constant stream of curated content
by Le Monde - about 52 minutes
Le Parquet national financier a annoncé, vendredi 6 février, avoir ouvert une enquête pour « blanchiment de fraude fiscale aggravée », contre le président de l’IMA et sa fille Caroline. Il sera reçu dimanche par le ministre des affaires étrangères, Jean-Noël Barrot, pour s’expliquer sur ses liens avec l’homme d’affaires américain et criminel sexuel.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Départ pour l’Italie, alors que débutent les Jeux olympiques d’hiver 2026 de Milan-Cortina, avec le récit du quotidien “Domani”, qui démêle l’histoire du “tramezzino”, petit sandwich au pain de mie, rectangulaire à Turin mais triangulaire à Venise. Pour la garniture, il existe une myriade de combinaisons.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Face à l’angoisse de la mort et à l’étrange impression d’un présent figé, Marian Donner raconte dans “De Groene Amsterdammer” qu’elle cherche comment habiter le temps. Chaque semaine, “Courrier international” vous propose un billet qui soulève des interrogations sur notre condition moderne.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Qualifié pour concourir dans quatre disciplines, le skieur suisse de 28 ans est l’un des favoris des Jeux olympiques de Milan-Cortina, où il vise au moins une médaille d’or en descente. En amont de la compétition, la presse helvète dresse le portrait d’un athlète à qui tout semble réussir, que ce soit sur le plan sportif ou financier.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Pour l’Arabie saoudite comme pour les Émirats arabes unis, cette zone géographique à cheval entre la Corne de l’Afrique et la péninsule arabique est un espace crucial d’investissements économiques et politiques. Pour la déclinaison anglophone de la chaîne panarabe Al-Jazeera, le chercheur et journaliste somalien Abdi Aynte démêle un épais écheveau d’intérêts stratégiques sur la mer Rouge.
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Après avoir dénoncé dans un premier temps l’« indignation artificielle » des médias, l’administration présidentielle a finalement attribué le post sur le compte Truth Social du président à une erreur d’un membre de son équipe, et l’a supprimé.
by HackAdAy - about 2 hours
Before the Internet, there was a certain value to knowing how to find out about things. Reference librarians could help you locate specialized data like the Thomas Register, the EE and IC Masters for electronics, or even an encyclopedia or CRC handbook. But if you wanted up-to-date info on any country of the world, you’d often turn to the CIA. The originally classified document was what the CIA knew about every country in the world. Well, at least what they’d admit to knowing, anyway. But now, the Factbook is gone.
The publication started in 1962 as the classified “The National Basic Intelligence Factbook,” it went public in 1971 and became “The World Factbook” in the 1980s. While it is gone, you...
by BBC - about 4 hours
The US president said he "didn't make a mistake", adding he had only seen the beginning of the video before it was posted.
by BBC - about 4 hours
The order did not specify the rate that could be imposed, but used 25% as an example.
by HackAdAy - about 5 hours
[Jer Schmidt] needed a way to put a lot of M8 bolts into a piece of square steel tubing, but just drilling and tapping threads into the thin steel wouldn’t be strong enough. So he figured out a way to reliably weld nuts to the inside of the tube, and his technique works even if the tube is long and the inside isn’t accessible.
Two smaller holes on either side. Weld through the holes. A little grinding results in a smooth top surface.
Essentially, one drills a hole for the bolt, plus two smaller holes on either side. Then one welds the nut to the tubing through those small holes, in a sort of plug weld. A little grinding is all it takes to smooth out the surface, and one is left with a strong threaded hole...
by BBC - about 6 hours
Sanae Takaichi is popular - but inflation and a diplomatic row with China weigh on voters' minds.
by io9 - about 6 hours
Rights issues have hovered around the killer's iconic mask for decades.
