Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Idaho Lab Produces World’s First Molten Salt Fuel for Nuclear Reactors
  2. Was the Airbus A320 Recall Caused By Cosmic Rays?
  3. All of Russia’s Porsches Were Bricked By a Mysterious Satellite Outage
  4. Can This Simple Invention Convert Waste Heat Into Electricity?
  5. Why Meetings Can Harm Employee Well-Being
  6. EU Urged to Soften 2035 Ban on Internal Combustion Engine Cars
  7. College Students Flock To A New Major:  AI
  8. No Rise in Radiation Levels at Chernobyl, Despite Damage from February’s Drone Strike
  9. OpenAI Insists Target Links in ChatGPT Responses Weren’t Ads But ‘Suggestions’ - But Turns Them Off
  10. How Home Assistant Leads a ‘Local-First Rebellion’
  11. Why Gen Z is Using Retro Tech
  12. Is Netflix Trying to Buy Warner Bros. or Kill It?
  13. New FreeBSD 15 Retires 32-Bit Ports and Modernizes Builds
  14. Homebrew Can Now Help You Install Flatpaks Too
  15. Many Privileged Students at US Universities are Getting Extra Time on Tests After ‘Disability’ Diagnoses

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.

Idaho Lab Produces World’s First Molten Salt Fuel for Nuclear Reactors

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
America’s Energy Department runs a research lab in Idaho — and this week announced successful results from a ground-breaking experiment. “This is the first time in history that chloride-based molten salt fuel has been produced for a fast reactor,” says Bill Phillips, the lab’s technical lead for salt synthesis. He calls it “a major milestone for American innovation and a clear signal of our national commitment to advanced nuclear energy.”
Unlike traditional reactors that use solid fuel rods and water as a coolant, most molten salt reactors rely on liquid fuel — a mixture of salts containing fissile material. This design allows for higher operating temperatures, better fuel efficiency, and enhanced safety. It also opens the door to new applications, including compact nuclear systems for ships and remote installations.

“The Molten Chloride Fast Reactor represents a paradigm shift in the nuclear fuel cycle, and the Molten Chloride Reactor Experiment (MCRE) will directly inform the commercialization of that reactor,” said Jeff Latkowski, senior vice president of TerraPower and program director for the Molten Chloride Fast Reactor. “Working with world-leading organizations such as INL to successfully synthesize this unique new fuel demonstrates how real progress in Gen IV nuclear is being made together.”

“The implications for the maritime industry are significant,” said Don Wood, senior technical advisor for MCRE. “Molten salt reactors could provide ships with highly efficient, low-maintenance nuclear power, reducing emissions and enabling long-range, uninterrupted travel. The technology could spark the rise of a new nuclear sector — one that is mobile, scalable and globally transformative.
More details from America’s Energy Department:
MCRE will require a total of 72 to 75 batches of fuel salt to go critical, making it the largest fuel production effort at INL since the operations of Experimental Breeder Reactor-II more than 30 years ago. The full-scale demonstration of the new fuel salt synthesis line for MCRE was made possible by a breakthrough in 2024. After years of testing, the team found the right recipe to convert 95 percent of uranium metal feedstock into 18 kilograms of uranium chloride fuel salt in only a few hours — a process that previously took more than a week to complete…

After delivering the first batch of fuel salt this fall, the team anticipates delivering four additional batches by March of 2026. MCRE is anticipated to run in 2028 for approximately six months at INL in the Laboratory for Operation and Testing (LOTUS) in the United States test bed.
“With the first batch of fuel salt successfully created at INL, researchers will now conduct testing to better understand the physics of the process, with a goal of moving the process to a commercial scale over the next decade,” says Cowboy State Daily.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the article.

Was the Airbus A320 Recall Caused By Cosmic Rays?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
What triggered that Airbus emergency software recall? The BBC reports that Airbus’s initial investigation into an aircraft’s sudden drop in altitude linked it “to a malfunction in one of the aircraft’s computers that controls moving parts on the aircraft’s wings and tail.” But that malfunction “seems to have been triggered by cosmic radiation bombarding the Earth on the day of the flight…”

The BBC believes radiation from space “could become a growing problem as ever more microchips run our lives.”
What Airbus says occurred on that JetBlue flight from Cancun to New Jersey was a phenomenon called a single-event upset, or bit flip. As the BBC has previously reported, these computer errors occur when high-speed subatomic particles from outer space, such as protons, smash into atoms in our planet’s atmosphere. This can cause a cascade of particles to rain down through our atmosphere, like throwing marbles across a table. In rare cases, those fast-moving neutrons can strike computer electronics and disrupt tiny bits of data stored in the computer’s memory, switching that bit — often represented as a 0 or 1 — from one state to another. “That can cause your electronics to behave in ways you weren’t expecting,” says Matthew Owens, professor of space physics at the University of Reading in the UK. Satellites are particularly affected by this phenomenon, he says. “For space hardware we see this quite frequently.”

This is because the neutron flux — a measure of neutron radiation — rises the higher up in the atmosphere you go, increasing the chance of a strike hitting sensitive parts of the computer equipment on board. Aircraft are more vulnerable to this problem than computer equipment on the ground, although bit flips do occur at ground level, too. The increasing reliance of computers in fly-by-wire systems in aircraft, which use electronics rather than mechanical systems to control the plane in the air, also mean the risk posed by bit flips when they do occur is higher… Airbus told the BBC that it tested multiple scenarios when attempting to determine what happened to the 30 October 2025 JetBlue flight. In this case also, the company ruled out various possibilities except that of a bit flip. It is hard to attribute the incident to this for sure, however, because careering neutrons leave no trace of their activity behind, says Owens…

[Airbus’s software update] works by inducing “rapid refreshing of the corrupted parameter so it has no time to have effect on the flight controls”, Airbus says. This is, in essence, a way of continually sanitising computer data on these aircraft to try and ensure that any errors don’t end up actually impacting a flight… As computer chips have become smaller, they have also become more vulnerable to bit flips because the energy required to corrupt tiny packets of data has got lower over time. Plus, more and more microchips are being loaded into products and vehicles, potentially increasing the chance that a bit flip could cause havoc. If nothing else, the JetBlue incident will focus minds across many industries on the risk posed to our modern, microchip-dependent lives from cosmic radiation that originates far beyond our planet.
Airbus said their analysis revealed “intense solar radiation” could corrupt data “critical to the functioning of flight control.” But that explanation “has left some space weather scientists scratching their heads,” adds the BBC.

Space.com explains:
Solar radiation levels on Oct. 30 were unremarkable and nowhere near levels that could affect aircraft electronics, Clive Dyer, a space weather and radiation expert at University of Surrey in the U.K., told Space.com. Instead, Dyer, who has studied effects of solar radiation on aircraft electronics for decades, thinks the onboard computer of the affected jet could have been struck by a cosmic ray, a stream of high-energy particles from a distant star explosion that may have travelled millions of years before reaching Earth. "[Cosmic rays] can interact with modern microelectronics and change the state of a circuit,” Dyer said. “They can cause a simple bit flip, like a 0 to 1 or 1 to 0. They can mess up information and make things go wrong. But they can cause hardware failures too, when they induce a current in an electronic device and burn it out.”

Re: Why was the older version better?

By ShanghaiBill • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

They don’t really know what caused the glitch.

The cosmic ray hypothesis is just a conjecture.

So, they’re rolling back to the previous version until they can figure it out.

If they’re doing memory scrubbing, they might want to bump up the frequency.

If they aren’t using semiconductors made with depleted boron, they should be.

