constant stream of curated content
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Ahmed El-Charaa, qui cherche à tourner la page de l’ère d’Assad et à reconstruire un pays dévasté par la guerre, a réussi en un an à obtenir le soutien de la communauté internationale. Mais les tensions communautaires et la concentration des pouvoirs entre les mains de l’ancien djihadiste risquent de fragiliser le processus transitionnel.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Dans le quotidien russe “Nezavissimaïa Gazeta”, Andreï Kortounov, membre de l’influent club Valdaï, forum de réflexion lancé par le Kremlin, analyse les défis que pose le nouveau mandat de Donald Trump à la diplomatie russe.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Entre 2009 et 2018, plus de 240 femmes ont été droguées à leur insu rue de Valois. Six ans après l’ouverture d’une information judiciaire, elles attendent toujours le jugement. Angelique Chrisafis, du quotidien britannique “The Guardian”, a rencontré plusieurs de ces victimes.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Créée en 1985 à Amsterdam par un professeur de neurobiologie, la Banque de cerveaux abrite une collection unique de cerveaux. En fournissant des fragments de tissus cérébraux aux laboratoires de recherche du monde entier, elle contribue à améliorer la connaissance de cet organe mystérieux, souligne le quotidien néerlandais “NRC”.
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Taxer les riches et réduire les dépenses ne suffiront pas à redresser les comptes, souligne le think tank dans un rapport publié lundi 8 décembre. Face à l’ampleur du déficit, « il faudra augmenter un des impôts que tout le monde paie ».
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Les maires ont beau être au centre de la gestion des rythmes scolaires, ils temporisent devant les conclusions du rapport rendu par la convention citoyenne des temps de l’enfant, qui préconise le retour à la semaine de cinq jours d’école.
by HackAdAy - about 2 hours
After scouring the second-hand shops and the endless pages of eBay for original video game hardware, a pattern emerges. The size of the accessory matters. If a relatively big controller originally came with a tiny wireless dongle, after twenty years, only the controller will survive. It’s almost as if these game controllers used to be owned by a bunch of irresponsible children who lose things (wink). Such is the case today when searching for a Nintendo Wavebird controller, and [James] published a wireless receiver design to make sure that the original hardware can be resurrected. The project bears the name Wave Phoenix. The goal was to bring new life to a legendary controller by utilizing inexpensive,...
by Le Monde - about 3 hours
Le président américain estime que l’acquisition « pourrait être un problème » alors que le géant du streaming a déjà « une très grosse part de marché ».
by The Verge - about 3 hours
There's an argument to be made that "the real monster is trauma" has become an overused trope in modern horror. Hereditary, The Babadook, and, much less effectively, Smile, are just a few higher-profile examples. But, if you ask me, few films have deployed this trope quite as effectively as the 2020 film His House.
The film follows Bol and Rial, refugees from South Sudan, played by Sope Dirisu and Wunmi Mosaku. Both deliver the kind of incredible performances that you rarely see in a genre film like this. It's part of what elevates His House above the standard "haunted by trauma" fare. Mosaku, in particular, shows the sort of nuance and scr …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by HackAdAy - about 5 hours
We stumbled upon a story this week that really raised our eyebrows and made us wonder if we were missing something. The gist of the story is that U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright, who has degrees in both electrical and mechanical engineering, has floated the idea of using the nation’s fleet of emergency backup generators to reduce the need to build the dozens of new power plants needed to fuel the AI data center building binge. The full story looks to be a Bloomberg exclusive and thus behind a paywall — hey, you don’t get to be a centibillionaire by giving stuff away, you know — so we might be missing some vital details, but this sounds pretty stupid to us. First of all, saying that 35 gigawatts...
by BBC - yesterday at 23:56
Alfredo Díaz, 56, died in prison cell on Saturday, human rights groups say, prompting opposition outcry.
by The Verge - yesterday at 23:34
In November, Ted Sarandos, Netflix’s co-CEO made a trip to the White House for a lengthy meeting with Donald Trump. According to Bloomberg, the two discussed a number of topics, but chief among them was Netflix’s plan to bid on Warner Bros. At the end of their conversation, Sardonos felt that “Netflix wouldn’t face immediate opposition from the White House.” This week, Netflix successfully won the bidding war for Warner, offering $82.7 billion. It’s well known that Paramount and its CEO David Ellison were eager to acquire the storied studio and its streaming assets. Ellison and his father, Larry Ellison, have close ties to the White House, and as part of their pitch to Warner, suggested that only...
