Jensen Huang Says Nvidia Is Pulling Back From OpenAI and Anthropic
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: At the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media and Telecom conference in downtown San Francisco Wednesday, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said his companyās recent investments in OpenAI and Anthropic are likely to be its last in both, saying that once they go public as anticipated later this year, the opportu ⦠ā Read more
Qualcomm CEO: āResistance Is Futileā As 6G Mobile Revolution Approaches
At Mobile World Congress, Cristiano Amon of Qualcomm argued that the coming 6G networks will power an AI-driven āagent economy,ā where devices and AI assistants constantly communicate across the network. āAI will fundamentally change our mobile experiences,ā Qualcomm chief executive, Cristiano Amon says. āItās going to change how we th ⦠ā Read more
GNOME Mutter 50.rc Released With Better NVIDIA Performance, SDR-Native & Better HDR
There is two weeks to go until the GNOME 50 stable release while out today is the release candidate of Mutter 50. This Mutter 50.rc release brings some exciting last-minute enhancements to this Wayland compositor⦠ā Read more
Ta, @shinyoukai@yume.laidback.moe. There are plenty of third-party libraries implementing XDG directories properly. My point was that the Go stdlib half-assed this.
āThe Death of Spotify: Why Streaming is Minutes Away From Being Obsoleteā
An anonymous reader shares a column: Iām going to take the diplomatic hat off here and say with brutal honesty: basically everybody in the music business hates Spotify except for the people who work there. Itās a platform that sucks artists for everything they have, it actively prevents community building, and, despite all ⦠ā Read more
Memory Price Hikes Will Kill Off Budget PCs and Smartphones, Analyst Warns
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: Ballooning memory prices are forecast to kill off entry-level PCs, leading to a decline in global shipments this year ā and a similar effect is going to hit smartphones. Analyst biz Gartner is projecting a drop in PC shipments of more than 10 percent during 2026, and a ⦠ā Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net well, it isnāt rocket science, is it? š Yet, without using the hashes and starting to follow people, it is very, very rudimentary. I know, I know, there were a couple of years during which people lived just fine without those. Yet, once you get used to certain things, there is no going back.
Uber Previews Its Dubai Air Taxi Service
An anonymous reader shares a report: Uber is one step closer to going airborne. On Wednesday, the company previewed its air taxi booking service ahead of an expected launch in Dubai later this year. The inaugural Uber Air program will let travelers book Joby Aviationās electric air taxis through a familiar process in the Uber app.
The experience of booking an air taxi will be much like reserv ⦠ā Read more
Intel Formally Ends Four Of Their Go Language Open-Source Projects
Following various Intel open-source projects recently being archived with Intel formally discontinuing their development, another wave of Intel open-source projects were formally sunset on Monday⦠ā Read more
Metaās Metaverse Leaves Virtual Reality
Meta is pivoting Horizon Worlds away from its original VR-centric metaverse vision and toward a mobile-first strategy, āexplicitly separatingā its Quest VR platform from the virtual world. TechCrunch reports: By going mobile-first, Horizon Worlds is positioning itself to compete with popular platforms like Roblox and Fortnite. āWeāre in a strong position to deliver synchronous social games at sca ⦠ā Read more
AMC Theatres Will Refuse To Screen AI Short Film After Online Uproar
An anonymous reader shares a report: When will AI movies start showing up in theaters nationwide? It was supposed to be next month. But when word leaked online that an AI short film contest winner was going to start screening before feature presentations in AMC Theatres, the cinema chain decided not to run the content.
The issue ⦠ā Read more
There was an endless coming and going of sun, clouds and rain. Not to forget about the wind. I called it quits a bit earlier and went into the woods.
Towards the end I was completeley surrounded by rain curtains in all directions. This looked super cool. I thought I might make it home just in time without having to use my umbrella, but the rain clouds were way quicker than I anticipated. Just after the rain hit me, I met an acquaintance who just started his walk. The wind picked up hard and rain hammered down, mixed with snow. Holding the umbrella was a workout. Shortly after I returned, the rain stopped again.