by The Verge - yesterday at 23:45
Digital photo frames like the Aura Aspen are down to some of their best prices. Valentine’s Day is coming up fast, and if you haven’t started shopping yet, there are a lot of great gifts on sale that should still arrive in time if you order soon. Several Verge-approved gadgets are seeing some of their best discounts since the holidays, with options we think will appeal to a wide range of interests, from thoughtful picks like digital photo frames to e-readers, smart speakers, smartwatches, massagers, and even practical stuff like vacuums. While some are bigger-ticket items, quite a few cost under $100, so there’s something here for a range of budgets, too. Below, we’ve rounded up the best Valentine’s...
by BBC - yesterday at 23:37
Andrea Bocelli and Mariah Carey perform as part of vibrant opening ceremony for the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics.
by io9 - yesterday at 23:15
What happens if a Waymo runs into an elephant? The world model knows.
by Wired - yesterday at 23:14
The government has withheld details of the investigation of Renee Good’s killing—but an unrelated case involving the ICE agent who shot her could force new revelations.
by io9 - yesterday at 23:05
Is this what a frothy bubble looks like?
by QZ - yesterday at 23:00
A bankruptcy filing could result in almost 200 stores closing, while the restaurant industry also contracts
by io9 - yesterday at 23:00
Even with the full rollout of Amazon's Alexa+ and Google's Gemini for Home, it feels like we're still shouting into the void.
by io9 - yesterday at 23:00
An adult cast romance about a poison assassin seeking love loosely riffing on 'Naruto' is about as peak‑shonen a premise as you can get.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 22:54
La journaliste acte son impossibilité de rester sur la même chaîne que Jean-Marc Morandini, deux fois définitivement condamné pour des faits de délinquance sexuelle mais maintenu en poste par sa direction.
by The Verge - yesterday at 22:32
CarPlay users could soon be able to use their chatbot of choice instead of Siri. As Bloomberg reports, Apple is working to add support for CarPlay voice control apps from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and others. Previously, users who wanted to access third-party chatbots in the car would need to go through their iPhone, but soon they may be able to talk with ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini directly in CarPlay. However, Apple reportedly "won't let users replace the Siri button on CarPlay or the wake word that summons the service." So, users will need to manually open their preferred chatbot's app. Developers will be able to set their apps to autom …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Verge - yesterday at 22:32
This is the final(ish) design of the T1 Phone, though it’s going to lose the T1 logo. | Screenshot: Dominic Preston / The Verge Where's the Trump phone? We're going to keep talking about it every week. We've reached out, as usual, to ask about the Trump phone's whereabouts. This time, surprisingly, we received a response - and an interview.
The Trump phone is real - maybe, sort of, soon? - and I've seen it. Not in the flesh, but during an hourlong video call with two Trump Mobile executives who showed me a phone, and told me more about why it was delayed, when it might actually reach buyers, and why its spec sheet has changed again and again.
I spoke to Don Hendrickson - yes, the one who had seemingly...
by Wired - yesterday at 22:02
Among those Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently named to a federal autism committee are people who tout dangerous treatments and say vaccine manufacturers are “poisoning children.”
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
Simulator-style video games are designed to scale in complexity, allowing players to engage at anything from a casual level to highly detailed, realistic simulation. Microsoft Flight Simulator, for example, can be played with a keyboard and mouse, a controller, or a huge, expensive simulator designed to replicate a specific airplane in every detail. Driving simulators are similar, and [CNCDan] has been hard at work on his DIY immersive driving sim rig, with this hand brake as his latest addition.
For this build, [CNCDan] is going with a lever-style handbrake which is common in motorsports like drifting and rallying. He has already built a set of custom pedals, so this design borrows heavily from them. That...
by QZ - yesterday at 21:17
The dollar has shed more than 10% of its value since Trump re-entered the Oval Office. The president says the weaker currency is "great"
by Wired - yesterday at 20:43
Forget the Super Bowl, Samsung’s Fantastic S90F QD-OLED TV is on a sweet sale just in time for the Winter Olympics.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 20:30
Fidget toys are everywhere these days. A particularly popular type simply puts some keyboard switches on a plate to provide a certain type of clicky satisfaction. [wjddnjsdnd] took that concept a step further, building a keychain-sized fidget toy that actually has games on it.
