constant stream of curated content
by Courrier International - about 22 minutes
Non seulement le président américain insiste pour qu’un nouveau dîner de gala de l’association des correspondants à la Maison-Blanche soit organisé dans les meilleurs délais, mais il a décidé de faire du chantier de construction de sa grande salle de réception sécurisée à la Maison-Blanche la “priorité des priorités”, soulignent les médias américains.
by Wired - about 24 minutes
On this week’s Big Interview podcast, actor-director Ben McKenzie talks about the rise of crypto, why he finds it dangerous, and why it benefits from having a mysterious creator.
by Korben - about 26 minutes
478 binaires Unix peuvent servir à devenir root sur un système mal configuré.
C'est ce que recense
GTFOBins
, le projet open source monté par Emilio Pinna et Andrea Cardaci, qui est devenu LE bookmark obligatoire de tout pentester Linux.
Ce ne sont pas des exploits, hein, mais juste des fonctions parfaitement légitimes de programmes installés partout, et qui dans le bon contexte (genre un bit SUID oublié, qui fait tourner un binaire avec les droits du propriétaire, souvent root) permettent de spawner un shell, lire un fichier protégé, ou grimper d'un cran dans la hiérarchie des privilèges. Petit rappel quand même, faut déjà avoir un pied sur la machine, ce n'est pas une porte d'entrée magique...
by Courrier International - about 36 minutes
L’explosion du prix du kérosène, mais aussi la crainte de pénuries, font grimper les prix des billets d’avion. Alors que les compagnies aériennes annulent une partie de leurs vols pour mai et juin, les vacanciers craignent que leurs voyages ne soient compromis, et cherchent d’autres possibilités.
by BBC - about 46 minutes
The state prosecutor told the court that police found an almost completed bomb in a search of the man's house.
by Korben - about 46 minutes
Souvenez-vous, en mai 2025 quand je vous parlais de
BleachBit 5.0
et de son grand ménage de printemps. Hé bien Andrew Ziem, le développeur historique du soft, vient de balancer la version 6.0 samedi dernier !
Et c'est annoncé comme la plus grosse release du projet depuis des années, avec plus de 100 améliorations et bug fixes au programme. Et surtout deux nouveautés qui sortent du lot.
La première, c'est un Cookie Manager qui vous laisse enfin choisir quels cookies garder lors d'un nettoyage, sur les navigateurs Chromium et Firefox. Plus besoin donc de tout dégager d'un coup et de devoir ressaisir vos sessions partout.
Vous gardez ce qui compte (banque, mail, sites où vous êtes loggés en...
by io9 - about 53 minutes
Ever used kanban-based management software? You'll probably recognize OpenAI's new open-source spec.
by New Yorker - about 54 minutes
Hurst captured the country’s culture—from public rituals of the cult of Santa Muerte to scenes from everyday life—with no small amount of homoeroticism.
by New Yorker - about 54 minutes
Here are a few things I’d rather do than log in to a portal: Get three mosquito bites. Drive all the way to Encino to have something notarized.
by Wired - about 54 minutes
On TikTok, young women are going viral for crafting whimsical homemade computers inside purses.
by New Yorker - about 54 minutes
The war’s ripple effects have exacerbated conflicts, economic insecurity, and regional tensions around the world, including in Ukraine.
by Korben - about 1 hour
Sur Hackaday, un maker a publié une variante rigolote de lévitation acoustique : un mini terrain d'air hockey où les palets flottent au-dessus du sol grâce à des ondes ultrasonores.
Le truc fun ça n'est pas la lévitation en elle-même, technique connue depuis longtemps et déjà couverte sur le site, mais la manière dont elle est mise en œuvre pour éviter les zones mortes habituelles qui rendent ce genre de dispositif statique. Le principe classique de la lévitation ultrasonique utilise un ou plusieurs transducteurs qui créent une onde stationnaire, et les petits objets restent piégés dans les nœuds de cette onde. Le souci, quand on veut faire bouger l'objet horizontalement, c'est que les nœuds...
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Quand les utilisateurs interrompent leurs traitements antiobésité à base de GLP-1, comme l’Ozempic, le Wegovy ou le Mounjaro, ils reprennent fatalement du poids. Et ce quatre fois plus vite que ceux qui se sont mis au régime et ont fait de l’activité physique. C’est ce que montre une vaste étude parue début janvier dans “The British Medical Journal”.
by Korben - about 1 hour
Tamawatchi
, c'est 2,8 Mo de pixel art qui tournent en natif sur Apple Watch sans dépendre d'un iPhone. Michael Ratto, lecteur de korben.info, vient de m'écrire pour m'annoncer la sortie de son Tamagotchi qui se nourrit de vos pas via HealthKit. La première créature est gratuite, et les autres à 99 centimes pièce.