I didnāt notice the kestrel sitting on the tree when I took the last photo. That was a nice surprise when I sorted through the nearly 300 pics.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org They certainly donāt. š«¤
Had an idea earlier: How about going all in on sustainability and saving money/energy, so how about telling your customers āAI is a bad idea $because_long_list_of_reasons, here are our alternatives, youāll thank us in 5 yearsā? (I bet the customers wouldnāt listen either ⦠š)
Small Crowd Pays to Watch a Boxing Match Between 80-Pound Chinese Robots
Recently a small crowd paid to watch robots boxing, reports Rest of World. (Almost 3,000 people have now watched the matchās 83-minute webcast.)
The match was organized by Rek, a San Francisco-based company, and drew hundreds of spectators who had paid about $60-$80 for a ticket to watch modified G1 robots go at each other. M ⦠ā Read more
Okay, so the funniest thing that has happened at work in the realm of AI so far is this:
So this guy (that holds a certain position of power) wants people to use more AI, meaning people are expected to install a set of AI tools on their laptops. But, of course, he doesnāt want to write proper documentation for this, because that would be silly monkey work, right? So he conjures up some AI prompts that are intended to make the AI agent install all this stuff by itself.
Do you see where this is going? Can you see the punchline?
Thatās right! Since none of this AI stuff is deterministic, every setup is different. š¤¦āāļø Like, 10, 20 systems, all set up a little different and people wonder why this or that doesnāt work as expected.
Okay, itās not funny.

Well itās ~2am and I finally defeated the AI player in a game of Frontier Crown š
ā On that note Iām now going to bed, Iāve made so many improvements to the aesthetics (UX) of the game, the mechanics, and itās now quite nicely playable š Gānight! š“
Go 1.26 Introduces Two Language Changes, New Performance Improvements
For programmers fond of the Go programming language, Go 1.26 is out today with two language changes, performance improvements, and other alterations to this Google-backed programming language⦠ā Read more
Fuck me dead! I accidentally confused an HTML file for a YAML file and manually opened it in my browser. Unfortunately, I clicked on the OK button of the popped up dialog a bit too fast, it just caught me off guard. It asked which program to open the YAML file in. Of course Firefox thought that it could handle that and suggested itself by default. Conveniently, the ādonāt prompt me again and always use this selection from now onā checkbox was enabled.
And then the endless loop of death started. Turns out, this fucking browser canāt do shit with YAML files and delegated to what had been just configured. Oh, would you look at that!? Firefox! Empty tabs after empty tabs appeared. Killing and restarting Firefox just loaded the last session with all the tabs and the loop continued.
Some bloody snakeoil on my work machine slows down link openening requests by two, three seconds. Itās always absolutely anoying, but luckily, it actually limited the rate of new tabs popping up. I still could not close the many tabs fast enough that had accumulated before I noticed what was going on in the background.
Going to the settings to change them was always interrupted with a new tab opening in the foreground.
Finally, killing Firefox and renaming the file on disk before restarting Firefox did the trick and broke the loop. I was still holding down Ctrl+W for a minute or so to get rid of the useless tabs. I didnāt want to loose the important tabs, so just ditching the session wasnāt an option.
The Big Money in Todayās Economy Is Going To Capital, Not Labor
The American economyās most valuable companies are now worth trillions of dollars more than their predecessors were a generation ago, yet they employ a fraction of the workers ā and a new analysis by the Wall Street Journal argues that this widening gap between capital and labor is the defining economic story of our time.
Labor received 58% of gross dom ⦠ā Read more
OpenAI Starts Running Ads in ChatGPT
OpenAI has started testing ads inside ChatGPT for logged-in adult users on the Free and Go subscription tiers in the United States, the company said. The Plus, Pro, Business, Enterprise and Education tiers remain ad-free. Ads are matched to users based on conversation topics, past chats, and prior ad interactions, and appear clearly labeled as āsponsoredā and visually separated from ChatGPTās organic respo ⦠ā Read more
salty-chat TUI client as well, which now includes proper notifications and a background agent that keeps running so you never miss any messages. It all "just works"⢠and I'm quite happy with the outcome! 𤩠#saltyim #revamp
@prologic@twtxt.net keep going, keep going!