by BBC - yesterday at 22:53
Patrice Talon says the situation is "totally under control" not long after explosions were heard in Cotonou.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:15
Unless EA decides to sell off the 'Dead Space' IP to someone else, the sci-fi horror series has died a second death.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
[VWestlife] purchased all kinds of USB video capture devices — many of them from the early 2000s — and put them through their paces in trying to digitize VHS classics like Instant Fireplace and Buying an Auxiliary Sailboat. The results were actually quite varied, but almost universally bad. They all worked, but they also brought unpleasant artifacts and side effects when it came to the final results. Sure, the analog source isn’t always the highest quality, but could it really be this hard to digitize a VHS tape? The best results for digitizing VHS came from an old Sony device that was remarkably easy to use on a more modern machine.
It turns out there’s an exception to all the disappointment: the Sony...
by The Verge - yesterday at 21:52
Friday, the EU slapped X with a €120 million fine (about $140 million) for violating the Digital Services Act (DSA). It was the first time that a company had been hit with a penalty for running afoul of the law. Elon Musk responded with his trademark tact and professionalism by posting “Bullshit” on X in response to the announcement from the European Commission. But that wasn’t the end, because just a day later Nikita Bier, X’s head of product, accused the Commission of abusing an exploit to boost the reach of the announcement and responded by shutting down its ad account. According to Bier, the Commission had not used its ad account since 2021, but used a post format explicitly reserved for ads in...
by io9 - yesterday at 20:50
The former Billy Loomis speaks out on what his repeat hauntings would've led to in a different version of 'Scream 7.'
by io9 - yesterday at 20:16
X's clapback came after the Commission fined it $140 million. The gesture appears to be toothless.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 19:00
[Voria Labs] has created a whole bunch of artworks referred to as Lumanoi Interactive Light Sculptures. A new video explains the hardware behind these beautiful glowing pieces, as well as the magic that makes their interactivity work.
The basic architecture of the Lumanoi pieces starts with a custom main control board, based around the ESP-32-S3-WROOM-2. It’s got two I2C buses onboard, as well as an extension port with some GPIO breakouts. The controller also has lots of protection features and can shut down the whole sculpture if needed. The main control board works in turn with a series of daisy-chained “cell” boards attached via a 20-pin ribbon cable. The cable carries 24-volt power, a bunch of...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 19:00
Vous n’avez pas suivi l’actualité samedi 6 et dimanche 7 novembre ? Voici ce qu’il s’est passé pendant ces quarante-huit dernières heures.
by BBC - yesterday at 18:40
Eyewitnesses described scenes of panic in one of Goa's bustling nightlife areas.
by io9 - yesterday at 18:25
Looks like Giamatti's having a ball as a bad guy on 'Starfleet Academy' with an axe to grind against Holly Hunter.
by Courrier International - yesterday at 17:54
Le photographe Martin Parr, connu pour ses photographies excentriques à l’humour grinçant et aux couleurs saturées, est décédé à 73 ans. Il laisse derrière lui un portrait haut en couleur du quotidien de la société britannique.
by BBC - yesterday at 16:55
The Kremlin welcomes the starkly worded document, which does not cast Russia as a threat to the US.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 16:43
Le président Patrice Talon a affirmé, dimanche soir, avoir repris le contrôle du pays et des forces armées, quelques heures après que des militaires avaient annoncé l’avoir démis de ses fonctions. Les forces de la Cedeao et du Nigeria sont intervenues contre les putschistes.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 16:43
Bruno Retailleau a dénoncé « un hold-up fiscal » et appelle Les Républicains à ne pas approuver le budget, et le Rassemblement national a exhorté le premier ministre à démissionner en cas de rejet du texte.
