constant stream of curated content
by HackAdAy - about 3 hours
There are a few very different pathways to building a product, and we gotta applaud the developers taking care to take the open-source path. Today’s highlight is [Mentra], who is releasing an open-source smart glasses OS for their own and others’ devices, letting you develop your smart glasses ideas just once, a single codebase applicable for multiple models.
Currently, the compatibility list covers four models, two of them Mentra’s (Live and Mach 1), one from Vuzix (Z100), and one from Even Realities (G1) — some display-only, and some recording-only. The app store already has a few apps that cover the basics, the repository looks lively, and if the openness is anything to go by, our guess is that...
by Le Monde - about 4 hours
Huit personnes hospitalisées sont dans un état critique, a annoncé le maire de la ville de Providence où se situe cet établissement réputé de l’Etat de Rhode Island, dans le nord-est du pays. Le suspect, un homme habillé en noir, est activement recherché.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 23:21
La centrale électrique de Smolensk et des dépôts pétroliers font partie des installations visées. De son côté, l’armée russe a annoncé avoir intercepté et détruit 94 drones ukrainiens.
by BBC - yesterday at 22:42
Two US soldiers and a civilian interpreter were killed in the attack, according to the US Central Command.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:15
Turns out, the 90s never really left us as the beef between 'Street Fighter' and 'Mortal Kombat' has now extended to theaters.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
Not a huge percentage of our readers probably get their heat from diesel fuel, but it’s not uncommon in remote areas where other fuels are hard to come-by. If you’re in one of those areas, this latest hack from [Hangin with the Hursts] could save you some change, or keep you  ̶2̶0̶%̶ ̶c̶o̶o̶l̶e̶r̶  25% warmer on the same fuel burn.
It’s bog simple: he takes his off-the-shelf hydronic diesel heater, which is already 71% efficient according to a previous test, and hooks its exhaust to a heat exchanger. Now, you don’t want to restrict the exhaust on one of these units, as that can mess with the air fuel mix, but [Hurst] gets around that with a 3″ intercooler meant for automotive intake....
by BBC - yesterday at 21:33
Opposition activist Maria Kolesnikova is among those released in exchange for a deal with the US.
by BBC - yesterday at 21:29
The Inter Miami and Argentina forward is in India for a tour, taking in events in Kolkata, Hyderabad, Mumbai and Delhi.
by io9 - yesterday at 21:23
Experts tell the Washington Post that workers' social media behavior is on the minds of employers.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 21:06
Des dizaines d’actions se sont déroulées samedi en France contre le protocole d’abattage des bovins touchés par la maladie virale, qui poursuit son expansion et dont aucun traitement n’existe.
by io9 - yesterday at 20:50
90s and 00s kids likely grew up hearing voice actors Jim Ward, Jeff Garcia, and Julie Mayfield across the cartoons and games of their youth.
by io9 - yesterday at 20:02
Disney has a licensing deal with OpenAI now, by the way.
by BBC - yesterday at 19:46
The strike killed Raed Saad, a senior commander in Hamas' Qassam Brigades, the Israeli military said.
by Société de Géographie - yesterday at 19:43
     
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by The Verge - yesterday at 19:17
It's a small sample size, likely driven by Black Friday discounts and temporary virality, but the Nex Playground has gone from little-known console curiosity to best-seller. It's now on track to quadruple its sales from last year. According to research firm Circana, the Playground was the second best-selling console in the US for the week ending November 22nd, and third for the week ending November 28th. In October, it wasn't even mentioned by Circana's video game analyst, Mat Piscatella. The colorful cube got a steep discount for Black Friday, from $249 to $199, which is likely part of what drove sales, especially since Microsoft didn't d …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 19:14
Sous le coup de deux mandats d’arrêt, le quinquagénaire, dernier membre en fuite de la célèbre bande criminelle corse, a été interpellé sans résistance par les gendarmes, samedi, deux jours après avoir été condamné, en son absence, au procès du meurtre du bâtonnier Antoine Sollacaro.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 19:00
Cats can be wonderful companions, but they can also be aloof and boring to hang out with. If you want to get a little more out of the relationship, consider obsessively tracking your cat’s basic statistics with this display from [Matthew Sylvester].
