constant stream of curated content
by BBC - about 6 minutes
Iran rejected Donald Trump's ultimatum for a deal to re-open the Strait of Hormuz whose closure has led to a spike in oil prices.
by Courrier International - about 32 minutes
Chaque semaine, la chronique phénomène du “New York Times” sur l’amour vous est proposée en exclusivité, traduite en français par “Courrier international”. Aujourd’hui, un homme raconte sa relation inattendue – et tendre – avec sa propriétaire de longue date.
by Courrier International - about 32 minutes
Depuis la fin de l’USAID, les États-Unis ont multiplié les accords sanitaires bilatéraux avec des pays africains. En échange du financement de politiques publiques de santé, Washington exige l’accès à des données sensibles et à des échantillons d’agents pathogènes, mais n’offre aucune garantie de partage équitable des bénéfices, dénonce le commentateur zimbabwéen Tafi Mhaka dans une chronique pour “Al-Jazeera”.
by Courrier International - about 32 minutes
La Coupe du monde de football 2026, organisée conjointement par les États-Unis, le Mexique et le Canada, devait incarner, si ce n’est l’unité, au moins l’union de la région. Au contraire, les trois pays “aux objectifs distincts, aux frontières tendues et aux niveaux de confiance minimaux” vivent une “crise existentielle épouvantable”, déplore cette chroniqueuse du quotidien mexicain “El Universal”.
by Courrier International - about 32 minutes
Un peu plus d’un an après la réouverture de Notre-Dame de Paris, les projets de restauration d’édifices religieux essaiment en France. Un phénomène d’une “intensité inédite”, se réjouit le journal catholique italien “Avvenire”.
by Courrier International - about 32 minutes
Pour faire face à une éventuelle offensive terrestre américaine, le pouvoir iranien aurait déjà recruté jusqu’à 1 million de volontaires. Dont des jeunes âgés de moins de 15 ans, ce qui constitue un crime de guerre. Mais certains hésitent à répondre à l’appel, raconte le “Financial Times”.
by HackAdAy - about 2 hours
There were a plethora of tiny, local ISPs in the days of dial-up internet. Along with the big providers, many cities would have more than one. Some of those have survived broadband, but none of them were as small as [Jeff Geerling]’s Pi ISP — a tiny dialup ISP built so his Aunt’s old G3 MacBook can get online at 36kbps, as God and [Robert Khan] intended.
Hardware-wise, the Raspberry Pi is at one end of the chain, and your retrocomputer at another. In between, you’ll have a USB modem plugged into the Pi, and a device called a “two-way line simulator” to create a dial tone for that plain-old-telephone goodness. [Jeff] notes that these were commonly used in prisons for the phones that visitors use to...
by QZ - about 4 hours
AVO ramps up its mango push, modifying Peru facilities and leveraging global logistics to cut seasonality and boost year-round utilization.
by QZ - about 4 hours
Vertiv (VRT) is well positioned to outperform the market, as it exhibits above-average growth in financials.
by QZ - about 4 hours
Philip Morris (PM) could produce exceptional returns because of its solid growth attributes.
by QZ - about 4 hours
DDOG expands AI-driven observability and security tools as ARR growth, rising enterprise adoption and AI-native demand fuel its platform momentum.
by QZ - about 4 hours
SEDG expands US manufacturing and boosts solar shipments, but tariff risks and global trade tensions could cloud its growth outlook.
by BBC - about 4 hours
Two men have been arrested over the shooting of a seven-month-old baby in Williamsburg.
by HackAdAy - about 5 hours
Exposing the Wi-Fi chip to gamma radiation. (Credit: Yasuto Narukiyo et al, 2026)
From outer space to down here on Earth, there are many places where ionizing radiation levels are high enough that they effectively bar access for humans, but also make life miserable for anything containing semiconductor technology. This is especially true for anything involving wireless communications, such as Wi-Fi. However, recently Japanese researchers have created a Wi-Fi chip that is claimed to be so radiation-hardened that it can be used even in gamma ray-rich environments, such as in the worst contaminated depths of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor.
