rss: npr

  • After the Fall: How Olympic figure skaters soar after stumbling on the ice
    Olympic figure skating is often seems to take athletes to the very edge of perfection, but even the greatest stumble and fall. How do they pull themselves together again on the biggest world stage? Toughness, poise and practice.
  • Opinion: Alternate endings for modern attention spans
    Some film professors are bemoaning the shortcuts students take to avoid watching assigned movies: some don't know what happens at the end. NPR's Scott Simon offers his own synopses.
  • They're cured of leprosy. Why do they still live in leprosy colonies?
    Leprosy is one of the least contagious diseases around — and perhaps one of the most misunderstood. The colonies are relics of a not-too-distant past when those diagnosed with leprosy were exiled.
  • This season, 'The Pitt' is about what doesn't happen in one day
    The first season of The Pitt was about acute problems. The second is about chronic ones.
  • Lindsey Vonn is set to ski the Olympic downhill race with a torn ACL. How?
    An ACL tear would keep almost any other athlete from competing -- but not Lindsey Vonn, the 41-year-old superstar skier who is determined to cap off an incredible comeback from retirement with one last shot at an Olympic medal.
  • The CIA World Factbook is dead. Here's how I came to love it
    The Factbook survived the Cold War and became a hit online. It mixed quirky cultural notes and trivia with maps, data, and photos taken by CIA officers. But it was discontinued this week.
  • State Department will delete X posts from before Trump returned to office
    The policy change orders the removal of any post made by official State Department accounts on X before President Trump returned to office in 2025.
  • DVDs and public transit: Boycott drives people to ditch Big Tech to protest ICE
    A sweeping boycott has begun — targeting tech giants who participants believe are enabling President Trump and his immigration crackdown.
  • Trump promised a crypto revolution. So why is bitcoin crashing?
    Trump got elected promising to usher in a crypto revolution. More than a year later, bitcoin's price has come tumbling down. What happened?
  • Mariah Carey, coffee makers and other highlights from the Olympic opening ceremony
    NPR reporters at the Milan opening ceremony layered up and took notes.


rss: bbc

  • Mandelson scandal is 'serious' for Starmer but PM is 'man of integrity', Brown says
    Brown said Sir Keir might have been "too slow to do the right things" but backed him to "clean up the system".
  • MPs are shocked and angry at Mandelson - but they're furious with Starmer
    Many Labour insiders say Sir Keir may not be the man to take them to the next election, writes Laura Kuenssberg.
  • I've seen where air pollution goes inside my body - and I feel contaminated
    BBC health correspondent James Gallagher gets his blood analysed to understand how air pollution is killing us.
  • US wants Russia and Ukraine to end war by June, says Zelensky
    The Ukrainian leader says difficult issues remain, as Russia carries out further strikes on energy facilities.
  • Trump says he 'didn't see' part of video with racist clip depicting Obamas as apes
    The US president says he "didn't make a mistake", adding he had only seen the beginning of the video before it was posted.
  • UK to get brief respite from rain, forecasts show
    Some parts of the UK have already seen more rain than they'd normally expect in the whole of February - so when will the wet weather end?
  • First gold of Games 'like a movie' for Von Allmen
    Swiss Alpine skier Franjo von Allmen becomes the first champion of the 2026 Winter Olympics in the downhill.
  • Vonn disputes doctor's knee injury claim
    Veteran skier Lindsey Vonn disputes a doctor's claim that her anterior cruciate ligament injury is not a "fresh tear", saying her ACL is "100% gone".
  • GB on brink of mixed semis after another win
    Team GB's mixed doubles curlers move to the brink of the Winter Olympics semi-finals with three matches still to play.
  • Five golds including big air on day one - Saturday's guide
    What's happening and who to look out for at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan-Cortina.


rss: the register

  • Whether they are building agents or folding proteins, LLMs need a friend

    AI pioneer Vishal Sikka warns to never trust an LLM that runs alone

    interview Don't trust; verify. According to AI researcher Vishal Sikka, LLMs alone are limited by computational boundaries and will start to hallucinate when they push those boundaries. One solution? Companion bots that check their work.…