The build is based around six key switches in a 2 x 3 array. The key switches are notable in this case for being magnetic shaft keys. Rather than using a mechanical switch to indicate a keypress, the keycap instead merely moves a magnet which triggers a signal in a hall effect sensor beneath the key. In this case, the build uses A3144 hall effect sensors, which are read by the Arduino Nano running the show. The Nano is also hooked up to...
by Wired - yesterday at 20:20
Saatva is providing a bedding bundle to Team USA hockey and figure skating at the 2026 Olympic Winter Games—here are my thoughts on it as a sleep coach.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 20:18
Comment le géant automobile en est-il arrivé à passer une provision de 22 milliards d’euros dans ses comptes pour effectuer un rétropédalage industriel concernant le tout-électrique ? L’explication est organisationnelle, commerciale, mais aussi politique.
by The Verge - yesterday at 20:18
300 journalists have lost their jobs at The Washington Post. Over 300,000 readers have canceled their subscriptions. Owner Jeff Bezos, who purchased the legendary publication in 2013, has driven his reputation into the ground by using his vast empire to churn out content designed to make President Donald Trump happy: Amazon MGM Studios spent $40 million to produce a fawning documentary about Melania Trump, which premiered days before the Post sent out mass layoff notices. And yet, he's gotten nothing out of his attempts to suck up to Donald Trump - at least, nothing that's a net positive to his bottom line. Which begs the cynical question: …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:17
“Argentina and the United States agreed Thursday to ease restrictions on each other’s goods in an expansive trade deal that boosts a drive by President Javier Milei to open up Argentina’s protectionist economy… After imposing sweeping tariffs on its trading partners, the Trump administration changed its tune last November in announcing framework deals with four Latin American countries, including Argentina. The White House argued that the reduction of tariffs on Argentine beef and Ecuadorian bananas, among other imports, would improve the ability of American firms to sell products abroad and relieve rising prices for American consumers. The announcement also came as Trump’s steep tariffs drew...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:07
“Ranchers can spend hundreds of thousands per year moving cattle between fields. GrazeMate builds autonomous drone software to guide cattle – doing the work of helicopters and motorbikes with AI that understands animal behaviour.” From Y Combinator.
The post GrazeMate: Drones That Herd Cattle appeared first on Human Progress.
by The Verge - yesterday at 20:02
Fortnite developer Epic Games says the account some people believed to be linked to Jeffrey Epstein is a "ruse." In a reply on X, the developer writes, "an existing Fortnite account owner changed their username" to "littlestjeff1," an alias spotted in several emailed receipts from YouTube in the Epstein files.
The email suggests that "littlestjeff1" may have been connected to Epstein's YouTube account, prompting online sleuths to search for the username on other platforms. Users later uncovered a "littlestjeff1" account on Fortnite, along with a 2019 email that mentions purchasing VBucks in Fortnite - though the sender and recipient are red …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:01
“Archaeologists have now found traces of a plant-based poison on several 60,000-year-old quartz Stone Age arrowheads found in South Africa, according to a new paper published in the journal Science Advances. That would make this the oldest direct evidence of using poisons on projectiles—a cognitively complex hunting strategy—and pushes the timeline for using poison arrows back into the Pleistocene.” From Ars Technica.
The post These 60,000-Year-Old Poison Arrows Are Oldest Yet Found appeared first on Human Progress.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 20:00
The conservative commentator on the antisemitism in MAGA media and why he condemns President Trump as corrupt yet sticks with him.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 20:00
A First Amendment lawyer once attacked Democrats for suppressing unpopular opinions; she now sees a vastly greater threat from the Trump Administration.
by Wired - yesterday at 19:58
Red and blue states alike have introduced legislation in recent weeks that would halt data center development, citing concerns from climate to high energy prices.
