative Thread

We have zoning in cities. Perhaps it’s time to zone farmland as farmland and forbid it from being used for anything else without regulatory review.

Some non-Republican states do exactly that.

In my state (Washington), it’s more of a county-by-county thing… but I think Oregon may do it state-wide.

Re:Explains why food got so expensive

By korgitser • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The US is not exactly farm land limited. It’s going to be water limited by mid-century though, as the Midwest aquifier is being drained out by farming.

In any case, what I find more interesting in TFA is the fact that a source of people who are not for sale has been found in the US. Wipe DC clean and put these people in charge asap.

New Microsoft Gaming CEO Has ‘No Tolerance For Bad AI’

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In her first major interview as Microsoft’s new gaming chief, Asha Sharma said that “great games” must deliver emotional resonance and a distinct creative voice, while making clear that she has “no tolerance for bad AI.” Stepping in after Phil Spencer’s retirement, she’s pledging consistency, community trust, and a human-first approach to storytelling as Xbox enters a new era. Variety reports:
Sharma was quick in laying out her top priorities for Microsoft Gaming in an internal memo announcing her promotion, noting “great games,” “the return of Xbox” and the “future of play” as her three main commitments to the gaming community. So first, what makes a great game for Sharma, whose roles prior to CoreAI include top positions at Instacart and Meta? The new Microsoft Gaming CEO tells Variety it’s all about games with “deep emotional resonance” and “a distinct point of view.” She wants to develop stories that make players “feel something,” like the kind of feelings Campo Santo’s 2016 first-person mystery “Firewatch” elicited in her.

Sharma takes on the mantle as head of the leading competitor to Sony’s PlayStation and Nintendo knowing full well she’s entering the role as an outsider to the larger gaming community and has “a lot to learn” still. But Sharma says she’s got a commitment to “being grounded in what the community is telling us.” “I’m coming into gaming as a platform builder,” Sharma said, adding that her goal is to “earn the right to be trusted by players and developers” and show the fanbase that “consistency” over time. In her interview with Variety, Sharma acknowledged the tumultuous state of the gaming industry, referencing Matthew Ball’s recent State of Video Gaming in 2026 report as evidence that the larger “transformation” of the sector is “protecting what we believe in while remaining open-minded about the future.”

Due to her strong background in AI, initial reactions to Sharma’s appointment have raised concerns about what her specific views are on the use of generative AI in game development. Sharma says her stance is simple: she has “no tolerance for bad AI.” “AI has long been part of gaming and will continue to be,” Sharma said, noting that gaming needs new “growth engines,” but that “great stories are created by humans.”

Means Nothing

By Kunedog • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
I’m sure she has no tolerance for “bad DRM” either.

Answer to the number 1 question

By backslashdot • Score: 3 Thread

is no, she is NOT a gamer. However, Microsoft has embraced the idea of her learning to play a few games https://www.windowscentral.com…

Doesn’t seem like a DEI hire either, more like WTF is Microsoft thinking?

Gamers have no tolerance

By HnT • Score: 3 Thread

Gamers have no tolerance for empty headlines, empty corpos, empty heads and horrible games full of badly done intentionally divisive activism and devoid of gaming, entertainment and fun.

Re:Has this woman

By Stolovaya • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Have you ever read a summary in your life? Sounds like she’s at least played Firewatch.

I think it’s fine to criticize her lack of industry experience, but yes, it does sound like she’s played at least one game in her life.

Re:Has this woman

By AnOnyxMouseCoward • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
It feels like many hate her guts just because she’s a woman.

Online competitive games (MOBA, FPS, strategy) tend to have very little story or “emotion”, but most successful single player games do. All RPGs are built on emotional resonance (think of GOTY Clair Obscur). Even modern action / adventure games tend to have a gripping story (the Last of Us? shit even the first Assassin’s Creed had that resonance).

Sure, the early generation of games (Space Invaders! Pacman!) had no story, but for the last 20 years at least emotional resonance and good storylines are what make games stand out. So let’s give this Asha person a break. I know nothing about her, but I don’t really care either, because she’s not the scenarist or the creative director of the games that will come out, she’s the business boss. If her only relevant comment was “I liked Firewatch, and I think games should have an emotional story”, I don’t understand the instinctive backlash.

Microsoft Says Bug In Classic Outlook Hides the Mouse Pointer

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joshuark quotes a report from BleepingComputer:
Microsoft is investigating a known issue that causes the mouse pointer to disappear in the classic Outlook desktop email client for some users. This bug has been acknowledged almost two months after the first reports started surfacing online, with users saying that Outlook became unusable after the mouse pointer vanished while using the app.

[…] Microsoft explained in a recent support document that the mouse pointer (and in some cases the cursor) will suddenly vanish as users move it across Outlook’s interface. “When using classic Outlook, you may find that the mouse pointer or mouse cursor disappears as you move the pointer over the Outlook interface,” it said. “Although the mouse pointer is not there, the email in the message list will change color as you hover over it. This issue has also been reported with OneNote and other Microsoft 365 apps to a lesser degree.”

