constant stream of curated content
by BBC - about 18 minutes
Fourteen people are reportedly injured after separate blasts were reported on Saturday.
by Le Monde - about 30 minutes
Le changement de mois marque la hausse des péages, mais aussi de nombreuses baisses. Si celles-ci sont bénéfiques pour les factures d’électricité, elles sont pénalisantes pour les épargnants.
by Courrier International - about 34 minutes
Aux États-Unis, les enseignants ont de plus en plus de mal à montrer des films à leurs élèves, qui viennent pourtant étudier le cinéma, s’inquiète “The Atlantic”. Accrocs à leurs téléphones, incapables de se concentrer longtemps, ces jeunes gens souffrent d’un mal qui semble toutefois affecter toute la société.
by Courrier International - about 44 minutes
Une juge fédérale du Minnesota a refusé d’interdire le déploiement des agents de la police de l’immigration dans l’État, tandis qu’un autre, au Texas, a exigé la libération du petit Liam Conejo Ramos et de son père, dont l’arrestation le 20 janvier avait choqué le pays.
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Si les humoristes ont le vent en poupe, il manque une manifestation d’envergure qui les rassemble, à l’image du Montreux Comedy Festival en Suisse. Enquête sur un paradoxe, tandis que Lille accueille jusqu’au 8 février la 5ᵉ édition de Lillarious.
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Le maire d’un bourg de Haute-Savoie depuis 2020, jeune pousse hyperactive de l’Union des droites pour la République, ancien allié d’Eric Zemmour et soutenu par Pierre-Edouard Stérin, brigue un siège de député.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Face à des tâches complexes ou après de longues journées de travail, notre cerveau finit par s’épuiser. Mais pourquoi notre système cognitif est-il sujet à la fatigue ? C’est la question à laquelle tentent de répondre de nombreux chercheurs, avec l’espoir de pouvoir mieux soigner ceux qui souffrent de Covid long ou d’encéphalomyélite myalgique, raconte “Nature”.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Les élections présidentielle et législatives organisées le dimanche 1er février dans le petit pays d’Amérique centrale devraient conférer la majorité absolue à l’actuel courant politique au pouvoir, un populisme qui tire son inspiration du Salvadorien Bukele.
by HackAdAy - about 2 hours
Dy default, the slicing software used for 3D printers has the printer first create the walls around the edges of a print, then goes back to deposit the infill pattern. [NeedItMakeIt], however, experimented with a different approach to line placement, and found significant strength improvements for some filaments.
The problem, as [NeedItMakeIt] identified with a thermal camera, is that laying down walls around a print gives the extruded plastic time to cool of. This means new plastic is being deposited onto an already-cooled surface, which reduces bonding strength. Instead, he used an aligned rectilinear fill pattern to print the solid parts. In this pattern, the printer is usually extruding filament right next...
by BBC - about 4 hours
Israel's military confirmed the strikes, which come during a ceasefire that Israel and Hamas accuse each other of breaking.
by BBC - about 5 hours
It says 15 security personnel and 18 civilians were also killed after militants attacked many cities in Pakistan's province.
by BBC - about 5 hours
Marius Borg Høiby, the crown prince's blond stepson, is accused of 38 charges in a case that has attracted global interest.
by HackAdAy - about 5 hours
These days, Windows has a moderately robust method for managing the volume across several applications. The only problem is that the controls for this are usually buried away. [CHWTT] found a way to make life easier by creating a physical mixer to handle volume levels instead.
The build relies on a piece of software called MIDI Mixer. It’s designed to control the volume levels of any application or audio device on a Windows system, and responds to MIDI commands. To suit this setup, [CHWTT] built a physical device to send the requisite MIDI commands to vary volume levels as desired. The build runs on an Arduino Micro. It’s set up to work with five motorized faders which are sold as replacements for the...
by The Verge - about 6 hours
Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang denied reports that he was unhappy with OpenAI and said his company still planned to make a "huge" investment in the ChatGPT firm. NVIDIA announced in September that it would invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI, but recently, there have been suggestions that the deal might not happen. While Huang told reporters in Taipei that it was "nonsense" to say he was unhappy with OpenAI, when asked if Nvidia would be investing over $100 billion, he replied, "No, nothing like that."
