constant stream of curated content
by io9 - about 33 minutes
From getting plenty of daylight to avoiding late night caffeine runs, here are some expert-backed tips on how to doze off more easily.
by Wired - about 33 minutes
A WIRED analysis of DHS records identified dozens of specialized federal agents who used force against US civilians during the largest known deployment of its kind in US history.
by Le Monde - about 42 minutes
Le président américain s’est félicité cette nuit de « progrès considérables », se donnant de deux à trois semaines pour terminer son opération et ramener l’Iran à l’« âge de pierre ». Dans les heures qui ont suivi ces déclarations, Israël a signalé plusieurs attaques de missiles.
by io9 - about 1 hour
The folks at Stormgate "hope to restore online play in a future patch."
by io9 - about 1 hour
Daniel Kuntz, one of Starboy's creators, tells us it's a "f*ck you" to AI gadgets.
by Wired - about 1 hour
Hack your hardware with these top picks for home-improvement heaven.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Depuis la fin de la pandémie, entre 800 000 et 900 000 immigrants réussissaient à se faire naturaliser. Mais sous l’administration Trump le processus est devenu beaucoup plus complexe et incertain, explique le quotidien “El País”.
by io9 - about 2 hours
By essentially rebadging the Toyota Highlander, Subaru deepens the impressive variety of its EV lineup.
by QZ - about 2 hours
Apple’s $150 billion in cash, a massive ecosystem, and decades of comebacks suggest the company may still have the last laugh
by QZ - about 2 hours
The Bearista Cold Cup was meant to spread holiday cheer. Instead, it sold out in hours, sparked fights, and turned a $30 cup into a speculative asset.
by QZ - about 2 hours
Family-friendly destinations that balance easy planning, engaging activities, and flexible itineraries for a smoother summer getaway
by QZ - about 2 hours
Dimon doubled-down about a week after an internal petition calling for more flexibility reached 2,000 signatures
by QZ - about 2 hours
First impressions close deals. From professional staging to deep cleaning, Realtor's recommendations can turn casual browsers into serious buyers
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Au cœur d’une fraude record, l’ancien patron de la banque brésilienne Master s’était constitué un vaste réseau au sein de l’élite économique et politique brésilienne. En détention préventive depuis le 4 mars, il s’apprêterait à collaborer avec la justice et risque d’impliquer des responsables de tous bords et figures judiciaires de premier plan, à quelques mois des élections générales.
by Korben - about 2 hours
Le designer suédois Love Hultén vient de dévoiler la NES-SY2.0, un synthétiseur fait main qui rend hommage à la NES tout en servant de véritable console de jeu. L'objet accepte les cartouches originales et produit de la musique chiptune.
Un objet entre console et instrument
La NES-SY2.0 reprend les codes visuels de la NES originale, avec son slot de cartouche et ses ports manette en façade, le tout habillé dans un boîtier en bois qui lui donne un côté objet d'art. Le format s'inspire des ordinateurs portables des années 80 : l'appareil s'ouvre comme une valise et révèle un écran, un clavier MIDI Keystep et toute une rangée de boutons et molettes rouges pour manipuler le son en temps...
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Militaire, énergétique, financière, technologique : la dépendance de l’Europe vis-à-vis des États-Unis est multiple. À chaque crise, elle devient un point de faiblesse, révélant son incapacité à encaisser les chocs seule, estime l’Allemand Wolfgang Munchau sur le site “UnHerd”. Entre illusion de supériorité et réalité d’une fragilité structurelle, le Vieux Continent fait face à une impasse stratégique.
by Korben - about 2 hours
La cour d'appel de Paris vient de confirmer que les fournisseurs de DNS alternatifs doivent bloquer l'accès aux sites de streaming et d'IPTV pirates. Google, Cloudflare et Cisco ont perdu leur appel face à Canal+.
Cinq appels rejetés d'un coup
La cour d'appel de Paris a tranché cinq affaires distinctes dans lesquelles Canal+ demandait à Google (Google Public DNS), Cloudflare (1.1.1.1) et Cisco (OpenDNS) de bloquer des centaines de noms de domaine liés à du streaming illégal. Les trois entreprises avaient fait appel des ordonnances rendues en première instance par le tribunal judiciaire de Paris.