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 19:51
De 2019 à 2024, plus de 300 millions d’euros provenant d’activités criminelles auraient été blanchis à l’aide d’un système sophistiqué impliquant des sociétés françaises et des biens immobiliers en Roumanie.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 19:43
“The Don River in Toronto was once so polluted with waste, garbage and chemicals that it caught on fire. The water itself, which flows towards Lake Ontario, was so inhospitable that it hosted life’s very antithesis. Now, after huge efforts to renaturalize the area, researchers are seeing a rebirth. The river has gone from being pronounced dead in 1969 to a place that is attracting fish and other aquatic species. This month, Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) shared its findings from the Don River in 2025, which include more than 20 fish species documented in its waters. For the first time since 2012, an Atlantic Salmon was found in the area, along with the first-ever Emerald Bowfin — a...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 19:39
“The Government of India in partnership with States/UTs is implementing the Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) to provide functional tap water connections to every rural household (at 55 lpcd, BIS:10500 standard). Progress has been substantial: starting from 3.24 crore (16.71%) connections in August 2019, the number has surged to over 15.79 crore (81.57%) households as of January 29, 2026, providing water supply to the majority of rural India.” From Ministry of Jal Shakti.
The post Tap Water Supply to Rural Indian Households Surges appeared first on Human Progress.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 19:00
This week, Hackaday’s Elliot Williams and Kristina Panos met up over coffee to bring you the latest news, mystery sound results show, and of course, a big bunch of hacks from the previous seven days or so.
We found no news to speak of, except that Kristina has ditched Windows after roughly 38 years. What is she running now? What does she miss about Windows? Tune in to find out.
On What’s That Sound, Kristina thought it was a jackhammer, but [Statistically Unlikely] knew it was ground-tamper thingy, and won a Hackaday Podcast t-shirt! Congratulations!
After that, it’s on to the hacks and such, beginning with 3D printing on the nano scale, and a couple of typewriter-based hacks.  Then we take a look at...
by New Yorker - yesterday at 18:59
Beverly Glenn-Copeland’s latest album, produced with his partner, Elizabeth, was made amid financial hardship and illness’s mounting toll.
by dwell - yesterday at 18:42
The birch structures support flexibility for the architect parents and their two kids, amplifying what makes Nova Oeiras such a desirable place to live.Matilde Girão and Ricardo Lima had recently moved into their new apartment when they ran into a couple of architects who had been their professors in college. Matilde and Ricardo, now architects themselves, quickly learned that their professors were actually neighbors in the condominium where they had just renovated a flat for their own family. It was a pleasant surprise, but more than just a chance encounter. Architects Matilde Girão and Ricardo Lima renovated a 1,300-square-foot flat for their family at Nova Oeiras, a midcentury development in Lisbon with...
by FluxBlog - yesterday at 18:03
Memorials “Cut Glass Hammer”
Memorials is a duo fronted by Verity Susman, who was a central player in Electrelane back in the 2000s. Memorials has a different dynamic than Electrelane – more streamlined arrangements, a little jazzier in a David Axelrod way here and there – but there’s a lot of overlap in aesthetic, to the point that this could just be labeled new Electrelane material and no one would blink. Susman’s prim vocal tone and dry affect is unmistakable, and the post-Stereolab droning vintage organ/high momentum groove combo on “Cut Glass Hammer” has always been in her wheelhouse. Susman and drummer Matthew Simms aren’t breaking new ground here, but they’re expert craftspeople when...
by Le Monde - yesterday at 18:00
Le coup d’envoi de l’événement a été donné, vendredi soir, au stade de San Siro à Milan, en conclusion d’une cérémonie organisée, en simultané, à Cortina d’Ampezzo, mais aussi à Livigno et Predazzo où des athlètes ont défilé.
by BBC - yesterday at 17:39
Lt Gen Vladimir Alexeyev is a senior figure in the main directorate of Russia's military general staff.
