rss: npr

  • Iraqi soccer fans celebrate end of 40-year World Cup drought
    The Iraq national men's team hasn't played a World Cup in 40 years; a drought that ends Tuesday night, to the excitement of soccer fans in Dearborn, Michigan, home to a large Iraqi diaspora.
  • In Albania, anger grows against the government for supporting a Kushner-linked luxury resort
    Albania's government has given preliminary approval to plans for the luxury resort along a stretch of coastline, prompting daily protests and legal challenges by environmental groups.
  • Trump further guts Education Dept. by shifting oversight of special ed, civil rights
    The moves to the federal departments of Health and Human Services and Justice, respectively, would further dismantle an agency that President Donald Trump has vowed to close.
  • 'The Lost Founder' profiles a brilliant lawyer who helped craft the Constitution
    Jesse Wegman's book tells the story of James Wilson, a largely forgotten founding father who lived a colorful life and died as a Supreme Court justice on the run from the law and creditors.
  • Live with a partner? You may be sharing more microbes than you think
    A large study finds you may share about a quarter of your oral and gut microbes with the people you live with. Should you worry? We asked the experts.
  • The World Cup reminds us that the way to a visitor's heart ... is through their stomach
    The action inside the stadiums isn't the only thing capturing the attention of international visitors. Turns out, they're discovering the delights of Buc-ee's, Waffle House, Wawa and free soda refills.
  • The war with Iran is making oil changes pricier. And a deal won't solve it
    The U.S. may be the world's biggest producer of crude oil, but that's not the case for motor oil. The cost of lubricants is soaring, and even a tentative deal to end the war won't solve the problem.
  • Pop albums are drowning in 'narrative.' What happens when we go in cold?
    New albums by Lizzo and the rising artist Imani Imani are both "event" records — but one arrives with arguably too much backstory, the other with almost none.
  • Survey confirms the struggle of working parents: 'No way to be two things at once'
    A new Pew survey finds many working parents feel they cannot give 100% at either work or home. Benefits like paid sick leave and more affordable childcare could help.
  • How Israel could complicate Iran peace negotiations. And, World Cup highlights
    Israel has been sidelined in the agreement between the U.S. and Iran. It could spoil peace negotiations. And, it's been a thrilling start to the World Cup.


rss: bbc

  • Russian warship fires warning shots near UK-registered yacht in Channel
    A British retired couple who were onboard the yacht tell BBC Newsnight they tried to show the warship they had changed course before the shots were fired.
  • UK forces face operational cuts without more cash, defence chief warns
    It comes as ex-defence secretary John Healey says the UK's enemies "do not follow timetables set by the Treasury".
  • Tehran selling deal with US as victory – but for Iranians it was necessity
    For many Iranians, the question is not whether the deal means victory, but whether it lowers prices and reduces fear of another war.
  • Three reasons ships are not going through the Strait of Hormuz yet
    Experts say that there are significant obstacles preventing traffic from returning to the levels seen before the conflict began – security, mines and tolls.
  • What UK social media ban means for gaming and YouTube
    A ban is coming - but it's still not clear what it will mean for sites including Roblox, YouTube and WhatsApp.
  • Woman left traumatised by swinging says website 'facilitated abuse'
    She wants to warn others after her husband pressured her into sex she did not want, she says.
  • Prince George to attend Eton College from September
    He will follow in the footsteps of his father, the Prince of Wales, who also attended the private school.
  • German broadcaster removes TV intro after Elon Musk takes legal action
    ZDF TV responded to a "cease and desist" letter after the tech trillionaire condemned the broadcaster's "outrageous lies".
  • Naomi Campbell blames lawyer for 'fraud and deception' at charity ban appeal
    The supermodel is appealing the ban against her, telling an appeal tribunal that fake emails were used to misdirect funds.
  • Thames Water closer to nationalisation after government objects to rescue deal
    The environment secretary says the deal does not do enough for consumers or the environment.


rss: the register

  • Python dev saved from disaster by intuition...and AI
    I'm sorry, Dave. I can't install that repo that will totally hose your system.
  • Intel-born networking tech resurfaces as InfiniBand alternative for DoE supers
    Omni-Path lights up Lawrence Livermore system at 400 Gbps
  • AI and brain-computer interface allow speechless ALS patient to work a full-time job
    The hardware isn't new, but a UC Davis research team's machine learning-powered method of translating brain activity in an ALS patient into sentences with 92% accuracy is
  • Three critical Fortinet sandbox bugs splattered by unknown attackers
    All have patches, so make sure you upgrade to a fixed version
  • Commodore gets into the phone biz with Sailfish-powered retro 'Callback'
    Ships sans email, web, or socials, but with plenty of beige plastic
  • There's no such thing as an agentic CPU
    AI agents are a general-purpose workload no different from any other
  • Firefox 152 understands 'Sssh!'
    As Google continues crippling Chrome ad-blockers, it's a good time to try Firefox
  • Microsoft faces down sueball, capacity problems in series of challenges
    Misleading statements about Copilot and AI? Surely not!
  • Crooks found a new way to collaborate using Teams – by hiding command-and-control traffic
    Custom malware routed communications through legitimate Microsoft services, making malicious activity look like routine corporate collaboration
  • Linux kernel 7.1 sends Intel 486 support to silicon heaven
    More than 140,000 lines of code bite the dust as ancient CPUs, bus mice, and other legacy leftovers face the chop


rss: ars technica

  • US approval of Paramount/Warner Bros. deal surprised DOJ lawyers, report says
    Trump admin green-lighting $111B deal "reeks of corruption," Sen. Warren says.
  • Pentagon boasts of using AI to write reports mandated by Congress
    Pentagon also claims 1.5 million personnel are using generative AI tools.
  • Android 17 starts hitting Pixel phones and watches today
    Pixels will get their OTA in the coming weeks, but don't expect monumental changes.
  • Trump admin abandons fight against wind energy as clean energy output surges
    Legal victories have dampened the Trump admin’s efforts to halt wind and solar power.
  • SpaceX to acquire AI coding platform Cursor for $60 billion
    Separately, neither could compete. Now they hope they can.
  • Leaked financial docs show OpenAI is losing billions of dollars a year
    Audited accounting shows growing revenues being dwarfed by R&D, other expenses.
  • Mobileye is entering the US robotaxi market with standalone service
    The service will leverage its Moovit platform to launch in an a US city in 2027.
  • The Ars Technica 2026 Reader Survey: Let your voice be heard!
    Tell us how you read Ars, and what you'd like to see more (or less!) of on the front page.
  • Critical Copilot vulnerability allowed hackers to steal 2FA code from users
    SearchLeak exploit shows why the industry's approach to LLM security fails over and over.
  • Commodore’s newest gadget is a flip phone that blocks social media and browsers
    Commodore's Callback 8020 is a phone “where the customer is not the product."


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