Microsoft added that the Outlook team is investigating the issues and will provide updates as more information becomes available. While a timeline for a permanent fix is not yet available, Microsoft has offered three temporary workarounds that require affected users to click an email in the message list when the cursor disappears, which may cause it to reappear. Alternatively, switching to PowerPoint, clicking into an editable area, and then returning to Outlook may also restore the mouse pointer.

they don’t know what’s wrong? why?

By zeiche • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

are they using claude to design and implement their products now? did they lay off their experts?

Is it “Classic”?

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
If Outlook is truly “Classic”, it will be keyboard-friendly: Power users can still navigate through most panes and lists.

Outlook is a dumpster fire

By Daina.0 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I’ve been saying for years that the Outlook team should all be fire and Outlook permanently retired. M$ should start from scratch using no one that was involved with Outlook as a product. Knowing M$ they’d just buy an email client and calendaring client and go from there. There’s no way it could be any worse that Outlook. The only reason anyone uses Outlook is because it is part of the M$ Office Gordian Knot. I wish my employer would dump it for almost anything else.

Some of the problems:
    o Cannot get a new member of a team to have access to the team’s calendar
    o Some events cannot be deleted, even by the owner
    o Some events can be deleted by someone who is not the owner
    o Some events show up multiple times as if they are different events. I’ve seen up to 5 copies of the same meeting!
    o By default forces you to use formatted text when writing an email
    o Hides email addresses so you don’t really know who you are emailing unless you poke around.
    o Hard to view message source
    o Combines calendar and email functions into one app. making it harder to see both at the same time.
    o Maybe it has an alarm function, but I haven’t seen it for events. All you get is a notification which can be easy to miss, especially if you have multiple monitors

Please just make it go away!

Mine works fine

By PhantomHarlock • Score: 3 Thread

Of course, I’m still happily using Outlook 2019 on a bought and paid for standalone office license. I see no reason to ‘upgrade’.

Outlook, Outlook (New) and Outlook (classic).

By pmsr • Score: 3 Thread

Great software. And I love how Microsoft deploys it. In my organization it was pot luck. Some ended up with Outlook and Outlook (New). Others with Outlook and Outlook (Classic). We try to uninstall the new Outlook app, but it should just be called Outlook (Zombie), since it comes back from the dead all the time. But me. I am a winner. I ended up with just two Outlook apps, with somewhat similar icons. Real software engineering here, Microsoft. Carry on!

Viral Doomsday Report Lays Bare Wall Street’s Deep Anxiety About AI Future

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A 7,000-word “doomsday” thought experiment from Citrini Research helped trigger an 800-point drop in the Dow, “painting a dark portrait of a future in which technological change inspires a race to the bottom in white-collar knowledge work,” reports the Wall Street Journal. From the report:
Concerns of hyperscalers overspending are out. Worries of software-industry disruption don’t go far enough. The “global intelligence crisis” is about to hit. The new, broader question: What if AI is so bullish for the economy that it is actually bearish? “For the entirety of modern economic history, human intelligence has been the scarce input,” Citrini wrote in a post it described as a scenario dated June 2028, not a prediction. “We are now experiencing the unwind of that premium.”

Many of Monday’s moves roughly aligned with the situation outlined by Citrini, in which fast-advancing AI tools allow spending cuts across industries, sparking mass white-collar unemployment and in turn leading to financial contagion. Software firms DataDog, CrowdStrike and Zscaler each plunged more than 9%. International Business Machines’ 13% decline was its worst one-day performance since 2000. American Express, KKR and Blackstone — all name-checked by Citrini — tumbled. That anxiety, coupled with renewed uncertainty about trade policy from Washington, weighed down major indexes Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average led declines, falling 1.7%, or 822 points. The S&P 500 shed 1%, while the Nasdaq composite retreated 1.1%.

[…] Monday’s market swings extended a run of AI-linked volatility. A small research outfit that has garnered a huge Substack following for macro and thematic stock research, Citrini said in its new post that software firms, payment processors and other companies formed “one long daisy chain of correlated bets on white-collar productivity growth” that AI is poised to disrupt. […] Shares in DoorDash also veered 6.6% lower Monday after Citrini’s Substack note called the delivery app a “poster child” for how new tools would upend companies that monetize interpersonal friction. In the research firm’s scenario, AI agents would help both drivers and customers navigate food deliveries at much lower costs.

Re: Let’s think about this for a moment…

By Jeremi • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I think it says a lot about the amount of uncertainty in the market. Nobody knows what’s going to happen next, and investors are skittish.

It’s just what Kurzweil predicted — as the pace of change keeps accelerating, peoples’ ability to predict the future gets compressed into a shorter and shorter time-window, like driving at night and outrunning the headlights of your car.

Re:Let’s think about this for a moment…

By Mspangler • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

To borrow a quote from the post below, “as the pace of change keeps accelerating, peoples’ ability to predict the future gets compressed into a shorter and shorter time-window,”

Building a new plant to produce polysilicon for solar panels took three years after two years of planning and design. The current RAM shortage is from a sudden change in demand. Assume it takes three years to build another one of them. Do you build it? Will the demand last or will the bubble burst and leave your investment stranded?