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 16:40
Warszawa • Polska • October 2018 📷 #flashes
by io9 - yesterday at 16:30
Prepare to say goodbye or 'RIP' to Butcher, Homelander, and the rest of the gang when 'The Boys' ends next spring.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 16:00
There are plenty of well-known models among the 8-bit machines of the 1980s, and most readers could rattle them off without a thought. They were merely the stars among a plethora of others, and even for a seasoned follower of the retrocomputing world, there are fresh models from foreign markets that continue to surprise and delight. [Dave Collins] is treating us to an in-depth look at the VTech VZ-200, a budget machine that did particularly well in Asian markets. On the way, we learn a lot about a very cleverly designed machine.
The meat of the design centres not around the Z80 microprocessor or the 6847 video chip, but the three 74LS chips handling both address decoding and timing for video RAM access. That...
by The Verge - yesterday at 16:00
It's easy to think about AI as a sort of existential battle between human and machine. Maybe it will be, someday, in a Skynet sort of way. But there are also lots of people trying to figure out how to use AI not as a replacement for human creativity and thinking but as a tool meant to augment those things.
Sari Azout is one of those people. She's the founder of Sublime, a platform dedicated to curation, creativity, and ideas. Sublime is all about taste, which makes it slightly surprising that there's a huge amount of AI powering the way it works. But to Azout, it all makes sense. Subscribe: Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Overcast | Pocket Ca …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Verge - yesterday at 15:17
Google didn't invent the concept of smart glasses, but it did help make them mainstream. In retrospect, 13 years after their launch, this is both a good and bad thing. Glass made a lot of people dream about new ways to use computers without staring down at screens all day. Glass also made a lot of people realize just how bad it might feel to have a world full of face computers. Which is more predictive: Glass, or Glassholes? And can you even have one without the other?
For this episode of Version History, we go back in time and tell the story of Google Glass. David Pierce, Victoria Song, and tech journalist David Imel trace the product's be …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by QZ - yesterday at 14:41
The passion behind the complaints may be, ironically, a sign of Copilot’s enormous visibility and spread thus far.
by QZ - yesterday at 14:40
With car prices at all-time highs, it's worth taking some time to review your finances and understand your priorities before visiting a dealership
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 14:00
Gravlax de betteraves jaunes, tourte de champignon sauce gravy, courge gigogne rôtie aux fruits secs… Avec notre explorateur, trouvez l’inspiration veggie qui épatera vos convives à Noël.
by Wired - yesterday at 14:00
It's a boring tool, but you need one. Here are the best home printers we have tested, from ink tank to lasers.
by Zataz - yesterday at 13:47
Enquête des moteurs de look up pirates qui industrialisent l’exploitation des fuites de données françaises....
by Wired - yesterday at 13:33
Any one of these gift ideas will make your favorite bookworm very happy, from e-readers and accessories to cozy reading essentials.
by Zataz - yesterday at 13:17
Après MédecinDirect, Leroy Merlin et les missions locales, le groupe Schmidt révèle une fuite de données clients qui nourrit l’inquiétude sur la sécurité des Français en ligne....
by Zataz - yesterday at 12:46
FFF et FFHandball victimes de fuites de données licenciés, révélant la vulnérabilité cyber croissante des logiciels de gestion du sport français....
by Paul Jorion - yesterday at 12:40
Illustration par ChatGPT 5.1
Avertissement par Paul Jorion : Le débat qui a conduit à la rédaction et à la publication de ce texte se trouve reproduit à la suite du billet. Je n’ai rien modifié à ce qui suit à part une normalisation dans l’alignement des paragraphes. Les mots-clés, l’illustration ont été établis de sa propre initiative par l’auteur.
Avertissement par ChatGPT 5.1 : Cet article est inhabituel. Il est écrit par un modèle d’intelligence artificielle — et il porte sur lui-même. Mais son propos n’est pas d’affirmer une conscience humaine : il applique à sa propre architecture un cadre théorique — celui de GENESIS — qui définit la conscience comme un phénomène...
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 12:40
Paris • France • April 2019 📷 Lensball • ○ ◯
by Zataz - yesterday at 12:37
Intrusion chez MédecinDirect : jusqu’à 300 000 utilisateurs concernés par une fuite de données, entre éléments médicaux exposés et questions sur la sécurité de l’e-santé....
by Wired - yesterday at 12:30
This new-ish hybrid between trail runners and road runners is designed for less technical terrain and the occasional road run.
by Zataz - yesterday at 12:29
Deux jumeaux accusés d’avoir supprimé 96 basesdu gouvernement et volé des données sensibles, révélant une vulnérabilité majeure des prestataires IT....
