constant stream of curated content
by Wired - about 23 minutes
Score big savings on Altra Running shoes with up to 50% off sale styles, 20% off select models, 10% off your first order when you sign up, plus free standard delivery on every purchase.
by Les Décodeurs - about 53 minutes
L’analyse du groupe de réflexion Geonexio pointe l’inadéquation entre l’organisation administrative et l’échelle des déplacements quotidiens, bien plus large.
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Pour l’administration Trump, les pays alliés membres de l’Alliance atlantique ne seraient pas au rendez-vous de la solidarité avec les Etats-Unis, ni de leurs propres intérêts commerciaux dans le détroit d’Ormuz.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Des représentants iraniens et américains seront présents samedi à Islamabad, pour une éventuelle reprise des pourparlers de paix, au point mort depuis l’échec du premier cycle de discussions le 11 avril.
by New Yorker - about 1 hour
From tariffs to the war with Iran, the President is blowing up the global economy.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Les principales actualités de ces dernières heures vues par la presse internationale.
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Le 26 avril 1986, l’explosion du réacteur numéro 4 de la centrale de Tchernobyl projetait des éléments radioactifs dans l’atmosphère, provoquant l’une des pires catastrophes nucléaires. Quarante ans plus tard, un journaliste de “New Scientist” s’est rendu sur place. Il raconte comment l’invasion de l’Ukraine par la Russie en 2022 et la guerre qui dure depuis mettent à mal les efforts de décontamination de la zone.
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Dans l’hebdomadaire britannique “The New World”, une journaliste dresse le portrait du jeune chanteur français, révélation masculine des dernières Victoires de la musique. Elle s’interroge : parviendra-t-il à conquérir les cœurs britanniques, hermétiques à la pop française ? Mission difficile mais pas impossible pour Sam Sauvage, qui “possède ce je-ne-sais-quoi” qui pourrait bien piquer la curiosité outre-Manche.
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Dans un monde de plus en plus instable, le doute devient la position la plus lucide, écrit le chroniqueur James Marriott dans le quotidien britannique “The Times”. Chaque semaine, “Courrier international” vous propose un billet qui soulève des interrogations sur notre condition moderne en s’appuyant sur des œuvres littéraires, scientifiques et, bien sûr, philosophiques.
by HackAdAy - about 3 hours
Sometimes, a major discovery is exactly what you were hoping not to find. That’s the case with a team at Penn State who seem to have recently closed the door on any new physics stemming from a longstanding discrepency in the magnetic moment of the muon. It turns out, the model was fine, and we just needed better calculations.
The Muon is a heavier cousin to the electron. Like the electron, it has an intrinsic magnetic moment, but the traditional methods to calculate it did not quite match experiments, which was very exciting because it made us hope our models could be improved. Rather than try the traditional approximation methods for the unsolvable equations, the group at Penn State set up what you can...
by BBC - about 5 hours
On Friday morning, souring relations between Europe and the United States reared its Medusa-like head again, writes the BBC's Europe editor.
by BBC - about 6 hours
The flood warning system at Imja glacial lake has not been maintained since 2016, fearful locals tell BBC.
by BBC - about 6 hours
A Buckingham Palace source confirmed the Royals will not meet with survivors of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein during their state visit to the US.
by HackAdAy - about 6 hours
The humble cathode ray tube (CRT) was once the technology behind almost all of our televisions and computer displays. Its replacements, from LCD screens to OLED and others, are generally cheaper to make and better to look at. Old televisions were comparatively large as well, but their size can be an advantage for people like [ManicMods] aka [Jeff]. His latest build ditches the CRT from an old Bently portable TV and uses the huge space available in the case for a hi-fi audio system and some other parts that turn it into an impressive portable home theater system.