by dwell - yesterday at 17:34
Bring your friends—this creative retreat includes three studios and a revamped bungalow connected by gardens and courtyards.Location: 161 – 167 N. Garden Street, Ventura, California Price: $1,895,000 Year Built: 2022 Architect: Richard Orne Footprint: 3,723 square feet (4 bedrooms, 7 baths) Lot Size: 0.18 Acres From the Agent: "Escape the pressures of big city life for this unique live/work art compound less than a mile from the beach in downtown Ventura. In a quiet neighborhood, with an existing mix of multiunit residential, commercial, artists’ studios, and light industry, the architect has created a compelling environment for living and working in community. Legally zoned for both commercial and...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 17:00
Les Jeux olympiques d’hiver 2026 de Milan-Cortina démarrent vendredi 6 février. Dans quelles disciplines les athlètes français ont-ils le plus de chances de remporter des médailles ?
by dwell - yesterday at 16:46
Architecture firm Snøhetta faces charges after emails reveal union busting efforts, Philadelphia’s iconic Rocky statue is being relocated, and more.Builders including Lennar and Taylor Morrison are floating a massive rent-to-own program some are referring to as "Trump Homes," pitching the idea of creating up to one million entry-level houses funded by private investors. (Despite its name, the proposal has nothing to do with the White House.) Here’s how it would work. (Bloomberg) Staff at Bjarke Ingels Group’s (BIG) London studio are protesting proposed layoffs that could cut nearly half the office after a major project was abruptly canceled. The employees, many of whom relocated internationally to the...
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 16:40
Kotulo ward • Kenya • May 2011 📷 #flashes
by Korben - yesterday at 16:24
Et si les meilleures techniques de game dev des années 2000 revenaient dans votre navigateur ?
ArcadeGPU, c'est un moteur de jeu complet qui tourne dans le navigateur grâce à WebGPU. C'est une vraie architecture de jeu avec walkmesh, hitbox BSP, moteur de script, pipeline graphique à la PS1 et même la physique Jolt intégrée (un moteur open source utilisé dans certains gros jeux). Le truc c'est que le dev derrière, un Français qui bosse seul sur le projet, a pris le parti de ressusciter des techniques qu'on utilisait entre 2000 et 2010 dans le développement de jeux. Du walkmesh pour la navigation des personnages, du hitmesh pour les collisions, du draw call only pour le rendu... Des trucs qu'on ne...
by QZ - yesterday at 16:21
Many popular vehicles are actually selling for more than their MSRP, according to data from Consumer Reports and TrueCar
by QZ - yesterday at 15:51
Amazon’s earnings showed momentum across AWS and ads. Then, the company dared AI-hungry investors to underwrite its $200 billion long game
by QZ - yesterday at 15:51
The crypto downturn has occurred against a backdrop of widening losses across high-growth tech stocks and other risk assets
by New Yorker - yesterday at 15:47
In appointing Ronald Hicks to the most prominent post in the U.S. Church, is Leo XIV assembling his own Team U.S.A.?
by Korben - yesterday at 14:52
VirtualBox, le bon vieux logiciel de virtualisation d'Oracle, vient de franchir un cap plutôt inattendu. Le code de développement supporte désormais KVM comme backend sur Linux ! En gros, au lieu de s'appuyer uniquement sur son propre module noyau (qui, soyons honnêtes, a toujours été un poil galère à maintenir), l'outil de virtualisation peut maintenant utiliser l'hyperviseur natif de Linux.
Et c'est pas rien quand on sait que le logiciel d'Oracle et KVM se marchaient dessus depuis des années. C'était impossible de faire tourner les deux en même temps... Du coup, plutôt que de continuer à se battre, Oracle a décidé de faire copain-copain avec KVM. C'est pas bête !
L'idée vient à l'origine...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 12:00
De la taxe Zucman à l’abattement fiscal des retraités, les Décodeurs retracent l’itinéraire d’une vingtaine de mesures ayant fait l’objet d’intenses discussions six mois durant, avant d’être abandonnées.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
Akinola Davies, Jr.,’s début feature, scripted by his older brother, Wale, follows two brothers and their father during Nigeria’s historic 1993 election.