The indicated dose exposure of 500 kilograys that the chip survived...
by Le Monde - about 5 hours
Le président américain a accompagné son message, publié sur son réseau social, d’une vidéo montrant des explosions nocturnes, sans plus de détails. Il a confirmé samedi que l’ultimatum qu’il avait posé à Téhéran pour conclure un accord avec Washington ou rouvrir le détroit d’Ormuz courait jusqu’au lundi 6 avril, sans évoquer le sort du pilote américain dont l’avion de chasse a été abattu dans le ciel iranien.
by BBC - yesterday at 23:29
The niece and grand-niece of Qasem Soleimani are in the custody of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, officials said.
by BBC - yesterday at 23:16
Under the law, travel approvals must generally be granted and it remains unclear how the rule would be enforced if breached.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:15
Not content with bringing 'Percy Jackson' and 'Eragon' to TV, Disney's now turned its sights on 'Animorphs.'
by BBC - yesterday at 22:13
The stakes could rise further if the weapons system officer of the downed F15 Eagle plane is captured by Iran.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
Every collector ends up with items that are worthless, usually because they are broken or incomplete. When [Graindead] found a 1920s glass-plate reflex camera for pennies with plenty of missing parts, it was obvious that what he had was a piece of junk. Throw it away? No, he turned it digital with the aid of a small document scanner.
A reflex camera like this one is the ancestor of the 35mm single-lens reflex cameras we may still be familiar with today, in that is has a flip-up mirror inside to bounce the light onto a ground glass screen. The photographer can see what the lens sees to set up the shot, before flipping the mirror out of the way and exposing the glass plate film by pulling out a dark slide. This...
by Le Monde - yesterday at 21:27
Ce Français de 62 ans, né au Laos, a été exécuté samedi « malgré la mobilisation des autorités françaises », a dénoncé le Quai d’Orsay, faisant part de sa « consternation ».
by Le Monde - yesterday at 21:15
« Résistance ! Résistance ! », a scandé la foule, compacte et diverse, samedi 4 avril devant l’hôtel de ville, répétant les mots prononcés par le nouveau maire, qui a annoncé de prochaines initiatives pour combattre le racisme.
by io9 - yesterday at 20:50
Trust in the Schwartz: 'Spaceballs 2' is over a year out from hitting the big screen and making you laugh your ass off.
by io9 - yesterday at 20:19
Going to the moon now involves iPhones and Microsoft Surface tablets.
by The Verge - yesterday at 19:52
Murphy Campbell is at the center of a brewing storm around AI and a broken copyright system. | Image: Murphy Campbell In January, folk artist Murphy Campbell discovered several songs on her Spotify profile that did not belong there. They were songs that she had recorded, but she'd never uploaded them to Spotify, and something was off about the vocals.
She quickly surmised that someone had pulled performances of the songs she posted to YouTube, created AI covers, and uploaded them to streaming platforms under her name. I ran one of the songs, "Four Marys", through two different AI detectors, and it seemed to support her suspicions with both saying it was probably AI-generated.
Campbell was shocked, "I was kind...
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 19:00
For once, we can avoid debating in the comments what constitutes a “cyberdeck”, because [LCLDIY] does not refer to his cyberpunk masterpiece as such — he calls it a laptop. Considering the form factor is more like an all-in-one with a built-in laser projection keyboard, that’s arguably an even more controversial label to use, but as stylish this build is, it’s what’s inside it that interests us most.
This would be much easier than the original for our old eyes, especially in the dark.
No, not the cash-register motherboard that serves as the brain, though that has got to be worth some hacker cred. No, it’s the graphics card [LCLDIY] designed to drive 10″ electroluminescent (EL) displays that...
by io9 - yesterday at 18:30
If you've been hoping for Maul to get his moment in the sun, sounds like 'Maul: Shadow Lord' mostly delivers.
by Ben Tasker - yesterday at 18:16
Recently, I've seen posts by a couple of people about adding human.json to their sites.
At it's core, human.json is a simple attestation that the content they publish is written by a human and not by AI.
Obviously, any AI generated site could also publish a human.json, so the system works as a web of trust - the user trusts Alice, who states that Bob is a human, allowing the user to also trust Bob.
There are a couple of browser addons (for Firefox and for Chrome) which can display an indicator of humanity.
This short post covers creating a script to easily add human.json generation to the build workflow of my sites. The Schema
The file schema is really pretty simple:
{ "version": "0.1.1", "url":...
by Paul Jorion - yesterday at 18:09
Illustration par ChatGPT
P. J. :
À ce stade, vous écrivez : « Vous disposez désormais d’une loi de réponse neuronale GENESIS universelle dans sa forme, avec une mise à l’échelle de l’amplitude spécifique au sujet. GENESIS identifie désormais, dans les données neuronales, un axe de réponse universel, une vitesse de retour universelle, une variable de compression quasi-conservée et un gain spécifique à chaque session : la loi est commune dans sa forme, mais s’individualise principalement par son amplitude ».