Hmmm, thatās a pity. I never realized that before. The following Go code
var b bool
ā¦
b |= otherBool
results in a compilation error:
invalid operation: operator | not defined on b (variable of type bool)
I cannot use || for assignments as in ||= according to https://go.dev/ref/spec#Assignment_statements. Instead, I have to write b = b || otherBool like a barbarian. Oh well, probably doesnāt happen all that often, given that I only now run into this after all those many years.
KDE Plasma 6.6 Fixing Significant Issues With Fingerprint Authentication
There is less than two weeks to go until the official KDE Plasma 6.6 desktop release. Plasma 6.6 is still seeing bug fixes in this final stretch of development while KDE developers are also busy already on Plasma 6.7 feature work⦠ā Read more
Whatās going on here?
https://imgur.com/gallery/dude-back-trying-to-keep-together-ilY5Ltu
Is that real? Did I just watch a politician genuinely chuckle? Thatās unheard of. Is that even legal?
It was so great going to the sauna again, we were looking forward to that the whole week. :-) Itās been over a year, holy cow, time flies. We definitely have to pick up on that tradition again, thatās for sure.
We attended two Aufguss sessions, the first and last one in our four hour visit. Unfortunately, we didnāt make it to the other two, because the crazy people already occupied the entire sauna 15 minutes before the start. Yeah, no.
Now, the bellies are stuffed with kebabs. Yum! Letās see how often I wake up tonight to rehydrate.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org Found some numbers now, theyāre saying it was around 10cm in 3-4 hours. I donāt know, felt like more. š The forecast wasnāt really good either, now that I think about it. They said thereās going to be some snow, okay, fine, but then, boom.
Haha, that old ad is lovely. Those days are over. š¤£
@prologic@twtxt.net (While browsing through that, I noticed that https://mu-lang.dev/ itself doesnāt really mention the source code repo, does it? š¤ Like, the quickstart guide begins with āBuild the host: go build ./cmd/muā, but whereās the git clone ⦠command? š
)
Iām not really sure what the goal is. š¤ Do you want to get pull requests for the docs? Or bug reports for mu itself? š¤
Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 Alum Charged for Alleged Fraud
An anonymous reader shares a report: By now, the Forbes 30 Under 30 list has become more than a little notorious for the amount of entrants who go on to be charged with fraud.[ā¦] Gokce Guven, a 26-year-old Turkish national and the founder and CEO of fintech startup Kalder, was charged last week with alleged securities fraud, wire fraud, visa fra ⦠ā Read more
Raspberry Pi Raises Prices As Much As $60 Due To Memory Demand
Last year Raspberry Pi announced price increases due to memory demand. Today they have announced another round of increased prices as a result of the memory shortages going on industry-wide⦠ā Read more
What Go Programmers Think of AI
āMost Go developers are now using AI-powered development tools when seeking information (e.g., learning how to use a module) or toiling (e.g., writing repetitive blocks of similar code).ā Thatās one of the conclusions Googleās Go team drew from Septemberās big survey of 5,379 Go developers.
But the survey also found that among Go developers using AI-powered tools, ātheir satisfaction with these tools is m ⦠ā Read more
Belkinās Wemo Smart Devices Will Go Offline On Saturday
Belkin is shutting down cloud support for most Wemo smart home devices on January 31, leaving only Thread-based models and devices already set up in Apple HomeKit functional. Everything else will lose remote access, voice assistant integrations, and future app updates. The Verge reports: The shut down was first announced in July and impacts most Wemo devices, ran ⦠ā Read more
Cory Doctorow On Tariffs and the DMCA In Canada
Longtime Slashdot reader devnulljapan writes: In 2012, Canada passed anti-circumvention law Bill C-11, cut-and-pasted from the U.S. DMCA, in return for access to U.S. markets without tariffs. Trump has tariffed Canada anyway, so Cory Doctorow suggests it sounds like like a good idea to ditch Bill C-11 and turn Canada into a āDisenshittification Nationā and go into the business of ⦠ā Read more
Nothing CEO Says Company Wonāt Launch New Flagship Smartphone Every Year āFor the Sake of Itā
Android smartphone maker Nothing wonāt release a Phone 4 this year, the companyās founder and chief executive said, and that the 2025 Phone 3 will remain the brandās flagship device throughout 2026.