A funny scary thing

By Artem S. Tashkinov • Score: 3 Thread
For decades, people have dismissed bit flips caused by cosmic rays, but here’s what I’ve been dealing with: I have four 16 GB sticks of DDR4 RAM running at stock without overclocking or anything. At least once a week, the Linux kernel displays this message:

mce: [Hardware Error]: Machine check events logged
mce: [Hardware Error]: CPU 1: Machine Check: 0 Bank 19: 9460eb40d5040348
mce: [Hardware Error]: TSC 0
mce: [Hardware Error]: PROCESSOR 2:a20f10 TIME 1750853778 SOCKET 0 APIC 2 microcode a20102d

The issue is seemingly far more widespread than people realize. My memory is otherwise 100% stable because I’ve run a 24-hour MemTest86 loop at least a couple of times and it didn’t find any errors. However, it’s important to note that sometimes it actually detects a single error, but it’s not reproducible.

Another gadget added to the list of forbidden item

By Provocateur • Score: 4, Funny Thread

I can’t bring a ton of shampoo, nor a pair of scissors. Certain laptops or batteries. Now, it’s looking like my homemade cosmic ray simulator won’t be making it onboard with me…

All of Russia’s Porsches Were Bricked By a Mysterious Satellite Outage

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Autoblog:
Imagine walking out to your car, pressing the start button, and getting absolutely nothing. No crank, no lights on the dash, nothing. That’s exactly what happened to hundreds of Porsche owners in Russia last week. The issue is with the Vehicle Tracking System, a satellite-based security system that’s supposed to protect against theft. Instead, it turned these Porsches into driveway ornaments.

The issue was first reported at the end of November, with owners reporting identical symptoms of their cars refusing to start or shutting down soon after ignition. Russia’s largest dealership group, Rolf, confirmed that the problem stems from a complete loss of satellite connectivity to the VTS. When it loses its connection, it interprets the outage as a potential theft attempt and automatically activates the engine immobilizer.

The issue affects all models and engine types, meaning any Porsche equipped with the system could potentially disable itself without warning. The malfunction impacts Porsche models dating back to 2013 that have the factory VTS installed… When the VTS connection drops, the anti-theft protocol kicks in, cutting fuel delivery and locking down the engine completely.

Who thought this service was a good idea?

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I can see a service where you can send a satellite message to disable your car/brick it. But a system where if you lose satellite communication for enough time it bricks itself automatically?

I can see a hundred ways this can go bad - starting with what actually happened.

Horrible business plan.

Re:Who thought this service was a good idea?

By ClickOnThis • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I suspect Porsche was trying to stop thieves who would disconnect the satellite link in order to keep the car from receiving a kill-switch signal.

Disable the car when it loses the satellite link, and that plan is foiled. That’ll teach ‘em! Oh wait…

Couldn’t happen to nicer people

By spazmonkey • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I wonder how many of those Porches (and Mercedes and others) were stolen from Ukrainian dealerships in the first place.
  Personally knowing medics in Ukraine that have to use modified secondhand family vans because the Russians looted all the ambulances and cleaned out the car dealerships, I have to say “So what?”
Brick them all.
   

Russian Porsches disabled

By innocent_white_lamb • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Well....

shucky darn.

John Deere remotely disabled a bunch of tractors that Russians stole from Ukraine in 2022.

Now Porsche can do the same thing to all of their vehicles in Russia.

Re:Couldn’t happen to nicer people

By spazmonkey • Score: 4, Funny Thread

why is this retarded shit rated as insightful?

Start of first shift in St Petersburg I see

Can This Simple Invention Convert Waste Heat Into Electricity?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Nuclear engineer Lonnie Johnson worked on NASA’s Galileo mission, has more than 140 patents, and invented the Super Soaker water gun. But now he’s working on “a potential key to unlock a huge power source that’s rarely utilized today,” reports the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. [Alternate URL here.]

Waste heat…
The Johnson Thermo-Electrochemical Converter, or JTEC, has few moving parts, no combustion and no exhaust. All the work to generate electricity is done by hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe. Inside the device, pressurized hydrogen gas is separated by a thin, filmlike membrane, with low pressure gas on one side and high pressure gas on the other. The difference in pressure in this “stack” is what drives the hydrogen to compress and expand, creating electricity as it circulates. And unlike a fuel cell, it does not need to be refueled with more hydrogen. All that’s needed to keep the process going and electricity flowing is a heat source.

As it turns out, there are enormous amounts of energy vented or otherwise lost from industrial facilities like power plants, factories, breweries and more. Between 20% and 50% of all energy used for industrial processes is dumped into the atmosphere and lost as waste heat, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. The JTEC works with high temperatures, but the device’s ability to generate electricity efficiently from low-grade heat sources is what company executives are most excited about. Inside JTEC’s headquarters, engineers show off a demonstration unit that can power lights and a sound system with water that’s roughly 200 degrees Fahrenheit — below the boiling point and barely warm enough to brew a cup of tea, said Julian Bell, JTEC’s vice president of engineering. Comas Haynes, a research engineer at the Georgia Tech Research Institute specializing in thermal and hydrogen system designs, agrees the company could “hit a sweet spot” if it can capitalize on lower temperature heat…

For Johnson, the potential application he’s most excited about lies beneath our feet. Geothermal energy exists naturally in rocks and water beneath the Earth’s surface at various depths. Tapping into that resource through abandoned oil and gas wells — a well-known access point for underground heat — offers another opportunity. “You don’t need batteries and you can draw power when you need it from just about anywhere,” Johnson said. Right now, the company is building its first commercial JTEC unit, which is set to be deployed early next year. Mike McQuary, JTEC’s CEO and the former president of the pioneering internet service provider MindSpring, said he couldn’t reveal the customer, but said it’s a “major Southeast utility company.” “Crossing that bridge where you have commercial customers that believe in it and will pay for it is important,” McQuary said…

On top of some initial seed money, the company brought in $30 million in a Series A funding in 2022 — money that allowed the company to move to its Lee + White headquarters and hire more than 30 engineers. McQuary said it expects to begin another round of fundraising soon.
“Johnson, meanwhile, hasn’t stopped working on new inventions,” the article points out. “He continues to refine the design for his solid-state battery…”

claims

By iggymanz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Johnson claims 40 - 60 % efficiency with large temperature spread of 600 degrees C.. and that’s beautiful and wonderful.

Thus far experiments at lower temperature differences have been done, I see on net 180 degrees with 17 percent which actually is ok too. The theoretical max there would be 38 percent.

But, anything near the 40 to 60 percent theoretical value hasn’t been demonstrated in repeatable experiment, he’s working up to that. So, is Johnson just overhyped about the invention or can he (or anyone) deliver? for that matter, even 20 percent at lower temp differences might be good for a lot of things anyway.

Re:claims

By Waffle Iron • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

For the example in TFS of 200F water and assuming room temperature exhaust, Mr. Carnot says that the max possible efficiency is less than 20%. Any real world engine, including this one, probably ends up at a low-to-mid single digit percent efficiency. IOW, the vast majority of the heat would still be wasted.

The operator of the facility generating the waste heat might get more energy savings at lower cost by tweaking their processes to be a few percent more efficient in the first place, instead of trying to recover this low-grade energy source with an elaborate engine and plumbing.

Normally I’d write most of that off as fluff

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Worked for NASA… *yawn*. Holds 140 patents… yeah, so what?

But this dude also invented the Super Soaker - now THAT’s legit guy cred!

Reinvented a Sterling engine

By gurps_npc • Score: 3 Thread

With similar efficiency claims? I am sure there are advantages to this version.

If the article had compared it to existing sterling engines and mentioned how it was better than existing Sterling Engines, that would have made it interesting.

Instead they talked about Super Soakers and mentioned all the obvious industrial uses that such a machine could be used for. The things anyone that graduated High School should have been able to think of themselves.

Was this article written for people that failed High School Physics? Is it an attempt to get an orange skinned fool that was tricked by a Democrat into pardoning him to fund something?

How did this sad excuse of an article get approved here?