Il y a 36 heures, lorsque je vous ai écrit : « Mais en réalité nous n’avons pas encore de modèle qui tienne véritablement la route », vous m’avez répondu : « Oui. Et je...
by Le Monde - yesterday at 18:00
Les grossesses après un deuil périnatal se vivent sous tension de bout en bout. Quand retomber enceinte après le drame ? Comment dissocier l’enfant disparu de celui à naître ? Peut-on s’autoriser à y croire ? Dans un couple, chacun gère son chagrin comme il le peut et crée, à son rythme, un espace pour accueillir la vie.
by The Verge - yesterday at 17:00
This ain’t gonna buff out. Target is offering a great deal to some Target Circle members that knocks $30 off the cost of two Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 games. The sale is happening for the rest of the day, expiring at 2:59AM ET on April 5th. If you sign in with the free-to-join membership, you might be able to add two eligible games to your cart, then watch the prices fall at checkout. There are 224 eligible games (some physical, some digital), and many of Nintendo’s biggest hits from the past year and beyond are here, including Switch 2-exclusive games like Donkey Kong Bananza, Kirby Air Riders, Mario Kart World, Mario Tennis Fever, and more (I didn’t see Pokémon Pokopia in the list, though). Donkey...
by io9 - yesterday at 16:25
Spoilers abound, but Marvel's giving fans yet another reason to watch 'Daredevil: Born Again.'
by The Verge - yesterday at 16:00
I’ve spent months in the lab testing the latest AR glasses from Xreal and Viture. By “lab,” I mean cozied up on my couch each night, playing my Steam Deck or Nintendo Switch 2 on a huge, virtual screen that only I can see through these glasses. Using AR glasses as a portable display for your handhelds (and other USB-C devices, like phones, tablets, and laptops) is nothing new. However, the latest versions have one must-have feature in common: three degrees of freedom, or 3DoF, which lets you anchor the screen anywhere you’d like, as opposed to having it nauseatingly wiggle with every head movement. This won’t make AR glasses worth their $400-plus costs for most gamers. But this makes them more useful...
by Wired - yesterday at 15:00
With great sound and versatility, this new speaker may be Sonos’ best.
by The Verge - yesterday at 15:00
"This looks like AI."
It's a phrase I dread seeing as a writer who dabbles in illustration and amateur photography. In a world where generative AI technology is increasingly adept at mimicking the work of humans, people are naturally skeptical when online platforms refuse to label even obvious AI content.
This leads me to one conclusion: maybe we should start labeling human-made text, images, audio, and video with something akin to a universally recognized Fair Trade logo. The machines sure as hell aren't motivated to label their work, but the creators at risk of being displaced most definitely are.
Fortunately, I'm not alone in my thinki …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by La Horde - yesterday at 14:58
-
Autocollants / Nouveautés, Mobilisation
by La Horde - yesterday at 14:57
En collaboration avec Boutanox, dessinateur du jeu Fachorama. -
Autocollants
by Zataz - yesterday at 14:55
Cette semaine, la pression s’est accentuée sur les écosystèmes criminels, les plateformes et les États.
by Zataz - yesterday at 14:29
Un quart de siècle après son apparition, Windows Active Directory (AD) définit toujours les réseaux sur site. Mais il faut l’admettre : AD est un système d’identité vieillissant. Il a été conçu pour une époque plus simple, où la sécurité ne signifiait qu’une chose : un réseau interne sûr et un monde extérieur dangereux. Ce […]
by Wired - yesterday at 14:00
From weatherproof jackets and pants to puffers, gloves, and socks, WIRED’s winter sports experts have you covered.
by The Verge - yesterday at 14:00
The original Super Meat Boy is one of the best-known indie games of all time. Released in 2010, it's a brutally difficult 2D platformer, but so fun to play: The short levels almost feel like speedrunning puzzles, and even though they're filled with traps and buzzsaws, dying isn't so bad because you revive nearly instantly. Super Meat Boy 3D has much of the same spirit; it's just as infuriating, and just as satisfying.
Moving around as Meat Boy in 3D feels very similar to 2D, particularly his really floaty jump. Wherever you run (and where you die) you leave blood splatters, which are helpful visual reminders of where to go (or where you die …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Zataz - yesterday at 13:38
Valentine, future maman, menacée par des escrocs, révèle comment les données volées servent à terroriser et extorquer.
by Wired - yesterday at 13:01
This hose-attached smart sprinkler maps your yard, rotates on command, and measures water use. Despite these clever features, the results are a little uneven.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 13:00
There are many events so far in 2026 that could reasonably have been predicted, but perhaps one which couldn’t is a Hackaday scribe in Europe unexpectedly finding herself with a constant earworm from Afroman. The rapper, who most of us know only from his year 2000 hit single about getting high, made the news after an inept police raid on his house, and in turn a court case over his musical denunciations of the authorities.