C'est la première fois qu'une cour d'appel française valide ce type de blocage DNS en s'appuyant sur...
by HackAdAy - about 3 hours
Recently [Kerry Wong] had one of his Cyclenbatt LiFePO4 batteries die after only a few dozen cycles, with a normal voltage still present on the terminals. One of the symptoms was that as soon as you try to charge it, the voltage goes up very rapidly to above 14 V due to what appears to be high internal resistance, and vice versa for discharging. In addition, the Bluetooth feature of the BMS appeared to have died as well, making non-invasive diagnostics somewhat tricky.
Close-up of the BMS. (Credit: Kerry Wong, YouTube)
After gently cutting open the plastic case, [Kerry] was greeted by the happily blinking blue LED of the Bluetooth module and deepening the mystery. Overall the build quality looks to be pretty...
by Courrier International - about 3 hours
Lors du week-end du 28 et 29 mars, au guidon d’une ZXMoto, le pilote français Valentin Debise a remporté les deux manches lors de l’épreuve portugaise à Portimão du championnat du monde Supersport 2026. Les médias chinois s’enflamment en qualifiant ces victoires de percées historiques pour l’industrie de pointe du pays.
by Le Monde - about 3 hours
Après plus d’un mois de guerre dans le golfe Arabo-Persique, les effets de la hausse des prix des carburants commencent à se faire sentir dans plusieurs secteurs industriels tricolores consommateurs d’énergies fossiles ou de matières premières dérivées du pétrole et du gaz.
by Torrentfreak - about 3 hours
In a complaint filed at a Nashville federal court in 2023, Universal Music, Sony Music, EMI and others, accused X Corp of ‘breeding’ mass copyright infringement.
The social media company allegedly failed to respond adequately to takedown notices and lacked a proper termination policy.
The National Music Publishers Association (NMPA), for example, claimed it had sent over 300,000 formal infringement notices, many of which didn’t lead to immediate removals.
“Twitter routinely ignores known repeat infringers and known infringements, refusing to take simple steps that are available to Twitter to stop these specific instances of infringement of which it is aware,” the music companies alleged.
X Won the...
by Courrier International - about 3 hours
La tradition est ancrée, on se déplace beaucoup à vélo aux Pays-Bas. Mais d’année en année, on le fait de plus en plus à l’aide d’un vélo électrique. “De Volkskrant” s’est demandé quelles sont les conséquences de cette révolution sur la santé des Néerlandais.
by Le Monde - about 3 hours
« Macron, que sa femme traite extrêmement mal… il se remet encore du coup de poing qu’il a pris à la mâchoire », a déclaré le président américain, qui reproche au chef de l’Etat français de ne pas prendre part à la guerre contre l’Iran.
by Journal du Lapin - about 4 hours
On se moque parfois d’Apple qui a pris quelques années pour remplacer le Lightning par l’USB-C dans les iPhone, mais dans les Mac, la société a commencé très tôt, il y a plus de 10 ans. Et l’adaptateur secteur du MacBook de 2015, d’une puissance de 29 W, est un peu particulier. Et il est surtout encore pris en charge en 2026. Posons les bases, rapidement : dans une bonne partie des adaptateurs secteur qui suivent la norme USB-PD (Power Delivery), on a généralement plusieurs tensions différentes, en fonction de ce qu’on doit alimenter. Un smartphpne peut se contenter d’une tension de 5 V, un ordinateur, lui, peut demander 9 V, 15 V, 20 V, etc. Les tensions disponibles dépendent en partie...
by Langue Sauce Piquante - about 4 hours
Nous apprenons dans Le Figaro qu’Athènes serait « la ville qui monte en Europe », une capitale qui mériterait désormais le détour alors qu’elle n’était auparavant qu’un lieu de passage entre deux resorts balnéaires, une ville de surcroît de plus en plus accueillante pour les riches, avec nouveaux hôtels et restaurants de luxe, sans oublier la « gentrification » de certains quartiers. Son aéroport viserait quarante millions de passagers à l’horizon 2032. En 1937, quand Sartre et Simone de Beauvoir visitèrent le pays, on recensait 150 000 touristes. Il est loin le temps où la Grèce se voyait manger la laine sur le dos par la Turquie voisine, qui lui piquait ses touristes. Il est...