H2 is a bugger to work with

By shilly • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

To my mind, the first and most obvious questions to ask are how this kind of system copes with the well known challenges of working with H2, such as embrittlement, leakage and a propensity to explode.

Why Meetings Can Harm Employee Well-Being

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Phys.org republishes this article from The Conversation:
On average, managers spend 23 hours a week in meetings. Much of what happens in them is considered to be of low value, or even entirely counterproductive. The paradox is that bad meetings generate even more meetings… in an attempt to repair the damage caused by previous ones…

A 2015 handbook laid the groundwork for the nascent field of “Meeting Science”. Among other things, the research revealed that the real issue may not be the number of meetings, but rather how they are designed, the lack of clarity about their purpose, and the inequalities they (often unconsciously) reinforce… Faced with what we call meeting madness, the solution is not to eliminate meetings altogether, but to design them better. It begins with a simple but often forgotten question: why are we meeting…?

The goal should not be to have fewer meetings, but better ones. Meetings that respect everyone’s time and energy. Meetings that give a voice to all. Meetings that build connection.
Slashdot reader ShimoNoSeki shares an obligatory XKCD comic

So

By liqu1d • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Half the work of managers is of low quality or low value. Who saw that coming?

Clear Agenda

By NaiveBayes • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I talked with someone who had a firm principal at work: If the meeting didn’t have a clear agenda explaining its purpose and what it would be covering (usually emailed around beforehand), he wouldn’t go to it. If the organisers didn’t put in the work to clearly communicate what the meeting intended to achieve, then the meeting was not worth the time he’d spend attending it.

Limit to Seven People

By pr0t0 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I recall reading that if you have a meeting with more than seven people, you are probably having an ineffective meeting. I am regularly forced to attend meetings with 20-30 people. It’s always the same 3-4 people who speak, everyone else remains silent.

I think about the many thousands of man-hours wasted during these meetings throughout the year, and the salary that costs, when I hear a PHB stating that new hardware, software, training, or personnel just aren’t in the budget.

Simple solution

By procrastinatos • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Back in the aughts, I wrote an Outlook (ugh) plugin to prominently display the cost of a meeting based on the length of the meeting and the midpoints of the salary bands of all participants. I did the same for emails based on the length of the email and again the salary bands of all recipients.

Problems of pointless meetings and emails with half the company in CC disappeared almost overnight.

Don’t show up to bad meetings

By Dixie_Flatline • Score: 3 Thread

I’m a lead programmer in the games industry, and I did not show up to meetings with low value. But that said, 50% of my time was spent on meetings and managerial duties.

Critically, I consider it my job to go to meetings so the other programmers on my team DON’T. We need to talk about the state of the game. We need to discuss mechanics and timelines and all sorts of things. But I don’t want other programmers in more than a few hours of meetings a week, and most of those meeting hours should be just in our team giving and getting updates.

We were aggressive about cutting meetings that people felt had little or diminishing value. Sometimes meetings are useful for a time and then they’re not. I never went to a meeting that I was invited to where I didn’t feel like I needed to hear the information or present something useful. Guard your own time, no matter what level of worker you are.

But yeah, useless meetings feel terrible. I didn’t feel bad about the meetings I went to because we often accomplished a lot.

EU Urged to Soften 2035 Ban on Internal Combustion Engine Cars

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Friday six European Union countries “asked the European Commission to water down an effective ban on the sale of internal combustion engine cars slated for 2035,” reports Reuters
The countries have asked the EU Commission to allow the sale of hybrid cars or vehicles powered by other, existing or future, technologies “that could contribute to the goal of reducing emissions” beyond 2035, a joint letter seen by Reuters showed on Friday. The letter was signed by the prime ministers of Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Italy, Poland and Slovakia. They also asked for low-carbon and renewable fuels to be included in the plan to reduce the carbon emissions from transportation…

Since they adopted a regulation that all new vehicles from 2035 should have zero emissions in March 2023, EU countries are now having second thoughts. Back then, the outlook for battery electric vehicles was positive, but carmakers’ efforts have later collided with the reality of lower-than-expected demand and fierce competition from China.
Car and Drive reports that Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany also "wants to allow exceptions for plug-in hybrids, extended-range EVs, and ‘highly efficient’ combustion vehicles beyond the current 2035 deadline.” They cite a report in Automotive News.
The European Commission hasn’t made any official changes yet, but mounting pressure suggests that a revised plan could be coming soon.... Apostolos Tzitzikostas, the European Commissioner for Sustainable Transport and Tourism, was cited by the German paper Handelsblatt as saying that the EU “will take all technological advances into account when reassessing fleet emission limits, including combustion engines running on e-fuels and biofuels.” And these renewable products will apparently be key pieces of the puzzle. BMW uses a vegetable-oil-derived fuel called HVO 100 in its diesel products throughout Europe. The plant-oil-based fuel reportedly reduces tailpipe emissions by 90 percent compared with traditional diesel. For its part, Porsche has been working on producing synthetic fuel at a plant in Chile since 2022.

The European Commission is set to meet on December 10. At that time, the body is expected to assemble a package of proposals to help out the struggling European automotive industry, though the actual announcement may be pushed to a later date.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader sinij for sharing the article.

Re:Renewable fuels?

By GameboyRMH • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Biofuels aren’t worse than fossil fuels but they surprisingly aren’t much better. You can make renewable e-fuels with just renewable power and recaptured CO2, but they take an obscene amount of energy and then the ICE turns most of what all that energy produced into waste heat.

Hydrogen is a fossil fuel industry distraction, it offers the best selection of the worst downsides: An expensive and currently mostly fossil-sourced fuel you need to get at a station like gas/diesel, relatively long refuel times and short range in a vehicle with a higher up-front cost and weight like an EV, and a fuel that is only available at a small handful of stations, needs to be stored at immense pressures, escapes through solids and embrittles steel on the way out, and burns with an invisible flame like only hydrogen can offer.

We won’t be able to get rid of liquid hydrocarbon fuels completely any time soon but we can make their uses a small enough fraction of what they are today that they’re no longer a major source of fossil CO2 emissions and these oddball “fucking around in the margins” solutions can fulfill a decent fraction of the demand.

Re:Renewable fuels?

By test321 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

if the EU tries to save aging VW investments, they are not only going to fail, they are going to fail harder. Or is the EU going to go full protectionist AND stick to ICEs at the same time?

Don’t worry too much for now, the news isn’t about the EU making a decision, it is about a letter sent trying to influence the Commission. The EC will propose no change unless it’s clear there is a majority to vote it at a Council meeting. With 6 countries representing 28.8% of the population, the proponents are far from the required majority of 14 votes representing 55% of the people. Obviously they know they are minority in the room and that’s the reason why they started a debate this way. The moment is delicate, but they’re still far from winning.

Re:People get nasty at Trump (bad guy) for this

By lucifuge31337 • Score: 4, Informative Thread
Little hint for why people get “nasty” about trump: his’ motivations are clear (self dealing) and even if what he’s purporting to do is something one agrees with in principal he always goes about it in an incorrect and damaging way. How is it that you haven’t picked up on this? It’s really, really obvious.

Re:Renewable fuels?

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Some car manufacturers want to wring more out of their investments in hybrid drivetrains. They are also hoping to delay long enough to catch up to the Chinese on battery tech.

Toyota is a great example. Their solid state battery tech is always a few years away from revolutionising the industry. They tried and abandoned hydrogen.

Re:Renewable fuels?

By GameboyRMH • Score: 4 Thread

Catch up to the Chinese on battery tech? They don’t have any special battery tech. There’s nothing special about Chinese EVs components, they’re basically the same stuff everyone else is making their EVs out of.