Reuters reported Huang said: "We are going to make a huge investment in OpenAI. I believe in OpenAI, the work that they do is incredible, they …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by BBC - about 6 hours
Three million new documents include hundreds of mentions of Trump and emails between Epstein and a person called "The Duke".
by io9 - yesterday at 22:15
Behind the scenes turmoil isn't stopping the network's excitement for the return of 'House of the Dragon' later in 2026.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
Thomas Edison is well known for his inventions (even if you don’t agree he invented all of them). However, he also occasionally invented things he didn’t understand, so they had to be reinvented again later. The latest example comes from researchers at Rice University. While building a replica light bulb, they found that Thomas Edison may have accidentally created graphene while testing the original article.
Today, we know that applying a voltage to a carbon-based resistor and heating it up to over 2,000 °C can create turbostratic graphene. Edison used a carbon-based filament and could heat it to over 2,000 °C.
This reminds us of how, in the 1880s, Edison observed current flowing in one direction through...
by io9 - yesterday at 21:57
Warsh's hawkish stance on Fed policy may have disappointed the crypto world, but he said Bitcoin was effectively gold for anyone under the age of 40.
by The Verge - yesterday at 21:30
It was too cold to take off my mittens and check Google Maps so I put my faith in the trickle of bundled-up people ahead of me. All of them were carrying signs and wearing whistles around their necks on top of layers and layers of winter clothing. At first there were dozens of us walking toward Government Plaza, across the street from Minneapolis City Hall, and within a block it was hundreds. By the time I arrived it was thousands. Some reports said five to ten thousand, but on the ground, it felt like a single vibrating mass that was too large to count. I made my way through the throng, repeating "excuse me" and "pardon me" despite the di …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by io9 - yesterday at 21:15
A lot of people leased EVs three years ago, and now they're turning them in. You should probably buy one.
by Wired - yesterday at 20:56
Just spritz and sleep—no melatonin tablets or pills necessary.
by io9 - yesterday at 20:50
If you're wanting more 'Welcome to Derry,' you better hope the Muschiettis come up with a good enough reason to take you back to town.
by io9 - yesterday at 20:38
Sorry, but what is the correct interpretation supposed to be?
by The Verge - yesterday at 20:38
SpaceX filed a request with the FCC on Friday seeking approval to put a constellation of 1 million data center satellites into orbit. While the FCC is unlikely to approve a network that expansive, SpaceX's strategy has been to request approval for unrealistically large numbers of satellites as a starting point for negotiations. The filing proposes establishing a network of solar-powered data centers in low Earth orbit that communicate with one another via lasers. The filling speaks of the constellation in ambitious sci-fi terms, calling it a "first step towards becoming a Kardashev II-level civilization - one that can harness the Sun's ful …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 20:13
Un responsable iranien a évoqué des avancées dans la définition d’un cadre pour les discussions, quelques heures après que l’armée disait s’être placée en « alerte maximale » face aux menaces américaines.
by QZ - yesterday at 19:12
Capping interest at 10% could save Americans billions, but banks say it would shut millions out. Here's what drives rates and why they're so high
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 19:00
The Colmi R02 is one of the cheapest smart rings on the market. It costs about $20, and is remarkably easy to hack. [Floyd Steinberg] took advantage of this to turn it into a rather unique MIDI controller.
What makes the Colmi R02 somewhat unique is that the manufacturer did not try to lock out users from uploading their own firmware. You don’t even really need to “hack” it, since there is no code signing or encryption. You can just whip up your own firmware to make it do whatever you want.
To that end, [Floyd] set up the ring to act as a device for musical expression. When connected to a computer over Bluetooth, data from the ring’s accelerometer is converted into MIDI CC commands via a simple web...
by The Verge - yesterday at 16:56
Happy Saturday, folks! After a few weeks of middling deals, we’re starting see things pick up. Some of our favorite deals of the holiday season have returned in some fashion, making now a great time to pick up deal stalwarts like the AirPods 4 with ANC or Google’s TV Streamer (4K). We also stumbled upon a deal that knocks $5 off a pair of Lego Roses, as well as another that lets both new and returning subscribers snag a month of Apple TV Plus, completely free of charge. So let’s get into it, shall we? If you can afford it, I highly recommend the AirPods Pro 3, which are on sale at Amazon and Walmart right now for $199 ($50 off). However, if you’re an Apple user looking to save some cash, the AirPods 4...