Il s'agit donc d'un compagnon style Tamagotchi des années 90 qui vit sur votre montre. Vous marchez, il bouffe. Vous glandez, il a faim. Vous dormez, il dort... vous voyez le tableau quoi... C'est une app de fitness qui se déguise puisque derrière le pixel art mignon, y'a surtout un compteur de pas gamifié qui pousse à se bouger. Parce que oui, ON EST PLUS MOTIVÉ pour faire 5000 pas pour...
by io9 - about 1 hour
AI agents are powered by the same obsequious LLMs as consumer chatbots.
by Wired - about 1 hour
Sporting the largest touchpad I’ve ever seen, this ambitious laptop is better in theory than in practice.
by Korben - about 2 hours
J'sais pas si vous avez remarqué, mais aujourd'hui, TOUT LE MONDE "vibe code" : On balance des prompts à un LLM, on accepte le diff sans comprendre, on commit sans relire et tadaaaa, ça fait des chocapics !
Sauf pour zsKnight et Demo qui viennent de relâcher
Super ZSNES
, après 19 ans de silence, avec un message bien en évidence sur leur page d'accueil... "No Vibe Coding. Classic development style." C'est incroyable, les deux développeurs originaux de ZSNES se sont enfin retrouvés pour réécrire leur émulateur SNES légendaire intégralement, et cette fois c'est le GPU qui prend en charge le rendu vidéo !! Youpi ! Pour ceux qui n'ont pas connu parce que ce sont des bébés qui viennent de naître,...
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
En raison d’une infection dont la nature n’a pas été déterminée, la commercialisation des cochons d’Inde en Équateur a été suspendue par les autorités le 17 avril. Une décision qui provoque l’inquiétude des éleveurs, dans ce pays andin où ces rongeurs sont des mets courus.
by Le Monde - about 2 hours
Les forces ukrainiennes ont de nouveau attaqué l’installation durant la nuit, quelques jours après un premier feu qui avait duré de lundi à vendredi.
by Courrier International - about 2 hours
Travailler à distance dans des pays où le coût de la vie est très bas leur a permis de vivre confortablement durant plusieurs années. Quand ils envisagent aujourd’hui leur retour aux États-Unis, les télétravailleurs que “The New York Times” a interrogés estiment qu’ils n’ont aucune chance de pouvoir profiter du même niveau de vie aux États-Unis.
by io9 - about 2 hours
The ancients really were super clever, y'know.
by Le Monde - about 2 hours
La commission d’enquête parlementaire sur « la neutralité, le fonctionnement et le financement de l’audiovisuel public » s’est très vite transformée en tribunal et ses auditions ont été instrumentalisées par son rapporteur, Charles Alloncle, pour colporter des fausses informations.
by Le Monde - about 2 hours
Une femme est morte fin mars, ajoutant une nouvelle victime à un bilan déjà lourd. Une vidéo que « Le Monde », « Lighthouse Reports », « Der Spiegel » et « Komune » se sont procurée éclaire un autre arraisonnement, en février, et remet en cause la version des policiers.
by The Verge - about 2 hours
The last few weeks have bordered on overwhelming for science fiction fans. While Project Hail Mary is dominating the box office, For All Mankind is currently in the midst of its penultimate season, with a spinoff streaming next month. When it comes to games, Capcom kicked off a new sci-fi franchise with Pragmata, and Housemarque is about to launch the haunting shooter Saros. With all of that going on, it'd be easy to miss Aphelion. It's a comparatively small and quiet adventure game, one focused more on storytelling than gameplay. But that also makes it a perfect complement to all of the current blockbusters, offering something much more int …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Wired - about 2 hours
WIRED spoke with Bloomberg's chief technology officer about the big, chatbot-style changes coming to the iconic platform for traders.
by Le Monde - about 3 hours
Alors que les militaires au pouvoir, alliés à la Russie, tiennent un discours ouvertement antifrançais, Paris observe avec discrétion l’avancée des djihadistes et des indépendantistes touareg.
by HackAdAy - about 3 hours
If you mention the word bus, you might think of public transportation or, more likely for us, a way to connect things together. But in the satellite world, the bus is the part of a vehicle that supports the payload but isn’t itself the payload. Typically, that means the electric power system, propulsion, radios, and thermal control, among other systems. If you are designing a CubeSat, you will want to read A Guide to CubeSat Mission and Bus Design by [Frances Zhu].