There is the uncertainty. Business hates uncertainty. Even the Chinese messed up their housing plans and created a giant boom and bust they are still trying to recover from.

The AI software could become an exponential growth situation leading to nirvana, or it could implode tomorrow when an AI gets control of something, screws it up and kills a bunch of people and the Butlerian Jihad comes early. Which way do you bet? The physical world has a lot longer time constants than the digital world which is a continuing problem with process control, That problem is generalizing to society in general.

but computers actually did take all the jobs!

By bussdriver • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Computers were mostly women, who did basic math as a job. The machines replaced all of them.

Re:Alright, kill the AI then

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

This isn’t an “AI” problem at all, it is a problem of a weakening economy, brought about by decades of eroding fundamentals for short-term profits, sped up by a moronic rush to idiocracy and kleptocracy.

The “AI” is just one of the many corruption schemes.

Re: Random blog post, or tariffs and politics?

By random735 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Genuinely curious, how are blue collar jobs that require climbing into attics and crawlspaces and generally performing physically demanding/relatively high dexterity tasks in addition to solving the vision and planning problems associated with any basic hvac, plumbing, or electrical job, more ripe for replacement by Ai than desk jobs that only need computation?

You need to solve a whole class of physical robotics challenges that no one has demonstrated they can solve at a speed needed to compete with a human or in a real world diverse environment.

Boston robotics showing a robot doing cartwheels is not the same thing as climbing into an attic and balancing on joists while running new thermostat wires.

Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ Explores Stablecoin For Gaza

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Financial Times:
Officials working with Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” are exploring setting up a stablecoin for Gaza as part of efforts to reshape the devastated Palestinian enclave’s economy, according to five people familiar with the discussions. The talks around introducing a stablecoin — a type of cryptocurrency whose value is pegged to a mainstream currency, such as the US dollar — are at a preliminary stage, and many details of how one could be introduced in Gaza remain to be determined.

But officials have discussed the idea as part of their plan for the future of the enclave, where economic activity collapsed during Israel’s two-year war with Hamas and the traditional banking and payments system has been severely impaired. A person familiar with the project said the stablecoin was expected to be tied to the US dollar, with the hope that Gulf Arab and Palestinian companies with expertise in the field of digital currencies will help spearhead the effort. “This will not be a ‘Gaza Coin’ or a new Palestinian currency, but a means to allow Gazans to transact digitally,” the person said.

Work on the idea is being led by Liran Tancman, an Israeli tech entrepreneur and former reservist who is now working as an unpaid adviser to Trump’s “Board of Peace,” the US-led body tasked with rebuilding Gaza, according to two people familiar with the matter. […] According to the person familiar with the project, the “Board of Peace” and NCAG will decide on the stablecoin’s regulatory framework and access, although “nothing definitive” has yet been finalized. Speaking at a meeting of the “Board of Peace” in Washington last week, Tancman said the NCAG was working on building “a secure digital backbone, an open platform enabling e-payments, financial services, e-learning, and healthcare with user control over data”, but did not elaborate.

Re:If Only This Were Parody

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

It already is a parody - the charter of the board of peace basically says Trump is chairman for life and he’s the big decision maker. And nothing says how the billions of dollars are to be spent (every member nation has 1 year to ante up $1B).

I guess we know where some of it will be going.

It should probably be called the “Board of Piece of the Action.”

Re:If Only This Were Parody

By sinkskinkshrieks • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
A parody would be funny, this is Orwellian.

Re:I think I’ve lost count of impeachable offenses

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
The ability to deny reality is amazingly powerful. I hear people say, “Yeah, well, I’m not so sure about this Trump guy anymore. I mean, I’ve always given him the benefit of the doubt and…” You cannot reason with that attitude, and that’s the best the right has.

Re:Theys

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I hope they mean Zionists and Israel, but fear they mean Jews.

The people of Gaza have suffered more than enough under the boot of Israel, and now Israeli genocide. A crypto scam is the last thing they need.

Re:If Only This Were Parody

By Rei • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It doesn’t matter what they call it because it doesn’t legally exist. There is no “Board of Peace” organized under any nation’s laws. Trump is acting like the US is party to it as a treaty organization, but only Congress has the power to do approve that.

BoP is collecting and distributing funds (JP Morgan playing as banker) but this must be in violation of Know-Your-Customer laws since BoP *doesn’t exist*. It is a transnational mafia backed only by the executive power of its members.

Since BoP doesn’t exist, USPTO is illegally holding its trademarks on its behalf, violating the Lanham Act, which requires that holders intend to use marks in commerce. Trump signed Executive Order 14375 protecting BoP under the International Organizations Immunity Act, but this does not legitimize or establish the organization.

Trump is saying he intends to use it to “oversee” the United Nations. There is no provision in the UN charter for any such oversight organization; what he means is that he is going to extort the UN by withholding US dues.

(ht/Dave Troy)