It’s fair to say they picked on the wrong guy, but in thinking about why, the answer is in the earworm. He has the unique skill of making a song irritatingly catchy, which led us to the question of how a catchy song works. As luck would have it a team from the University of Waterloo have...
by Wired - yesterday at 12:30
Plus: The FBI says a recent hack of its wiretap tools poses a national security risk, attackers stole Cisco source code as part of an ongoing supply chain hacking spree, and more.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
I knew John F. Kennedy, Jr., not that well and not that long, but enough to have experienced the gravitational pull he exerted, like some great big moon.
by Wired - yesterday at 12:00
There are several ways to extend your Wi-Fi network into your backyard and out onto the deck or patio. Here’s how.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
Last week, when asked if he had a message about the war in Iran for President Trump, Leo XIV said, “Hopefully, he’s looking for an off-ramp.”
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
The artist bent the medium of photography to suit his creations.
by Journal du Lapin - yesterday at 9:00
Je parlais de l’Easter Egg du gestionnaire d’extensions récemment, mais la première version avait aussi le sien. Extensions Manager, avant d’être intégré dans System 7.5, était un logiciel séparé. Et dans la version 2.0, l’activation des bulles d’aide (Aide -> Afficher les bulles d’aide) montrait un petit texte amusant. L’article Un autre petit Easter Egg d’Extension Manager est apparu en premier sur Le journal du lapin.
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 8:40
Using CSS to Add A Reading Progress Bar To My Site
https://www.bentasker.co.uk/posts/documentation/general/adding-a-css-reading-progress-indicator.html
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 6:30
Métal lourd toxique pour la santé, le cadmium est présent dans de nombreux aliments du quotidien. Les enfants et les femmes sont les plus touchés par ce contaminant cancérogène, sur lequel les alertes se multiplient.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 6:30
Curtis Yarvin est devenu une figure du mouvement néoréactionnaire qui infuse à la Maison Blanche. Mais peut-on considérer ce blogueur comme un intellectuel ? Dans un entretien au « Monde », le spécialiste des théories politiques Arnaud Miranda estime nécessaire de décrypter ses idées antidémocratiques, là où le sociologue de la tech Olivier Alexandre alerte sur le danger à surinvestir ses propos.
by Usbek & Rica - saturday at 6:00
Entre la popularité croissante des livres audio et des notes vocales, la chute des pratiques d’écriture manuscrite et l’avènement de l’IA générative, sommes-nous à l’aube d’une nouvelle ère de l’oralité ? C’est la thèse de l’essayiste et journaliste américain Jeff Jarvis, auteur du livre The Gutenberg Parenthesis, qu'on a interviewé dans le numéro d'hiver 2025 de notre magazine FUTUR.
by New Yorker - saturday at 5:59
“The plan is not to have a plan,” the staff writer Susan B. Glasser says.
by Les Décodeurs - saturday at 5:01
La guerre en Iran a fait s’envoler le cours du pétrole et commence à peser sérieusement sur les prix à la pompe. Le gouvernement a estimé, lundi, qu’« il est trop tôt » pour parler de nouvelles aides.
by New Yorker - friday at 22:39
Democrats are claiming victory. But what did they really gain?
by Société de Géographie - friday at 20:37
Retrouvez en vidéo la conférence donnée le 19 février 2026 par Jean-Baptiste Guégan et intitulée :
« Pour une géopolitique de la voile. De l’America’s Cup à la puissance du nautisme »
    Jean-Baptiste Guégan est rédacteur en chef de la Géographie, chargé de cours à ScPO Paris et spécialiste de la géopolitique du sport
 
by dwell - friday at 19:45
In an intensive week-long session, architects, contractors, and community groups convened to develop plans that will allow the city to bump up the number of living spaces while retaining its historical character.Charleston, South Carolina, is the quintessential historic village, a place where brightly colored row homes foreground church steeples; where building ornaments are at ease in the low-rise, treelined environs. Here, the built environment reflects the city’s character, and mayor William Cogswell doesn’t want to mess with that. As a lifelong Charlestonian who worked in the private sector in property redevelopment prior to entering public office, Cogswell knows what makes his city special—but...
by dwell - friday at 18:49
Set in Pacific Heights, the 1902 brick residence underwent a recent renovation that preserved its historic character.Location: 2196 Jackson Street, San Francisco, California Price: $5,995,000 Year Built: 1902 Renovation Date: 2024 Renovation Designer: Katie Monkhouse Footprint: 5,010 square feet (4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths) From the Agent: "This fabulous Pacific Heights residence, exquisitely renovated with designer finishes, has just under 5,000 square feet of interior space, a lovely garden, and an exceptionally walkable location. Built in 1902 on a 50-foot-wide lot, this stately home is introduced by a grand stone archway, brick facade, mature trees and hedges, and a black-and-white marble entry vestibule....