1. 1.
    Claude Opus 4.6 (anthropic.com)

    Anthropic has released Claude Opus 4.6, a significant upgrade to their smartest model, featuring improved coding skills, a 1M token context window (beta), and enhanced abilities for everyday work tasks. Opus 4.6 achieves state-of-the-art performance in coding, reasoning, and economically valuable knowledge work, while maintaining a strong safety profile, and is now available via API and Claude.ai.

  2. 2.
    GPT-5.3-Codex (openai.com)

    GPT-5.3-Codex is a new, more capable agentic coding model that surpasses its predecessor in coding performance, reasoning, and professional knowledge, while also being faster. Notably, it was instrumental in its own creation, accelerating its development through debugging, deployment management, and test result analysis, showcasing its ability to perform a wide range of tasks previously done by developers and professionals.

  3. 3.
    Don't rent the cloud, own instead (blog.comma.ai)

    Without article content, I can only infer the main point from the title. The article likely argues against relying solely on cloud services ("renting") and advocates for building and maintaining your own infrastructure ("owning") for greater control and potentially cost savings in the long run. It suggests that owning infrastructure offers advantages that outweigh the convenience of cloud services.

  4. 4.
    Data centers in space makes no sense (civai.org)

    Without article content, it's impossible to provide a comprehensive summary. However, based on the title "Data centers in space makes no sense," the article likely argues against the feasibility or practicality of establishing data centers in space. It probably presents reasons why this is not a viable or beneficial solution for data storage and processing.

  5. 5.
    Voxtral Transcribe 2 (mistral.ai)

    Without any content, it's impossible to summarize the article. However, based on the title "Voxtral Transcribe 2," it likely discusses a transcription service or software, possibly an updated version of a previous offering. The article probably details the features, improvements, or capabilities of Voxtral Transcribe 2.

  6. 6.
    I now assume that all ads on Apple news are scams (kirkville.com)

    The author argues that the ads served in Apple News, particularly after Apple's deal with Taboola, are increasingly scam-like, often featuring AI-generated content and recently registered domains. They criticize Apple for seemingly not caring about the proliferation of these deceptive ads within their premium news service.

  7. 7.
    My AI Adoption Journey (mitchellh.com)

    The author's journey to AI adoption involved initially dismissing chatbots, then forcing themselves to reproduce their own work with AI agents to understand their strengths and weaknesses. This led to strategically using AI for tasks like overnight research and issue triage, ultimately allowing the author to outsource "slam dunk" tasks and focus on more complex work, resulting in increased efficiency.

  8. 8.
    The Waymo World Model (waymo.com)
  9. 9.
    We tasked Opus 4.6 using agent teams to build a C Compiler (anthropic.com)

    The article, titled "We tasked Opus 4.6 using agent teams to build a C Compiler," describes an experiment where Opus 4.6, likely a large language model, was used with agent teams to attempt the complex task of building a C compiler. The article's core focus is on the application of AI, specifically Opus 4.6, in a challenging software engineering project.

  10. 10.
    Flock CEO calls Deflock a “terrorist organization” (2025) [video] (youtube.com)

    Without any article content, the summary can only be based on the title. In 2025, the CEO of the company "Flock" publicly labeled "Deflock" as a terrorist organization, as evidenced by a video. The reasons behind this accusation and the nature of Deflock remain unknown without further information.

  11. 11.
    TikTok's 'addictive design' found to be illegal in Europe (nytimes.com)

    European Union regulators have preliminarily ruled that TikTok's design, specifically its infinite scroll and personalized algorithm, is "addictive" and violates EU online safety laws, potentially harming users' mental and physical well-being, especially children. TikTok disputes the findings and plans to challenge them, but the ruling could force the company to overhaul its core features or face significant fines. This marks the first time a legal standard for social media addictiveness has been applied globally.

  12. 12.
    A new bill in New York would require disclaimers on AI-generated news content (niemanlab.org)
  13. 13.
    Recreating Epstein PDFs from raw encoded attachments (neosmart.net)
  14. 14.
    LinkedIn checks for 2953 browser extensions (github.com)
  15. 15.
    AI is killing B2B SaaS (nmn.gl)
  16. 16.
    When internal hostnames are leaked to the clown (rachelbythebay.com)
  17. 17.
    OpenCiv3: Open-source, cross-platform reimagining of Civilization III (openciv3.org)
  18. 18.
    CIA suddenly stops publishing, removes archives of The World Factbook (simonwillison.net)
  19. 19.
    A case study in PDF forensics: The Epstein PDFs (pdfa.org)
  20. 20.
    Hackers (1995) Animated Experience (hackers-1995.vercel.app)
  21. 21.
    Orchestrate teams of Claude Code sessions (code.claude.com)
  22. 22.
    The time I didn't meet Jeffrey Epstein (scottaaronson.blog)
  23. 23.
    GitHub Actions is slowly killing engineering teams (iankduncan.com)
  24. 24.
    The RCE that AMD won't fix (mrbruh.com)
  25. 25.
    Animated Knots (animatedknots.com)
  26. 26.
    An Update on Heroku (heroku.com)
  27. 27.
    Top downloaded skill in ClawHub contains malware (1password.com)
  28. 28.
    The Great Unwind (occupywallst.com)
  29. 29.
    Microsoft open-sources LiteBox, a security-focused library OS (github.com)
  30. 30.
    Sheldon Brown's Bicycle Technical Info (sheldonbrown.com)