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 16:40
January 2022 📷 #flashes
by Paul Jorion - yesterday at 16:31
Illustration par ChatGPT
GENESIS : un cadre mathématique pour prédire l’émergence(Audit du code Python actuel par Claude)
Le problème central
Tout au long de l’histoire, la science s’est heurtée à un paradoxe : des systèmes complexes s’auto-organisent spontanément — les galaxies se forment à partir de nuages de poussière, la vie émerge de la chimie, la conscience surgit des neurones, les marchés se cristallisent à partir de transactions individuelles — et pourtant nous ne disposons d’aucun cadre mathématique rigoureux permettant de prédire quand et comment ces phénomènes émergents apparaîtront. Nous savons décrire l’émergence après coup, mais nous ne savons pas la...
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 16:00
We were talking on the podcast about rope. But not just any rope – especially non-stretchy rope for using in a mechanical context. The hack in question was a bicycle wheel that swapped out normal metal spokes for lighter and stronger high-density polypropylene weave, and if you can tension up a bike wheel and ride it around, you know it’s not your garden-variety twine.
Now, it just so happens that I’ve got basically the same stuff in my parts drawer: some 1 mm diamaeter Dyneema-brand rope. This is an amazing material. It’s rated to a breaking strength of 195 kg (430 lbs) yet it weighs just under one gram per meter, and if you buy the pre-stretched variant, it’s guaranteed to stretch less than 1% of...
by The Verge - yesterday at 15:00
It's no secret that Cassette Boy is inspired by the classics. It's a top-down adventure game in the vein of a retro Legend of Zelda, while your home base is a small town like in an older Pokémon game, complete with a mom who is constantly wishing you well. The game's blocky 3D graphics evoke Minecraft, and you save at campfires that reset the world, like a FromSoft game. Everything in Cassette Boy even has a green tint that reminds me of playing games on my original Game Boy. But despite all of the clear influences, it still feels unique: underneath that charming exterior, Cassette Boy is a game filled with clever puzzles that forced me to u …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Wired - yesterday at 13:32
Bosch’s Unlimited 10 combines key features from Dyson’s and Shark’s stick vacuums and packs some nice extras, but it can’t seem to keep debris inside.
by Wired - yesterday at 13:00
Sinners, Wicked, and Die Hard are just a few of the movies you should be watching on Amazon Prime Video this week.
by Wired - yesterday at 13:00
Want the image quality of a DSLR without the bulk? These WIRED picks do more with less.
by Paul Jorion - yesterday at 12:56
Jugez vous-même… Affaire Epstein Meidas Touch – 31-01-26Télécharger
by Le Monde - yesterday at 12:32
Les frappes de samedi surviennent la veille de l’ouverture prévue du point de passage de Rafah, à la frontière avec l’Egypte. Le directeur général du ministère de la santé de l’enclave a dénoncé de « graves violations de l’accord » entre Israël et le Hamas.
by Wired - yesterday at 12:30
We braved the cold to answer a modern dilemma: Can you keep your hands warm and use a smartphone at the same time?
by QZ - yesterday at 11:11
A belligerent style of American foreign affairs has fostered a uniquely unpredictable environment likely to scare off U.S. oil and gas companies
by QZ - yesterday at 11:10
The experts at Consumer Reports weighed in on how to keep yourself and your vehicle prepared for winter's harsh conditions
by Korben - yesterday at 10:47
Vous avez un logiciel qui cause un peu trop avec Internet alors qu'il n'a rien à y faire ? Ou un petit utilitaire qui balance de la télémétrie dans votre dos sans vous demander votre avis ? Ou peut-être juste une application que vous voulez forcer en mode hors-ligne sans pour autant couper tout votre réseau ?
C'est LA situation classique où pour leur couper la chique, on finit par se battre avec les menus obscurs du pare-feu Windows. Sauf que maintenant, y'a un petit outil CLI qui fait exactement ça en une seconde : ProcNetBlocker
.
