- 1Casio turns back time with reproduction of 1983 G-Shock that started it all (theverge.com)
- 2Euclid Could Find 170,000 Strong Gravitational Lenses (universetoday.com)
- 3How the bullet train transformed Japan (bbc.com)
- 1US regulator says AI scanner 'deceived' users after BBC story (bbc.com)
- 1Nintendo, Palworld, a GTA 5 Mod, and an Injunction for the Japanese Market (techdirt.com)
- 2Canon TDD – By Kent Beck – Software Design: Tidy First? (tidyfirst.substack.com)
- 1LG unveils a stretchable display that expands by 50 percent when you pull on it (liliputing.com)
- 62Jazz Kissa (en.wikipedia.org)
- 1"Prison and Crime: Much More Than You Wanted to Know": My Thoughts (philosophybear.substack.com)
- 2UK net migration figures missed out 166,000 people, ONS admits (thetimes.com)
- 2"I Bought and Installed a Payphone" [video] (youtube.com)
- 1Openvibe: Town square for open social media (openvibe.social)
- 2Amdahl's Law and AI Productivity (amazingcto.com)
- 1Theory of software (a la theory of mind) ()
- 1My Horrible Career (bitfieldconsulting.com)
- 5Google plans "historic" data centre expansion in Finland (yle.fi)
- 3Want to confess to Jesus? LLM have your back (apnews.com)
- 6A Study Says Gray Hair May Be Reversible (popularmechanics.com)
- 76Who Is Jay Graber, the CEO of Bluesky? (lemonde.fr)
- 55Synology patches unannounced multiple zero-day vulnerabilities (synology.com)
- 1Hesai reportedly plans to cut LiDAR prices by half next year (just-auto.com)
- 6Google offered millions to ally itself with trade body fighting Microsoft (theregister.com)
- 1Special Reports (spectrum.ieee.org)
- 4University and State (arnoldkling.substack.com)
- 5AI #92: Behind the Curve (thezvi.substack.com)
- 3The Beautiful Ludlow Typography Specimen Books C. 1958 (flashbak.com)
- 37Seoul blanketed by heaviest November snow on record (bbc.com)
- 1Fossilised faeces show dinosaurs rose to dominance over millions of years (abc.net.au)
- 2GDPR Impact on Innovation in Europe (siliconcontinent.com)
- 2Exercising to lose weight? Science says it rarely works. (washingtonpost.com)