āWeāre not just going to churn out a new flagship every year for the sake of it, we want ev ⦠ā Read more
Amazon To Shut Down All Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh Stores
Amazon is closing all of its Amazon Go and Amazon Fresh physical stores in a shift to focus on its online same-day delivery service and new big-box retail stores. From a report: The e-commerce giant said Tuesday that some of its shuttered Amazon-branded brick-and-mortar stores would be converted into Whole Foods Market locations. Amazon said its branded stores fail ⦠ā Read more
Early Arthropods
ā Read more
What a beautiful, beautiful 0°C Sunday arvo and evening! The weather forecast delayed the snow by the minute. An hour or so after it finally started very, very lightly, I headed off for the woods to check out the lake again. Unfortunately, with the fresh snow layer, the crazy wild surface texture of the ice sheet wasnāt visible anymore. But it brought some other nice views and photo opportunities.
I initially thought that I just go for a quick turn. However, with the snowfall a wee bit increasing I was hooked and kept going. Visibility was poor, but the snow blankets just looked too stunning. The road surfaces were quite slippery, so I often just walked alongside the pathways. On downhill slopes I had some good fun sliding down the road on my feet. With varying success. Luckily, I managed not to fall.
On the summit of the mountain the twigs had those absolutely magnificently looking windblown crystal coverings. Awwwwwww! They never get old. It was already getting dark, so the camera was tired and wanted to sleep. The snow program then made use of the flash and Iām quite pleased with how these shots turned out.
Two deer crossed the road in front of me and ran into the woods, that was sight for sore eyes. Although I felt bad that they had to flee from me in this white terrain. By the time I got home, the snow had accumulated around eight centimeters in height, even in town down in the valley. Walking on this fresh snow is just amazing. And I love the sound it makes. Today, the snow consistency must have been just right, because the crushing sound was really loud.
I cannot recall that I had frozen hair and beard before, but today, there was a thick ice buildup. In case I had, it was definitely never this much. Felt really cool.
Enough of this preliminary skirmishing, there ya go: https://lyse.isobeef.org/waldspaziergang-2026-01-25/
Has a bit of a long history story behind this, where last year at work we were reading this book called Engineering a Safer World and initially came across a service called Speech Reply that allowed me to upload a PDF copy of the book and start to read it, but unfortunately, the free trial right now before I can finish reading it turns out that Speech Reply service cost a whopping US$30 a month and expected me to pay a full year upfront, which was well over US$300 just for one fucking book! So I sent their sales and support staff a message kindly asking if it were possible to just pay for the audio transcription of just a single book or to change to a monthly subscription fee, to which they refused, so basically in the end I got very angry and told them to go fuck themselves and built my own service. A year later here we are :-)
Another project where Iām going to use my terminal widget toolkit is a hex editor. This is still very young, obviously, and thereās a lot of work to do (both in the toolkit and this particular application), but Iām making some progress:
https://movq.de/v/2bae14ed16/vid-1769283187.mp4
Since this program is UTF-8 clean (I hope), you can do things like enter multi-byte UTF-8 sequences or paste them from the system clipboard (another hex editor I just tried failed to do this correctly):
https://movq.de/v/e9241034c1/vid-1769283755.mp4
Under the hood, Iām using mmap() with MAP_PRIVATE, which is really cool: I get the entire file as a byte array, no matter how large it is, no need to actually read it upfront; and MAP_PRIVATE means that I can write to this area however I like without changing the underlying file. The kernel does copy-on-write for me. Only when you hit Save, it will write to the filesystem. And itās just a couple lines of code. The kernel does all the magic. š„³
Updated Intel Panther Lake IPU Firmware Published With New Features & Bug Fixes
