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SUNDAY, 19 APRIL 2026, 14:27

Science/Tech

Best Meta Glasses (2026): Ray-Ban, Oakley, AR

Today at 13:00 PM, via Wired

Meta is unquestionably winning the face-wearable war. Can you trust the company? Maybe not. But these are some of the nicest glasses I’ve ever worn.

Canadian astronaut’s bon mots help heal wounds from French language row

Today at 13:00 PM, via The Guardian

Jeremy Hansen praised for speaking French in space after Air Canada chief’s linguistic snub exposed tensions and drew rebuke from PM

Few people foresaw humanity’s quest for the moon as accurately as the 19th-century French author Jules Verne, whose two works –From the Earth to the Moon and Around the Moon – anticipated many of the features of modern lunar exploration.

But Verne’s language had...

Don’t knock small talk. It has the power to mend a world ripped apart by rage | Bidisha

Today at 11:00 AM, via The Guardian

All good? Busy day? Small talk is a social good with a bad reputation. We dread it, but it’s vital for human connection

Hi there, how’re you? How’s it going? You alright? All good?

As any Briton knows, none of these questions is an inquiry into your emotional state, the material conditions of your life or your opinion on anything. Respond positively – “all good so far, touch wood” is nice...

Remembering Zip Drives – the Trendy Storage Technology of the 1990s

Today at 09:34 AM, via Slashdot

Back in the 1990s, floppy disks “had a mere capacity of 1.44MB,” remembers XDA Developers, “which would soon become absolutely tiny for the increasingly large pieces of software that would come about.”Floppy disks also felt quite fragile, and while we got “superfloppy” formats that were physically larger and had more capacity, those were pretty unwieldy as portable storage. Enter 1994, when a...

‘The Oscar of science’ awarded to scientists behind genetic treatment that restores lost vision win

Today at 08:00 AM, via The Guardian

Breakthrough prize in Life Sciences awarded to team who developed Luxturna therapy, which helped a patient see their child’s face for the first time

A married couple who met over a dissected brain and went on to create the first approved gene therapy for blindness have been awarded one of the most lucrative prizes in science.

Molecular biologist Jean Bennett and ophthalmologist Albert Maguire...

Duolingo CEO Says They’ve Stopped Tracking Employees’ AI Use for Performance Reviews

Today at 05:34 AM, via Slashdot

Last May Duolingo’s stock peaked at $529.05. But while the learning app passed $1 billion in revenue in 2025 and 50 million daily active users, today its stock price has dropped more than 81%, to $100.51. And there’s been other changes, reports Entrepreneur:In April 2025, Duolingo CEO Luis von Ahn made headlines after writing a memo calling the company “AI-first.” In the memo, von Ahn announced...

SpaceX, Blue Origin Compete For ‘Artemis III’ Mission

Today at 03:34 AM, via Slashdot

After Artemis II’s astronauts returned to earth, “NASA has Artemis III in its sights,” reports the Associated Press:In a mission recently added to the docket for next year, Artemis III’s yet-to-be -named astronauts will practice docking their Orion capsule with a lunar lander or two in orbit around Earth. Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin are racing to have their company’s lander...

New Movie Trailer Shows First AI-Generated Performance By a Major Star: the Late Val Kilmer

Today at 00:34 AM, via Slashdot

“A trailer has been released for the first film to star an authorised generative AI version of a major Hollywood actor,” writes The Guardian:Val Kilmer was cast in western As Deep As the Grave before his death in April 2025. Production delays meant he never shot any scenes, but the creative team worked with UK-based company Sonantic to create an AI speaking voice based on his old recordings....

Old Cars ‘Tell Tales’ by Storing Data That’s Never Wiped

Yesterday at 23:34 PM, via Slashdot

Slashdot reader Bismillah shared this report from ITNews:Research and development engineer Romain Marchand of Paris headquartered Quarkslab obtained a telematic control unit (TCU) from a salvage yard in Poland… Marchand tore down the TCU, which is based on a Qualcomm system on a chip, and extracted the Linux-based file system from the Micron multi-chip package (MCP) which contained NAND-based...

