constant stream of curated content
by Courrier International - about 41 minutes
Dans la nuit du mercredi 17 au jeudi 18 juin, l’armée ukrainienne a lancé l’une de ses opérations les plus ambitieuses sur la capitale russe, touché une raffinerie et provoqué d’énormes incendies. Si la Russie tente d’en minimiser l’impact, l’Ukraine prévient qu’il y aura des suites.
by io9 - about 45 minutes
Logitech's folding mouse may fit in your pocket or backpack, but it won't offer the perfect PC controls we hoped for.
by Le Monde - about 47 minutes
Des premières négociations sont prévues en Suisse dès vendredi, après la signature du protocole d’accord, qui ouvre une fenêtre de 60 jours pour « négocier un accord final ». Ce texte prévoit aussi la « cessation immédiate et définitive des opérations militaires sur tous les fronts, y compris au Liban ».
by Le Monde - about 47 minutes
Météo-France a placé 53 départements en vigilance orange pour la journée de vendredi et prévoit que « très peu de régions devraient rester à l’écart des fortes chaleurs ». Les températures ont dépassé 35 °C à Paris et Lyon.
by io9 - about 50 minutes
It's an aggressive move that'll effectively force operators of critical French infrastructure to move away from traditional cryptographic systems.
by Wired - about 52 minutes
The software engineers filed a complaint with Seattle’s civil rights office accusing Amazon of illegally retaliating against them for expressing their personal
by BBC - about 54 minutes
Niger has been fighting a militant Islamist insurgency for a decade and in January suspected jihadists attacked the same airport.
by io9 - about 55 minutes
The Apple TV horror comedy wrapped up its triumphant first season this week—and, like a certain cursed island, we’re already hungry for more.
by The Verge - about 55 minutes
When three Amazon software engineers testified earlier this month at Seattle City Council hearings about data centers, they started their testimony by citing a city law barring employment discrimination over political speech. Now, they're accusing their employer of breaking that law by retaliating against them. On June 10th - one week after the hearing, and one day after the City Council passed a milestone moratorium on data centers - Patrick Schloesser, Darius Irani, and Liesl Wigand were each called into an impromptu meeting with Amazon's "Employee Relations." HR representatives told the employees that the company was investigating them …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Un hackeur suisse est parvenu à mettre la main sur des documents confidentiels émanant de la société Dialog, qui organise des réunions secrètes auxquelles participent des responsables politiques, des financiers et des militaires de premier plan. Le média américain “Wired” révèle leur identité et le programme de ces réunions entre puissants.
by BBC - about 1 hour
While the human cost is clear, the Iranian regime has not just survived the war, it has been empowered.
by BBC - about 1 hour
A refinery and a shopping centre burned after almost 200 Ukrainian drones struck an area to the south-east of the Russian capital.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Le gouvernement Trump va débourser près de 800 millions de dollars pour que l’énergéticien Invenergy renonce à développer des parcs éoliens au large des côtes de New York, de la Californie et du Maine. Après deux accords similaires passés avec TotalEnergies et Ocean Winds, cette annonce porte la facture à quelque 2,5 milliards de dollars pour l’État américain.
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
La capitale russe a subi dans la matinée de jeudi la plus importante attaque aérienne depuis 2022. Le chef du Kremlin n’a pas réagi. Mais discrètement, par messagerie, des Moscovites expriment craintes et frustrations.
by Le Monde - about 1 hour
Après l’interdiction de territoire prononcée, jeudi, à l’encontre du Ghanéen Thomas Partey, poursuivi pour viols au Royaume-Uni, les services d’immigration canadiens ont refusé la venue de l’attaquant ivoirien récemment soupçonné d’implication dans des paris sportifs truqués en France.
by BBC - about 1 hour
Iran has come out of the war's first chapter stronger than many expected, but its next challenge may be harder, the BBC Persian Service's Amir Azimi writes.
by The Verge - about 1 hour
This is Lowpass by Janko Roettgers, a newsletter on the ever-evolving intersection of tech and entertainment, syndicated just for The Verge subscribers once a week.
When Fox announced its acquisition of Roku earlier this week, executives of both companies were quick to promise that not much would change in the near future. Sure, getting its hands on Roku will help Fox become a major force in streaming, and surpass the viewership of Netflix in the United States when you include Fox's TV networks. But Roku will remain open to all streaming services, and Fox will keep selling its programming to anyone, they pledged.
