Latest entries
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Gemma 4 audio with MLX
Thanks to a tip from Rahim Nathwani, here's a uv run recipe for transcribing an audio file on macOS using the 10.28 GB Gemma 4 E2B model with MLX and mlx-vlm: uv run --python 3.13 --with mlx_vlm --with torchvision --with gradio \ mlx_vlm.generate \ --model google/gemma-4-e2b-it \ --audio file.wav \ …
Simon Willison — Published
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The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Psychological Hazards
Table of Contents This is a long article, so I'm breaking it up into a series of posts which will be released over the next few days. You can also read the full work as a PDF or EPUB; these files will be updated as each section is released. Introduction Dynamics Culture Information Ecology Annoyances…
Kyle Kingsbury — Published
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Shock from Iran war has Trump's vision for US energy dominance flailing
Record domestic oil and gas production hasn't saved US drivers from price spikes.
Ars Technica — Published
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A lunch without alcohol
An entry from my journal in which I describe a little bit of life in the mountains and my experience at an Easter celebration.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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SQLite 3.53.0
SQLite 3.53.0 SQLite 3.52.0 was withdrawn so this is a pretty big release with a whole lot of accumulated user-facing and internal improvements. Some that stood out to me: ALTER TABLE can now add and remove NOT NULL and CHECK constraints - I've previously used my own sqlite-utils transform() method for…
Simon Willison — Published
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SQLite Query Result Formatter Demo
Tool: SQLite Query Result Formatter Demo See my notes on SQLite 3.53.0. This playground provides a UI for trying out the various rendering options for SQL result tables from the new Query Result Formatter library, compiled to WebAssembly. Tags: tools, sqlite
Simon Willison — Published
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The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Annoyances
Table of Contents This is a long article, so I'm breaking it up into a series of posts which will be released over the next few days. You can also read the full work as a PDF or EPUB; these files will be updated as each section is released. Introduction Dynamics Culture Information Ecology Annoyances…
Kyle Kingsbury — Published
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AI models are terrible at betting on soccer—especially xAI Grok
Systems from Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI struggle with the Premier League.
Ars Technica — Published
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The Artemis II mission has ended. Where does NASA go from here?
"The work ahead is greater than the work behind us."
Ars Technica — Published
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Four astronauts are back home after a daring ride around the Moon
"I can't imagine a better crew that just completed a perfect mission right now."
Ars Technica — Published
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Brocards for vulnerability triage
I spend some of my hobby time doing vulnerability triage on open source projects. As part of that, I see (and filter through) a lot of nonsense1. Spam, “beg bounty” submissions, and increasingly zero-effort LLM submissions. ↩
William Woodruff — Published
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There goes another Easter
An entry from my journal in which I describe my thoughts as they occur moments to midnight.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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WCAG3 Contrast as of April 2026
This post is part of RSS Club, rewarding those who still use RSS to read and/or share content. These posts are embargoed from my regular post feed and the socials for an arbitrary period of time. You can see all the RSS-only posts at AdrianRoselli.com/category/RSS. Tell your friends (to get…
Adrian Roselli — Published
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Californians sue over AI tool that records doctor visits
Plaintiffs say transcription tool processed confidential chats offsite.
Ars Technica — Published
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New paper argues history, not mantle plume, powers Yellowstone
A now-vanished plate under North America may open the crust below Yellowstone.
Ars Technica — Published
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F1 moves a step closer to fixing its 2026 hybrid problem
Algorithms, not drivers, are deciding how hard to accelerate, and that's no good.
Ars Technica — Published
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Kākāpō parrots
Lenny posted another snippet from our 1 hour 40 minute podcast recording and it's about kākāpō parrots! Tags: kakapo
Simon Willison — Published
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Report: US demands Reddit unmask ICE critic, summons firm to grand jury
Trump admin reportedly gets grand jury involved in attempt to identify Redditor.
Ars Technica — Published
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Microsoft's "commitment to Windows quality" starts with overhaul of beta program
Windows Insider builds remain confusing, but they should be more predictable.
Ars Technica — Published
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"Oobleck" still holds some surprises
Dense drops of oobleck with high shear rates spread out like a liquid before stiffening into a solid.
