constant stream of curated content
by Korben - about 38 minutes
La Station Spatiale Internationale file à 28 000 km/h au-dessus de nos têtes, et y'a un mec qui a décidé de suivre ça en direct depuis un petit écran 3.5 pouces posé sur un Raspberry Pi 3b. Le projet s'appelle
ISS Tracker
, c'est open source, et franchement... c'est plutôt classe !
Concrètement, l'écran affiche un globe terrestre en 3D qui tourne, avec la position de l'ISS en temps réel. Latitude, longitude, altitude, vitesse, et même la région survolée. En fait, la position est récupérée toutes les 30 secondes via des APIs gratuites et interpolée entre les mises à jour pour que le rendu reste fluide. Vous branchez le câble micro-USB, vous attendez le boot, et ça tourne tout seul ! L'ISS...
by daryo Bluesky - about 51 minutes
[20 mars 2026] Déjeuner-débat « Le tourisme, vecteur de développement en Indonésie », par Sylvie Pickel-Chevalier
https://socgeo.com/2026/02/12/20-mars-2026-dejeuner-debat-le-tourisme-vecteur-de-developpement-en-indonesie-par-sylvie-pickel-chevalier/
by Torrentfreak - about 51 minutes
In 2024, the video rental and streaming company Redbox shut down its service and filed for bankruptcy.
The service, owned by Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment (now CSS Entertainment), was running hundreds of millions in losses per year and no longer saw a path to profitability.
With hundreds of filings, the bankruptcy case is a complex one. While these types of proceedings typically don’t have much news value, a rather intriguing piracy-related filing caught our eye last fall. Court Clears Path for $100 Million Piracy Litigation Deal
Last October, it was reported that a company called Grove Street Partners was offering at least $100 million for the copyright litigation rights of Redbox‘ bankrupt...
by Korben - about 54 minutes
Depuis qu'Amazon a supprimé le "Télécharger & transféré via USB" de nos ebooks Kindle en février de l'année dernière je suis triste de fou... Si vous n'avez pas de Kindle, en fait ça veut dire que nos fichiers .azw3 restent prisonniers de l'app Kindle, et qu'il est impossible de les balancer ensuite sur une liseuse Kobo ou dans Calibre. Du coup, si vous voulez garder le contrôle sur vos e-bouquins, faut se retrousser les manches et héberger tout ça soi-même.
Alors voilà le topo pour ceux qui veulent reprendre leur bibliothèque en main.
Le vétéran du game, c'est
Calibre
. Depuis 2006, une base de données SQLite bien rangée, une communauté énorme et un écosystème de plugins (dont le fameux...
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Malgré des résultats en baisse, le parti de Marine Tondelier veut jouer le rôle d’arbitre et « trouver des solutions » dans plusieurs villes où la gauche peut l’emporter.
by Journal du Lapin - about 2 hours
Vu sur eBay, un truc un peu particulier. C’est un bracelet pour Apple Watch qui n’est pas officiellement un modèle Apple… mais qui l’est officieusement. Il est aux couleurs d’un Bearbrick par Barry McGee. Les Bearbrick, ce sont des ours assez connus, souvent décorés par des artistes. Barry McGee, c’est artiste qui a justement proposé un Bearbrick. Et il était livré avec un bracelet d’Apple Watch, un modèle Sport de 42 mm de l’époque (vers 2018). Et selon la personne qui vend un bracelet (et qui argumente bien sur les forums de MacRumors), c’est en réalité un bracelet Apple sans que ce soit officiel. Il pointe que le marquage est exactement celui d’Apple (M/L et S/M), que...
by Korben - about 2 hours
Si vous vous êtes déjà demandé comment les flics font pour fouiller un disque dur saisi chez un suspect, la réponse tient en quatre lettres :
IPED
. C'est l'outil que la police fédérale brésilienne a développé en interne depuis 2012 pour analyser les preuves numériques... et qui est devenu open source en 2019.