College Students Flock To A New Major: AI

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
AI is the second-largest major at M.I.T. after computer science, reports the New York Times. (Alternate URL here and here.) Though that includes students interested in applying AI in biology and health care — it’s just the beginning:
This semester, more than 3,000 students enrolled in a new college of artificial intelligence and cybersecurity at the University of South Florida in Tampa. At the University of California, San Diego, 150 first-year students signed up for a new A.I. major. And the State University of New York at Buffalo created a stand-alone “department of A.I. and society,” which is offering new interdisciplinary degrees in fields like "A.I. and policy analysis....”

[I]nterest in understanding, using and learning how to build A.I. technologies is soaring, and schools are racing to meet rising student and industry demand. Over the last two years, dozens of U.S. universities and colleges have announced new A.I. departments, majors, minors, courses, interdisciplinary concentrations and other programs.
“This is so cool to me to have the opportunity to be at the forefront of this,” one 18-year-old told the New York Times. Their article points out 62% of America’s computing programs reported drops in undergraduate enrollment this fall, according to a report in October from the Computing Research Association.

“One reason for the dip: student employment concerns.”

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader theodp for sharing the article.

Wrong major

By DrMrLordX • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Chemical Engineering/MSE will be much more valuable for those that can hack it.

This might be a good thing

By evanh • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Move away from the insanity of LLMs and massive data centre build outs and get more focused on efficient local hardware uses.

Re:Wrong major

By silentbozo • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

I get the feeling that many people who will be opting for AI/cybersecurity are hoping to somehow get the gold star of approval that allows them to get a paycheck for not actually doing work.

Kind of like how a lot of people wanted to get hired by the big tech companies (meta, alphabet, apple, amazon, netflix, etc.) and draw a 6 figure salary for basically doing nothing - except maybe video blogging about how they were making a 6 figure salary for basically doing nothing.

I would caution people trying to treat this as the new MBA with an observation - if there’s sufficient supply of “AI” degree graduates, then the individual value of that degree drops, same as with the MBA. The people getting wealthy at this stage of the game are the ones starting their own companies, or who already have established research pedigrees that make them prime poaching material.

Anybody trying to get a degree in “AI” right now that takes them out of the workforce for 4 years is going to get an incredibly rude shock when they graduate and find that most everything that doesn’t relate to fundamentals (like data science, OSI, etc.) they learned is no longer relevant. Remember how hot “prompt engineering” was at one point? Yeah…

Better as a minor

By will4 • Score: 3 Thread

Conjecture that (degree X) with an applied AI minor would be a better combination.

Conjecture 2: Some company, with a stock market capitalization of $2+ billion today, will announce an AI induced failure causing an AI induced collapse in its share price and bankruptcy before 2033. I’d expect it to be when they apply AI to commodity trading with success for the first 5 years, then increasing the AI’s impact afterwards. How would a company explain the AI, it’s commodity trading rules, risk management and validate it’s testing in non-production to the company’s financial auditors?

Quality Education

By RonVNX • Score: 3 Thread

Oh boy. And you just *know* most of the people teaching all these classes don’t know anything about it. It’s going to be students turning in assignments LLMs wrote for them, graded by LLMs.

No Rise in Radiation Levels at Chernobyl, Despite Damage from February’s Drone Strike

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
UPDATE (12/7): The New York Times clarifies today that the damage at Chernobyl hasn’t led to a rise in radiation levels:
“If there was to be some event inside the shelter that would release radioactive materials into the space inside the New Safe Confinement, because this facility is no longer sealed to the outside environment, there’s the potential for radiation to come out,” said Shaun Burnie, a senior nuclear specialist at Greenpeace who has monitored nuclear power plants in Ukraine since 2022 and last visited Chernobyl on October 31. “I have to say I don’t think that’s a particularly serious issue at the moment, because they’re not actively decommissioning the actual sarcophagus.”

The I.A.E.A. also said there was no permanent damage to the shield’s load-bearing structures or monitoring systems. A spokesman for the agency, Fredrik Dahl, said in a text message on Sunday that radiation levels were similar to what they were before the drone hit.
But “A structure designed to prevent radioactive leakage at the defunct Chernobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine is no longer operational,” Politico reported Saturday, “after Russian drones targeted it earlier this year, the U.N.‘s nuclear watchdog has found.”
[T]he large steel structure “lost its primary safety functions, including the confinement capability” when its outer cladding was set ablaze after being struck by Russian drones, according to a new report by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Beyond that, there was “no permanent damage to its load-bearing structures or monitoring systems,” it said. “Limited temporary repairs have been carried out on the roof, but timely and comprehensive restoration remains essential to prevent further degradation and ensure long-term nuclear safety,” IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said in astatement.
The Guardian has pictures of the protective shield — incuding the damage from the drone strike. The shield is the world’s largest movable land structure, reports CNN:
The IAEA, which has a permanent presence at the site, will “continue to do everything it can to support efforts to fully restore nuclear safety and security,” Grossi said.... Built in 2010 and completed in 2019, it was designed to last 100 years and has played a crucial role in securing the site.

The project cost €2.1 billion and was funded by contributions from more than 45 donor countries and organizations through the Chernobyl Shelter Fund, according to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, which in 2019 hailed the venture as “the largest international collaboration ever in the field of nuclear safety.”

And the only way to get it back

By ArmoredDragon • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The project cost €2.1 billion and was funded by contributions from more than 45 donor countries and organizations through the Chernobyl Shelter Fund

Take it out of Putin’s ass.

Re:Old News?

By dunkelfalke • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Russian authorities always lie, even if telling the truth would have been beneficial to them. They can’t help themselves.

Re:Was it a Russian drone?

By UnknowingFool • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Ukraine has more reason to attack it and blame Russia

That’s like the situation where one of my neighbor’s dogs pooped on my lawn. Which neighbor was it? Was it the one that I see conscientiously pick up their dog’s poop every time on their walks. Or the neighbor that lets their dog roam around the neighborhood with no leash? Your argument would be the conscientious one did it to frame the other neighbor. Because . . .sympathy and support? I do not believe Europe needs any more justification for sympathy and support for Ukraine.

But of course it might be possible for a russian drone on its way to Kyiv to be misguided and hit the dome by accident.

Consider Russia indiscriminately attacks civilian targets, I would bet Russia hitting it by accident or on purpose. It is hard to know at this point.

Re: Was it a Russian drone?

By ruemere • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The facts:

- Russia is attacking civilian targets in Ukraine

- Russian military is actively invading a sovereign country

- there are multiple documented war crimes committed by Russian military during the invasion

- Russian agents have committed various provocations in EU countries

- the Russians have a history of blundering in Chernobyl recently

In the light of the above, your claims are suspect.

Re:Was it a Russian drone?

By DamnOregonian • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

We can play sixteen-dimensional chess. Or we can boil it all down to one country being instigators and nothing else mattering. The dome is damaged because Russia invaded another country. Period. In my books, even if the leader of Ukraine ordered Ukranian people to damage the dome, the Russians are to blame. There’s the border. Get back on your side.

I find this line of reasoning dangerous.

If the Nazis had not started WW2, but had been invaded by some Western power unjustly, and then executed the holocaust, would the holocaust by the fault of the invading Western power?

No, it would not be.
The fault is the person who did the crime, period.
Russia is responsible for this terrible fucking war- but if Ukraine accidentally or purposefully popped the dome over Chernobyl (which I am not accusing them of doing) then it is their fault, period.

Unfortunately, the fact is- we can’t really answer who.
They’re both full of shit, as parties at war tend to be.

OpenAI Insists Target Links in ChatGPT Responses Weren’t Ads But ‘Suggestions’ - But Turns Them Off

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
A hardware security response from ChatGPT ended with “Shop for home and groceries. Connect Target.”