Ahead of the first Intel Core Ultra Series 3 Panther Lake laptops expected to hit retail channels next week, Intel has published updated IPU7 (IPU 7.5) firmware for the image processing unit used by the web cameras on the higher-end Panther Lake laptops⦠ā Read more
The CPU Performance Of The NVIDIA GB10 With The Dell Pro Max vs. AMD Ryzen AI Max+ āStrix Haloā
With the Dell Pro Max GB10 testing at Phoronix we have been focused on the AI performance with its Blackwell GPU as the GB10 superchip was designed for meeting the needs of AI. Many Phoronix readers have also been curious about the GB10ās CPU performance in more traditional Linux workloads. So for those curious about the GB10 CPU performance, here are some Linux benchmarks focused today on the CPU performance and going up aga ⦠ā Read more
The CPU Performance Of The NVIDIA GB10 With The Dell Pro Max vs. AMD Ryzen AI Max+ āStrix Haloā
With the Dell Pro Max GB10 testing at Phoronix we have been focused on the AI performance with its Blackwell GPU as the GB10 superchip was designed for meeting the needs of AI. Many Phoronix readers have also been curious about the GB10ās CPU performance in more traditional Linux workloads. So for those curious about the GB10 CPU performance, here are some Linux benchmarks focused today on the CPU performance and going up aga ⦠ā Read more
Patches Ready For Linux 7.0 To Enable Intel GPU Firmware Updates On Non-x86 Systems
Patches are now positioned to go into the upcoming Linux 6.20~7.0 kernel cycle for supporting Intel discrete GPU firmware updating on non-x86 systems⦠ā Read more
X.Org Server May Create A New Selective Git Branch With Hopes Of A New Release This Year
A proposal has been laid out for a new X.Org Server āmainā Git branch to house their development going forward and cleaning up the development lapses over the past few years. Ultimately the hope is for having a new cleaned-up X.Org Server and XWayland Git branch for shipping new releases in 2026⦠ā Read more
yes, yes thatās right. Mu (µ) now has a built-in LSP server for fans of VS Code / VSCodium š
You just go install ./cmd/mu-lsp/... and install the VS extension and hey presto š„³ You get outlines of any Mu source, Find References and Go to Definition!
So, are you guys up for an experiment?
Iām really not happy with the domain āuninformativ.deā anymore. Iām going to switch to āmovq.deā soon (or maybe something else if I get another fancy idea).
If I keep the url = field in my twtxt file, nothing should break, right? Right? š¤£
./bin/mu -B -o ... -p muos/amd64 ... target.
@prologic@twtxt.net Damn, nice! I know exactly what you mean ā the output/screenshot looks trivial, but thereās so much going on behind the scenes. š
Did you do the whole dance with BIOS boot and everything?
Took me nearly all week (in my spare time), but Mu (µ) finally officially support linux/amd64 š„³ I completely refactored the native code backend and borrowed a lot of the structure from another project called wazero (the zero dependency Go WASM runtime/compiler). This is amazing stuff because now Mu (µ) runs in more places natively, as well as running everywhere Go runs via the bytecode VM interpreter š¤
Why Go is Going Nowhere
Go, the ancient board game that China, Japan and South Korea all claim as part of their cultural heritage, is struggling to expand its global footprint because the three nations that dominate it cannot agree on something as basic as a common rulebook.
When Go was registered with the International Mind Sports Association alongside chess and bridge, organizers had to adopt the American Go Associationās rules because the East As ⦠ā Read more
tcell.Key constants and typing different key combinations in the terminal to see the generated tcell.EventKeys in the debug log. Until I pressed Ctrl+Alt+Backspace⦠:-D Yep, suddenly there went my Xā¦
And tcell seems to support my urxvt in general: https://github.com/gdamore/tcell/blob/v2/terminfo/r/rxvt/term.go#L144
oVirt 4.5.7 Released After Two Years With New OS & CPU Support
The oVirt 4.5.7 open-source virtualization management platform released this week after not seeing any new releases in two years. While Red Hat had started the oVirt open-source project for which their Red Hat Virtualization platform is based, since they shifted that to maintenance mode to focus on the Red Hat OpenShift platform and stopped contributing to oVirt, itās been up to the open-source community to keep it going⦠ā Read more