N'importe qui peut aujourd'hui peut donc télécharger le même logiciel que celui utilisé par les enquêteurs pour décortiquer des scènes de crime numériques. J'vous parle d'un truc qui avale 400 Go de données à l'heure, ce qui à vrai dire c'est plutôt le débit d'un SSD NVMe que d'un logiciel d'analyse. Et ça gère des multicases de 135 millions d'éléments. Ouais, rien que le...
by Korben - about 2 hours
Un TUI en Rust pour gérer vos coffres Obsidian sans quitter le terminal c'est ce que propose Basalt qui détecte automatiquement vos vaults, affiche le markdown avec un rendu visuel, et depuis la v0.12.3, y'a même un mode vim intégré. Le tout sans avoir besoin que la vraie app tourne en arrière-plan !
Et c'est là toute la différence avec
le CLI officiel d'Obsidian
dont je vous parlais il y a quelques jours. Car le CLI a besoin de l'app qui tourne via un socket local. Basalt, lui, lit en fait vos fichiers .md directement sur le disque. Du coup, ça marche en SSH, sur un serveur headless, ou sur n'importe quelle machine où vous avez juste vos fichiers markdown. C'est carrément pratique !
L'installation...
by Korben - about 2 hours
Faut le reconnaitre, la doc et qui plus est, la doc réseau, c'est un peu le parent pauvre du homelab. Tout le monde sait qu'il faudrait la tenir à jour sur un petit wiki tout mignon mais personne le fait parce qu'on n'est pas cinglé et qu'on aime trop la vie pour ça. Heureusement, pour nous aider, y'a maintenant
Scanopy
qui est un outil open source qui scanne automatiquement votre réseau pour générer une topologie interactive incroyable qui se met à jour toute seule !
Pour l'installer, deux lignes suffisent :
curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/scanopy/scanopy/refs/heads/main/docker-compose.yml
docker compose up -d
Et hop, l'interface est dispo sur le port 60072 de votre serveur ! Pas de...
by Le Taurillon - about 2 hours
Depuis plusieurs années, le débat sur l'abaissement de l'âge du droit de vote à 16 ans gagne en visibilité dans de nombreux pays européens et notamment en France, en pleine période d'élections municipales. Si la majorité électorale reste fixée à 18 ans dans la plupart des démocraties occidentales, plusieurs États ont déjà choisi d'expérimenter cette évolution, au niveau national ou local. Ces expériences constituent aujourd'hui un véritable laboratoire démocratique, qui permet d'observer la réalité des effets d'une participation politique plus précoce des citoyennes et des citoyens. Une évolution récente
L'idée d'abaisser l'âge du droit de vote s'inscrit dans un cheminement...
by Le Monde - about 3 hours
Le maire sortant divers droite réalise son meilleur score au premier tour depuis 2014. Derrière lui, c’est la liste La France insoumise qui crée la surprise en devançant le socialiste François Briançon.
by Le Monde - about 3 hours
Pierre Jouvet, porte-parole socialiste, demande à Sébastien Delogu de se ranger derrière le maire sortant, Benoît Payan, pour faire barrage à l’extrême droite. Le RN, arrivé en deuxième place, a la même exigence envers la candidate LR Martine Vassal, estimant qu’ils représentent « le vote utile ».
by BBC - about 3 hours
The BBC's International News correspondent, Barbara Plett Usher, visits Doha's Souq Waqif market as strikes in the region continue.
by Wired - about 3 hours
This sale spans almost an entire week, and it’s full of fake “deals.” We hunted to find truly good prices on gear we’ve tested.
by HackAdAy - about 3 hours
Anyone who saw Back to the Future II was disappointed when 2015 rolled around with nary a hoverboard in sight. There have been various attempts to fake it, but none of them quite have the feel of floating about wherever you’d like to go that the movie conveys. The little-known YouTuber [Colin Furze] has a new take on the idea: use magnets. Really big magnets.