Ars Technica — Published
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YouTube increases Premium price again, says 90-second unskippable ads are a bug
An individual plan now cost $15.99 per month, and the free tier comes with buggy ads.
Ars Technica — Published
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Oldest octopus fossil found to not be an octopus
Supposed “first octopus” was something else entirely.
Ars Technica — Published
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What leaked "SteamGPT" files could mean for the PC gaming platform's use of AI
AI tools could help moderators sift through mountains of suspicious incidents
Ars Technica — Published
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ChatGPT voice mode is a weaker model
I think it's non-obvious to many people that the OpenAI voice mode runs on a much older, much weaker model - it feels like the AI that you can talk to should be the smartest AI but it really isn't. If you ask ChatGPT voice mode for its knowledge cutoff date it tells you April 2024 - it's a GPT-4o era…
Simon Willison — Published
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The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Information Ecology
Table of Contents This is a long article, so I'm breaking it up into a series of posts which will be released over the next few days. You can also read the full work as a PDF or EPUB; these files will be updated as each section is released. Introduction Dynamics Culture Information Ecology Annoyances…
Kyle Kingsbury — Published
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Here's what to expect from the fiery, 14-minute return of Artemis II
"Let’s not beat around the bush—we have to hit that angle correctly."
Ars Technica — Published
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Pro-Iran Explosive Media trolls Trump with AI-generated Lego cartoons
Group has released over a dozen videos mocking President Trump and the US.
Ars Technica — Published
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Dad stuck in support nightmare after teen lied about age on Discord
Data dump confirms dad's suspicions that Discord knew teen's age prior to hack.
Ars Technica — Published
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Jimmy Carter was right
What Carter did in his speech was something rare in the annals of democratic government: he confronted the people with the truth—about his own failings, about the reality of the world around them, and most importantly about themselves. Even as Americans grow, for the second time, disillusioned with a…
Jeffrey Zeldman — Published
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Rocket Report: Chinese version of Falcon 9 fails; Artemis depends on rapid heavy lift
“As space becomes increasingly strategic, access is no longer a luxury."
Ars Technica — Published
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Orion helium leak no threat to Artemis II reentry but will require redesign
After leaks on Artemis I and II, Orion's next flight to the Moon will need new valves.
Ars Technica — Published
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threadcat
URL: https://codeberg.org/blinry/threadcat
Sebastian Morr — Published
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Emacs modus-themes live stream today @ 14:00 Europe/Athens
I am doing a live stream related to Emacs, where I will write tests for my modus-themes.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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RFK Jr. rewrites CDC panel's charter, opening door to anti-vaccine quacks
ACIP's charter now full of anti-vaccine terms and welcomes fringe groups to CDC.
Ars Technica — Published
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GitHub Repo Size
Tool: GitHub Repo Size GitHub doesn't tell you the repo size in the UI, but it's available in the CORS-friendly API. Paste a repo into this tool to see the size, for example for simonw/datasette (8.1MB). Tags: cors, github
Simon Willison — Published
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AI on the couch: Anthropic gives Claude 20 hours of psychiatry
Mythos is "the most psychologically settled model we have trained to date."
Ars Technica — Published
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Fewer Computers, Fewer Problems: Going Local With Builds & Deployments
Me, in 2025, on Mastodon: I love tools like Netlify and deploying my small personal sites with git push But i'm not gonna lie, 2025 might be the year I go back to just doing builds locally and pushing the deploys from my computer. I'm sick of devops'ing stupid stuff because builds work on my machine…
Jim Nielsen — Published
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Untitled
In yet another surprising turn of events, today I joined a library. And borrowed a book of fiction. To read.
Paul Robert Lloyd — Published
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Handwritten notes in the time of AI note takers
The best project management tool is still a pen, plus the discipline to notice what the machine cannot. Wisdom from Lucas Radke. The post Handwritten notes in the time of AI note takers appeared first on Jeffrey Zeldman Presents.
