There’s a line buried in the San Francisco audit story that stopped me mid-scroll. It notes that civil liberties groups argue people may avoid attending protests, seeking reproductive health care, or participating in political activities if they believe their movements are being tracked. One commenter on the thread put it plainly: that is entirely the point. I think they’re right. And that’s what …
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There’s a story doing the rounds about SpaceX’s IPO and the growing unease among Americans who’ve realised their retirement savings may now be quietly tied to Elon Musk’s ambitions. The reaction online has ranged from resigned shrugging to genuine alarm. Both seem appropriate. The short version: SpaceX went public, got fast-tracked into the Nasdaq 100 at a speed that bypassed the usual rules, …
Keep readingSomeone posted their homelab setup online recently and the project itself is genuinely clever: they took their network diagram out of a drawing tool and made it a build artefact instead. A text file in a repo, a GitHub Actions workflow that renders it on every push, icons pulled from public sources at render time so nothing drifts. The diagram can’t lie to you because it rebuilds itself from the thing that is …
Keep readingOhio State’s NLP group just released QUEST-35B, a Deep Research agent they trained on roughly 32 H100s with about 8,000 synthetic samples. They’ve open-sourced the whole thing: weights, training recipe, code, datasets. Benchmark results look competitive against some frontier systems. That’s a genuine achievement for an academic team. The online reaction was predictably split. Some people were …
Keep readingSomeone posted online this week about corporate team days, and within about forty comments it had become a proper catharsis session. The butcher’s paper. The coloured Post-its. Leadership doing their twelve minutes of performed empathy before quietly disappearing. The pre-assigned groups, because nothing accelerates team cohesion like being seated next to the person who replies-all to everything. The OP nailed …
Keep readingSomeone posted on AusFinance recently about hitting $80,000 in savings at twenty years old. No inheritance, no windfall. Just five years of working since they were fifteen, living at home with a dad who wouldn’t accept rent, and enough discipline to not blow it on whatever twenty-year-olds blow money on these days. The post wasn’t a flex. That’s what made it interesting. It was more like: I have …
Keep readingThere’s a thread doing the rounds comparing the major AI assistants, and it’s the usual mix of genuine insight and confident nonsense. But buried in there are a few observations that stuck with me. Someone mentioned their mum now uses Gemini daily, gets answers in her own language, solves her own problems. Someone else’s mum has apparently made Claude her best friend. This is not the AI adoption …
Keep readingSomeone posted on Reddit this week asking whether they were going to spend the rest of their career reviewing AI-generated code. They mentioned that colleagues were boasting about not having written a single line of code in months. That markdown lists of ideas were showing up in meetings, obviously AI-generated, presented as thinking. That the expectation had quietly shifted: a good engineer now “supervises …
Keep readingRight then. That actually happened. The Socceroos beat Türkiye 2-0 in Vancouver, and if you told me that six hours ago I would have nodded politely and assumed you were winding me up. Türkiye’s squad is reportedly valued somewhere around six times what Australia’s is worth. Their captain had gone on record before the match saying his more talented team would dominate us. That quote aged, as someone online …
Keep readingSomeone in an online forum recently asked whether you can buy at-home dry-cleaning kits here. Products like Dryel, apparently common in the US, where you chuck a few garments in the dryer with a moist treatment sheet and get something approximating a dry-clean result. Cheaper, more convenient, no dropping things off and picking them up two days later. The answer, roughly, was: no, we don’t really have those, …
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