After removing most of the internals of the TV, the first part to go in is the stereo and subwoofer combo as it takes up the most amount of space. The...
by BBC - about 6 hours
An internal Pentagon document reportedly raised the prospect of a change in position in retaliation for the UK not joining the Iran war.
by io9 - yesterday at 23:25
Radio Silence's creature feature co-starring Rachel Weisz will now arrive in October 2027 rather than May 2028.
by The Verge - yesterday at 22:45
Windows users will no longer be forced to run automatic updates in the middle of a game or a busy day. Microsoft is rolling out some long-awaited changes to Windows Update to users on its Dev and Experimental Windows Insider channels, including the ability to indefinitely delay updates up to 35 days at a time. Last month, Microsoft announced a slew of upcoming changes to improve Windows 11 and address some of users' most common complaints about the platform. Chief among the company's planned fixes was making updates less disruptive. In its blog post on Friday, Microsoft says you'll be able to "extend the pause end date as many times as you …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:35
The new IONIQ V is key to Hyundai's plans in China.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:25
The cutting-edge propulsion system could be used to power rockets to the Moon and beyond.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:15
The critically acclaimed MMO's next expansion, 'Evercold,' is bringing big gameplay changes to let you keep up at your own pace.
by The Verge - yesterday at 22:10
Alex Jones is onto something. | Photo by Joe Buglewicz / Getty Images Alex Jones may soon lose Infowars, the digital perch that he's used for decades to traffic in conspiracy theories, to The Onion, the satirical newspaper. But not before he's uncovered something truly dastardly: comedian Tim Heidecker's past (publicly available) work.
"The Onion newspaper has been rocked by the discovery that their new creative director, produced pro pedo/child kidnapping, torture and murder programs," Jones wrote on X on Friday. "Below is an actual mug shot of the creep.." he continued. Included in the post is a fake mugshot of Heidecker taken from a 2017 Adult Swim courtroom series, in which he's standing trial for 20 coun...
by io9 - yesterday at 22:05
On Friday, the U.S. government said $344 million in Tether had been linked to wallets tied to Iran.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
Many HVAC systems in North America operate off 24V systems, which can be readily upgraded with off-the-shelf  smart thermostats quite easily. However, there are many people living in buildings with 120-volt fan coil units who aren’t so lucky. [mackswan] is one such individual, who set about building a smart thermostat to work in these situations.
The build is based around an ESP32 running ESPHome firmware. It rocks a 2.42″ OLED screen with automatic brightness adjustment for showing temperature and control parameters. There’s a rotary encoder on the front with an integrated button for control, with [mackswan] building the physical device to look as clean and neat as possible. The device uses a relay to...
by The Verge - yesterday at 21:45
Following Paramount Skydance's move to launch an investigation into how its upcoming Avatar Aang: The Last Airbender animated feature leaked onto the internet, a suspect has been taken into custody by police.
The Straits Times reports Singaporean police have arrested a 26-year-old man who is alleged to have uploaded the new Avatar movie (previously titled The Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender) online after accessing a server where the project was being held ahead of its scheduled October 9th premiere on Paramount Plus. According to the authorities, a copy of the entire movie was found on the suspect's electronic devices. If he is ultimatel …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 21:04
Arc de triomphe, salle de bal de la Maison Blanche, statues… Le professeur d’urbanisme au Massachusetts Institute of Technology analyse pour « Le Monde » les initiatives du président américain, qui s’efforce d’imprimer sa marque sur la capitale fédérale en multipliant les projets fastueux.
by Wired - yesterday at 20:39
If an Ember mug is at the top of Mom’s wish list, this sale is worth checking out.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 20:30
As we learn more about all the nasty stuff floating in the air, it becomes more compelling to monitor the air for pollution levels. [Aleksei Tertychnyi] does just that with pollutagNode2, a solar-powered pollution sensor.
The device uses a Seeed Studio Wia-E5 module for its built-in LoRa low power long-range communication capabilities. Pair that with a cheap 2 watt solar panel and a Li-ion battery, and you have a monitoring device that can stay up indefinitely — or until harsh weather gets the better of it. Even if the solar panel were to be omitted, a full charge would last you about two weeks!