  • Study confirms experience beats youthful enthusiasm

    Research shows productivity and judgment peak decades after graduation

    A growing body of research continues to show that older workers are generally more productive than younger employees.…

  • Openreach turns up the heat to force laggards off legacy copper lines

    Half a million businesses face successive price hikes ahead of PTSN shutdown

    Openreach is warning British businesses that the old phone network shuts down in less than a year - with half a million commercial lines still unmigrated.…

  • AI video company arouses fury by boasting about replacing creative jobs

    Marketing stunt backfires with creators

    The first rule of AI-generated job loss is you don't talk about AI-generated job loss ... if you're the company that caused it. Higgsfield.ai, a startup offering AI video creation tools, recently generated outrage when it claimed it had caused artists to hit the unemployment line.…

  • Let there be light! DARPA seeking physics-defying photonic computers to supercharge AI

    There’s about $35M up for grabs if your circuits can beat today’s limits

    It's no lightweight matter. DARPA is putting about $35 million in total funding on the table in the hope that it will spur researchers to work around fundamental physical constraints and build much larger-scale photonic circuits that do more of the computing with light, not electronics.…

  • Four horsemen of the AI-pocalypse line up capex bigger than Israel's GDP

    Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft eye $635B in infrastructure spend

    Four tech megacorps intend to collectively fork out roughly $635 billion this year on capex, much of it for datacenters and AI infrastructure – more than the entire output of Israel's economy and well beyond all global cloud infrastructure services revenue generated last year.…

  • Flickr emails users about data breach, pins it on 3rd party

    Attackers may have snapped user locations and activity information, message warns

    Legacy image-sharing website Flickr suffered a data breach, according to customers emails seen by The Register.…

  • DDoS deluge: Brit biz battered as botnet blitzes break records

    UK leaps to sixth in global flood charts as mega-swarm unleashes 31.4 Tbps Yuletide pummeling

    Cloudflare says DDoS crews ended 2025 by pushing traffic floods to new extremes, while Britain made an unwelcome leap of 36 places to become the world's sixth-most targeted location.…

  • Summoning the spirit of the BBC Micro with a Pi 500+ and a can of spray paint

    Rhapsody in beige

    An enterprising engineer has evoked the spirit of Acorn's BBC Micro with a custom paintjob for a Raspberry Pi 500+ computer-in-a-keyboard and a natty set of replacement keycaps.…

  • Supermarket sorry after facial recognition alert flags right criminal, wrong customer

    System worked as intended, but staff then kicked out innocent bystander

    A British supermarket says staff will undergo further training after a store manager ejected the wrong man when facial recognition technology triggered an alert.…



rss: ars technica

  • Under Trump, EPA’s enforcement of environmental laws collapses, report finds
    The Environmental Protection Agency has drastically pulled back on holding polluters accountable.
  • Sixteen Claude AI agents working together created a new C compiler
    The $20,000 experiment compiled a Linux kernel but needed deep human management.
  • Penisgate erupts at Olympics; scandal exposes risks of bulking your bulge
    Claims of penis injections in ski jumpers has fillers spewing into the news.
  • Lawyer sets new standard for abuse of AI; judge tosses case
    Behold the most overwrought AI legal filings you will ever gaze upon.
  • Malicious packages for dYdX cryptocurrency exchange empties user wallets
    Incident is at least the third time the exchange has been targeted by thieves.
  • Why $700 could be a "death sentence" for the Steam Machine
    Analysts expect Valve might be hit particularly hard by soaring RAM, storage prices.
  • COVID-19 cleared the skies but also supercharged methane emissions
    Less pollution meant lower amounts of a methane-destroying chemical.
  • Waymo leverages Genie 3 to create a world model for self-driving cars
    With Genie 3, Waymo wants to explore rare and even impossible driving conditions.
  • To reuse or not reuse—the eternal debate of New Glenn's second stage reignites
    A new job posting suggests the debate may be swinging back toward reusing GS2.
  • Driven: The 2026 Lamborghini Temerario raises the bar for supercars
    This V8 hybrid with more than 900 hp replaces the V10 Huracán.


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