The Creative Commons-licensed book has twelve chapters, ranging from systems engineering — that is, defining what you want to do — to analyzing structures, handling power, setting up communications, and more. Of particular interest to us was...
by Wired - about 3 hours
Weighing 97 grams with a stiff carbon-fiber plate in the sole, Adidas’ new shoes helped Sabastian Sawe beat the two-hour mark in the London Marathon, a time barrier once considered insurmountable.
by BBC - about 4 hours
The 141m-long vessel, linked to a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, cleared the waterway despite an ongoing blockade.
by The Verge - about 4 hours
Logitech’s Creative Console and other MX accessories are now compatible with several productivity apps. | Image: Logitech Logitech has announced a new suite of Productivity Plugins for its entire MX line of accessories, including its Stream Deck alternative, the MX Creative Console. Since the console launched in September 2024, Logitech has been expanding its capabilities with plug-ins that support creativity-focused apps such as Final Cut Pro, Adobe Lightroom, and Figma. That is now expanding to include productivity apps, such as Microsoft Office's Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, as well as Slack and Notion.
Shortcuts, actions, and specific tools in those apps can be quickly accessed using Logitech's Actions...
by Le Monde - about 4 hours
L’appel de l’armée justifie la poursuite de ses bombardements par « la violation de l’accord de cessez-le-feu par le Hezbollah ». Au moins 40 personnes, en grande partie des civils, ont été tuées depuis le début du cessez-le-feu, le 17 avril, selon le ministère de la santé libanais.
by Torrentfreak - about 5 hours
In 2021, a group of independent movie companies, including the makers of The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard, London Has Fallen, and Rambo V, sued RCN Telecom Services at a New Jersey federal court.
The filmmakers alleged that RCN failed to disconnect repeat infringers on its network, making the ISP liable for its subscribers’ copyright infringement.
The lawsuit was one of several filed by the same group of filmmakers against U.S. Internet providers, including Grande Communications, Frontier Communications, and Verizon. These all alleged that the ISPs failed to terminate accounts of repeat infringers, which made the providers secondarily liable for these pirating subscribers.
Stipulation of Dismissal
A few...
by BBC - about 5 hours
In a parody aired days before the White House Correspondents' Dinner, Kimmel called Melania an "expectant widow".
by Journal du Lapin - about 5 hours
Avec la Xbox 360, Microsoft avait fait un choix surprenant pour les manettes : il existe des manettes Xbox 360 filaires (en USB) et des manettes sans fil, avec un protocole propriétaire (et une troisième variante, plus rare, avec une croix directionnelle améliorée). Microsoft avait bien sorti un câble USB pour la manette sans fil (le kit Play & Charge), mais assez bizarrement, il ne passe pas la manette en filaire. Mais a une petite option cachée tout de même. Le câble du kit Play & Charge est trompeur et assez particulier, en réalité. Il était livré avec une batterie à insérer dans la manette (à la place des piles AA employée en standard) et le câble ne sert (presque) qu’à recharger la...
by HackAdAy - about 6 hours
USB wasn’t even a gleam in an engineer’s eye when the Sega Master System hit the market in 1985. Today, we’re up to USB 4 or something, and the USB C connector is becoming a defacto standard for just about everything except desktop computers. [Retrostalgia] is embracing this by mating the control pad from Sega’s first international console with the connector of today.
Naturally, the Sega Master System did not use the Universal Serial Bus to talk to its controllers, so some conversion was in order. That’s achieved with the use of a RP2040 microcontroller, which reads the D-pad and action buttons via its GPIO pins. It then acts as a HID device when plugged into a computer or other USB host, showing up...
by La Horde - about 6 hours
Soirée antifasciste à Marseille avec au programme : Discussion, repas, concerts, tombola anti-repression et tables d'info. -
Initiatives / Marseille, Initiative culturelle, Rencontres et débats
by The Verge - about 7 hours
On Monday, the courtroom battle between Elon Musk and Sam Altman over alleged broken promises at OpenAI started, as usual, with jury selection. The only tricky part? A lot of the prospective jurors already have an opinion about Elon Musk, and it's not a good one.