Jeffrey Zeldman — Published
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The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Culture
Table of Contents This is a long article, so I'm breaking it up into a series of posts which will be released over the next few days. You can also read the full work as a PDF or EPUB; these files will be updated as each section is released. Introduction Dynamics Culture Information Ecology Annoyances…
Kyle Kingsbury — Published
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asgi-gzip 0.3
Release: asgi-gzip 0.3 I ran into trouble deploying a new feature using SSE to a production Datasette instance, and it turned out that instance was using datasette-gzip which uses asgi-gzip which was incorrectly compressing event/text-stream responses. asgi-gzip was extracted from Starlette, and has…
Simon Willison — Published
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Interpretation of “The Elves” by Socratis Malamas & Ioulia Karapataki
Translation of---and philosophical commentary on---a Greek song whose translated title is 'The Elves'.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Meta's new model is Muse Spark, and meta.ai chat has some interesting tools
Meta announced Muse Spark today, their first model release since Llama 4 almost exactly a year ago. It's hosted, not open weights, and the API is currently "a private API preview to select users", but you can try it out today on meta.ai (Facebook or Instagram login required). Meta's self-reported benchmarks…
Simon Willison — Published
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Untitled
Today has been utterly barmy, and not only the weather.
Paul Robert Lloyd — Published
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Quoting Giles Turnbull
I have a feeling that everyone likes using AI tools to try doing someone else’s profession. They’re much less keen when someone else uses it for their profession. — Giles Turnbull, AI and the human voice Tags: ai-ethics, writing, ai
Simon Willison — Published
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The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Dynamics
Table of Contents This is a long article, so I'm breaking it up into a series of posts which will be released over the next few days. You can also read the full work as a PDF or EPUB; these files will be updated as each section is released. Introduction Dynamics Culture Information Ecology Annoyances…
Kyle Kingsbury — Published
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A Commentary On GenAI Inspected Through Different Lenses
The amount of concerning reports related to generative AI is rising at an alrming rate, yet all we do is make ourselves more dependent on the brand new technology. Why? It’s not just that we’re lazy—we are!—there are many more variables involved. As part of my quest to try and understand what the heck…
Wouter Groeneveld — Published
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An update on life and work
I’ve gone a lot of hard and scary experiences that’s made me deeply value stability. After enduring varied traumas, I really turned on the afterburners to make up for being ripped away from my own life and to rebuild a […]
Brad Frost — Published
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One item purchased, Ten emails
Online shopping is fantastic. A few clicks and you've ordered almost anything from anywhere. But I've noticed a huge uptick in the volume of emails relating to an online order which makes it frustrating to order anything. I recently had a purchase which included the following chain Thanks for your order…
Josh Ghent — Published
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Selfie: a casual afternoon
Selfie picture of me on a walk wearing sunglasses
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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GLM-5.1: Towards Long-Horizon Tasks
GLM-5.1: Towards Long-Horizon Tasks Chinese AI lab Z.ai's latest model is a giant 754B parameter 1.51TB (on Hugging Face) MIT-licensed monster - the same size as their previous GLM-5 release, and sharing the same paper. It's available via OpenRouter so I asked it to draw me a pelican: llm install llm…
Simon Willison — Published
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Anthropic's Project Glasswing - restricting Claude Mythos to security researchers - sounds necessary to me
Anthropic didn't release their latest model, Claude Mythos (system card PDF), today. They have instead made it available to a very restricted set of preview partners under their newly announced Project Glasswing. The model is a general purpose model, similar to Claude Opus 4.6, but Anthropic claim that…
Simon Willison — Published
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Russia Hacked Routers to Steal Microsoft Office Tokens
Hackers linked to Russia's military intelligence units are using known flaws in older Internet routers to mass harvest authentication tokens from Microsoft Office users, security experts warned today. The spying campaign allowed state-backed Russian hackers to quietly siphon authentication tokens from…
Brian Krebs — Published
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SQLite WAL Mode Across Docker Containers Sharing a Volume
Research: SQLite WAL Mode Across Docker Containers Sharing a Volume Inspired by this conversation on Hacker News about whether two SQLite processes in separate Docker containers that share the same volume might run into problems due to WAL shared memory. The answer is that everything works fine - Docker…
Simon Willison — Published