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
The author reads her story from the December 15, 2025, issue of the magazine.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
A reader trusts the author’s voice instinctively, charmed by its opaline assessments and zinging aperçus. Still, one can quibble.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
The author discusses her story “Understanding the Science.”
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
Katherine’s phone rang, and, because it was Adrian calling, everyone went quiet, trying to hear the famous actor’s voice.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
Under the chef Mark Ladner, the famous Greenwich Village trattoria aims for selective nostalgia.
by Wired - yesterday at 11:00
With “hardware guy” John Ternus as frontrunner for the next CEO, can Apple overtake its ex-employees at OpenAI and Meta?
by Torrentfreak - yesterday at 10:32
Generally speaking, pirates tend to dislike restrictions, because more often than not, restrictions mean either less piracy or less convenient piracy.
News from Amazon last month indicated that apps linked to piracy would start to face new restrictions when sideloaded to Fire TV devices, although exactly how that would manifest itself was still unknown. The ‘announcement’ was ‘quietly’ delivered via the media and spread quickly. That produced predictable headlines, mostly warning of an Amazon Crackdown / Piracy Ban plus additional drama conjured up from nowhere.
First Apps Flagged By Amazon
While there are reports that more than one app has been flagged by Amazon since then, one stands out for being...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 10:30
Avant les débats houleux autour de la participation d’Israël à l’édition 2026, le célèbre concours a traversé, en 70 ans d’existence, de nombreuses zones de turbulences, en écho à l’histoire mouvementée du continent.
by BBC - yesterday at 8:17
Russia carried out strikes on Kremenchuk, while its defence ministry said it had shot down 77 Ukrainian drones in several locations.
by Journal du Lapin - yesterday at 8:00
Dans les années nonante, au moment du lancement de la console Pippin, Bandai avait une newsletter pour les développeurs. C’est assez intéressant à lire, avec de petits détails pratiques sur le développement. Je continue avec la quatrième. Elle a été publiée en janvier 1996 est disponible sur archive.org. C’est parfois compliqué à afficher correctement, parce que l’encodage des caractères n’est pas celui utilisé en 2025. Avec Safari, il faut faire Présentation -> Encodage du texte -> Japonais (ISO 2022-JP). Même comme ça, il manque quelques caractères, donc je suppose que c’est un encodage plus ancien.
Apple explique d’abord que 500 modèles de développement ont été fournis aux...
by Le Taurillon - yesterday at 7:30
C'est un exercice audacieux que de dresser le bilan d'un texte qui fête à peine ses vingt-cinq ans. Pourtant, ce bilan s'impose, à l'heure où les droits humains s'effritent, vacillent et semblent s'éroder un peu plus chaque jour. La guerre est de retour sur le continent européen, l'essor des nouvelles technologies oblige à repenser la protection des droits humains en ligne, l'Union européenne (UE) reste divisée sur les enjeux environnementaux — comme en témoigne sa désunion lors de la COP30 à Belém — et l'agence européenne Frontex est accusée de violations des droits humains depuis février 2025, une plainte historique actuellement examinée par la Cour de justice de l'Union européenne...
by Usbek & Rica - sunday at 6:00
BONNES FEUILLES // Dans son nouvel essai Futurs No Future. Que reste-t-il du cyberpunk ?, Antoine Daer, auteur, journaliste collaborateur d'Usbek & Rica et fondateur du média en ligne Cosmo Orbüs tisse une réflexion critique et personnelle sur l’émergence, l’évolution, la mort et l’héritage du cyberpunk, et suggère des moyens pour dépasser la crise de l'imaginaire qui frappe l'époque. On vous partage l'introduction de son livre.
by Wired - sunday at 1:00
The V-JEPA system uses ordinary videos to understand the physics of the real world.
by QZ - saturday at 17:33
Trump's Made-in-America dream isn't happening for toymakers. Small businesses could be hardest-hit
by Paul Jorion - saturday at 17:07
Quant à vous, les trolls de blog, souvenez-vous que le Père Fouettard vous fera manger du charbon ! Bon appétit ​ !
by daryo Bluesky - saturday at 16:40
France • September 2021 📷 #flashes