Of course, that doesn't me …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Six entreprises qui détiennent la moitié du marché japonais des crèmes glacées se seraient concertées pour fixer les prix de leurs produits. Accusées d’avoir formé un cartel, elles font l’objet d’une enquête des autorités japonaises.
by io9 - about 2 hours
The company is also opening a spa in downtown San Francisco, “with pools of golden light which softly scan your body.”
by io9 - about 2 hours
That amount could pay for climate and biodiversity financing targets with billions still to spare.
by Wired - about 2 hours
The rich are getting richer. Here’s what wealth advisers are telling their tech clients right now.
by QZ - about 2 hours
The biggest economic upheavals in modern history trace back to identifiable decisions made by identifiable people — and those decisions could have gone differently
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Alors que le climat mondial se dérègle et que le monde est en surchauffe, les climatiseurs semblent parfois le seul moyen pour la population de supporter les pics de chaleur. Mais la climatisation est un cercle vicieux, dans la mesure où son utilisation croissante entraîne une hausse des émissions de gaz à effet de serre. Décryptage.
by The Verge - about 2 hours
There are now 24 default color options instead of 11, and you can select more via an RGB color picker. | Image: Google Running out of color options for events in Google Calendar shouldn't be an issue going forward. The previous limit of 11 predefined colors has now been expanded to give users access to up to 200 custom colors for individual events across the native Calendar web and mobile apps, and the Calendar API.
This started rolling out yesterday for users on Google's rapid release domains, with an extended rollout for more users starting on June 29th, though the update may take a few weeks to reach everyone. It's available to all Google Workspace customers, Workspace Individual subscribers, and users with...
by QZ - about 2 hours
From software engineers to surgeons, here's exactly what workers earn at every stage of 25 in-demand careers, using the latest U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data
by The Verge - about 3 hours
One messy database is threatening to disenfranchise thousands or even millions of registered voters, while leaving even more at risk of intimidation or data breaches, in the name of solving a problem that barely exists.
As the 2026 midterm elections approach, election and privacy experts are sounding alarms about the Department of Homeland Security's Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) Program, which President Donald Trump's administration has expanded to ostensibly catch noncitizens voting. Experts say that amounts to a dangerous, error-prone effort to centralize voter data. "The federal government doesn't have the author …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by QZ - about 3 hours
Experts warn full relief could take years, with prices still about a third higher than before the war with Iran
by The Verge - about 3 hours
Amazon Prime Day 2026 lifts off on June 23rd and will hopefully deliver the best deals of the summer. We’ve been covering the most notable pre-Prime Day discounts happening, and come next week, we’ll be bringing you many more deals — ones we can’t tell you about just yet. As usual, expect to see price drops on a range of product categories, including smart home, headphones, smartwatches, monitors, 4K TVs, outdoorsy gear, and more. The sale will conclude at 3:01AM ET on June 27th. We’ve put together this package so you can see all of our sprawling coverage in one convenient place. It contains not just our favorite one-off deals and category roundups to come, but also some shopping tips that might help...
by QZ - about 3 hours
The four-week moving average climbed to 223,250, while continuing claims rose to 1.81 million for the week ended June 6
by QZ - about 3 hours
It is the second recall by the Alphabet-owned company in just over a month, following a May recall tied to flooded roads
by HackAdAy - about 3 hours
There was a particularly tense moment aboard the International Space Station earlier this month, with NASA directing their astronauts to secure themselves in the Dragon capsule and prepare for a potential return to Earth while their Russian counterparts engaged in what we now know to have been some impromptu demolition work on their side of the orbiting complex.
Despite objections from their American partners, Roscosmos had given their cosmonauts the go-ahead to drill and cut into the walls of the Zvezda module — one of the core components of the ISS which has been in orbit since 2000 — to try and identify and ultimately repair persistent leaks that have been venting the Station’s atmosphere out into...
by Les Décodeurs - about 3 hours
Avec la hausse des températures, les risques liés à la pratique d’une activité sportive augmentent également. Le point sur les principaux dangers et les comportements à adopter.
by BBC - about 3 hours
The US defence secretary's move follows a US decision to scale back its commitments to a high readiness force within the alliance.
by Wired - about 4 hours
The company's latest recall of 3,871 vehicles follows incidents of its autonomous cars prioritizing other hazards or failing to recognize closed construction zones altogether.
