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AddLenticular Clock: After making my Moire Clock a got interested in a very similar effect: lenticular animations. You probably have seen this effect before, e.g. on post cards. I remember having a ruler in primary school with a picture of dinosaurs on it that changed d…
Considered lost for over a century, Georges Méliès' 'Gugusse and the Automaton' features cinema’s earliest robot.
Iroh 1.0 is out. Now is the time to build.
After years of rebuffing lobbying efforts.
Will involve sharing test Medicare cards via a QR code.
Access iMessage from any device. iUseLinux runs on your Mac and serves iMessage through a web interface accessible over your VPN or Tailnet.
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Take control of your content consumption with RSS and Atom feeds. Escape algorithmic black boxes, gain more control over what and how you consume in order to be more intentional with your media consumption.
What happens when you ask Claude Code to compose music? Five experiments later: original songs, music videos, and a full album, all built from scratch.
Companies that treat AI as an autonomous agent are disappointed. Those that treat it as an exoskeleton—an amplifier of human capability—are seeing transformative results. Here's the framework.
A pocket gadget with clicky buttons, a tiny screen, and sensors. Fun to use out of the box, open-source and programmable if you want to
(this is also posted on O’Reilly’s Radar blog. Much thanks to Daniel Schauenberg, Morgan Evans, and Steven Shorrock for feedback on this) Before I begin this post, let me say that this is intended to be a critique of the Five Whys method, not a criticism of the people who are in favor of using…
Introducing phase8, an eight-voice acoustic synthesizer that merges the sonic richness of the physical world with precise electronic control. With envelope shaping, sequencing, analogue wavefolding, and pitch-dependent modulation, phase8 harnesses the latest Acoustic Synthesis technology developed at KORG.
To prioritize the safety and security of the ecosystem, Kubernetes SIG Network and the Security Response Committee are announcing the upcoming retirement of Ingress NGINX. Best-effort maintenance will continue until March 2026. Afterward, there will be no further releases, no bugfixes, and no updates to resolve any security vulnerabilities that may be discovered. Existing deployments of Ingress NGINX will continue to function and installation artifacts will remain available. We recommend migrating to one of the many alternatives.
On January 14, 2026, global telnet traffic observed by GreyNoise sensors fell off a cliff. A 59% sustained reduction, eighteen ASNs going completely silent, five countries vanishing from our data entirely. Six days later, CVE-2026-24061 dropped. Coincidence is one explanation.
learn-c.org is a free interactive C tutorial for people who want to learn C, fast.
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On April 21, 2026, a major breakthrough in cybersecurity happened: leading standardization initiatives gathered in Washington DC and agreed to begin coordinating collectively on AI security. A personal dream come true. The result: MOSAIC: Multi-Organization Secure AI Coordination. The goal: turn a fragmented landscape into clear, consistent standards and guidelines, to deal with the mounting risks of AI.
This important step was taken at the AI Security Policy Forum, organised and led by the OWASP AI Exchange, with SANS Institute as co-host - convening standard makers and policy stakeholders.
The initiatives at the table included: 👉 BIML (Berryville Institute of Machine Learning) 👉 Center for Internet Security (CIS) 👉 Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) 👉 Coalition for Secure AI (CoSAI) 👉 National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) 👉 OWASP AI Exchange (AIX) 👉 OWASP GenAI Security Project 👉 SANS Institute
The group agreed that it is now more important than ever to coordinate around the rapidly evolving possibilities and challenges of AI, as AI security risks mount.
One of the next steps is to provide a standardized map of the participating initiatives and a communication platform to exchange insights on a first list of identified topics (e.g., aligning with other initiatives such as SC42, building on OpenCRE, consensus on definitions), improve consistency, clarity, quality, and prevent unnecessary duplication. The idea is to move fast while maintaining independence and with lightweight coordination - not add more committees.
In addition to the organizations mentioned, the discussion also included journalists, representatives from International Telecommunication Union (ITU), The Aspen Institute, academia, and government — providing valuable perspectives on developments in both policy and industry. This helped prioritize the topics to focus on.
In the picture, from left to right, standing to sitting: Disesdi Shoshana Cox (AIX), Gary McGraw(BIML), Rob van der Veer (AIX), Anonymous, Duncan Sparrell, John Yeoh (CSA), Rock Lambros (GenAI), Norma Krayem, Brian Calkin (CIS), Matt Altomare (Aspen), Omar Santos (CoSAI), Aruneesh Salhotra (AIX), Jonathan Gibson (The Dispatch), Apostol Vassilev (NIST), Rhea Nygard, Ken Huang, Lav Varshney (Stony Brook University), Sounil Yu, and Sharon Goldman (Fortune)
Not in the picture, but involved, in alphabetical order: Rob T. Lee (SANS), Ryan Galluzzo (NIST), Soribel F.
A big thank you to: 👏 Disesdi Shoshana Cox for her idea to bring everybody together in a room to fulfil the connecting mission of the Exchange 👏 The amazing thinktank at the AI Exchange 👏 Spyros Gasteratos for his work on OpenCRE 👏 Violeta Klein, CISSP, CEFA for shaping the story for the Forum 👏 Straiker, Casco (YC X25), AI Security Academy, and SANS for supporting the Forum. 👏 Software Improvement Group for donating the original threat model and initiating the AI Exchange
Let’s make AI a success! | 28 comments on LinkedIn
It turns out that professionals are keenly interested in learning new skills (which makes us deliriously happy). And learning tends to spike in January, as people start the year focused on building new habits.