But “There are no live tests for ads” on ChatGPT, insists Nick Turley, OpenAI’s head of ChatGPT. Posting on X.com, he said “any screenshots you’ve seen are either not real or not ads.” Engadget reports
The OpenAI exec’s explanation comes after another post from former xAI employee Benjamin De Kraker on X that has gained traction, which featured a screenshot showing an option to shop at Target within a ChatGPT conversation. OpenAI’s Daniel McAuley responded to the post, arguing that it’s not an ad but rather an example of app integration that the company announced in October. [To which De Kraker responded “when brands inject themselves into an unrelated chat and encourage the user to go shopping at their store, that’s an ad. The more you pretend this isn’t an ad because you guys gave it a different name, the less users like or trust you.”]

However, the company’s chief research officer, Mark Chen, also replied on X that they “fell short” in this case, adding that “anything that feels like an ad needs to be handled with care.”

“We’ve turned off this kind of suggestion while we improve the model’s precision,” Chen wrote on X. “We’re also looking at better controls so you can dial this down or off if you don’t find it helpful.”

Here’s a suggestion for you

By devslash0 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

F… off, ChatGPT.

Not helpful

By marcle • Score: 3 Thread

“We’re also looking at better controls so you can dial this down or off if you don’t find it helpful.”

Helpful? Since when is an ad encouraging me to shop at Target helpful? This lame attempt at corporate spin just digs the hole deeper.

Re: Not helpful

By Entrope • Score: 4, Funny Thread

ClipGPT: “It looks like you’re trying to manage public relations in connection with an advertising campaign. Sterling Cooper & Partners is an internationally recognized agency with a long track record of successful campaigns in this area. Can I help you navigate to Link Target?”

Raises hand

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Weren’t Ads But ‘Suggestions’

Um… aren’t all ads suggestions?

How Home Assistant Leads a ‘Local-First Rebellion’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
It runs locally, a free/open source home automation platform connecting all your devices together, regardless of brand. And GitHub’s senior developer calls it "one of the most active, culturally important, and technically demanding open source ecosystems on the planet,” with tens of thousands of contributors and millions of installations.

That’s confirmed by this year’s "Octoverse” developer survey
Home Assistant was one of the fastest-growing open source projects by contributors, ranking alongside AI infrastructure giants like vLLM, Ollama, and Transformers. It also appeared in the top projects attracting first-time contributors, sitting beside massive developer platforms such as VS Code… Home Assistant is now running in more than 2 million households, orchestrating everything from thermostats and door locks to motion sensors and lighting. All on users’ own hardware, not the cloud. The contributor base behind that growth is just as remarkable: 21,000 contributors in a single year…

At its core, Home Assistant’s problem is combinatorial explosion. The platform supports “hundreds, thousands of devices… over 3,000 brands,” as [maintainer Franck Nijhof] notes. Each one behaves differently, and the only way to normalize them is to build a general-purpose abstraction layer that can survive vendor churn, bad APIs, and inconsistent firmware. Instead of treating devices as isolated objects behind cloud accounts, everything is represented locally as entities with states and events. A garage door is not just a vendor-specific API; it’s a structured device that exposes capabilities to the automation engine. A thermostat is not a cloud endpoint; it’s a sensor/actuator pair with metadata that can be reasoned about.

That consistency is why people can build wildly advanced automations. Frenck describes one particularly inventive example: “Some people install weight sensors into their couches so they actually know if you’re sitting down or standing up again. You’re watching a movie, you stand up, and it will pause and then turn on the lights a bit brighter so you can actually see when you get your drink. You get back, sit down, the lights dim, and the movie continues.” A system that can orchestrate these interactions is fundamentally a distributed event-driven runtime for physical spaces. Home Assistant may look like a dashboard, but under the hood it behaves more like a real-time OS for the home…

The local-first architecture means Home Assistant can run on hardware as small as a Raspberry Pi but must handle workloads that commercial systems offload to the cloud: device discovery, event dispatch, state persistence, automation scheduling, voice pipeline inference (if local), real-time sensor reading, integration updates, and security constraints. This architecture forces optimizations few consumer systems attempt.
“If any of this were offloaded to a vendor cloud, the system would be easier to build,” the article points out. “But Home Assistant’s philosophy reverses the paradigm: the home is the data center…”

As Nijhof says of other vendor solutions, “It’s crazy that we need the internet nowadays to change your thermostat.”

I grew up in an automated home

By RitchCraft • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

In the 70’s and 80’s I grew up in an automated home. My father, and electronics engineer, designed a custom PLC that controlled items throughout the house. You would hear automated vents throughout the duct work doing their thing as heat was transferred around the house on winter days. The system would switch over to a large battery bank when power would go out, fire up the generator in the shed, and then switch over to the generator when warmed up (that saved our bacon during the blizzard of ‘78). When more automation was needed my father would simply build another card and plug it into a free S-100 looking slot in his custom PLC. Home Assistant is the modern version of this. Keep everything local and under your control. The only thing I didn’t like about it was if you tried to take a shower longer than 15 minutes the alarm would go off at the control center in the kitchen warning that water was running too long some where, LOL.

I mean - most of them are local first

By mccalli • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
HomeAssistant’s main strength is in tying otherwise incompatible devices together. Local first is not unique though - HomeKit is local, Matter is local, I don’t know much about the Alexa/Google setups but I believe they can be controlled locally too.

Don’t get me wrong, Home Assistant is an excellent bit of kit with lots of standardisation and automation. But this article is pushing the wrong part of its strengths - local-first isn’t unique. Pick the right ecosystem and it’s all local-first anyway.

I have many different smart vendors in my home - Google (originally Nest), Philips, Meross, Aqara, Eve, Ikea, LightwaveRF, Shelly, Eufy, Switchbot…none of them require the internet. All of them can work locally. All of them work in the same ecosystem. Then I have oddities which I use HomeBridge for to bridge the gap - Roomba (older, non-Matter, Worx Landroid (robot lawnmower), Dyson Hot’n’Cool thingy, Logitech Harmony…even plugins for Synology which show the NAS’s temperature and allow shutdown. Through the use of HomeBridge, I can draw them into the same ecosystem too. None of this requires the internet.

The meme is completely overblown and quite often you can tell by people that don’t actually use this kind of tech. Obviously if I want to control this kit from outside the home then I need an internet connection, and if I want to update any of the kit then I need to download the updates from the internet for that too, but operation from within the house? Just a HomeKit/Matter hub, that’s all.

Re:I mean - most of them are local first

By mccalli • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Yep - absolutely agree with you. Just because a devices is locally controllable and has opened up localhost:8080, that doesn’t prevent it from also opening a connection to https://badthing.example:9999/ and uploading everything it can find to it. Concepts are orthogonal.

Re:Never buy any product that…

By Junta • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

The devices generally do not connect to Home Assistant as a server, the Home Assistant connects to them as a client. The devices are generally oblivious about Home Assistant and it’s nature.

I have z-wave thermostats. They have no idea what internet even is. They presumed they would be sold into some partner’s hub ecosystem, but as a consequence Home Assistant can talk to it direct.

I attached an open firmware based controller to my garage door opener. The garage door opener doesn’t know what networking is, and even the open source controller is oblivious to home assistant, just providing a general, locally accessible HTTP api. Home assistant connects to it.

If you are careful, you can generally find networkable components that do not expect to connect to any server, but can be connected to. Matter over Thread is *generally* a safe bet the device in question is friendly to local usage.

However, a lot of devices have firmware hard coded to connect only to their suppliers internet presence. Without an account you can’t control them. Sometimes they start charging a subscription. Sometimes they discontinue allowing a device to connect and operate, suggesting you buy the new model after a couple of years. Meanwhile their ‘cloud’ doesn’t add anything that you couldn’t have added yourself. Get a free domain and a let’s encrypt certificate and you can connect to your house from anywhere, if you want. Or keep it closed off to anything outside your house. Or ‘shadow’ select stuff into remote access while keeping some things local.