by Wired - about 5 hours
The Frame Pro 2026 benefits from meaningful tweaks. AI audio and picture tuning work in tandem with a new anti-glare coating to deliver impressive benefits.
by Wired - about 5 hours
Whether you need a travel-friendly slate or something affordable for the kids, we tested every model to find the right one for every occasion.
by Torrentfreak - about 6 hours
In May, thirteen major publishers won a massive $19.5 million default judgment against shadow library Anna’s Archive in a New York federal court. This week, the same publishers, including Penguin Random House, Elsevier, and HarperCollins, filed a new complaint at the same court, this time with the relatively young pirate library WeLib as the target. Again, the stakes are substantial, with the publishers seeking up to $19.5 million in potential damages for direct copyright infringement. A New Entrant
The similarities don’t stop at the legal arguments and stakes. Anna’s Archive already highlighted the newcomer in a blog post last year, describing WeLib as a “new entrant” in the space that had copied...
by HackAdAy - about 6 hours
Whatever happens with the new incarnation of the Commodore corporation, we’ll always remember the old one fondly. Well, we’ll remember certain of its products fondly, at any rate, if not the corporate leadership that drove them under. About that, perhaps the less said the better. That’s why we’re looking at the revived Commodore’s latest offering with equal parts interest and trepidation — is there really a market for a Linux-based, Commodore branded flip phone in 2026 and beyond?
The official reveal trailer, which you can watch below, can only be described as weaponized nostalgia for the late 90s, which tracks because the revived C-64 is more-or-less the same thing for the 8-bit era. That said,...
by Usbek & Rica - about 6 hours
Des classes surchauffées en été, glaciales en hiver, des bâtiments pas toujours adaptés aux chocs climatiques à venir… Pour faire face, l’école doit revoir sa copie climatique. Voici trois pistes pensées par ACTEE, le programme de rénovation des bâtiments publics.
by Korben - about 7 hours
C'est la fin d'une époque. Le noyau Linux, le cœur du système qui pilote le matériel et les communications, s'apprête à supprimer le support d'AppleTalk, ce vieux protocole réseau qu'Apple utilisait dans les années 80 et 90 pour faire dialoguer ses Mac entre eux avant que TCP/IP, le langage commun d'internet, ne s'impose partout.
À l'époque, c'était plutôt malin: vous branchiez deux machines et une imprimante, et elles se trouvaient toutes seules, sans la moindre configuration, du plug-and-play avant l'heure à un moment où monter un réseau relevait encore du casse-tête réservé aux initiés.
Aujourd'hui, plus grand monde ne parle ce dialecte. Il en subsiste quelques traces dans Bonjour, la...
by Conspiracy Watch - about 7 hours
Le 19 juin 1986, Coluche se tuait à moto sur une route des Alpes-Maritimes. Quarante ans plus tard, une partie de la France refuse toujours d’y voir un accident.
by Zataz - about 8 hours
Fuite Autosur : données clients, véhicules et contrôleurs exposées, avec risque de phishing ciblé.
by Usbek & Rica - about 8 hours
Et si, pour répondre à la pénurie d’organes, on créait des corps de rechange ? On doit cette idée à trois chercheurs de Stanford qui ont imaginé une source potentiellement illimitée d’organes : les « bodyoïdes ». Le concept : faire grandir en laboratoire des corps humains vivants pour leur prélever des greffons et les transplanter aux patients en attente de don. On vous racontait cet objectif scientifique et ses limites dans le dossier sur les prochaines grandes découvertures scientifiques du numéro d'été 2025 de FUTUR, le magazine d'Usbek & Rica, à commander en librairie.
by HackAdAy - about 9 hours
For some time now [Tobi Friedly] has been tinkering away at porting the original Super Mario 64 from the Nintendo 64 to just about any device imaginable. One of these being the Nintendo DS, with the code and build instructions now up on GitHub, along with the demonstration video below that shows off the added multiplayer functionality.
We previously covered this project and the challenges involved. The main problem that kept him from just taking the existing Nintendo DSi port by [Hydr8gon] and running it on the original DS is that the latter doesn’t have enough RAM to load the entire game ROM into memory. The integration of NitroFS for asset streaming took some time, along with addressing sound support and...
by Korben - about 9 hours
-- Article en partenariat avec Tapo - Contient des liens affiliés --
La
Tapo C675D KIT de TP-Link
est une caméra de surveillance solaire qui vient de sortie, avec un truc qu'on voit rarement à ce tarif : 2 objectifs 4K.