by daryo Bluesky - about 4 hours
Google, Cloudflare, Cisco Lose Pirate Site DNS Blocking Appeal in France
https://torrentfreak.com/google-cloudflare-cisco-lose-pirate-site-dns-blocking-appeal-in-france/
by Le Monde - about 4 hours
La fusée Space Launch System de la NASA a décollé jeudi à 0 h 35 avec à son bord quatre astronautes. Cette mission de neuf jours autour de notre satellite naturel est une première depuis cinquante-quatre ans. L’objectif, édicté par Donald Trump et l’agence spatiale américaine, est le retour des humains sur la Lune en 2028.
by Le Taurillon - about 5 hours
Lorsque Collien Ulmen-Fernandes découvre, à l'automne 2024, l'existence de vidéos pornographiques hyperréalistes la mettant en scène sans son consentement, elle pense d'abord être confrontée à l'une des dérives désormais bien identifiées de l'intelligence artificielle. Les deepfakes, ces montages numériques capables de superposer un visage sur un corps ou une scène existante, se sont multipliés au cours de la dernière décennie, touchant de nombreuses femmes, anonymes ou célèbres, souvent sans qu'elles en aient connaissance. Mais ce qu'elle croit d'abord être une violation extérieure, anonyme et lointaine, se révèle progressivement être une trahison intime. Selon les informations...
by HackAdAy - about 6 hours
For those of us who hack old cameras, the 3D printer has undoubtedly been a boon. High precision, or at least consistent precision, lightproof enclosures can be easily made and reproduced for others. As a result there are quite a few printable cameras out there, and we’ve featured our share here. We didn’t realize just how many there are without the work of [Sebastian] though, as he’s gathered together every one he can find in a glorious catalog of homemade photographic construction.
As a snapshot of the world of home made cameras it’s refreshing to see such a wide range of designs. There are pinholes aplenty as well as cameras using lenses from scavanged point and shoots through 35mm SLR, medium...
by Wired - about 6 hours
Save on Lovehoney, including bestselling toys, lingerie, and popular gift sets for date nights, self-care, and couples’ play.
by Wired - about 6 hours
Save on rowers and accessories with Hydrow coupons, including an exclusive discount of $50.
by Wired - about 6 hours
Save 30% with a OnePlus coupon this month, plus save up to 10% on earbuds, phones, and more.
by BBC - about 7 hours
The quake struck between the islands of Manado and Ternate. Tsunami warnings have now been lifted.
by Le Monde - about 7 hours
Boris Vallaud, président des députés socialistes à l’Assemblée nationale, a posé un ultimatum au premier secrétaire Olivier Faure qui n’est pas opposé à l’idée d’une primaire organisée à l’automne.
by BBC - about 7 hours
There were some glaring omissions in the president's primetime address, writes the BBC's Gary O'Donoghue.
by io9 - about 8 hours
The duration of the incident was about the same as a horror film. Coincidence?
by Asialyst - about 8 hours
Voyager au Cambodge, c’est entendre les récits les plus intrigants, parcourir des lieux « hantés » dont l’atmosphère pèse sur les cœurs, ou compter les innombrables « preah phum, » ces petites « maisons des esprits » présentes dans ou devant chaque demeure. Plongeons ensemble dans ces mystères qui entourent la société khmère.
by HackAdAy - about 9 hours
Electro-permanent magnets (EPMs) are pretty nifty concepts, and if you aren’t familiar with them, they are permanent magnets with the ability to be electrically switched on or off. Unlike an electromagnet — which maintains a magnetic field only while power is applied — an EPM can remain “on” even when power is removed. Want to see one work? There’s a video embedded below that shows one off, but if you’d like to know how they work, we have you covered.