The build is based around the Seeedstudio ReTerminal E1001/E1002 devices—basically an e-paper display with a programmable ESP32-S3 built right in. It’s upon this display that you will see all kinds of feline statistics being logged and graphed. The data itself comes from smart litterboxes, with [Matthew] figuring out how to grab data on weight and litterbox usage via APIs. In particular, he’s got the system working with PetKit gear as well as the Whisker...
by Le Monde - yesterday at 18:32
Alors que Washington et Damas resserrent leurs liens face à la menace djihadiste, l’attaque à Palmyre met en lumière les risques persistant pour les délégations internationales en Syrie.
by io9 - yesterday at 18:25
It ain't a thing of beauty, but 'Cyberpunk 2077' eventually became a good game that knows how it got there.
by The Verge - yesterday at 18:00
Music making is always better with hardware. Native Instruments and Ableton have had incredible success with their custom MIDI controllers that integrate with their DAWs (digital audio workstations), Maschine and Live, respectively. Native Instruments' Maschine (yes, it's the name of the hardware and the software) and Ableton's Push are pretty much the gold standard for integration between music-making software and hardware. Serato is hoping it can capture even a sliver of that magic with its pairing of Slab and Serato Studio.
Plenty of others have tried their hand at building (or having others build for them) custom controllers for their DAWs - FL Studio, Studio One, and the MPC desk …
Read the full story...
by Courrier International - yesterday at 17:35
Conceptualisé par le chercheur américain Asa Seresin, le terme, de plus en plus employé, renvoie à l’ensemble des discours tenus par des personnes hétérosexuelles qui affirment que leur orientation sexuelle est vouée à être dysfonctionnelle et douloureuse.
by The Verge - yesterday at 17:00
The Posha robot chef can autonomously cook a meal from scratch. As I'm sitting in my office writing this review, delicious, cheesy, garlicky scents are wafting up the stairs. I can hear whizzing and whirring, and the occasional clunk, as a robot chef in my kitchen is making macaroni and cheese. Its app tells me there are three minutes left in the process, and based on the snapshot it's showing, the dish looks like a creamy pile of cheesy goodness. I'll be heading out the door shortly to pick up my daughter from the school bus, and when we're back, the robot-cooked mac and cheese will be waiting for her to dive into, staying fresh thanks to a "copilot" mode that keeps it warm and stirs it occasionally u...
by Courrier International - yesterday at 16:57
Le lauréat du prix Nobel de la paix Ales Bialiatski et l’opposante Maria Kolesnikova font partie des 123 prisonniers politiques détenus en Biélorussie qui ont été libérés ce samedi 13 décembre. Ces libérations interviennent après des pourparlers entre Minsk et Washington.
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 16:40
Lille • France • November 2019 📷 #flashes
by The Verge - yesterday at 16:16
The Nex Playground is a compact, cube-shaped console that’s currently on sale for $50 off. | Image: The Verge The Nex Playground is apparently one of the hottest consoles this holiday season thanks to its kid-friendly games and fun, motion-controlled gameplay. And now through December 14th, the cube-shaped console is on sale for its Black Friday low of around $199 ($50 off) at Amazon. There are some other great deals still available you might have missed this week, too, including a sizable discount on the new Google Pixel Buds 2A and Genki’s Moonbase Charging Station, which looks straight out of Star Wars. Nex Playground Where to Buy: $250 $199 at Amazon
The Nex Playground easily connects to your TV and...
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 16:00
Al and I were talking on the podcast about the Home Assistant home automation hub software. In particular, about how devilishly well designed it is for extensibility. It’s designed to be added on to, and that makes all of the difference.