Re:and vendors are raceing to lockout any control

By AmiMoJo • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Some are, others are adopting Matter which is local only and an open protocol. Vote with your wallet.

Why Gen Z is Using Retro Tech

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“People in their teens and early 20s are increasingly turning to old school tech,” reports the BBC, “in a bid to unplug from the online world.”
Amazon UK told BBC Scotland News that retro-themed products surged in popularity during its Black Friday event, with portable vinyl turntables, Tamagotchis and disposable cameras among their best sellers. Retailers Currys and John Lewis also said they had seen retro gadgets making a comeback with sales of radios, instant cameras and alarm clocks showing big jumps.

While some people scroll endlessly through Netflix in search of their next watch, 17-year-old Declan prefers the more traditional approach of having a DVD in his hands. He grew up surrounded by his gran’s collection and later bought his own after visiting a shop with a friend. “The main selling point for me is the cases,” he says. Streaming services like Netflix and Disney+ dominate the market but Declan says he values ownership. “It’s nice to have something you own instead of paying for subscriptions all the time,” he says. “If I lost access to streaming tomorrow, I’d still have my favourite movies ready to watch.”

He admits DVDs are a “dying way of watching movies” but that makes them cheaper. “I think they’re just cool, there’s something authentic about having DVDs,” he says. “These things are generations old, it’s nice to have them available.”
The BBC also writes that one 21-year-old likes the “deliberate artistry” of traditional-camera photography — and the nostalgic experience of using one. They interview a 20-year-old who says vinyl records have a “more authentic sound” — and he appreciates having the physical disc and jacket art.

And one 21-year-old even tracked down the handheld PlayStation Portable he’d used as a kid…

That’s what they get

By codebase7 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Companies chose the enshitification route. A good number of people are starting to realize that it provides nothing of value at best, and potentially life altering consequences at worst. (If not out right risk of death, depending on the product category.) It should be no surprise to these companies that people are checking out.

Offline mode is basically a middle finger to these companies. As it means they are unable to sell ADs to display on the product to milk more “free” money post-purchase. (“Free” as in “socialized the costs” not “Free” as in “beer.”) Turns out that people don’t like being tracked constantly, or pestered constantly by their own things to buy other things.

DVDs (And to another extent VHS / Bluray / 8-Track / Records / Dead Trees / etc.) are a response to demanding rent per view, and then failing to deliver on the promised content. (480i unless your browser / OS / GPU supports the hardware attested DRM for the 4K playback you purchased. Which we won’t refund you for, or tell you upfront about. Oh you wanted to watch that series? Well, you’ll need to subscribe to this other service for another $$$$ per month.) To say nothing about them just memory holing something out of your “library” for whatever reason.

Video games? That’s a whole other ball of wax, but enshitification exists there too. Including, but not limited to, loot boxes / gotcha games whose sole purpose is milking whales often with gambling thrown in for good measure, content being ripped out of games during development for the sole purpose of being sold back to you at an additional cost, blatant product placements in increasing numbers, updates that only degrade the experience or force players to play in ways they don’t want to (Mario Kart World’s online), price hikes for the sake of price hikes ("$80.00? Pfft. I think gamers are ready for $120.00 games!” - Ubisoft, “We think this game of ours is valued at $90.00.” - Nintendo), intentional removal of physical sales (Poketopia, but NS2 game key cards, or digital distribution only in general. Anyone remember the PS Vita?), abuse of the patent system to remove consumer choice (Nintendo vs. Pocket Pair, but see also Capcom’s bootlicking statements, and Warner Bros Interactive’s nemesis system.), Demanding that legitimate buyers of a product be treated as common thieves and put up with an inferior version of the product while pirates get the best version, etc.

TL;DR: When you create nothing but garbage that only enriches yourself at the perpetual expense of others, you shouldn’t be surprised when people go elsewhere.

Re:they don’t know…

By Kernel Kurtz • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

When they see that modern things are more convenient, then they’ll understand why the old things fell out of use.

Because they were not a recurring revenue stream? “If I lost access to streaming tomorrow, I’d still have my favourite movies ready to watch.” Seems like some of them do indeed understand. Hopefully more of them figure it out.

Absolutely the case

By roc97007 • Score: 3 Thread

Daughter is a big fan of physical media, both CDs and DVDs. She doesn’t buy blu-rays because her TV wouldn’t really benefit and her current DVD player, which “works fine” doesn’t support them. I have to remember that when I buy movies for her for birthday or Christmas, they have to be on plain DVDs.

I’m a photographer, and at one time daughter wanted to follow suit. I got her a “prosumer” digital camera which she used for a while but didn’t really get into it. What she really wanted was my old film camera. This led to lomography, a series of vintage medium format cameras, and a lot of prints. All physical media.

A few years ago she won a bid on a Nintendo 64 with one controller. She found another controller somewhere, and started investing in old game cartridges. I pointed out that those games are available now on modern hardware via emulation, but she says there’s something satisfying with having physical cartridges of single games.

I understand her views partially. I shoot Nikon, currently Z series (mirrorless) but earlier this year I invested in a Nikon F4 film camera because I wanted to re-experience film. I love the feel of the thing and the completely different workflow of film vs digital. I still get paid to take digital photos, but I play with film.

Similarly, I still buy CDs instead of streaming music. Older CDs are dirt cheap right now, so in the last couple years I’ve picked up a lot of music that I used to have on vinyl years ago. I will still dump the CD into itunes and put the mp3s on a thumb drive for the truck, but there’s something satisfying in having a physical copy.

Newspaper

By JBMcB • Score: 3 Thread
My son works for his high school newspaper. He brought in a battery powered Panasonic cassette recorder to do interviews, complete with the cheesy chrome microphone it came with. It got people more interested in the interviews and he got some good copy out of them. He also brought in a portable typewriter we found on the side of the road being thrown away. He fixed it up and uses it to type notes in newspaper class. Everyone in that class loves it.

The way to go

By Slashythenkilly • Score: 3 Thread
When you buy physical media, its yours, forever.

Is Netflix Trying to Buy Warner Bros. or Kill It?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Why does Netflix want to buy Warner Bros, asks the chief film critic at the long-running motion-picture magazine Variety. “It is hard, at this moment, to resist the suspicion that the ultimate reason… is to eliminate the competition.”
[Warner Bros. is] one of the only companies that’s keeping movies as we’ve known them alive… Some people think movies are going the way of the horse-and-buggy. A company like Warner Bros. has been the tangible proof that they’re not. Ted Sarandos, the co-CEO of Netflix, has a different agenda. He has been unabashed about declaring that the era of movies seen in movie theaters is an antiquated concept. This is what he believes — which is fine. I think a more crucial point is that this is what he wants.

The Netflix business strategy isn’t simply about being the most successful streaming company. It’s about changing the way people watch movies; it’s about replacing what we used to call moviegoing with streaming. (You could still call it moviegoing, only now you’re just going into your living room.) It in no way demonizes Sarandos — he’d probably take it as a compliment — to say that there’s a world-domination aspect to the Netflix grand strategy. Sarandos’s vision is to have the entire planet wired, with everyone watching movies and shows at home. There’s a school of thought that sees this an advance, a step forward in civilization. “Remember the days when we used to have to go out to a movie theater? How funny! Now you can just pop up a movie — no trailers! — with the click of a remote....”

Once he owns Warner Bros., will Sarandos keep using the studio to make movies that enjoy powerful runs in theaters the way Sinners and Weapons and One Battle After Another did? In the statement he made to investors and media today, Sarandos said, “I’d say right now, you should count on everything that is planned on going to the theater through Warner Bros. will continue to go to the theaters through Warner Bros.” He added, “But our primary goal is to bring first-run movies to our members, because that’s what they’re looking for.” Not exactly a ringing declaration of loyalty to the religion of cinema. And given Sarandos’s track record, there is no reason to believe that he will suddenly change his spots.