C'est un utilitaire Windows en ligne de commande qui permet de bloquer l'accès réseau de n'importe quel processus comme ça pas besoin de créer des règles à rallonge....
by Zataz - yesterday at 10:34
Le warez n'est pas mort ! Washington coupe l’accès à trois géants du piratage de films, de musique et de livres....
by La Horde - yesterday at 10:01
Rendez-vous à partir de 19h au bar culturel El Zókalo (49 Rue Pixérécourt, 75020 Paris). -
Initiatives
by Torrentfreak - yesterday at 9:55
No other country in Europe generates as much noise around physical anti-piracy crackdowns as Italy, where ‘boots-on-the-ground’ operations have become a regular occurrence.
While the number of affected users doesn’t always seem to add up, it is clear that Italy can and is willing to take action, where other countries do not see IPTV as a priority. This week, the local authorities announced another major crackdown. Led by the District Prosecutor’s Office of Catania and the Italian Postal Police, “Operation Switch Off” involved raids in 11 Italian cities and 14 countries, including the UK, India, Canada, and Romania. Operation Switch Off
With support from Eurojust, Europol, and Interpol, the...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 9:00
Depuis le début d’année, les réseaux prorusses et les comptes institutionnels trumpistes ciblent de plus en plus la France. Avec des méthodes différentes mais un récit convergent, ils représentent un défi inédit.
by Journal du Lapin - yesterday at 8:00
Je suis tombé sur cet Easter Egg sur un site dédié, et j’ai d’abord testé sous Windows, parce que tester les vieilles versions d’iTunes sous Mac OS X, c’est compliqué. L’idée, c’est que si vous lancez le visualiseur, il y a des raccourcis avec des fonctions cachées. J’ai d’abord testé avec la version notée dans le post d’origine (iTunes 6).
iTunes 6
Première étape, presser H. Vous verrez diverses options. J’ai mis les touches en capitales, mais c’est pour des questions de lisibilités (il suffit de presser la touche).
Le menu caché
La touche F affiche le nombre d’images par secondes de l’effet en cours. La touche T permet d’améliorer la fluidité : par défaut, c’est...
by Le Taurillon - yesterday at 7:30
Au moment où ces lignes sont écrites, la présidente de la Commission européenne Ursula von der Leyen et le président du conseil européen Antonio Costa assistent au Jour de la République, une parade annuelle en Inde qui est normalement réservée aux chefs d'États sur invitation du gouvernement. C'est un événement historique majeur et un signe d'une relation étroite en formation entre Bruxelles et New Delhi, marquant un moment historique dans les relations UE-Inde. Cette année avait mal commencé à la fois pour l'UE et pour l'Inde, en particulier sur le prisme géopolitique. Alors que l'UE a une guerre en cours à ses frontières orientales entre l'Ukraine et la Russie, l'Inde se remet d'une...
by Usbek & Rica - saturday at 6:00
Atteinte à la liberté individuelle fondamentale pour les uns, remède à l’abstention pour les autres, le vote obligatoire est loin de faire consensus en France, où il est ponctuellement débattu. En imposant aux citoyens de se rendre aux urnes, à l’image de nos voisins belges, pourrait-on revitaliser notre démocratie en crise ? En amont de l'élection municipale de mars 2026, on a posé la question au politologue Régis Dandoy et au philosophe Gaspard Kœnig dans le nouveau numéro de notre magazine FUTUR.
by QZ - friday at 22:33
Earnings week turned AI into accounting: who can fund the build with cash on hand, and who needs the build to make the dream real
by QZ - friday at 22:01
Warsh will find it hard to deliver on Trump's demand for lower interest rates. He has also endorsed slashing the Fed balance sheet
by Human Progress - friday at 21:03
“On Floreana … efforts are underway to rid the island of invasive rats and cats and restore its native vegetation. The work, which is part of a sprawling $15 million effort decades in the making, is among the most ambitious projects ever mounted to bring an island back to its natural state. In the coming years, project leaders hope to reintroduce 12 native species… The effort has already seen some successes. In 2024, scientists moved 19 Floreana tortoises to a protected pen on the island… Scientists have also noticed a resurgence of native animals in recent years, including beetles, butterflies, snails, geckos, lava lizards, and the Galápagos rail, a bird known locally as the pachay that was once...
by Human Progress - friday at 20:46
“Following a five-year upward trend likely impacted by the COVID pandemic, the number of heart disease and stroke deaths has declined, yet, heart disease and stroke still kill more people in the U.S. each year than any other cause… In 2023, there were 915,973 total deaths from cardiovascular disease (CVD), including heart disease, stroke, hypertension and heart failure, down from 941,652 CVD deaths in 2022. The age-adjusted rate of CVD deaths in 2023 was 218.3 per 100,000 people, compared with 224.3 per 100,000 in 2022.” From American Heart Association.