Inside are two types of magnet, one of which is permanent and the other being a semi-hard magnet paired with an electromagnetic coil. A semi-hard magnet’s flux can be changed by exposing it to a strong enough magnetic field, and that’s the key...
by FluxBlog - about 9 hours
Squeeze “What More Can I Say”
Squeeze’s new record Trixies was written well before the band existed, back when Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook were teenagers in the mid-1970s. The record, a concept album about a nightclub set in the far-off 1980s, was shelved and the band pivoted to the new wave-adjacent sound of their initial run of classic records. I can’t imagine they deliberately planned to keep a stockpile of songs written close to their prime to fully realize very deep into their career, but that’s effectively what they’ve done. The songs on Trixies aren’t quite up to the high standard of Cool for Cats, Argybargy, and East Side Story, but they’re not far off either. As it turns out,...
by Korben - about 10 hours
Cloudflare qui sort un successeur open source à WordPress le 1er avril, je vous avoue que ça sentait le poisson d'avril à plein nez. Sauf que non !!
EmDash
est bien réel, son code est sur GitHub sous licence MIT, et ça s'installe en une commande toute simple !
L'idée de base pour Cloudflare, c'est de dire que WordPress a plus de 20 ans et bien qu'il alimente 40% du web, son architecture de plugins est un emmental (Le gruyère n'a pas de trou les amis ^^). En effet, 96% des failles de sécurité viennent des extensions et pas du noyau PHP ni des thèmes et en 2025, on a quand même explosé le record de failles dans l'écosystème WP.
Du coup Cloudflare, grand prince (Matthew ^^ Ok, je sors...) a tout...
by The Verge - about 11 hours
On Wednesday morning, the Supreme Court heard arguments in Trump v. Barbara, a case challenging President Donald Trump's 2025 executive order banning birthright citizenship. Justices seemed skeptical of the administration's argument, but by taking up birthright citizenship at all, they showed how much ground nativists have gained since Trump's first term. The 14th Amendment is quite clear: "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside." Trump seeks to overturn this and create a new, effectively stateless American underclas …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Brighter Side - about 11 hours
The slowest part of a Mars mission is often not the driving, it is the waiting. A rover can only do so much when every move must be planned from Earth, then checked, then sent back across a gap that can stretch communication delays to between four and 22 minutes one way. Moreover, limited data transfer and dangerous terrain make a cautious style of exploration necessary. As a result, rovers may cover only a few hundred meters in a day. A new study suggests there is a faster way to work. In tests at the University of Basel’s Marslabor facility, researchers showed that a semi-autonomous four-legged robot could move to several targets in sequence and deploy instruments on its own. Despite this independence, the...
by HackAdAy - about 12 hours
You know what they say — you can’t keep a good website down. OldVersion.com, the repository of outdated software that has been serving up old versions of tools you need for the last twenty-five years, is not going away as we reported last year. Not only is it sticking around, it’s gotten a retro facelift inspired by Windows 3.1 or OS/2. Mostly Windows, given the screensaver, but we’ll let you find that for yourself.
We’re thrilled to see that OldVersion has gotten the support they need to keep going after running into financial troubles. According to founder Alex Levine, some of that support came as a result of the Hackaday article reporting on the then-upcoming closure, so kudos to you guys for...
by BBC - about 12 hours
After delays and technical issues, the first crewed Moon mission in 50 years finally took off from Florida and is now in Earth's orbit.
by The Verge - about 12 hours
NASA's Artemis II flight, which is set to take four astronauts toward the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years, successfully launched on Wednesday evening.
The Artemis II mission, part of NASA's Artemis program that's intended to bring humans back onto the Moon as early as 2028, will bring the four astronauts in orbit around the Moon on the first crewed flight of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket. The astronauts, Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, and Canadian Jeremy Hansen, will make the trip aboard the Orion crew capsule, and the full mission is expected to be a 10-day journey. The mission was delayed in February …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by HackAdAy - about 12 hours
NASA is going back to the Moon! We’ll follow the crew of Artemis II every step of the way. Day 1 – Liftoff!
After resolving a last-minute communications issue with the Flight Termination System (FTS), the Artemis II Space Launch System (SLS) rocket lifted off from Launch Complex 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 6:35 PM EDT.
