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Project Genie: Experimenting with infinite, interactive worlds
meetpateltech about 11 hours ago

Project Genie: Experimenting with infinite, interactive worlds

Google's Project Genie explores using large language models to assist humans in creative tasks like writing stories, designing products, and solving problems, with the goal of enhancing human intelligence and capabilities.

blog.google
481 240
Summary
County pays $600k to pentesters it arrested for assessing courthouse security
MBCook about 10 hours ago

County pays $600k to pentesters it arrested for assessing courthouse security

A county in Ohio paid $600,000 to a security firm after arresting its employees for assessing the security of a courthouse, highlighting the risks and legal complexities surrounding ethical hacking and penetration testing activities.

arstechnica.com
342 167
Summary
My Mom and Dr. DeepSeek (2025)
kieto about 10 hours ago

My Mom and Dr. DeepSeek (2025)

The article examines the widespread use of AI chatbots in China, particularly their deployment in the healthcare sector to assist patients. It explores the benefits and potential drawbacks of these conversational AI systems in the Chinese context.

restofworld.org
137 83
Summary
Flameshot
OsrsNeedsf2P about 9 hours ago

Flameshot

Flameshot is an open-source, cross-platform screenshot tool that provides advanced features such as annotation, editing, and sharing capabilities. It offers a user-friendly interface and is available for various operating systems, making it a versatile choice for capturing and manipulating screenshots.

github.com
135 51
Summary
The WiFi only works when it's raining (2024)
epicalex about 8 hours ago

The WiFi only works when it's raining (2024)

The article explores a peculiar phenomenon where a person's Wi-Fi connection only works when it's raining, highlighting the unexpected impact weather conditions can have on wireless technology and the need for further research in this area.

predr.ag
105 35
Summary
AI's impact on engineering jobs may be different than expected
rbanffy about 10 hours ago

AI's impact on engineering jobs may be different than expected

The article explores the evolving impact of AI on engineering jobs, suggesting that the initial projections of widespread job losses may not fully capture the nuanced and complex nature of this transformation. It highlights the potential for AI to augment and enhance engineering work rather than entirely replace human roles.

semiengineering.com
91 160
Summary
Apple buys Israeli startup Q.ai
ishener about 8 hours ago

Apple buys Israeli startup Q.ai

https://www.reuters.com/business/apple-acquires-audio-ai-sta...

techcrunch.com
80 28
Summary
Show HN: Kolibri, a DIY music club in Sweden
EastLondonCoder about 12 hours ago

Show HN: Kolibri, a DIY music club in Sweden

We’re Maria and Jonatan, and we run a small DIY music club in Norrköping, Sweden, called Kolibri.

We run it through a small Swedish company. We pay artists, handle logistics, and take operations seriously. But it has still behaved like a tiny cultural startup in the most relevant way: you have to build trust, form a recognisable identity, pace yourself, avoid burnout, and make something people genuinely return to, without big budgets or growth hacks. We run it on the last Friday of every month in a small restaurant venue, typically 50–70 paying guests.

What we built isn’t an app. It’s a repeatable local format: a standing night where strangers become regulars, centred on music rather than networking.

We put up a simple anchor site with schedule + photos/video: https://kolibrinkpg.com/

What you can “try” on the site:

  * Photos and short videos from nights (atmosphere + scale)
  * A sense of programming/curation (what we book, how we sequence a night)
  * Enough context to copy parts of the format if you’re building something similar locally
How it started: almost accidentally. I was doing one of many remote music sessions with a friend from London, passing Ableton projects back and forth while talking over FaceTime. One evening I ran out of beer and wandered into a nearby restaurant (Mitropa). A few conversations later we had a date on the calendar.

That restaurant is still the venue. It’s owned by a local family: one runs the kitchen, another manages the space. Over time they’ve become close to us, so I’ll put it plainly: if they called and needed help, we’d drop everything.

Maria was quickly dubbed klubbvärdinnan (hostess), partly as a joke. In Sweden in the 1970s, posh nightclubs sometimes had a klubbvärdinna, a kind of social anchor. She later adopted it as her DJ alias, and the role became real: greeting people, recognising newcomers who look uncertain, and quietly setting the tone for how people treat one another.