The Verge reporter Elizabeth Lopatto, who was there at the courthouse, quoted statements from some of the juror questionnaires: "Elon Musk is a greedy, racist, homophobic piece of garbage."
"Elon Musk is a world-class jerk."
"I very much dislike Tesla. As a woman of color, I am very aware of the damaging statements and actions Elon Musk has enacted and been a part of." M …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by HackAdAy - about 9 hours
Solid state batteries, we are told, are the new hot battery technology that will replace lithium-ion batteries. Soon. Not that we haven’t heard that before. One reason it isn’t dominating the market today is that it’s prone to short circuits during charging. [Dr. Yuwei Zhang and others have published a paper detailing why the shorts happen, which could lead to strategies to improve the technology.
Solid state batteries employ a solid electrolyte and a lithium anode. It is known that, sometimes, lithium metal from the anode forms dendrites that penetrate the ceramic electrolyte and cause it to crack. This is somewhat of a mystery as the lithium is a soft metal (to quote [Zhang], “like a gummy...
by io9 - about 9 hours
Florida's attorney general has an ongoing criminal probe into ChatGPT.
by BBC - about 10 hours
Investigators say the 31-year-old California man wanted to kill as many high-level officials as possible.
by BBC - about 11 hours
In modern America, it seems violence of this kind has become an ever-present storm that can strike anywhere and at any moment.
by The Verge - about 11 hours
Google is trying out an AI Mode-like search experience for YouTube. The company is now testing "a new way to search on YouTube that feels more like a conversation," with results pulling in things like longform videos, YouTube Shorts, and text about what you're searching for. The "experiment" is now available if you're a YouTube Premium subscriber in the US who is 18 or older.
I turned it on for my account. Now, in the search bar, I see an "Ask YouTube" button, and clicking the search bar shows prompts to ask like "funny baby elephant playing clips," "summary of the rules of volleyball," and "short history of the Apollo 11 moon landing." If …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Zataz - about 11 hours
Vérifier une fuite de données avec ZATAZ : moteurs France et monde, veille premium et risques cyber.
by Zataz - about 11 hours
Avril noir pour les forums pirates : HexDex risque 10 ans de prison, DarkForums visé par une fuite de données !
by io9 - about 12 hours
Authorities said the SMS Blaster could have disrupted network connections and potentially blocked calls to 911.
by HackAdAy - about 12 hours
Ultrasonic levitation is by now a familiar trick: one or more ultrasonic transducers create a standing wave, and small objects can be held in the nodes of this standing wave. With a sufficiently large array of transducers, it’s even possible to control the movement of the object. This isn’t the only form of ultrasonic levitation, however, as [Steve Mould] demonstrated with his ultrasonic air hockey table.
This less familiar form of levitation was discovered by [Bob Collins] while working on torpedo guidance systems: when he tried to place a glass lens on an ultrasonic transducer it immediately slid off. He found during further experimentation that an ultrasonic transducer would levitate over any...
by Zataz - about 12 hours
Faux site Lens-Nice : ZATAZ révèle une fausse billetterie et un abonnement caché derrière la finale de la coupe de France de football : Lens-Nice.
by Liz Climo - yesterday at 23:52

by New Yorker - yesterday at 23:50
How the President’s insistence on Tehran’s unconditional surrender made it impossible to make a deal.
by dwell - yesterday at 23:08
The traditional mosaic style mixes with regional cobogó blocks in the 754-square-foot flat.Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here. Project Details: Location: São Paulo, Brazil Architect: COTA760 Architecture / @cota760.arq Footprint: 754 square feet Photographer: Leila Viegas / @leila.viegas From the Architect: "The Caquinhos Apartment, designed by COTA760 Arquitetura, is the renovation of an existing apartment located in the Vila Madalena neighborhood of São Paulo, Brazil. The project reinterprets traditional elements of Brazilian architecture to construct a contemporary...
by dwell - yesterday at 23:05
Dwell’s visual media producer hit the ground running in Milan with eleven appointments and eight hours to complete them. These were the standouts.This story is part of Fair Take, our reporting on global design events that looks up close at the newest ideas in fixtures, furnishings, and more. If you want to really see Milan Design Week, you need a pretty rigid schedule—something I learned last year. Every April, the streets bloom with exhibitions by brands wanting to get in on the action that the main attraction, Salone del Mobile, brings to the city. This year, I did the math and figured I could hit eleven different projects within six and a half hours, as long as I scheduled each appointment 35 minutes...