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Amazing Refresh — A Malicious Chrome Extension Running Malware in the Browser
We recently uncovered a malicious browser extension affecting visitors to customer websites. It injected JavaScript into pages, hijacked outbound clicks through affiliate infrastructure, and quietly monetised user traffic. We spotted it not because a website was compromised, but because we monitor what…
Scott Helme — Published
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The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess
Table of Contents This is a long article, so I'm breaking it up into a series of posts which will be released over the next few days. You can also read the full work as a PDF or EPUB; these files will be updated as each section is released. Introduction Dynamics Culture Information Ecology Annoyances…
Kyle Kingsbury — Published
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dcmake: a new CMake debugger UI
CMake has a --debugger mode since 3.27 (July 2023), allowing software to manipulate it interactively through the Debugger Adaptor Protocol (DAP), an HTTP-like protocol passing JSON messages. Debugger front-ends can start, stop, step, breakpoint, query variables, etc. a live CMake. When I came across…
Chris Wellons — Published
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Weekly Update 498
This week, more time than I'd have liked to spend went on talking about the trials of chasing invoices. This is off the back of a customer (who, for now, will remain unnamed), who had invoices stacking back more than 6 months overdue and despite payment terms of
Troy Hunt — Published
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Adding Correctness Conditions to Code Changes
Today I looked at the first PR on our new project repo. It added a new run script, but the README didn’t mention it. The proposed change was incomplete, because the documentation was out of sync. Did I comment on the PR? heck no. I want to fix this problem for all PRs, not just ... Read moreAdding Correctness…
Jessica Kerr — Published
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Poem: From the age of myth
Just read the poem. No further comment.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Untitled
So ends a peaceful, relaxing and enjoyable Easter bank holiday doing mostly nothing, beyond watching some films and TV shows, spending time with my family, and going on short walks with this little old lady. Perfect.
Paul Robert Lloyd — Published
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Prototyping with LLMs
Did you know that Jesus gave advice about prototyping with an LLM? Here’s Luke 14:28-30: Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Won’t you first sit down and estimate the cost to see if you have enough money to complete it? For if you lay the foundation and are not able to finish it, everyone who…
Jim Nielsen — Published
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Google AI Edge Gallery
Google AI Edge Gallery Terrible name, really great app: this is Google's official app for running their Gemma 4 models (the E2B and E4B sizes, plus some members of the Gemma 3 family) directly on your iPhone. It works really well. The E2B model is a 2.54GB download and is both fast and genuinely useful…
Simon Willison — Published
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datasette-ports 0.2
Release: datasette-ports 0.2 No longer requires Datasette - running uvx datasette-ports now works as well. Installing it as a Datasette plugin continues to provide the datasette ports command. Tags: datasette
Simon Willison — Published
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scan-for-secrets 0.3
Release: scan-for-secrets 0.3 New -r/--redact option which shows the list of matches, asks for confirmation and then replaces every match with REDACTED, taking escaping rules into account. New Python function redact_file(file_path: str | Path, secrets: list[str], replacement: str = "REDACTED") -> int…
Simon Willison — Published
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Cleanup Claude Code Paste
Tool: Cleanup Claude Code Paste Super-niche tool this. I sometimes copy prompts out of the Claude Code terminal app and they come out with a bunch of weird additional whitespace. This tool cleans that up. Tags: tools, claude-code
Simon Willison — Published
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Storybook MCP with Dominic Nguyen
Dominic Nguyen (Founder of Storybook and Chromatic) joins me to talk about Storybook MCP the long journey of design system quality. We get into what it actually feels like to be “scaredcited” right now, and Dom shows off the newly-released […]
Brad Frost — Published
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Germany Doxes “UNKN,” Head of RU Ransomware Gangs REvil, GandCrab
An elusive hacker who went by the handle "UNKN" and ran the early Russian ransomware groups GandCrab and REvil now has a name and a face. Authorities in Germany say 31-year-old Russian Daniil Maksimovich Shchukin headed both cybercrime gangs and helped carry out at least 130 acts of computer sabotage…
Brian Krebs — Published
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datasette-ports 0.1
Release: datasette-ports 0.1 Another example of README-driven development, this time solving a problem that might be unique to me. I often find myself running a bunch of different Datasette instances with different databases and different in-development plugins, spreads across dozens of different terminal…
Simon Willison — Published
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Another England: How to Reclaim Our National Story [book]