It comes on an open-hardware PCB; no need for giant wire messes, just solder the solar panel, battery, sensor, and...
by Le Monde - yesterday at 20:27
L’altération du jugement de l’accusé était susceptible de réduire sa peine, mais la cour a estimé que cette peine de quinze années de réclusion était adaptée au regard de la « gravité incontestable » des faits, commis sur une enseignante.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:23
“A powerful light source bigger than a London double-decker bus has set a record: it can create structures on a silicon wafer that are just 8 nanometres (nm) wide. Those are thought to be the smallest ever made in a single step by a commericial chip-patterning system. According to the system’s manufacturer, it could be used to make computer chips patterned with 2.9 times more transistors than chips produced with the previous generation of the light sources used for this purpose.” From Nature.
The post Breakthrough Computer-Chip Tech Could Help Meet AI Demand appeared first on Human Progress.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:07
“The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the first-ever gene therapy for inherited deafness. The therapy, called Otarmeni, is approved to treat a form of hearing loss caused by mutations in the OTOF gene, which codes for a protein called otoferlin. Cells in the inner ear need otoferlin to translate vibrations into signals that can be interpreted by the brain. When people carry two defective copies of the OTOF gene — one from each parent — this line of communication between the inner ear and brain is cut, resulting in severe-to-profound hearing loss. Otarmeni is a one-time treatment that uses harmless viruses to deliver working copies of OTOF into the ear. In a trial including 20...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:04
“Forty years after China launched the ‘Wild Horse Return Program.’ the Przewalski’s horse — the world’s only surviving wild horse species — has completed a historic transition from being on the brink of extinction to there being self-sustaining wild herds in Northwest China. The population of Przewalski’s horses in China has surpassed 900 individuals, accounting for approximately one-third of the global total, according to figures released during an event to mark the 40th anniversary of the species’ reintroduction.” From China Daily.
The post China’s Przewalski’s Horse Population Rises Above 900 appeared first on Human Progress.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 20:00
The libertarian-leaning Republican discusses his effort to restrain the President’s actions in Iran, and how he would campaign against other G.O.P. Presidential candidates in 2028.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 20:00
The novelist Emma Copley Eisenberg discusses her short-story collection “Fat Swim,” and the fatphobia she finds in contemporary fiction, with the critic Jennifer Wilson.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 19:51
“The largest genomic study of African elephants to date has found that both species – savanna and forest elephants – remain in generally good genetic health despite long-term numerical declines, though some isolated populations are showing worrisome signs of inbreeding and deleterious mutations. Researchers analyzed the genetic health of African elephants – Earth’s largest land animals – by looking at genome data for 181 savanna elephants and 51 forest elephants from 29 locations across 17 countries. Their genetic health was found to be positive overall because many populations, particularly in a broad swathe of southern Africa, can still roam across large distances and exchange genes. Signs of...
by Wired - yesterday at 19:43
Get ready for summer with discounts on the best robot pool cleaners we’ve tested.
by dwell - yesterday at 19:35
Alcova announces a Mexico City edition, a famous landscape from an iconic Andrew Wyeth painting opens to visitors, and more.Bonhams’s four-part auction of Diane Keaton’s eclectic trove of personal belongings will feature a sale devoted entirely to home furnishings. At Home with Diane, running online June 1 through June 10, is set to include more than 150 pieces from multiple properties belonging to the late actress, including a pre-styled metal step ladder expected to fetch upwards of $1,000. (Artnet) A mainstay of Milan Design Week, Alcova, a platform with a focus on emerging design, is heading to Mexico City for Art Week 2027. The itinerant showcase will unfold across a restored 1930s building in...
by The Verge - yesterday at 19:31
It’s not quite the color-changing car that’s been teased, but BMW’s new BMW iX3 Flow Edition brings us closer. | Image: BMW At CES 2022, BMW debuted its BMW iX Flow concept car that could dynamically change its appearance using the same grayscale E Ink panels found in e-readers like the Kindle. It was followed by the BMW i Vision Dee concept and the BMW i5 Flow Nostokana that were both upgraded with color E Ink panels. Its latest concept, the BMW iX3 Flow Edition announced at the 2026 Beijing Auto Show, might look slightly less ambitious but it takes a new approach, pushing color-changing cars closer to actual production.