That doesn’t mean that it’s trivial to add your own wacky control or sensor elements to the system, but that it’s relatively straightforward, and that it accommodates you. If your use case isn’t already covered, there is probably good documentation available to help guide you in the right direction, and that’s all a hacker really needs. As evidence for why you might care, take the RTL-HAOS project that we covered this week, which adds nearly arbitrary...
by The Verge - yesterday at 16:00
A keyboard perfect for barside writing. As a writer, I take the tools of my trade relatively seriously. I’m not crazy enough to drop $3,600 on a keyboard, but I also find typing on a MacBook for extended periods of time deeply unsatisfying — and distracting. So this spring, I started looking into distraction-free writing setups, which included an e-reader / writer and a mechanical keyboard.  I started with the Boox Palma 2 because its E Ink screen and limited connectivity could make it a solid distraction-free solution if paired with a good keyboard. After a lot of research, the keyboard I settled on was the NuPhy Air60 V2, with the company’s heaviest tactile Moss switches and the gorgeous NuFolio case...
by Courrier International - yesterday at 15:50
À travers l’Europe, les piliers de l’État providence vacillent, minés par les dettes et des choix politiques qui réduisent les protections. Des pays nordiques aux rives méditerranéennes, la même lassitude affleure, révélant un pacte social fragilisé. Chaque pays avance en serrant les dents, espérant que l’avenir n’exige pas un tribut plus lourd encore.
by Torrentfreak - yesterday at 15:17
The general belief in Hollywood is that piracy causes billions of dollars in lost revenue and is predominantly harmful.
However, if research has shown anything over the years, it’s that piracy can have positive effects too. Indeed, a new study from researchers at Monash University and San Jose State University, published in Research Policy, provides fresh evidence for this. It suggests that, under the right conditions, piracy can boost box office ticket sales. The paper, titled “Avengers assemble! When digital piracy increases box office demand”, uses a dataset that matches U.S. box office revenue with the timing of high-quality piracy releases between 2004 and 2020.
The paper: Avengers assemble!
The...
by Wired - yesterday at 15:09
From a backyard hot tub to the warmest slippers, these picks will make your loved ones feel warm and fuzzy—inside and out.
by La Horde - yesterday at 14:37
Petit retour sur la panique morale lancée par des syndicats policiers et qui a assuré à notre jeu une diffusion et une visibilité bienvenues. -
Fachorama
by Wired - yesterday at 14:00
Motorola phones may seem old-school, but their reasonable prices, colorful designs, and simple software make them good, wallet-friendly Android smartphones.
by Courrier International - yesterday at 13:51
Le 10 décembre, un consortium de médias européens révélait que les gamètes d’un donneur de sperme porteur d’un gène prédisposant au cancer avaient permis la naissance de près de 200 enfants dans 14 pays européens. La “BBC” essaye aujourd’hui de comprendre pourquoi des centaines de bébés peuvent être issus d’un seul donneur.
by BBC - yesterday at 13:43
The latest overnight attacks come as US envoy Steve Witkoff prepares to hold more talks with Ukraine's president.
by Wired - yesterday at 13:35
Here’s how Amazon’s ebook readers stack up—and which one might be right for you.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 13:00
A significant fraction of people can’t handle lactose, like [HGModernism]. Rather than accept a cruel, ice cream free existence, she decided to do something you really shouldn’t try: biohacking her way to lactose tolerance.
The hack is very simple, and based on a peer reviewed study from the 1990s: consume lactose constantly, and suffer constantly, until… well, you can tolerate lactose. If you’re lactose intolerant, you’re probably horrified at the implications of the words “suffer constantly” in a way that those milk-digesting-weirdos could never understand. They probably think it is hyperbole; it is not. On the plus side, [HGModernism]’s symptoms began to decline after only one week.
The...
by Wired - yesterday at 13:00
A destructive storm in 2020 prematurely shut down Iowa’s only nuclear plant. With Google’s plans to reopen it to power nearby data centers, will extreme weather threaten the reactor’s safety?
by Wired - yesterday at 13:00
Bat-Fam, The Girlfriend, and The Mighty Nein are just a few of the shows you should be watching on Amazon Prime Video this week.