"Our diverse literary heritage reveals that we do not need a single national story" I bought and read this book after seeing Caroline Lucas speaking with Zack Polanski during a live session of Bold Politics. It's a book that tries to reclaim "Englishness" from the weaponising that the Far Right have…
Remy Sharp — Published
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Emacs live stream for writing Denote tests and more on Monday 6 April @ 20:00 Europe/Athens
I am doing a live stream related to Emacs, where I will write tests for Denote.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Eight years of wanting, three months of building with AI
Eight years of wanting, three months of building with AI Lalit Maganti provides one of my favorite pieces of long-form writing on agentic engineering I've seen in ages. They spent eight years thinking about and then three months building syntaqlite, which they describe as "high-fidelity devtools that…
Simon Willison — Published
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Quoting Chengpeng Mou
From anonymized U.S. ChatGPT data, we are seeing: ~2M weekly messages on health insurance ~600K weekly messages [classified as healthcare] from people living in “hospital deserts” (30 min drive to nearest hospital) 7 out of 10 msgs happen outside clinic hours — Chengpeng Mou, Head of Business Finance…
Simon Willison — Published
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Syntaqlite Playground
Tool: Syntaqlite Playground Lalit Maganti's syntaqlite is currently being discussed on Hacker News thanks to Eight years of wanting, three months of building with AI, a deep dive into how it was built. This inspired me to revisit a research project I ran when Lalit first released it a couple of weeks…
Simon Willison — Published
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I Tried Vibing an RSS Reader and My Dreams Did Not Come True
Simon Willison wrote about how he vibe coded his dream presentation app for macOS. I also took a stab at vibe coding my dream app: an RSS reader. To clarify: Reeder is my dream RSS app and it already exists, so I guess you could say my dreams have already come true? But I’ve kind of always wanted to…
Jim Nielsen — Published
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Remakes And Remasters Of Old DOS Games: A Small 2026 Update
It’s been two years since the Remakes And Remasters Of Old DOS Games article. Nostalgia still sells handsomely thus our favourite remaster studios (hello Night Dive) are cranking out hit after hit. It’s time for a small 2026 update. I’ve also updated the original article just in case you might find your…
Wouter Groeneveld — Published
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scan-for-secrets 0.2
Release: scan-for-secrets 0.2 CLI tool now streams results as they are found rather than waiting until the end, which is better for large directories. -d/--directory option can now be used multiple times to scan multiple directories. New -f/--file option for specifying one or more individual files to…
Simon Willison — Published
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scan-for-secrets 0.1.1
Release: scan-for-secrets 0.1.1 Added documentation of the escaping schemes that are also scanned. Removed unnecessary repr escaping scheme, which was already covered by json.
Simon Willison — Published
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scan-for-secrets 0.1
Release: scan-for-secrets 0.1 I like publishing transcripts of local Claude Code sessions using my claude-code-transcripts tool but I'm often paranoid that one of my API keys or similar secrets might inadvertently be revealed in the detailed log files. I built this new Python scanning tool to help reassure…
Simon Willison — Published
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research-llm-apis 2026-04-04
Release: research-llm-apis 2026-04-04 I'm working on a major change to my LLM Python library and CLI tool. LLM provides an abstraction layer over hundreds of different LLMs from dozens of different vendors thanks to its plugin system, and some of those vendors have grown new features over the past year…
Simon Willison — Published
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Quoting Kyle Daigle
[GitHub] platform activity is surging. There were 1 billion commits in 2025. Now, it's 275 million per week, on pace for 14 billion this year if growth remains linear (spoiler: it won't.) GitHub Actions has grown from 500M minutes/week in 2023 to 1B minutes/week in 2025, and now 2.1B minutes so far this…
Simon Willison — Published
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Emacs live stream with Sacha Chua on 2026-04-16 17:30 Europe/Athens
I will do a live together with Sacha Chua where we will do some programming on Emacs.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Vulnerability Research Is Cooked
Vulnerability Research Is Cooked Thomas Ptacek's take on the sudden and enormous impact the latest frontier models are having on the field of vulnerability research. Within the next few months, coding agents will drastically alter both the practice and the economics of exploit development. Frontier model…
Simon Willison — Published
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The cognitive impact of coding agents
A fun thing about recording a podcast with a professional like Lenny Rachitsky is that his team know how to slice the resulting video up into TikTok-sized short form vertical videos. Here's one he shared on Twitter today which ended up attracting over 1.1m views! That was 48 seconds. Our full conversation…
Simon Willison — Published
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Quoting Willy Tarreau