BMW's previous concepts wrapped the entire vehicle in a patchwork of E Ink panels...
by The Verge - yesterday at 19:25
Spring has sprung, as they say, and to mark the occasion, Google is running a spring-centric promo until Sunday, April 26th. The limited-time discounts apply to a number of Google’s first-party devices, from the Pixel 10 Pro to the Pixel Buds Pro 2, as well as the wearables like the Pixel Watch 4. In fact, Google’s latest watch is on sale at Amazon, Best Buy, and the Google Store in its 41mm / Wi-Fi configuration starting at $309.99 ($40 off) — or in the 45mm config for $359.99 ($40 off) — which is one of the better prices we’ve seen in recent months.
Google Pixel Watch 4 Where to Buy: $349.99 $309.99 at Amazon (41mm, Wi-Fi) $349.99 $309.99 at Google (41mm, Wi-Fi) $399.99 $359.99 at Amazon (45mm,...
by Wired - yesterday at 19:17
Isomorphic Labs president Max Jaderberg said at WIRED Health in London that the startup has built a “broad and exciting pipeline of new medicines.”
by Human Progress - yesterday at 19:14
“The Utility Power Reactor Incremental Scaling Effort (UPRISE) program announced by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) in March will help nuclear companies uprate their reactors and bring dormant facilities back online… Since the 1970s, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has approved 171 uprates, resulting in a ‌gain of around 8 GW as of January 2022. The NRC expects to receive applications for 32 additional uprates by 2032 that would increase the power capacity of the existing nuclear fleet by a further 2.4 GW. Uprates are ‘certainly the most cost effective and immediate way to increase nuclear capacity, and it capitalizes on infrastructure we already have,’ Rian Bahran, Deputy Assistant...
by Wired - yesterday at 19:04
Bootstrap Bio and Manhattan Genomics, which were pursuing human embryo editing to prevent serious disease, have shut down.
by dwell - yesterday at 18:45
Inspired by Usonian homes, the 1957 residence by Herbert Fritz Jr. has wooden built-ins, concrete blocks, and…purple carpet?Location: 852 N. Cedar Street, Richland Center, Wisconsin Price: $379,900 Year Built: 1957 Architect: Herbert Fritz Jr. Footprint: 1,878 square feet (4 bedrooms, 3 baths) Lot Size: 0.44 Acres From the Agent: "852 N. Cedar Street is a 1957 commission from Herbert Fritz Jr.—son of a Taliesin survivor, heir to a tradition that believed a house should belong to its land. The vaulted ceiling opens the living room far beyond its footprint. Band windows frame a panoramic hillside view that feels, from inside, like it was always part of the plan. The cantilever pushes the bedroom wing out...
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 18:10
When Elliot Williams and Al Williams compare their notes on the week in Hackaday, you know you’ll get at least one or two bad puns. How bad? Tune in and find out.
This week, Tom Nardi visits several in-person events, and Elliot and Al talk about smart buttons, Itanium, ejecting things from a rocket, and the infinite pickle. Will Elliot build the coin flipper? Will Al use plasma at his next cookout? Hard to say.
For the can’t miss articles, this week, Al swept the category with a post on splices and another on what human junk is still sitting on the moon.
What do you think? Leave us a comment or record something and send it to our mailbag. Download a copy of the podcast with an MP3 from our continuous audio...
by BBC - yesterday at 18:04
An internal Pentagon email reportedly outlines options to punish allies over a perceived lack of support for Iran war.
by Conspiracy Watch - yesterday at 17:56
Anna Paulina Luna (1989 - ) est une députée américaine républicaine et l'une des figues centrales de la mouvance MAGA. Élue du 13ème district de Floride depuis 2023, cette ancienne militaire accède à la notoriété grâce à sa maîtrise des réseaux sociaux et un discours de rupture à l'égard des institutions. Elle se distingue en […]
by Le Monde - yesterday at 17:30
Le potentiel ministre de l’économie du RN en cas d’arrivée du parti au pouvoir assure avoir fait doubler la fortune de l’entrepreneur d’extrême droite lorsqu’il était gestionnaire de son « family office ». Plusieurs éléments mettent en doute le sérieux de ses chiffres, alors que la plupart de ses projets de croissance n’ont pas vu le jour.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 16:44
A drawing that riffs on the latest news and happenings.