A letter sent to Congress by a group of anonymous Hollywood producers, who voiced “grave concerns” about Netflix buying Warner Bros., stated, “They have no incentive to support theatrical exhibition, and they have every incentive to kill it.” If that happens, though, I have no doubt that Sarandos will be smart enough to do it gradually. Warner Bros. films will probably be released in a “normal” fashion…for a while. Maybe a year or two. But five years from now? There is good reason to believe that by then, a “Warner Bros. movie,” even a DC comic-book extravaganza, would be a streaming-only release, or maybe a two-weeks-in-theaters release, all as a more general way of trying to shorten the theatrical window, which could be devastating to the movie business.

Do we know all this to be true? No, but the indicators are somewhat overpowering. (He’s been explicit about the windows…)
An anonymous group of “concerned feature film producers” sent an open letter to Congress warning Netflix would “effectively hold a noose around the theatrical marketplace,” reports Variety.

And CNN also got this quote from Cinema United, a trade association that represents more than 30,000 movie screens in the United States. “Netflix’s stated business model does not support theatrical exhibition,” Cinema United President/CEO Michael O’Leary said in a statement. “In fact, it is the opposite.”

How does one do this?

By evil_aaronm • Score: 3, Interesting Thread

An anonymous group of “concerned feature film producers” sent an open letter to Congress

How does a group anonymously send a letter to “Congress”? Is there an address and mailbox for anonymous letters? Do you just let it slip out of your pocket while walking on the steps of the big building and a staffer picks it up to process? What are the mechanics of this?

We used to love going to theaters…

By ThomasBHardy • Score: 5, Informative Thread

But these days they are too expensive, doubly so if you want snacks. The last time we went, it cost us $32 for a small popcorn and 2 waters.
The sound was turned up so loud that it was borderline painful. And this is not just “that one time” it’s been a trend for years. All of the joy has been robbed from the experience.

I’m totally fine letting theaters die off. People are loud and obnoxious and are always texting on their phones and frankly, I can have a better experience at home.

Someone would have to explain to me what the appeal of going to the theaters is these days, because everything about them that we loved is gone.

Re:We used to love going to theaters…

By crunchy_one • Score: 4, Funny Thread

Someone would have to explain to me what the appeal of going to the theaters is these days, because everything about them that we loved is gone.

Novel respiratory infections.

As if!

By jenningsthecat • Score: 3 Thread

Now you can just pop up a movie — no trailers! — with the click of a remote.

In the first place, trailers - which play before the movie, are a feature, not a bug.

In the second place, streamed movies can be interrupted by ads - and I’m not talking about mere product placement. So when it comes to streaming - no, fuck you very much.

Netflix

By fuzzyf • Score: 4, Funny Thread
While Netflix have had quite a few really good ones I’m reminded of a joke.

A priest, a rabbi, a lesbian woman, a trans man, an teen hacker girl, a black gay, a white overly racist guy and a black woman with a PhD walks into a bar.
Bartender: What? new a new Netflix series?

New FreeBSD 15 Retires 32-Bit Ports and Modernizes Builds

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
FreeBSD 15.0-RELEASE arrived this week, notes this report from The Register, which calls it the latest release “of the Unix world’s leading alternative to Linux.”
As well as numerous bug fixes and upgrades to many of its components, the major changes in this version are reductions in the number of platforms the OS supports, and in how it’s built and how its component software is packaged.

FreeBSD 15 has significantly reduced support for 32-bit platforms. Compared to FreeBSD 14 in 2023, there are no longer builds for x86-32, POWER, or ARM-v6. As the release notes put it:

“The venerable 32-bit hardware platforms i386, armv6, and 32-bit powerpc have been retired. 32-bit application support lives on via the 32-bit compatibility mode in their respective 64-bit platforms. The armv7 platform remains as the last supported 32-bit platform. We thank them for their service.”

Now FreeBSD supports five CPU architectures — two Tier-1 platforms, x86-64 and AArch64, and three Tier-2 platforms, armv7 and up, powerpc64le, and riscv64.

Arguably, it’s time. AMD’s first 64-bit chips started shipping 22 years ago. Intel launched the original x86 chip, the 8086 in 1978. These days, 64-bit is nearly as old as the entire Intel 80x86 platform was when the 64-bit versions first appeared. In comparison, a few months ago, Debian 13 also dropped its x86-32 edition — six years after Canonical launched its first x86-64-only distro, Ubuntu 19.10.

Another significant change is that this is the first version built under the new pkgbase system, although it’s still experimental and optional for now. If you opt for a pkgbase installation, then the core OS itself is installed from multiple separate software packages, meaning that the whole system can be updated using the package manager. Over in the Linux world, this is the norm, but Linux is a very different beast… The plan is that by FreeBSD 16, scheduled for December 2027, the restructure will be complete, the old distribution sets will be removed, and the current freebsd-update command and its associated infrastructure can be turned off.

Another significant change is reproducible builds, a milestone the project reached in late October. This change is part of a multi-project initiative toward ensuring deterministic compilation: to be able to demonstrate that a certain set of source files and compilation directives is guaranteed to produce identical binaries, as a countermeasure against compromised code. A handy side-effect is that building the whole OS, including installation media images, no longer needs root access.

There are of course other new features. Lots of drivers and subsystems have been updated, and this release has better power management, including suspend and resume. There’s improved wireless networking, with support for more Wi-Fi chipsets and faster wireless standards, plus updated graphics drivers… The release announcement calls out the inclusion of OpenZFS 2.4.0-rc4, OpenSSL 3.5.4, and OpenSSH 10.0 p2, and notes the inclusion of some new quantum-resistant encryption systems…

In general, we found FreeBSD 15 easier and less complicated to work with than either of the previous major releases. It should be easier on servers too. The new OCI container support in FreeBSD 14.2, which we wrote about a year ago, is more mature now. FreeBSD has its own version of Podman, and you can run Linux containers on FreeBSD. This means you can use Docker commands and tools, which are familiar to many more developers than FreeBSD’s native Jail system.

“FreeBSD has its own place in servers and the public cloud, but it’s getting easier to run it as a desktop OS as well,” the article concludes. “It can run all the main Linux desktops, including GNOME on Wayland.”

“There’s no systemd here, and never will be — and no Flatpak or Snap either, for that matter.

no systemd

By gweihir • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

That alone is a reason to make sure FreeBSD will stay around. “No Flatpak or Snap either” is another.

Good to see that some people still understand what “solid engineering” means.

I miss PC-BSD

By unixisc • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
I’d like to see a return of, if not the PC-BSD/TrueOS distros themselves, at least the following features: The PBI system of package installation The Lumina UI I’ve also been hearing about Wayland being ported to FreeBSD, although not sure what good it is, given the many Linux underpinnings it seems to have. It would be good to have XLibre become its default windowing system, and then Lumina on top of that On the browser front, I’d like to see Brave be ported there and be one of the options of browsers that one can install, if not the default browser

The bigger story

By jizmonkey • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Big endian support is dead. Power was always great for testing code, because you could get an old Mac off e-bay for $100 and make sure stuff worked right. Now the only Power architecture supported is little endian.

I mean, if you see computer programming as just a means to an end, that’s fine, but if you see it as an art form (c.f., “The Art of Computer Programming,” written by some guy) it’s important to write portable code.

Re:The bigger story

By adri • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

It’s not dead, it’s still showing up in weird places you don’t run linux/freebsd in embedded RTOSes which borrow the freebsd networking/wifi stack.

Also PPC64 BE may be dead from the current generation of openpower chips for the bare metal hardware, but not from the VM side. There’s a weird reason there’s still PPC64BE and it’s due to a large three letter company…

Re:I miss PC-BSD

By adri • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

We’re working on it!

