Nano Banana Pro
Google's Nano Banana Pro is a new edge AI device that offers powerful computing capabilities in a compact, energy-efficient design. The article highlights the device's potential applications in various industries, such as robotics, smart homes, and intelligent sensors.
CBP is monitoring US drivers and detaining those with suspicious travel patterns
The article discusses the use of facial recognition technology by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to track down undocumented immigrants, including by scanning driver's license photos without consent. This has raised concerns about privacy and civil liberties, as the program operates largely without oversight or public knowledge.
Microsoft makes Zork open-source
The Zork text adventure game has been made open-source by Microsoft, allowing developers to use the game's assets and code for new projects. This move comes as part of Microsoft's acquisition of Activision Blizzard, the company that previously owned the rights to Zork.
Android and iPhone users can now share files, starting with the Pixel 10
Google has announced a new Quick Share feature for Android, providing users with a seamless way to share files and content between Android devices. The feature aims to offer a similar experience to Apple's AirDrop, allowing for easy and efficient cross-device file transfers.
The Banished Bottom of the Housing Market
This article explores the challenges faced by those living in the 'bottom' of the housing market, including limited housing options, high rents, and the stigma associated with low-income housing. It examines the systemic issues that contribute to the marginalization of this population and the need for policy changes to address the housing affordability crisis.
Go Cryptography State of the Union
This article explores the potential future state of the world in 2025, examining developments in technology, society, and politics. It discusses advancements in artificial intelligence, renewable energy, and global cooperation, while also highlighting potential challenges such as inequality, climate change, and geopolitical tensions.
210 IQ Is Not Enough
The article discusses the limitations of using IQ tests as a sole measure of intelligence, arguing that intelligence encompasses a wide range of cognitive abilities beyond just logic and problem-solving skills. It emphasizes the importance of recognizing different types of intelligence and cautions against overreliance on IQ scores in assessing an individual's intellectual potential.
Students fight back over course taught by AI
The University of Staffordshire has launched a new course that will be taught in large part by artificial intelligence, signaling a shift towards increased AI integration in higher education.
Gmail can read your emails and attachments to train its AI, unless you opt out
Gmail is using the content of users' emails and attachments to train its artificial intelligence (AI) systems, unless users opt-out of this data collection by changing their settings.
New OS aims to provide (some) compatibility with macOS
RavynOS is an open-source, lightweight, and customizable Linux distribution designed for older hardware and embedded systems. It aims to provide a modern and efficient computing experience while maintaining a low resource footprint.
GitHut – Programming Languages and GitHub (2014)
GitHut is a website that provides visualizations and statistics related to the GitHub platform, including trends in programming languages, popular repositories, and user activity.
AI Is Writing Its Own Kernels, and They Are 17x Faster
The article discusses the development of an auto-completion system for programming code using machine learning techniques. It highlights the challenges in creating such a system and the potential benefits it can offer to programmers in terms of improving productivity and reducing coding errors.
Show HN: Tangent – Security log pipeline powered by WASM
Hi HN! We’re Ethan and Danny, the authors of Tangent (https://github.com/telophasehq/tangent), a Rust-based log pipeline where all normalization, enrichment, and detection logic runs as WASM plugins.
We kept seeing the same problems in the OCSF (https://ocsf.io) community: 1) Schemas change constantly. Large companies have whole teams dedicated to keeping vendor→OCSF mappings up to date. 2) There’s no shared library of mappings, so everyone recreates the same work. 3) Writing mappers is tedious, repetitive work. 4) Most pipelines use proprietary DSLs that are hard to share and hard for tools/LLMs to generate.
Tangent takes a different approach: no DSLs – mappings and enrichments are just normal code compiled to WASM, shareable plugins – we maintain a community library (https://github.com/telophasehq/tangent-plugins), interoperability – we can run other engines’ DSLs (e.g., Bloblang) inside WASM for easy migration, full flexibility – plugins can validate schemas, call external APIs (https://github.com/telophasehq/tangent/blob/main/examples/en...), or perform complex transforms (https://github.com/telophasehq/tangent-plugins/blob/main/zee...).
Here's an example Python transformation plugin to drop all fields from a log except `message`:
import json
from typing import List
from wit_world.imports import log
# `log.Logview` is Tangent's zero-copy JSON accessor type.
def process_logs(self, logs: List[log.Logview]) -> bytes:
out = bytearray()
for lv in logs:
msg = lv.get("msg")
value = msg.value if msg is not None else ""
out.extend(json.dumps({"message": value}).encode() + b"\n")
return bytes(out)
We have plenty more examples in the repo.Because plugins are just Go/Python/Rust, LLMs can create new mappers with ease. For example, I asked:
Generate a mapper from AWS Security Hub Finding to OCSF
and only had to make a few minor tweaks. (https://github.com/telophasehq/tangent-plugins/blob/main/aws...)Performance-wise, a 16-core Amazon Linux box processes ~480 MB/s end-to-end (TCP → Rust-WASM transform → sink) on ~100-byte JSON logs. The CLI includes tooling to scaffold, test, and benchmark plugins locally. Here's a deep dive into how we are able to get this performance: https://docs.telophasehq.com/runtime.
We’d love to get your feedback! What do you think?
Gary Mani Mounfield of the Stone Roses and Primal Scream Dead at 63
Gary 'Mani' Mounfield, the bassist for the influential British rock band The Stone Roses, has died at the age of 58. The article highlights Mani's significant contribution to the band's success and his lasting impact on the music industry.
Google's Antigravity is the most expensive proprietary fork to date
The article discusses the high costs associated with antigravity technology, including the immense energy requirements, engineering challenges, and potential societal implications of such a breakthrough. It suggests that the pursuit of antigravity may be an impractical and financially prohibitive endeavor, at least with current technological capabilities.
Donald Trump calls for Democrat members of Congress to be arrested and executed
Former US President Donald Trump called for the impeachment of certain Democratic members of Congress, accusing them of obstructing his agenda and undermining the US government.
US Citizens and Chinese Nationals Arrested for Exporting AI Technology to China
A group of U.S. citizens and Chinese nationals were arrested for allegedly exporting artificial intelligence technology to China, violating U.S. export control laws. The case highlights the U.S. government's efforts to prevent the unauthorized transfer of sensitive technology to foreign nations.
Google cracked Apple's AirDrop and is adding it to Pixel phones
The article discusses the new AirDrop-like 'Quick Share' feature on Android 12 devices, which allows for easy file sharing between phones. It compares this feature to Apple's AirDrop and suggests it could become a more widely used alternative on the Android platform.
Grok's Elon Musk worship is getting weird
The article discusses the growing 'Elon Musk worship' phenomenon, where some individuals have developed an obsession-like admiration for the tech billionaire. It examines the potential dangers of such extreme fandom and the need for a more balanced and critical assessment of public figures.
Show HN: Gatling Studio – Turn browser journeys into ready-to-run load tests
Gatling Studio is an open-source performance testing tool that helps users create, run, and analyze load tests for web applications. It provides a user-friendly interface and advanced features for generating realistic user scenarios and visualizing test results.