If you’re one of [Colin]’s handful of subscribers, then you probably saw his magnetic-suspension bike. We passed on that one, but we couldn’t resist the urge to cover the hoverboard version, regardless of how popular [Colin] might be on YouTube. It’s actually stupidly simple: the suspension is provided by the repulsive force between alarmingly...
by Le Monde - about 4 hours
Le parti de Jordan Bardella comptait reprendre pied dans les métropoles à un an de l’élection présidentielle en faisant son retour dans les conseils municipaux. Le pari est raté en grande partie.
by BBC - about 4 hours
Residents describe new security checkpoints around the capital, where they say people are stopped and searched.
by Courrier International - about 4 hours
Le RN et LFI, généralement faibles aux élections municipales, ont cette fois-ci “gagné du terrain”, exerçant une forte pression au 2e tour dans les deux plus grandes villes, Paris et Marseille.
by Courrier International - about 5 hours
Minoritaires face à la droite et au centre droit et déçus par le président Lula, les jeunes Brésiliens anticapitalistes jugent que “le système actuel n’offre plus d’espoir”. Des collectifs organisent actions et débats pour tenter de donner un nouveau langage à la gauche, rapporte ce journaliste de “Folha de São Paulo”.
by Courrier International - about 5 hours
Le média en ligne “The Assembly” décrit les opérations menées par l’association MountainTrue dans les cours d’eau de Caroline du Nord, dans l’est des États-Unis. Ses équipes récupèrent et nettoient les effets personnels emportés par l’ouragan Helene en septembre 2024, et tentent de retrouver leurs propriétaires.
by Courrier International - about 5 hours
Alors que les États-Unis se révèlent être un allié de moins en moins fiable, l’Europe doit s’inspirer de la France du Minitel, estime Alexander Hurst. Ce journaliste américain et chroniqueur du “Guardian” explique que, depuis des décennies, le pays s’est efforcé d’assurer sa souveraineté technologique.
by Le Monde - about 5 hours
Six ans après sa victoire surprise, le maire sortant est arrivé en tête, avec 27,68 % des voix, mais il est talonné par le candidat d’union de la droite et du centre, Thomas Cazenave (25,58 %). Un troisième candidat sans étiquette, l’économiste Philippe Dessertine, rassemble, lui, 20,20 % des voix.
by io9 - about 6 hours
Ryan Coogler's film was nominated for a record 16 Oscars, including Best Director and Best Picture.
by HackAdAy - about 7 hours
[Nick] came across an awesome Bluetooth speaker online, only, there was a problem. It didn’t really exist—it was just a render of a device that would be nice to have. Of course, there was an obvious solution—[Nick] just had to build the device for real!
The key to the aesthetic of the build is the external case. [Nick] was able to recreate the rough design of the rendered device in SolidWorks, before having the components produced on a resin 3D printer which provided excellent surface finish. Internally, the Bluetooth audio receiver was cribbed from an old pair of wireless headphones. However, a little more oomph was needed to make the speaker really usable, so [Nick] hooked the audio output up to a...
by BBC - about 8 hours
The killing of Charlie Kirk galvanised a transatlantic campaign against abortion. But will it succeed in shifting Britain's pro-choice consensus?
by New Yorker - about 8 hours
The dark satire, shot largely in a Paris department store, claimed the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short, in a rare tie.
by BBC - about 8 hours
The war-torn country is battling to secure crucial funding from the IMF and EU, as well as putting up taxes.
by io9 - about 9 hours
Netflix's biggest film of all time not only has a sequel in the works, but it's also got more awards on its shelf.
by HackAdAy - about 10 hours
Some days, it feels like we’re getting all the bad parts of cyberpunk and none of the cool stuff. Megacorps and cyber warfare? Check. Flying cars and holograms? Not quite yet. This week, things took a further turn for the dystopian with the news that a woman was hospitalized after an altercation with a humanoid robot in Macau. Police arrived on scene, took the bot into custody, and later told the media they believed this was the first time Chinese authorities had been called to intervene between a robot and a human.
The woman, reportedly in her seventies, was apparently shocked when she realized the robot was standing behind her. After the dust settled, the police determined it was being operated remotely as...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 22:59
Ministres ou personnalités d’envergure nationale en lice, métropoles qui pourraient basculer… Suivez les résultats du premier tour dans des villes particulièrement scrutées.
by BBC - yesterday at 22:56
Bobi Wine says from an undisclosed location: "It was clear that the regime wanted to eliminate me."
by io9 - yesterday at 21:15
Why not spend part of your summer reading the exploits of the 'X-Men '97' cast before the show returns in full?