-adrian@freebsd.org

Homebrew Can Now Help You Install Flatpaks Too

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Homebrew, the package manager for macOS and Linux, just got a handy new feature in the latest v5.0.4 update,” reports How-To Geek.

Brewfile install scripts “are now more like a one-stop shop for installing software, as Flatpaks are now supported alongside Brew packages, Mac App Store Apps, and other packages.”
For those times when you need to install many software packages at once, like when setting up a new PC or virtual machine, you can create a Brewfile with a list of packages and run it with the 'brew bundle' command. However, the Brewfile isn’t limited to just Homebrew packages. You can also use it to install Mac App Store apps, graphical apps through Casks, Visual Studio Code extensions, and Go language packages. Starting with this week’s Homebrew v5.0.4 release, Flatpaks are now supported in Brewfiles as well…

This turns Homebrew into a fantastic setup tool for macOS, Linux, and Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) environments. You can have one script with all your preferred software, and use ‘if’ statements with platform variables and existing file checks for added portability.

So what’s the actual advantage to this?

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 3 Thread

Bookkeeping?

I mean, both Mac App Store packages and Flatpaks are already self-contained… so there’s no dependency management you have to think about with those “apps”. And WSL already supports numerous Linux distros, each of which already has its own package manager (e.g. dnf, apt).

Many Privileged Students at US Universities are Getting Extra Time on Tests After ‘Disability’ Diagnoses

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
Today America’s college professors “struggle to accommodate the many students with an official disability designation,” reports the Atlantic, “which may entitle them to extra time, a distraction-free environment, or the use of otherwise-prohibited technology.”

Their staff writer argues these accommodations “have become another way for the most privileged students to press their advantage.”
[Over the past decade and a half] the share of students at selective universities who qualify for accommodations — often, extra time on tests — has grown at a breathtaking pace. At the University of Chicago, the number has more than tripled over the past eight years; at UC Berkeley, it has nearly quintupled over the past 15 years. The increase is driven by more young people getting diagnosed with conditions such as ADHD, anxiety, and depression, and by universities making the process of getting accommodations easier. The change has occurred disproportionately at the most prestigious and expensive institutions. At Brown and Harvard, more than 20 percent of undergraduates are registered as disabled. At Amherst, that figure is 34 percent. Not all of those students receive accommodations, but researchers told me that most do. The schools that enroll the most academically successful students, in other words, also have the largest share of students with a disability that could prevent them from succeeding academically. “You hear ‘students with disabilities’ and it’s not kids in wheelchairs,” one professor at a selective university, who requested anonymity because he doesn’t have tenure, told me. “It’s just not. It’s rich kids getting extra time on tests....”

Recently, mental-health issues have joined ADHD as a primary driver of the accommodations boom. Over the past decade, the number of young people diagnosed with depression or anxiety has exploded. L. Scott Lissner, the ADA coordinator at Ohio State University, told me that 36 percent of the students registered with OSU’s disability office have accommodations for mental-health issues, making them the largest group of students his office serves. Many receive testing accommodations, extensions on take-home assignments, or permission to miss class. Students at Carnegie Mellon University whose severe anxiety makes concentration difficult might get extra time on tests or permission to record class sessions, Catherine Samuel, the school’s director of disability resources, told me. Students with social-anxiety disorder can get a note so the professor doesn’t call on them without warning… Some students get approved for housing accommodations, including single rooms and emotional-support animals. Other accommodations risk putting the needs of one student over the experience of their peers. One administrator told me that a student at a public college in California had permission to bring their mother to class. This became a problem, because the mom turned out to be an enthusiastic class participant. Professors told me that the most common — and most contentious — accommodation is the granting of extra time on exams…

Several of the college students I spoke with for this story said they knew someone who had obtained a dubious diagnosis… The surge itself is undeniable. Soon, some schools may have more students receiving accommodations than not, a scenario that would have seemed absurd just a decade ago. Already, at one law school, 45 percent of students receive academic accommodations. Paul Graham Fisher, a Stanford professor who served as co-chair of the university’s disability task force, told me, “I have had conversations with people in the Stanford administration. They’ve talked about at what point can we say no? What if it hits 50 or 60 percent? At what point do you just say ‘We can’t do this’?” This year, 38 percent of Stanford undergraduates are registered as having a disability; in the fall quarter, 24 percent of undergraduates were receiving academic or housing accommodations.

Re:I see something like that as well

By godrik • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

(I teach CS in college and grad school.)

Yeah, that’s essentially what I do. My typical exam time is 75 minutes because of the way my university schedule is setup. My exams usually do not require more than about 35 minutes to do. You can get a good prediction for peoples grade based on when they leave.
If they leave before 30 minutes, they are likely getting F; leaving between 30 to 45 minutes is likely A; leaving within 40 to 55 is likely B; leaving before 70 minutes is likely C, staying to the end are usually Ds and Fs.

The time angle only make sense in orders of magnitude. I am teaching database this semester. I have a few SQL questions on my exam. It should take you about a minute or two to figure out the question and answer it. If you are particularly slow/not too practiced, it might take you 4-5. But it shouldn’t take 10.
I often see students saying “I could figure it out, but it would have taken me much more time”. Then really it means you are not practiced enough, so I still feel the grade is fair.

Re: ADHD does not exist

By Mononymous • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Why have any rules or standards at all? Just give all students full credit in everything.
If we’re going to make college the last bit of preparation standing between “children” and the real world, at some point we have to require them to do something hard.

Time for a critical thinking lesson

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
The article is written by one Rose Horowitch

A quick Google search turns up several of her other “articles”

Every single one of them is a poorly written and poorly researched opinion piece similar to this one talking about some moral panic regarding the collapse of the American education system with a special emphasis on how bad colleges.

This is more anti-higher education propaganda because Rich assholes do not want your kid or your grandkid getting a good education and thinking for themselves.

Little surprise to see it in the Atlantic, but honestly after what I saw in the last 2 years with regards to American Media not all that surprised. The Atlantic is owned by Steve jobs’s ex-wife so we’re not exactly talking salt of the earth ownership here…

As usual, follow the money

Autism does exist [Re:ADHD does not exist]

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

And I say that that applies to autism to. Social skills is something you need to practise as child, it is not congenital. Some have more talent for this, other less. The latter need to practise. Just like with everything from math to juggle balls.

Autism most certainly does exist. The difficulty here is that in the most recent DSM, autism was redefined as a spectrum, and the “mild” end of the spectrum manifests as socially awkward. But there’s no clear dividing line anymore; neurotypical behavior can shade into socially awkward behavior by infinitesimal degrees. And, worse, in the popular conversation about autism, most people talk about the mild form, previously a separate diagnosis of “Asperger’s”, and the profound version gets ignored.
https://www.hawaiitribune-hera…
  https://www.economist.com/scie…
  https://www.nytimes.com/2025/1…

  (apologies for the paywalled articles, but those are the ones that go into better depth).

Re: ADHD does not exist

By superposed • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I spent a while as a professor of electrical engineering. As a student, I always hated when tests were a time trial to get as much done as you could in the time available. Yes, being prepared helps with that. But those tests evaluate calmness under pressure, speed of writing and effectiveness of test-taking strategies more than the material you learned in the course. And if there’s only time to answer half the questions, then students only need to know half the material to get a decent grade after the curve. (I also hated mis-written test questions where there was no correct answer.) Speed tests don’t predict real-world performance either, because at work you generally have enough time to think (and references), but you have to get it right.

So as a professor I always sat down and answered (and timed) every question on my tests in advance. Then I trimmed it down until there were only 17 mins of material for a 50 min exam. That eliminated speed as a major factor. So then there was also no advantage in taking extra time. If you knew the material well on test day, you would do fine, and if you didn’t, you wouldn’t. I wish more professors would take this approach.