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 12:40
📷 Lensball • ○ ◯
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
A new show on C-SPAN seeks to model civil dialogue and bipartisan coöperation in an age of inflamed debate. But is getting along a worthwhile goal?
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
Nineties teen counterculture, a trip to Universal Studios, and the modern American dream of perpetual childhood.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
The late British photographer was drawn to outsider subcultures, among them the working-class youths known as Teds.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
With his new book, “The Journal of a Prisoner,” the former French President seeks to place himself in the company of Alfred Dreyfus and Jesus Christ.
by QZ - yesterday at 11:11
The Fed cut interest rates again, but don't expect mortgage rates to follow suit. Here's why — and the factors that do move them
by QZ - yesterday at 11:10
Consumer Reports ranked car brands across four metrics — road-test scores, predicted reliability, safety, and owner satisfaction
by QZ - yesterday at 11:10
Discover top U.S. museums offering free admission days, from Brooklyn to the Bay Area and the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.
by Zataz - yesterday at 10:28
Cyberinfo de la semaine du 13 décembre 2025 - Cyberattaques, fuites massives & espionnage : l’actu cybersécurité de la semaine....
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 8:40
Pourquoi les condamnés peuvent passer des décennies dans le couloir de la mort aux Etats-Unis
https://www.lemonde.fr/les-decodeurs/article/2025/12/11/pourquoi-les-condamnes-peuvent-passer-des-decennies-dans-le-couloir-de-la-mort-aux-etats-unis_6656874_4355770.html
by Journal du Lapin - yesterday at 8:00
Avec les applications dédiée au Nintendo Switch Online, Nintendo a mis de petits Easter Egg. Pour le moment, ils sont en place dans les émulateurs de Game Boy, Game Boy Advance et Game Cube. On commence par le Game Boy Advance. Si vous pressez le stick de gauche au démarrage de l’application, vous verrez une animation de démarrage de Game Boy Advance, plutôt que le panneau habituel.
L’image classique
L’animation Pour le Game Boy, il y a trois versions. Le fonctionnement est le même : il faut presser le stick de gauche pendant le lancement. Il y a l’écran de démarrage du Game Boy classique, de la version Pocket et du Game Boy Color. On peut choisir l’aspect dans les paramètres de...
by Korben - yesterday at 7:59
Amazon vient de lancer une nouvelle fonctionnalité dans son app Kindle iOS qui risque de faire grincer pas mal de dents du côté des auteurs et éditeurs. Ça s’appelle “Ask this Book” et c’est un chatbot IA intégré directement dans vos bouquins.
Le principe c’est de pouvoir poser des questions sur le livre que vous êtes en train de lire. Genre “c’est qui déjà ce personnage ?”, “il s’est passé quoi dans le chapitre 3 ?” ou “c’est quoi le thème principal ?”. Et l’IA vous répondra instantanément avec des réponses “sans spoilers” basées sur le contenu du livre.
Notez que les réponses de l’IA ne peuvent être ni copiées ni partagées, et seuls les acheteurs ou...
by Korben - yesterday at 7:28
Vous avez toujours voulu créer des workflows d’agents IA mais vous avez la flemme de coder tout ça à la main ? Hé bien y’a un projet open source qui va vous faire plaisir. Ça s’appelle Sim Studio et c’est une plateforme qui permet de construire des workflows d’agents IA de manière visuelle, un peu comme sur Figma. Le principe c’est d’avoir un canvas sur lequel vous glissez-déposez des blocs : des LLMs, des outils, des connexions à des services tiers comme Slack, Gmail, Supabase ou Pinecone. Vous reliez tout ça avec des flèches et hop, vous avez votre workflow qui tourne. Pas besoin d’écrire une seule ligne de code si vous voulez pas.