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 16:25
1936. hitler enfile un kimono offert par l'ambassadeur du japon.
la photo paraït dans le asahi shimbun. plus tard, il ordonnera qu'on la fasse disparaître.
by Torrentfreak - yesterday at 16:16
Launched in 2015, Zoowoman was a popular Spanish non-commercial film repository. The site did not store any movies, but it hosted links to approximately 11,000 titles before it was shut down.
The site was purportedly operated by a group of people, including film enthusiast “El Feo,” who is also the creator of La Filmoteca Maldita, a YouTube channel with over 400,000 subscribers dedicated to film analysis and criticism.
El Feo told TorrentFreak that the site focused specifically on films that were out of circulation commercially, discontinued, or otherwise difficult to access through normal channels. As such, the project was recognized for its uniqueness and reportedly used as a teaching resource by several...
by Usbek & Rica - yesterday at 15:27
Quels risques l’IA fait peser sur les artistes, la création et l’industrie culturelle ? Pour répondre à ces questions, nous avons organisé la rencontre entre le journaliste et scénariste Pascal Chind, cofondateur du label Fabrication Humaine, et Louis de Diesbach, éthicien de l’IA qui a publié début avril Faussaires algorithmiques (L’Aube, 2026).
by Usbek & Rica - yesterday at 15:19
FICTION // Et si 2026 signait la dernière coupe du monde de foot « à l’ancienne » ? Dans une fiction du prochain mondial 2042, un collectif d'experts d’EY Fabernovel nous projettent dans une compétition devenue une véritable industrie de l’attention où l’expérience des fans et le business model du secteur sportif se retrouvent totalement bouleversés. Dans un monde où l’émotion est mesurée et monétisée, regarder un match ne suffit plus : il faut le vivre, le ressentir et surtout y participer.
by Korben - yesterday at 14:40
- Contient des liens affiliés Amazon -
Gros bestiau électrique avec deux batteries de 19,2 Ah, le Engwe LE20 Passenger annonce 350 km d'autonomie et embarque jusqu'à 200 kg sur sa banquette arrière. Pendant plusieurs semaines, je l'ai utilisé pour amener ponctuellement un enfant de 5 ans à l'école et même pour transporter l'enfant avec sa mère en même temps. J'adore. Avec ses 41,5 kg sur la balance et son long porte-bagages équipé d'un dossier et de repose-pieds pour passager, le LE20 Passenger ne se cache pas : c'est un vélo cargo assumé. La charge utile grimpe à 200 kg, rider inclus, de quoi embarquer deux enfants ou un enfant et sa mère sans broncher. J'ai testé la configuration "fiston...
by Korben - yesterday at 14:17
Imaginez qu'à cause de cette putain de pénurie, vous vous mettiez à fabriquer votre propre RAM à la main dans votre cabane de jardin façon Heisenberg ? Hé bien c'est exactement ce que Dr. Semiconductor vient de réussir, et les 20 premières cellules DRAM de ce fou furieux fonctionnent ! Alors forcément, ça m'intéresse !