The novelty (if there is any) is that we treat the night like a designed social system:

  * Curation is governance. If the music is coherent and emotionally “true”, people relax. If it’s generic, people perform.
  * The room needs a host layer. Someone has to make it socially safe to arrive alone.
  * Regulars are made, not acquired. People return when they feel recognised and when the night has a consistent identity.
  * DIY constraints create legitimacy. Turning a corner restaurant into a club on a shoestring sounds amateurish, but it reads as real.
  * Behavioural boundaries are practical. If newcomers can’t trust the room, the whole thing stops working.
On marketing: we learned quickly that “posting harder” isn’t the same as building a local thing. What worked best was analogue outreach: we walked around town, visited local businesses we genuinely like, bought something, introduced ourselves, and asked if we could leave a flyer. It’s boring, but it builds trust because it’s human, not algorithmic.

A concrete example: early on we needed Instagram content that could show music visually without filming crowds in a club. We started filming headphone-walk clips: one person, headphones on, walking through town to a track we chose. It looked good, stylised, cinematic, and that mattered more than we expected. People didn’t just tolerate being filmed; many wanted to be in the videos. Then we’d invite them for a couple of free drinks afterwards as a thank-you and a chance to actually talk. That was a reliable early trust-building mechanism.

At one point we were offered a larger venue with a proper budget. It was tempting. But we’d just hosted our first live gig at Mitropa and felt something click. We realised the format works because it’s small and grounded. Scale would change the social physics.

kolibrinkpg.com
36 9
Summary
Cutting Up Curved Things
ecto about 6 hours ago

Cutting Up Curved Things

The article explores the mathematical concept of tessellation, which involves the arrangement of shapes to cover a surface without gaps or overlaps. It discusses the historical development of tessellation, its various types, and its applications in art, architecture, and design.

campedersen.com
30 6
Summary
Reid Hoffman: Silicon Valley can't be neutral any longer
afavour about 8 hours ago

Reid Hoffman: Silicon Valley can't be neutral any longer

The article argues that Silicon Valley can no longer remain neutral on political and social issues, as tech leaders have a responsibility to use their influence to address pressing societal challenges. It suggests that the industry should take a more active role in shaping the future rather than remaining passive.

sfstandard.com
28 3
Summary
Taco writer detained–briefly–by feds
reaperducer about 8 hours ago

Taco writer detained–briefly–by feds

A writer who covers the taco industry was briefly detained by federal agents while reporting in the Big Bend region of Texas. The article explores the incident and raises questions about the treatment of journalists, particularly in border areas, when covering issues related to immigration and border enforcement.

bigbendsentinel.com
15 2
Summary
The Trump Administration Is Publishing a Stream of Nazi Propaganda
zerosizedweasle about 7 hours ago

The Trump Administration Is Publishing a Stream of Nazi Propaganda

The article examines the Trump administration's efforts to monitor and control social media, including plans by the Department of Homeland Security to track public social media posts for potential threats. It highlights concerns over the government's expanding surveillance of citizens' online activities.

theatlantic.com
15 2
Summary
Show HN: Transcribee: YouTube transcriber that builds a knowledge base
ofabioroma about 9 hours ago

Show HN: Transcribee: YouTube transcriber that builds a knowledge base

Transcribee is an open-source automated transcription tool that uses natural language processing to convert audio files into text transcripts. It provides a simple and efficient way to transcribe audio content, with features like speaker diarization and multi-language support.

github.com
14 1
Summary
Show HN: vind – A Better Kind (Kubernetes in Docker)
saiyampathak about 11 hours ago

Show HN: vind – A Better Kind (Kubernetes in Docker)

Vind is an open-source, lightweight, and high-performance search engine that can be easily integrated into web applications. It provides a simple and efficient way to add search functionality to various types of content, including documents, images, and more.

github.com
14 1
Summary
EFF to Close Friday in Solidarity with National Shutdown
8organicbits about 6 hours ago