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 21:00
Platinum-group metals (PGMs) are great catalysts, but they’re also great investments — in the sense that they are very, very expensive. Just ask the guy nicking car exhausts in the Walmart parking lot. If one could replace PGMs with a more common element, like, say the aluminum that makes up over 8% the mass of this planet, it would be a boon to the chemical industry, and a bane to meth addicts. Researchers at King’s College, London have found a way to do just that, with a novel form of aluminum called cyclotrialumane.
The aluminum trimer is exactly what the ‘tri’ in the name makes it sound like: three aluminum atoms, bonded in a triangular structure that is just pointy and stick-outy enough to poke...
by The Verge - yesterday at 20:35
Aether OS puts a full-fledged desktop in your browser that ties directly into the AT Protocol. That means it connects to your Bluesky account and other public records. It offers a pretty full suite of apps, 42 in total, covering text editing, task management, and social media. There's even a rudimentary tracker for making chiptunes, a DAW, and a video editor. Of course, part of the appeal is also the cyberpunk good looks that draw obvious inspiration from The Matrix. Right now, the project is in alpha, and there are a lot of rough edges. Documentation is also basically non-existent. So, if you get stuck trying to use an app, you're kind …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 20:27
Listes arrivées en tête, scores des différents partis, maires déjà élus… Suivez les résultats du premier tour des municipales en temps réel avec nos cartes.
by io9 - yesterday at 19:50
'Voltron: Legendary Defender' may no longer be on Netflix, but in a few weeks, it can be with *you*...at least until you remember its ending.
by Conspiracy Watch - yesterday at 19:33
L'actu de la semaine décryptée par Conspiracy Watch (du 09/03/2026 au 15/03/2026).
by io9 - yesterday at 18:23
Siri is more than a disembodied voice. It was reportedly meant to anchor a whole new set of Apple doohickeys.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 18:00
Those who stay into the forbidden realm of font rendering quickly learn how convoluted and arcane it can be – LaTeX is a fully Turing-complete programming language, Unicode has over eighty invisible characters, and there are libraries that let you execute WebAssembly in a font. A great example of a font’s hidden capabilities is Z80 Sans, a font that disassembles Z80 opcodes to assembly mnemonics.
If one pastes Z80 opcodes into a word processor and changes their font to Z80 Sans, the codes are rendered as their assembly mnemonics. The font manages this by abusing the Glyph Substitution Table and Glyph Positioning Table, two components of the OpenType standard. Fonts define relations between characters...
by The Verge - yesterday at 17:45
Can’t. Stop. Dancing. | Image: Wonderwheel Recordings Shout out to subscriber N_Gorski for today's pick. They popped into the comments on last week's recommendation to ask what I thought of the new Sotomayor record. Well, I hadn't actually heard it yet, but now I'm obsessed.
The group consists of siblings Raul and Paulina Sotomayor from Mexico City. Wabi Sabi is their first record since 2020's Origenes, and it is pure joy. You can look back through everything I've recommended over the last several months, and "fun" is not how you'd describe most of it. But that's what Wabi Sabi is - it's fun, chaotic, and dancey as hell.
I was only familiar with Sotomayor before this because of a short docume …
Read the...
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 16:40
Uganda • May 2011 📷 #flashes
by The Verge - yesterday at 15:13
He might have realized he’s about to lose a lot of money. | Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images David Sacks, the White House's AI and crypto czar, has warned that a continued war in Iran could be catastrophic. On the All In podcast, Sacks said that "we should try to find the off-ramp." He expressed concern that Iran could demolish oil and gas infrastructure across the Middle East, but more alarmingly, that it could start targeting desalination plants, which provide water to much of the region, and could lead to an even larger humanitarian crisis. Sacks has never made humanitarian efforts a cornerstone of his public persona, however. But he has a well-documented anti-interventionist streak, and...
by The Verge - yesterday at 15:00
If you've got strong creative instincts, the ability to authentically portray emotion, and are capable of staying true to a character's voice throughout a scene, there's a job listing calling for your experience. The catch: You won't be performing in a theater, a film studio, or an underground performance space. You'd be using your talents to train an AI model for "one of the leading AI companies," according to the open role posted by Handshake, a company that provides training data to OpenAI and other labs. Handshake AI is one of a handful of companies of its kind, scrambling to provide more and more niche or specific training data to A …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Torrentfreak - yesterday at 14:04
Anti-piracy reporting tools have existed for years, but generally speaking, there is little interest from the public to expose pirates. The Business Software Alliance previously offered people hard cash in exchange for tips, which helped, but there are other potential reward options too.