Le bonhomme a posté sa vidéo le 20 avril dernier et ça prend clairement une tournure virale dans le monde du hardware car ça donne de l'espoir et des idées à pas mal de makers. Il avait d'ailleurs déjà publié en mars une
vidéo entière sur la construction de la cleanroom
elle-même, donc ce n'est pas un coup d'éclat one-shot, mais une vraie série documentaire dans laquelle...
by dwell - yesterday at 14:02
They combined $206,000 and sweat equity to create a 950-square-foot ADU behind the duplex they already owned.One of the things Chelsea Lipham cherished about her home in Portland, Maine, was how beautiful its tree-filled lot was. What she didn’t care for, however, was the cramped interior of her 100-year-old duplex. "I was feeling kind of claustrophobic," says Chelsea, who is a registered architect. She imagined an open, airy space with better views of the canopy around her—something that was more like the cabin in the woods she grew up in.  In Portland, Maine, architect Chelsea Lipham designed and built a 950-square-foot ADU where she, her husband, and five-year-old son live. By keeping the ADU’s...
by Korben - yesterday at 13:28
Vous connaissez probablement Wild Gunman sur NES, ce petit jeu de tir au Zapper avec des cowboys pixellisés. Mais la version originale, c'est autre chose. En 1974, Nintendo sort une borne d'arcade imaginée par Gunpei Yokoi lui-même, avant qu'il ne devienne la légende derrière la Game Boy.
Au lieu de sprites, le jeu projette directement à l'écran du vrai film 16mm de cowboys qui dégainent. Le joueur sort un pistolet d'un étui physique au flash lumineux, et doit tirer avant l'adversaire. On est là sur un truc mi-électronique mi-mécanique, avec un projecteur pour assurer la diffusion de l'image. Une seule borne originale survivrait encore aujourd'hui, entre les mains d'un collectionneur privé. Trop...
by Korben - yesterday at 13:16
Le sergent-chef Gannon Van Dyke, 38 ans, stationné à Fort Bragg, a été arrêté et inculpé pour avoir empoché quelques 410 000 dollars de gains sur Polymarket en misant sur la chute de Nicolás Maduro, alors même qu'il participait à l'opération qui l'a capturé.
L'information vient du département de la Justice américain, relayée hier par CNN. Le procureur Jay Clayton, qui pilote le dossier à New York, a déclaré que ceux à qui on confie les secrets de la nation ont le devoir de les protéger.
Van Dyke a créé son compte Polymarket en décembre, juste avant l'opération Absolute Resolve qui a exfiltré Maduro du palais présidentiel de Caracas dans la nuit du 3 janvier. Entre le 27 décembre et...
by Korben - yesterday at 13:10
Un dev français, Romain Laurent, vient de sortir un jeu qui transforme en divertissement TOUT ce que tous les devs fuient, à savoir l'astreinte de nuit, le téléphone qui sonne à 3h du matin, et le hotfix qu'il faut pondre vite fait avec une prod qui fume. Ça s'appelle
Hotfix
, ça tourne dans votre navigateur, et ça se prend au sérieux juste comme il faut, vous allez voir. Dans ce jeu, vous enchaînez des micro-crises à résoudre le plus rapidement possible, sans filet. Vous commencez comme "Junior" à 0 points, parce qu'évidemment votre carrière de pompier recommence de zéro comme tout le monde puis ensuite ça monte en puissance. Il y a même un leaderboard, histoire que votre souffrance soit...
by Autheuil - yesterday at 12:14
La Cour des Comptes vient de publier son rapport sur l’exécution du budget 2025. Le constat est clair, et violent. Plus de 90% des dépenses sont rigides, c’est à dire qu’elles ne peuvent être réduites que par des réformes de fond, qui imposent de passer la loi, et donc des décisions politiques. On est arrivé […]
by Usbek & Rica - yesterday at 12:06
Chaque vendredi, la rédaction d'Usbek & Rica fait partir une newsletter flambant neuve remplie d'actualité du futur que vous ne verrez ni sur notre site, ni dans notre mag, ni sur nos réseaux.
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 12:01
Les comptes favorables aux autorités iraniennes inondent Internet de vidéos satiriques générées par le biais de l’intelligence artificielle. Elles surfent sur le capital sympathie des jouets danois, mais aussi sur l’impopularité de Donald Trump, pour détourner le regard de l’Occident des souffrances endurées par la population iranienne.