Un grand-angle fixe qui surveille toute la scène, et un second monté sur rotule qui zoome et suit l'action tout seul comme un grand. J'avais déjà testé sa petite sœur, la
Tapo C665G
, et là j'avoue que Tapo monte clairement d'un cran. Les deux objectifs, c'est malin parce que sur une caméra motorisée classique, dès qu'elle pivote pour suivre quelqu'un, elle perd le reste du champ. Ainsi, pendant qu'elle zoome sur le mec qui crochète votre portail, votre bagnole sort du cadre et...
by Korben - about 10 hours
Environ 75 000 pare-feu Fortinet ont vu leurs identifiants de connexion volés puis vérifiés un par un, des FortiGate, ces boîtiers qui filtrent l'accès au réseau des entreprises et servent très souvent de porte d'entrée VPN pour les salariés en télétravail.
Baptisée FortiBleed par les chercheurs qui l'ont mise au jour, la campagne couvre 194 pays et plus de 21 000 domaines, soit à peu près la moitié des pare-feu Fortinet exposés sur Internet à l'heure actuelle.
Parmi les organisations dont les accès se sont retrouvés dans la nature, on relève des noms qui n'ont rien d'amateur en matière de sécurité : Foxconn, Samsung, Comcast, Siemens, Lenovo, FedEx, Accenture ou encore Oracle.
Toute...
by Korben - about 10 hours
Voici une news concernant l'intelligence artificielle, qui je pense devrait vous plaire si vous vous intéressez à la robotique. Alibaba qu'on ne présente plus, vient de sortir sa Qwen-Robot Suite, 3 modèles IA signés Tongyi Lab (les gens derrière
Qwen
) imaginé pour donner un corps à l'IA. Parce qu'une machine capable de décrire votre cuisine au millimètre près mais complétement infoutue d'y attraper une tasse, voilà un peu ce qu'on a en robotique en ce moment... Car "comprendre" le monde, ça les modèles savent faire. Mais agir dedans, c'est une autre paire de manches. Cette Qwen-Robot Suite découpe donc ça en trois briques, RobotNav pour se déplacer, RobotManip pour saisir des objets, et...
by daryo Bluesky - about 10 hours
NASA’s Quiet Supersonic Jet Just Hit Another Major Milestone
https://humanprogress.org/nasas-quiet-supersonic-jet-just-hit-another-major-milestone/
by Journal du Lapin - about 11 hours
Quand j’ai joué avec les VHS contenant deux langues, j’ai pour le moment montré deux cas possibles. Le premier est celui des cassettes japonaises qui contiennent deux pistes, une sur la voie de gauche et une sur la voie de droite. Le second celui des VHS françaises avec deux fois le film sur la cassette. Aujourd’hui, je vais parler des VHS russes avec le doublage si caractéristique des pays de l’Est, et d’un truc un peu particulier lié, même si ce n’est pas flagrant. Ce qui va suivre est plus une expérience qu’une vraie démonstration, je vous préviens, parce que trouver des VHS russes en France n’est pas si simple…
En Russie mais aussi en Pologne (il y a une vidéo de Karambolage sur...
by HackAdAy - about 12 hours
The word “restomod” is a bit nebulous, but it’s normally used in the automotive world to describe taking an old car and making it better-than-new with all the technological improvements the original builders would have used, had they been available. We think the word applies to [Alnwlsn]’s MIDI-actuated player piano, because what are those punched rolls of paper, but the MIDI of the 19th century?
Unlike a lot of automotive restomods though, this one is mostly reversible. He did drill few holes and slots in the original wood, but nowhere that it would alter the integrity or original operation of the player piano mechanism. The MIDI-controlled solenoids just poke the same key paddles from below that the...
by Le Monde - about 13 hours
Submergés par des milliers de procédures, les enquêteurs spécialisés mettent en cause l’efficacité de la vaste revue des dossiers décidée par le gouvernement après la mort de la collégienne de 11 ans. Ils alertent sur le risque de « procédures fragilisées ».
by HackAdAy - about 15 hours
There always seem to be a handful of revolutionary technologies perpetually out of reach: fusion energy, quantum computers, and full self-driving cars are always in this list, and it seems like there’s also some battery technology which will finally let us fully decouple from fossil fuels in there as well. Although lithium batteries have allowed some ground-based electric transportation, the energy density is still not enough to enable full electrification, especially for things like aircraft. Solid state batteries may be on the verge of changing some of this, though, and a team has recently put them to work in a test aircraft to help make some headway with this novel battery chemistry.
