Scientists discover intercellular nanotubular communication system in brain
science.org
Live Stream from the Namib Desert
bookofjoe2.blogspot.com
Claude Skills are awesome, maybe a bigger deal than MCP
simonwillison.net
Andrej Karpathy – AGI is still a decade away
dwarkesh.com
EVs are depreciating faster than gas-powered cars
restofworld.org
Ruby core team takes ownership of RubyGems and Bundler
ruby-lang.org
AI has a cargo cult problem
ft.com
OpenAI Needs $400B In The Next 12 Months
wheresyoured.at
MIT physicists improve the precision of atomic clocks
news.mit.edu
4Chan Lawyer publishes Ofcom correspondence
alecmuffett.com
I built an F5 QKview scanner for CISA ED 26-01
usenabla.com
Migrating from AWS to Hetzner
digitalsociety.coop
Forgejo v13.0 Is Available
forgejo.org
Smithsonian Open Access Images
si.edu
Resizeable Bar Support on the Raspberry Pi
jeffgeerling.com
Exploring PostgreSQL 18's new UUIDv7 support
aiven.io
Cartridge Chaos: The Official Nintendo Region Converter and More
nicole.express
Let's write a macro in Rust
hackeryarn.com
The Rapper 50 Cent, Adjusted for Inflation
50centadjustedforinflation.com
Trap the Critters with Paint
deepanwadhwa.github.io
How I bypassed Amazon's Kindle web DRM
blog.pixelmelt.dev
Stinkbug Leg Organ Hosts Symbiotic Fungi That Protect Eggs from Parasitic Wasps
bioengineer.org
I suppose the image is genai, but they don't credit it as such, despite crediting the images on all the other articles below it as genai. However, they don't provide any image credit on the linked article, so presumably they just forgot to add it.
It's sickening that a science website uses genai specifically for images of things that are ostensibly real in the context of news about that thing. E.g. this stinkbug, and some kind of fruiting plant in a lower-down article. As opposed to only using it for clearly artificial renderings.