Et le truc sympa c’est qu’il y a un Copilot...
by Korben - yesterday at 7:02
Vous pensiez que les technologies de surveillance chinoises étaient 100% chinoises ? Hé bien pas du tout.
Une enquête passionnante d’AP
vient de révéler que le gouvernement chinois utilise massivement des logiciels américains pour traquer ses propres citoyens, y compris ceux qui ont fui aux États-Unis.
L’histoire de Li Chuanliang est assez flippante. Cet ancien fonctionnaire chinois était en convalescence d’un cancer sur une île coréenne quand il a reçu un appel urgent lui disant de ne surtout pas rentrer en Chine. Quelques jours plus tard, un inconnu le prend en photo dans un café. Terrorisé à l’idée que la Corée du Sud le renvoie chez lui, Li s’enfuit aux États-Unis avec un visa...
by Korben - yesterday at 6:26
Vous bossez toute la journée sur ChatGPT ou Claude et vous commencez à trouver ça un peu tristounet ? Youpi, y’a une extension Chrome qui va égayer tout ça avec des petits animaux virtuels qui se baladent sur votre interface comme quand on était en 1999.
Ça s’appelle GPTPets et c’est le genre de truc complètement inutile donc forcément indispensable comme disait Jérôme Bonaldi. Le principe c’est d’avoir un petit compagnon animé qui vit sa vie sur la barre de saisie de votre IA préférée, genre un chat qui fait la sieste, un chien qui remue la queue, un panda qui mange du bambou, une brigitte qui insulte ses paires… bref vous voyez le genre. L’extension propose 8 animaux différents...
by Korben - yesterday at 6:09
Je ne connaissais pas le NanoKVM mais c’est un petit boîtier KVM chinois vendu entre 30 et 70€ qui permet de contrôler un PC à distance. Sauf qu’un chercheur en sécurité slovène a découvert qu’il embarquait un micro planqué capable d’enregistrer tout ce qui se dit autour. Ça craint !
En effet,
Matej Kovačič
a ouvert son NanoKVM et y a trouvé un minuscule composant de 2x1 mm dissimulé sous le connecteur. Un truc tellement petit qu’il faut une loupe ou un microscope pour le dessouder proprement. Et pourtant, ce micro MEMS est capable d’enregistrer de l’audio de “qualité surprenamment élevée” comme il le dit et le pire c’est que l’appareil est fourni avec tous les outils...
by Usbek & Rica - yesterday at 6:00
« 2015, et Hollywood inventa le legacyquel. » Il y a dix ans, trois studios de cinéma américains ressuscitaient des franchises de science-fiction à succès, avec l’espoir d’attirer un nouveau public et de relancer leur univers. Premier volet de notre série de Noël avec le mastodonte Star Wars, épisode VII : Le Réveil de la Force.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 5:59
Taking stock of how American norms, ideals, and values have been transformed by Trump 2.0.
by Conspiracy Watch - friday at 23:46
Rudy Reichstadt et Tristan Mendès France décryptent et analysent, dans ce 100ème épisode, l'activité de la complosphère depuis les débuts de Complorama. Une émission spéciale réalisée en public à la Maison de la radio et de la musique.
by QZ - friday at 23:11
With Trump's tariffs potentially on the Supreme Court chopping block, one example from the 1990s holds lessons for how a refund process might work
by Human Progress - friday at 22:05
Summary: Modern American housing offers far greater comfort and convenience than homes of the mid-20th century. Living spaces have expanded and amenities have become far more widespread. Despite higher sticker prices, rising wages have made each unit of housing less costly in time prices. The year 1956 was remarkable. The “baby boom” was in full swing, Dwight Eisenhower won a second term in the White House, and Elvis Presley topped the charts twice. It was the year IBM unveiled the world’s first computer hard drive—a 1-ton machine, the IBM 305 RAMAC, that could store a grand total of about 5 megabytes. It was also the year I was born. Some have suggested it was the golden year for housing; however, the...