Main engine cutoff (MECO) for the SLS rocket occurred at 6:43 PM, placing the Orion spacecraft and crew members Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen safely into orbit around the Earth. Just before 7:00 PM, all four solar array “wings” were successfully deployed from the European Service Module. The perigee and apogee raise maneuvers were...
by BBC - about 12 hours
New DNA testing has solved the 51-year-old case of murdered teenager Laura Ann Aime, according to investigators.
by The Brighter Side - yesterday at 22:07
Bright background light can do more than clutter a quantum experiment. It can wash out the very features that make quantum systems useful in the first place. That is the problem a team at the Institut national de la recherche scientifique, or INRS, set out to tackle. Working with light particles called photons, the researchers built a way to sift out meaningful quantum signals even when those signals are buried under heavy optical noise. Their results, published in Science Advances, point to a simpler and more energy-efficient route for keeping quantum information intact in messy, real-world conditions. The work came from the group of Professor José Azaña, in collaboration with Professor Roberto...
by The Verge - yesterday at 21:05
NASA's Artemis II Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft rest on Launch Pad 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on March 31, 2026, ahead of the crewed lunar mission. | Image: AFP via Getty Images With NASA planning to launch four astronauts on Wednesday on its Artemis II mission, the race to return to the Moon is back on. The current mission will see astronauts aboard the Orion capsule travel around the Moon before returning to Earth in 10 days' time. They'll be testing out the hardware and systems that could soon see Americans standing on the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years in the Artemis IV mission scheduled for 2028. NASA isn't ready to land people on the Moon just...
by The Brighter Side - yesterday at 20:07
The calls come in steady and they come in wrong. A woman locked out of her own home by a neighbor throwing objects. A resident in mental health crisis transferred off the emergency line and told to wait. A person reporting harassment, routed somewhere, then nowhere. In Los Angeles, the distance between dialing 911 and reaching actual help has become, for a significant share of callers, a journey through a system that was not designed for what they are asking it to do. The city answered just 57.43 percent of 911 calls within 15 seconds in 2024. Officials have cited operator shortages, attrition, and infrastructure that has not kept pace with demand. A recent LAPD report to the City Council made clear that Los...
by The Verge - yesterday at 20:02
This is part of our package about Apple's 50th anniversary. Read more here.
The thing about the iPhone is that everyone knew it was going to be a big deal, and then it was an even bigger deal than that. Hell, it's still the biggest thing going.
It's hard to remember, but almost 20 years ago Apple's first iPhone really was that good. The trick that Steve Jobs and Jony Ive kept pulling off in that era was turning the limitations of the available technology into focal points of the products they made. The first iMac was built around a big, heavy CRT display - but Ive made the translucent case wrap around it, transforming the internals into a …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Verge - yesterday at 19:59
Welcome to the worst day on the internet! As Chaim Gartenberg pointed out years ago, brands and a holiday dedicated to hoaxes are rarely a winning combo. If you’re a company with any kind of social media, internet, or AI chatbot presence in 2026, you really, truly only have four options on April Fools’ Day: Don’t do an April Fools’ joke. Put the time and energy into doing something productive that will materially benefit the world (or, less idealistically, your business) instead. Or just don’t do anything. Abstaining entirely would still be a net positive over the drain of resources and mental energy. Do an April Fools’ “joke,” but actually follow through on your stunt. This is arguably not a...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 19:39
“There’s no question that finally putting driverless semi trucks into regular interstate runs will be a turning point for the industry. A driver’s salary is 26 percent of the per-mile cost of operating a truck, Truckers Report says, while other studies have found it to be around 40 percent. Going driverless would result in considerable savings for the U.S. freight-truck business, which generates more than $900 billion in annual revenue. An acute driver shortage — frequently mentioned as a motivation for going autonomous — is no longer a major factor in the United States, though some cite a global shortage last year of 3.6 million drivers. ‘Currently there is not a big U.S. shortage,’ said Bob...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 19:24
Alors que la nouvelle mission lunaire dirigée par la NASA doit décoller dans la nuit de mercredi à jeudi, Les Décodeurs font le point sur les vols spatiaux habités depuis les années 1960.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 19:15
Summary: The perceived “autism epidemic” is largely driven by broadened diagnostic criteria and increased identification of mild, non-impairing cases rather than a true increase in severe autism. Cultural and institutional factors—like overdiagnosis and shifting norms in child psychiatry—play a significant role. Public health efforts are being misdirected by alarmist narratives and should instead focus on genuine health crises and more consistent, clinically meaningful diagnostic standards. For years, public health debate has often fixated on a supposed rise in the prevalence of autism. Various culprits have been named, including the well-investigated but unsubstantiated claim that vaccines cause...