EFF to Close Friday in Solidarity with National Shutdown

The article discusses the Electronic Frontier Foundation's (EFF) decision to close on Friday, January 20, 2026, in solidarity with a national shutdown. The shutdown is aimed at raising awareness about issues such as government surveillance, corporate privacy violations, and the need for stronger digital rights protections.

eff.org
13 1
Summary
A practical primer on confidential computing
grun about 11 hours ago

A practical primer on confidential computing

The article provides a primer on confidential computing, a cloud computing technology that protects data in use by executing code in a secure, hardware-based environment. It explains the key concepts, benefits, and current usage of confidential computing.

github.com
12 0
Summary
Show HN: VCluster Free – Free K8s Multi-Tenancy with Virtual Clusters
gentele about 10 hours ago

Show HN: VCluster Free – Free K8s Multi-Tenancy with Virtual Clusters

vCluster is launching a free version of its enterprise-grade Kubernetes platform, offering advanced features like multi-tenancy, resource isolation, and high availability at no cost, enabling developers to build and deploy applications more efficiently.

vcluster.com
12 3
Summary
Networks Hold the Key to a Decades-Old Problem About Waves
makira about 9 hours ago

Networks Hold the Key to a Decades-Old Problem About Waves

The article explores how network theory can help solve a decades-old problem in physics related to the behavior of waves, suggesting that understanding the interconnected relationships within complex systems may provide insights into long-standing scientific challenges.

quantamagazine.org
8 1
Summary
Anna's Archive is sued for $13T
antonmks about 9 hours ago

Anna's Archive is sued for $13T

Spotify and major record labels have sued Anna's Archive, a music download site, alleging the 'brazen theft' of millions of copyrighted music files worth over $1 trillion. The lawsuit claims Anna's Archive has illegally distributed the music, causing significant financial harm to the recording industry.

nme.com
8 4
Summary
Show HN: Autonomous recovery for distributed training jobs
tsvoboda about 11 hours ago

Show HN: Autonomous recovery for distributed training jobs

Hi HN! We’re TensorPool. We help companies access and optimize large scale compute for training foundation models.

The Problem

It’s been almost a year since we’ve finished YC, and we’ve just crossed 100,000 multinode training GPU hours run on our platform.

On those training runs, we’ve seen countless 3am job crashes because of issues like an Xid error from a flaky GPU or an S3 timeout that corrupted a checkpoint save. By the time you wake up and notice, you've lost 8+ hours of compute. You scramble to diagnose the issue, manually restart from the last checkpoint, and hope it doesn't happen again. Rinse and repeat.

For training runs that take days to weeks, this constant babysitting is exhausting and expensive. The research iteration cycles lost can also make or break a model release (especially for short reservations).

What We Built

This agent monitors your training jobs and autonomously recovers them when things go wrong. It works with Kubernetes, Slurm, and TensorPool Jobs.

We originally built the TensorPool Agent as an internal tool to help us debug failures with our own customers. Over time, we realized its performance was so good that we could automate the entire triage process. We're now releasing a public beta for people to use.

Best case: The TensorPool Agent detects the failure, diagnoses the root cause, fixes it, and restarts your job from the last checkpoint – all while you sleep ;)

Worst case: If the TensorPool agent can't fix the issue automatically, it delivers a preliminary RCA and a list of actions it attempted, giving you a head start on debugging.

How It Works

1) Registration – You provide credentials to your job scheduler via our dashboard. Perms are granted on a whitelist basis; you explicitly control what actions the agent can take.

2) Monitoring – The agent continuously monitors your job for failure conditions.

3) Recovery – On failure, the agent analyzes logs and attempts to diagnose the issue. If successful, it restarts the job from the last checkpoint and resumes monitoring. If not, you get an alert with full context.

Target Failure Modes

The agent is specifically designed for runtime errors that occur deep into training, like:

- CUDA OOM: Memory leaks, gradient explosions

- Xid errors: GPU hardware faults (Xid 79, 63, 48, etc.)

- Distributed communication failures: NCCL timeouts, rank failures

- Storage I/O errors: Checkpoint corruption

- Network issues: S3 request timeouts on mounted object storage

docs.tensorpool.dev
8 3
Summary