Online Pirate Hunters
The Czech anti-piracy company Warezio, which works for various international rightsholders, believes that it can motivate people to report pirate streaming links through a gamified experience. The company recently launched a new platform, inviting the public to help spot links to pirated content. The ‘Online Hunter’ portal effectively turns people into pirate ‘hunters.’ As the name suggests, users...
by The Verge - yesterday at 14:00
The Galaxy Buds Pro 4 are a nice improvement over the Buds 3, but still require a Galaxy device to use all their features. Samsung promised "more than a design refresh" for its new top-end Galaxy Buds - it added upgraded woofers for improved, dual-amped hi-fi sound, a new blade design, clearer call performance, and better noise cancellation. Ultimately, while the $249.99 Galaxy Buds 4 aren't a huge leap forward over the previous model, they keep what was good about the Buds 3 and improve on most of what wasn't - as long as you use Samsung Galaxy devices.
That's because, much like the AirPods Pro 3 with Apple gear, the Buds 4 Pro still work best when paired with another Galaxy device. This unlocks all of the...
by Paul Jorion - yesterday at 12:45
Illustration par ChatGPT
Depuis plusieurs siècles, la science se représente sa propre réussite de la manière suivante : elle découvre progressivement les constituants ultimes de la réalité-objective, leurs propriétés intrinsèques, et les lois causales fondamentales qui gouvernent leurs interactions.
Cette image a été extraordinairement féconde. Elle a permis des succès immenses. Mais GENESIS montre qu’elle laisse dans l’ombre ce qu’elle aurait dû expliquer en priorité : l’apparition de la nouveauté.
Car la difficulté centrale de la science classique n’a jamais été de décrire des interactions. Elle sait admirablement le faire. Sa difficulté a toujours été d’expliquer comment,...
by Wired - yesterday at 12:00
Our favorite red light therapy device for hair growth just dropped in price. Grab it while it lasts.
by Wired - yesterday at 12:00
Brompton's latest folding electric bicycle is beautiful, genuinely portable, and doesn't quite go fast enough.
by Wired - yesterday at 11:32
iGarden's new pool-cleaning robot pairs sporty design with a long runtime, though there are a few quirks.
by Wired - yesterday at 11:00
Despite a price tag that’s a literal joke, this is still a cool collector’s item for gaming nerds.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 11:00
The author reads his story from the March 23, 2026, issue of the magazine.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 11:00
Even with Kristi Noem gone, the Administration’s immigration agenda shows no signs of flagging—in fact, it is leading toward a new humanitarian and legal crisis.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 11:00
Trump has hollowed out the Johnson Amendment, which prohibited churches from endorsing candidates. Mercy Culture, in Fort Worth, has sprung into action.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 11:00
The “world’s best restaurant” has been rocked—again—by revelations of the chef René Redzepi’s abusive behavior.
by QZ - sunday at 10:00
Discover how successful entrepreneurs spend their weekends to recharge, stay inspired, and set themselves up for a productive week ahead
by QZ - sunday at 10:00
AI’s next breakthrough won’t come from scraping the web. Companies are racing to unlock new training data, from personal data to drones and corporate archives
by QZ - sunday at 10:00
These SUVs and minivans can comfortably fit seven or eight — and won't leave anyone complaining about getting stuck in the back row
by QZ - sunday at 10:00
Discover these coastal retirement spots that balance quality healthcare access, lifestyle amenities, and long-term affordability for retirees
by daryo Bluesky - sunday at 8:40
Réclame !
http://www.chezfoucart.com/2026/02/20/reclame-3/