by The Verge - yesterday at 22:47
One of the most popular Linux distributions is about to get an influx of AI features. As reported by Phoronix, Jon Seager, VP of engineering at Ubuntu developer Canonical, shared a blog post on Monday detailing plans to add AI features to the Linux distro over the next year. As the post states, the AI features "will come in two forms: first as a means of enhancing existing OS functionality with AI models in the background, and latterly in the form of 'AI native' features and workflows for those who want them." These features will range from accessibility tools like improved speech-to-text and text-to-speech to agentic AI features for tasks …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
Springs are great, but making them out of plastic tends to come with some downsides, for fairly obvious reasons. Creating a compliant mechanism that can be 3D printed and yet which doesn’t permanently deform or wear out after a few uses is therefore a bit of a struggle. The compliant toggle mechanism that [neotoy] designed is said to have addressed those issues, with the model available on Printables for anyone to give a shake.
The model in question is a toggle, which is the commonly seen plastic or metal device that clamps down on e.g. rope or cord and requires you to push on it to have it release said clamping force. Normally these use a metal spring inside, but this version is fully 3D printable and thus...
by dwell - yesterday at 19:58
The annual design fair, which wrapped up in Milan Sunday, acknowledged the increasing interest in rare and one-off pieces, in addition to the latest work to be put into production.This story is part of Fair Take, our reporting on global design events that looks up close at the newest ideas in fixtures, furnishings, and more. I’ve never been to Comic Con, but I have to imagine attending it feels something like the experience of going to Salone del Mobile—if you multiplied the number of attendees by a few, and replaced the life-size Pikachus with invaluable works (and Aperol spritz stands). Before last week, I’d actually never attended the annual design festival in Milan, which ran this year from Tuesday...
by dwell - yesterday at 19:55
"It’s like living in a cabin—but in the middle of London," Shai Akram says of the space, which has removable plywood walls and two tree house–like mezzanines.This is an excerpt from the book Home for Now by Earl of East, published by gestalten in 2026. The text is by Paul Firmin, and the photos are by Sarah Victoria Bates. From Workshop to Home When Shai Akram and Andrew Haythornthwaite first stepped inside their Stoke Newington property, it was far from the haven it would become. A former flour shop in Victorian times, later a hackney carriage station and ceramic studio, the building still had oil-stained floors and makeshift walls, but it was brimming with possibility. Instead of saving for a mortgage,...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 18:56
“Japan — Fifteen years ago, this mountainous region on Japan’s northeast coast suffered one of the world’s worst nuclear power accidents. Abandoned homes, offices and shops still dot the landscape — remnants of the evacuation after an earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant and released radiation. In the accident’s aftermath, nuclear power’s future seemed bleak, with Japan shutting off all its reactors as public opinion soured against the technology. But the country is now rapidly moving to restart nuclear power plants, as artificial intelligence increases electricity demand and foreign wars throttle natural gas supply. Japan relies on natural gas for 30 percent...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 18:53
“China has announced that it now has the capacity to build up to 50 nuclear reactors simultaneously, as it doubles down on a push to rapidly expand its nuclear power generation and become a global leader in the sector. The figure came from a report released by the China Nuclear Energy Association (CNEA) on Friday, which highlights the country’s ability to run dozens of nuclear projects concurrently.” From South China Morning Post.
The post China’s Nuclear Sector Now Able to Build Fifty Reactors at a Time appeared first on Human Progress.
by Usbek & Rica - yesterday at 18:18
Sam Altman, le patron d'OpenAI, est aussi à la tête de World, une start-up qui propose de scanner notre iris pour prouver notre humanité à l'ère des bots. L'entreprise vient de signer des partenariats avec Tinder, Zoom et DocuSign, s'immiscant das nos vies intimes et professionnelles. Retour sur la genèse d'un des projets tech les plus controversés du moment.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 15:36
A drawing that riffs on the latest news and happenings.
by Autheuil - yesterday at 15:07
J’ai d’abord cru à une blague du Gorafi, quand j’ai lu que le gouvernement voulait rebaptiser les Etablissements d’hébergement pour Personnes Âgées Dépendantes (EHPAD) en « maison France Autonomie ». Rien ne va. Les ehpad sont un sigle pour désigner une catégorie d’établissements, un terme technique, un acronyme qui a progressivement remplacé ce qu’on appelait autrefois « maison […]