On the kernel security list we've seen a huge bump of reports. We were between 2 and 3 per week maybe two years ago, then reached probably 10 a week over the last year with the only difference being only AI slop, and now since the beginning of the year we're around 5-10 per day depending on the days…
Simon Willison — Published
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Quoting Daniel Stenberg
The challenge with AI in open source security has transitioned from an AI slop tsunami into more of a ... plain security report tsunami. Less slop but lots of reports. Many of them really good. I'm spending hours per day on this now. It's intense. — Daniel Stenberg, lead developer of cURL Tags: daniel…
Simon Willison — Published
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Quoting Greg Kroah-Hartman
Months ago, we were getting what we called 'AI slop,' AI-generated security reports that were obviously wrong or low quality. It was kind of funny. It didn't really worry us. Something happened a month ago, and the world switched. Now we have real reports. All open source projects have real reports that…
Simon Willison — Published
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Emacs: new sequence scheme for the ‘denote-sequence’ package
Information about a new feature that I just added to the 'denote-sequence' package.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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The Web Is An Antitrust Wedge
TL;DR: Armed with new powers to rein in the worst excesses of mobile's duopolists, antitrust bodies around the world are struggling to find their footing, and an incurious tech press is letting it pass with nary a nod. Browsers are app stores, but that perspective is almost entirely absent from the antitrust…
Alex Russell — Published
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The Blandness of Systematic Rules vs. The Delight of Localized Sensitivity
Marcin Wichary brings attention to this lovely dialog in ClarisWorks from 1997: He quips: this breaks the rule of button copy being fully comprehensible without having to read the surrounding strings first, perhaps most well-known as the “avoid «click here»” rule. Never Register/Register Later/Register…
Jim Nielsen — Published
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Bringing in the experts; Having our Passkeys implementation Security Tested
We recently announced support for Passkeys on your Report URI account, and everyone should go and enable Passkeys for the amazing security benefits they offer. As a new implementation of an authentication technology, we wanted to be sure that everything was as secure as it should be for our customer…
Scott Helme — Published
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Prot Asks: Hjalmar about Emacs for music, the joy of art, and Internet sociability
In this 2-hour video I talk with Hjalmar about using Emacs to write music, the joy of artistic expression, and sociability in the Internet era.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Learning from the land
An entry from my journal where I comment on how I learn by observing the phenomena around me.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Favourites of March 2026
Our daughter turned three. We’re beyond exhausted but a ripgrep search in this repository yields five more instances of the word exhausted in combination of parenting so I’ll shut up. I guess we also celebrate that after three years of pure chaos, we’re… still alive? Previous month: February 2026. Games…
Wouter Groeneveld — Published
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Chicago vs New York Pizza is the Wrong Argument
It’s April Cools! It’s like April Fools, except instead of cringe comedy you make genuine content that’s different from what you usually do. For example, last year I talked about The best introductory video games for non-gamers. This year I’m picking a fight. This is “New York” Pizza (NYP): (source)…
Hillel Wayne — Published
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When knowing it all does not matter
An essay from my journal in which I express the connection with my surroundings and how I do not need all the answers.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Weekly Update 497
Day by day, I find we're eeking more goodness out of OpenClaw and finding the sweet spot between what the humans do well and the agent can run off and do on its own. Significantly, we're shifting more and more of the workload to the latter
Troy Hunt — Published
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Emacs coaching with Sacha Chua
I will do a coaching session with Sacha Chua. She wrote a blog post about it and I am making comments on it.
Protesilaos Stavrou — Published
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Continuous, Continuous, Continuous
Jason Gorman writes about the word “continuous” and its place in making software. We think of making software in stages (and we often assign roles to ourselves and other people based on these stages): the design phase, the coding phase, the testing phase, the integration phase, the release phase, and…
Jim Nielsen — Published
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HIBP Mega Update: Passkeys, k-Anonymity Searches, Massive Speed Enhancements and a Bulk Domain Verification API
For a hobby project built in my spare time to provide a simple community service, Have I Been Pwned sure has, well, "escalated". Today, we support hundreds of thousands of website visitors each day, tens of millions of API queries, and hundreds of millions of password searches. We&
Troy Hunt — Published