The post Heart Disease and Stroke Deaths Has Declined appeared first on Human Progress.
by Human Progress - friday at 20:43
“Polar bears have been getting fatter even as sea ice disappears in Norway’s Svalbard archipelago, the fastest-warming place on Earth… The average size and weight of the Svalbard bears have increased since 2000, a finding that surprised Jon Aars at the Norwegian Polar Institute, who led the study… The Barents Sea population, which was estimated at 1900 to 3600 bears two decades ago, is thought to be stable or perhaps even growing. Starting in 1995, Aars and his colleagues tranquilised 770 bears with dart guns from helicopters. They hopped out onto the snow or ice to measure their length and, to estimate weight, their girth at the chest. Trend analysis showed this body condition decreased until 2000,...
by Human Progress - friday at 20:37
“The use of artificial intelligence in breast cancer screening reduces the rate of a cancer diagnosis by 12% in subsequent years and leads to a higher rate of early detection, according to the first trial of its kind. Researchers said the study was the largest to date looking at AI use in cancer screening. It involved 100,000 women in Sweden who were part of mammography screening and were randomly assigned to either AI-supported screening or to a standard reading by two radiologists between April 2021 and December 2022. The AI system worked by analysing the mammograms and assigning low-risk cases to a single reading and high-risk cases to a double one by radiologists, as well as highlighting suspicious...
by Human Progress - friday at 20:06
“Africa installed at least 2.4 GW of solar in 2025, according to figures from the Africa Solar Industry Association’s (AFSIA) Africa Solar Outlook 2026 report. The figure is similar to the 2.5 GW of solar that AFSIA recorded as deployed in 2024 at the time of its last annual report but the association has since registered a further 1.2 GW of projects that came online in 2024 in its project database, increasing 2024’s figure to 3.7 GW.  AFSIA’s project database has now identified a cumulative operational solar capacity of 23.4 GW across Africa. The database currently includes more than 42,000 projects, a 40% increase in the number of projects at the end of 2024. It covers projects at all stages of...
by La Horde - friday at 18:57
Le 31 août 2024 Djamel Bendjaballah est tué à Cappelle-la-Grande par Jérôme Découfour, leader d'une milice d'extrême droite. Un appel à se rassembler le samedi 31 janvier à 15h00 au Tribunal de Dunkerque a été lancé afin de faire face au déni de justice, au racisme, mais surtout pour que justice soit rendue à Djamel. -
Solidarité
by Conspiracy Watch - friday at 18:55
L'antisionisme démonologique de l'humoriste égyptien le conduit à réécrire l'histoire et à cautionner les thèmes d'accusation antijuifs les plus éculés.
by Korben - friday at 17:45
Yop !
Si vous avez la sensation que votre Windows 11 est devenu une espèce de panneau publicitaire géant bourré d'IA dont vous ne voulez pas, j'ai ce qu'il vous faut !!
Satya Nadella (le patron de Microsoft) a récemment parlé de "Slop" (ça veut dire bouillie) à propos de l'IA générative dans un billet de blog, mais ironiquement, c'est exactement ce que beaucoup reprochent à son OS aujourd'hui. A savoir que c'est devenu une accumulation de fonctionnalités imposées...
Sauf que voilà, pour nous, ça reste du gras qui peut ralentir certaines machines et polluer l'expérience. J'ai d'ailleurs passé pas mal de temps aujourd'hui sur un PC Windows 11 à essayer de virer manuellement des soft inutiles......
by Zataz - friday at 15:41
Municipales 2026 : la CNIL serre la vis sur le ciblage politique et lance un dispositif de signalement....