Fewer US College Students Major in CS. More Choose Data Science, Engineering

Yesterday at 22:34 PM, via Slashdot

“From 2008 to 2024, the number of four-year computer science degrees granted rose about fivefold…” reports the Washington Post. Then in 2025 CS suddenly dropped from the fourth-largest undergraduate major to sixth, they report (citing data from the nonprofit National Student Clearinghouse, which compiles numbers from 97% of U.S. universities. The 54,000-student drop was “the biggest one-year...

US Congress Fails to Pass Long-Term FISA Extension, Authorizes It Through April 30

Yesterday at 21:34 PM, via Slashdot

Yesterday the U.S. Congress approved “a short-term extension” of a FISA law that allows wiretaps without a warrant for surveilling foreign targets, reports CNN — but only until April 30. Republican congressional leaders had sought an 18-month extension, but “failed to secure” the votes after “clamoring from some of their members for reforms to protect Americans’ privacy.”The warrantless...

30 WordPress Plugins Turned Into Malware After Ownership Change

Yesterday at 20:34 PM, via Slashdot

Wednesday BleepingComputer reported that more than 30 WordPress plugins “have been compromised with malicious code that allows unauthorized access to websites running them.”A malicious actor planted the backdoor code last year but only recently started pushing it to users via updates, generating spam pages and causing redirects, as per the instructions received from the command-and-control (C2)...

Fructose Isn’t Just Sugar. It Acts More Like a Hormone

Yesterday at 19:34 PM, via Slashdot

Slashdot reader smazsyr writes: A new review says we’ve had fructose wrong for decades. The nine authors, led by Richard Johnson at the University of Colorado Anschutz, argue that fructose “is not just another calorie.” It is a signal. It tells the liver to make fat and brace for a famine that never comes. That made sense for a bear fattening up on autumn berries. It makes less sense for a...

20-Year-Old Enters Prison for Historic Breach, Ransoming of Massive Student Database

Yesterday at 18:34 PM, via Slashdot

20-year-old Matthew Lane sent a text message to ABC News as his parents drove him to federal prison in Connecticut. “I’m just scared,” he said, calling the whole situation “extremely sad.”Barely a year earlier, while still a teenager, he helped launch what’s been described as the biggest cyberattack in U.S. education history — a data breach that concerned authorities so much, it prompted...

FSF to OnlyOffice: You Can’t Use the GNU (A)GPL to Take Software Freedom Away

Yesterday at 17:34 PM, via Slashdot

Nextcloud joined a project to create a sovereign replacement for Microsoft Office called “Euro-Office”. But after that project forked OnlyOffice, OnlyOffice suspended its partnership with Nextcloud. “They removed all references to our brand/attribute as required by our license,” argued OnlyOffice CEO Lev Bannov on March 30th. (“The core issue here isn’t just about what the AGPL license states,...

US Government Now Wants Anthropic’s ‘Mythos’, Preparing for AI Cybersecurity Threats

Yesterday at 16:34 PM, via Slashdot

Friday Anthropic’s CEO met with top U.S. officials and “discussed opportunities for collaboration,” according to a White House spokesperson itedd by Politico, “as well as shared approaches and protocols to address the challenges associated with scaling this technology.” CNN notes the meeting happens at the same time Anthropic “battles the Trump administration in court for blacklisting its...

Can the ‘Attention Liberation Movement’ Foment a Rebellion Against Screens?

Yesterday at 13:34 PM, via Slashdot

The Associated Press looks at the small-but-growing “rebellion” against attention-hogging devices, citing “a growing body of literature calling for people to move away from screens and pay attention to life.”D. Graham Burnett is a historian of science at Princeton University and one of the authors of ” Attensity! A Manifesto of the Attention Liberation Movement,” making him a pillar of the...

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