by Journal du Lapin - yesterday at 19:00
Je vais être honnête : j’ai peut-être trouvé la meilleure façon de faire tourner un site tech en 2026. Et cette méthode révolutionnaire consiste globalement à ne plus faire grand-chose moi-même. C’était évidemment un poisson d’avril, je ne compte pas écrire mon blog avec une IA (ni générer des images moches).
Avant, il fallait tester du matériel, brancher des trucs, vérifier si un adaptateur marchait vraiment, prendre des photos, refaire les photos parce qu’elles étaient ratées, recommencer un test parce qu’un comportement bizarre venait d’un câble défectueux, et ensuite seulement écrire un article. C’était objectivement une perte de temps.
Maintenant, j’ai découvert les...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 18:39
“Today, nearly all data centers are designed around AC utility power. The electrical path includes multiple conversions before power reaches the compute load. Power typically enters the data center as medium-voltage AC (1 to 35 kilovolts), is stepped down to low-voltage AC (480 or 415 volts) using a transformer, converted to DC inside an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) for battery storage, converted back to AC, and converted again to low-voltage DC (typically 54 V DC) at the server, supplying the DC power computing chips actually require… That setup worked well enough for the amounts of power required by traditional data centers. Traditional data center computational racks draw on the order of 10 kW...
by The Brighter Side - yesterday at 18:07
For years, planetary scientists have argued that some of the material that built Earth must have drifted in from beyond Jupiter, carrying water and other volatile ingredients with it. Estimates often put that outer Solar System share somewhere between 6 percent and 40 percent. A new analysis led by ETH Zurich researchers Paolo Sossi and Dan Bower takes a very different view. After comparing Earth’s isotopic makeup with that of meteorites, Mars and the asteroid Vesta, they argue that Earth formed almost entirely from material already present in the inner Solar System. That does not mean the question is settled. Sossi himself says the debate over Earth’s building blocks is “far from over.” But the new...
by Journal du Lapin - yesterday at 18:00
Il y a des projets qui traînent dans un coin de la tête pendant des années. Pour moi, le DVB-H en faisait partie. La télévision numérique terrestre sur mobile, la grande promesse du milieu des années 2000, celle qui devait révolutionner l’usage de la vidéo sur téléphone avant qu’un certain Steve Jobs présente l’iPhone et que tout le monde décide que le streaming via réseau cellulaire était finalement plus pratique. En France, l’aventure a été brève et calamiteuse — quelques années d’expérimentation, un service commercial lancé en 2010, enterré en 2012 — mais j’avais gardé dans un coin de mon labo le matériel pour y rejouer un jour. C’était évidemment un poisson...
by Korben - yesterday at 17:00
Vous faites tourner des LLMs en local comme le gros fifou de Hipster IA que vous êtes et, Ô drame, la VRAM de votre ordinateur explose dès que le contexte dépasse 8000 pauvres malheureux tokens ?
Le problème c'est le KV cache les amis ! Le KV cache c'est ce truc qui stocke les clés et valeurs d'attention et qui grossit linéairement avec la longueur du prompt. C'est pour gérer ce problème que Google a annoncé sous la forme d'un whitepaper uniquement un algo qui compresse tout ça de 3,8 à 6,4 fois... et youpi pour nous, y'a un dev qui l'a déjà implémenté dans
un fork de llama.cpp
.
Concrètement ça donne :
llama-server -m model.gguf -ctk turbo3 -ctv turbo3 -fa on
Et vous venez de diviser la...