The main contributing...
by Liz Climo - yesterday at 22:48

by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:40
“Infant mortality in the U.S. dropped to a new all-time low in 2025, according to preliminary government data. There were slightly fewer than 5.4 infant deaths per 1,000 live births in 2025, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While that appears to be a small decline from about 5.5 in 2024 and 5.6 in the two years preceding, researchers say it is statistically meaningful and translates to hundreds of fewer infant deaths per year.” From STAT.
The post The US Infant Mortality Rate Fell to an All-Time Low appeared first on Human Progress.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:32
“The Washington Post recently ran a fun, data-filled article on berry consumption and parenting. Lots of good tidbits in the article, including that Americans eat a lot more berries than in the recent past, and that a lot of the availability is thanks to foreign trade and imports. But despite being somewhat light-hearted, the article does seem very negative, especially in the title and introduction, about how parents are spending a lot of money on berries… Relative to median wages, berries of all kinds are now more affordable than a decade ago. Parents may still feel squeezed by all the berries their kids are eating, but in terms of affordability and share of the family budget, there is probably no...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:23
“For decades, physicists have pursued a goal that sounds nearly impossible: to build a clock that keeps time using an atom’s nucleus rather than the electrons orbiting it. Now, researchers have demonstrated the first functioning nuclear clock ‪—‬ an advancement that could eventually lead to more robust timekeeping devices and new ways to search for dark matter and physics beyond the Standard Model.” From Live Science.
The post Nuclear Clock Could Help Detect a Fundamental Force of Physics appeared first on Human Progress.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:13
“After breaking the sound barrier for the first time, NASA’s X-59 supersonic jet flew faster and at higher altitudes in preparation for its most crucial test. The experimental aircraft reached a speed of Mach 1.4 during a test flight on Friday, June 12, flying at the same conditions NASA will use to gather data from the public on the aircraft’s noise, according to the space agency. The X-59 is designed to break the sound barrier without producing the loud, explosive sound known as a sonic boom. NASA is preparing to fly the aircraft above selected U.S. communities to gauge public response, aiming to use X-59 to pave the way for supersonic jets to fly over land without their audible disruptions.” From...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:09
“Inside a factory in southern France, millions of tiger mosquitoes are being bred, not to spread, but to stop them from reproducing—though scaling up such efforts poses a mighty challenge. At the Terratis facility in Montpellier, male insects grow inside large glass enclosures. In batches of 400,000, they are exposed to X-rays, making them infertile… The aim is to flood an area with sterile male mosquitoes until the invasive population gradually collapses… The tiger mosquito (Aedes albopictus), which can transmit diseases such as dengue, the Zika virus and chikungunya, is now present across most of France. But enhancing efforts to ramp down their numbers remains difficult. Of around 50 industrial...
by FluxBlog - yesterday at 20:37
Olivia Rodrigo “Expectations”
“Expectations” is the result of a songwriting dream team at the height of their powers: an A+ melody from pop topline queen Amy Allen, a typically bold structure and meticulous arrangement by Dan Nigro, and the lyrical POV and effortless charisma of Olivia Rodrigo. Musically it’s a slight shift for Rodrigo, moving into early 80s new wave territory rather than 90s alt-rock/00s pop-punk, but it’s the same effervescent energy that brings out the best in her voice and persona. But it’s right in the sweet spot for Nigro, as he’s basically pulling in tricks he developed in his collaborations with Chappell Roan. There’s more than a little “Hot to Go” and “Super...
by Usbek & Rica - yesterday at 19:43
TRIBUNE // Présenté comme une solution clé à la crise écologique, le recyclage - y compris celui des métaux - ne peut suivre l’explosion de la demande. En amont du Tribunal pour les Générations Futures qui se tiendra le 18 juin 2026 au théâtre de la Commune à Aubervilliers et au long duquel étudiants de l’IUT de Saint Denis feront le procès du recyclage, Lola Lilensten, chercheuse CNRS à l'Institut de recherche de chimie Paris, assure que pour réduire réellement notre impact, il nous fait repenser la production, la conception et surtout nos niveaux de consommation.