Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. 40 Years After the Chernobyl Disaster, More Countries Are Turning To Nuclear Power
  2. Is AI Cannibalizing Human Intelligence? A Neuroscientist’s Way to Stop It
  3. Trump Fires All 24 Members of America’s National Science Board
  4. Australia’s Teen Social Media Ban Isn’t Working. Half Their Teens Still Have Access, Survey Finds
  5. Colorado Adds Open-Source Exemption to Age-Verification Bill
  6. Is the World Ready For a Car Without a Rear Window?
  7. Open Source Developer Brings Linux to Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows ME
  8. Linux Drops ISDN Subsystem and Other Old Network Drivers
  9. White House Pushed Out New AI Official After Just Four Days on the Job
  10. Free Software Foundation Says ‘Responsible AI’ Licenses Which Restrict Harmful Uses are Unethical and Nonfree
  11. Intel’s Stock Soars 24% Friday, Its Biggest One-Day Gain Since 1987
  12. Physicists Revive 1990s Laser Concept To Propose a Next-Generation Atomic Clock
  13. FDA Gives Green Light To the First Gene Therapy For Deafness
  14. Maine Governor Vetoes Data Center Moratorium Bill
  15. BMW Is One Step Closer To Selling You a Color-Changing Car

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

40 Years After the Chernobyl Disaster, More Countries Are Turning To Nuclear Power

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from the Associated Press:
The 1986 Chernobyl disaster fueled global fears about nuclear power and slowed its development in Europe and elsewhere. Four decades later, however, there’s a revival around the world, a trend that has been given a big boost by war in the Middle East. Over 400 nuclear reactors are operational in 31 countries, while about 70 more are under construction. Nuclear power accounts for producing about 10% of the world’s electricity, equivalent to about a quarter of all sources of low-carbon power.

Nuclear reactors have seen steady improvements, adding more safety features and making them cheaper to build and operate. While Chernobyl and the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan diminished the appetite for such power sources, it was clear years ago that there probably would be a revival, said Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency. With the war in the Middle East, “I am 100% sure nuclear is coming back,” he added…

The United States is the world’s largest producer of nuclear power, with 94 operational reactors accounting for about 30% of global generation of nuclear electricity. And it is increasing efforts to develop nuclear energy capacity with a goal to quadruple it by 2050… China operates 61 nuclear reactors and is leading the world in building new units, with nearly 40 under construction with a goal to surpass the U.S. and become the global leader in nuclear capacity. European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen has acknowledged that it was Europe’s “strategic mistake” to cut nuclear energy and outlined new initiatives to encourage building power plants. [In 1990, nuclear energy accounted for roughly a third of Europe’s electricity, the article points out, but it’s now only about 15%.] Russia, meanwhile, has taken a strong lead in exporting its nuclear know-how, building 20 reactors worldwide…

Japan has restarted 15 reactors after reviewing the lessons of the earthquake and tsunami that damaged the Fukushima plant, and 10 more are in the process of getting approval to restart. South Africa has the only nuclear power plant on the African continent, although Russia is building one in Egypt, and several other African nations are exploring the technology… With 57 reactors at 19 plants, France relies on nuclear power for nearly 70% of its electricity.
The article includes an interactive graphic that shows the growth in the world’s nuclear capacity slowing down soon after the 1986 Chernobyl meltdown — with that capacity broken down by country. But it’s still increased by roughly 50%.

Even Ukraine — the site of the accident — now “still relies heavily on nuclear plants to generate about half of its electricity,” the article points out. But Germany “switched off its last three nuclear reactors in 2023.”

Nuclear reactor technology

By pygalge • Score: 3, Interesting Thread
Conflating modern reactors with Chernobyl is like saying there is no difference between a stationary diesel and a Mazda Wankel engine, or a turbocharged four. I also find it interesting that they wave Chernobyl and Fukushima and don’t mention Three Mile Island, which was probably more pertinent to current technologies than either of those other examples. The anti-nuclear bias in the report is pretty mild compared to what has been printed in the past, but seems still to be there. FUD has always been a viable tool for those who would protect their own entrenched interests.

Is AI Cannibalizing Human Intelligence? A Neuroscientist’s Way to Stop It

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The AI industry is largely failing to ask a key design question, argues theoretical neuroscientist/cognitive scientist Vivienne Ming. Are their AI products building human capacity or consuming it?

In the Wall Street Journal Ming shares her experiment about which group performed best at predicting real-world events (compared to forecasters on prediction market Polymarket) — AI, human, or human-AI hybrid teams.
The human groups performed poorly, relying on instinct or whatever information had come across their feeds that morning. The large AI models — ChatGPT and Gemini, in this case — performed considerably better, though still short of the market itself. But when we combined AI with humans, things got more interesting. Most hybrid teams used AI for the answer and submitted it as their own, performing no better than the AI alone. Others fed their own predictions into AI and asked it to come up with supporting evidence. These “validators” had stumbled into a classic confirmation bias-loop: the sycophancy that leads chatbots to tell you what you want to hear, even if it isn’t true. They ended up performing worse than an AI working solo.

But in roughly 5% to 10% of teams, something different emerged. The AI became a sparring partner. The teams pushed back, demanding evidence and interrogating assumptions. When the AI expressed high confidence, the humans questioned it. When the humans felt strongly about an intuition, they asked the AI to come up with a counterargument… These teams reached insightful conclusions that neither a human nor a machine could have produced on its own. They were the only group to consistently rival the prediction market’s accuracy. On certain questions, they even outperformed it…

We are building AI systems specifically designed to give us the answer before we feel the discomfort of not having it. What my experiment suggests is that the human qualities most likely to matter are not the feel-good ones. They’re the uncomfortable ones: the capacity to be wrong in public and stay curious; to sit with a question your phone could answer in three seconds and resist the urge to reach for it. To read a confident, fluent response from an AI and ask yourself, “What’s missing?” rather than default to “Great, that’s done.” To disagree with something that sounds authoritative and to trust your instinct enough to follow it. We don’t build these capacities by avoiding discomfort. We build them by choosing it, repeatedly, in small ways: the student who struggles through a problem before checking the answer; the person who asks a follow-up question in a conversation; the reader who sits with a difficult idea long enough for it to actually change one’s mind. Most AI chatbots today default to easy answers, which is hurting our ability to think critically.

I call this the Information-Exploration Paradox. As the cost of information approaches zero, human exploration collapses. We see it in students who perform better on AI-assisted tasks and worse on everything afterward. We see it in developers shipping more code and understanding it less. We are, in ways that feel like progress, slowly optimizing ourselves out of the loop.
The author just published a book called " Robot-Proof: When Machines Have All The Answers, Build Better People.” They suggest using AI to “explore uncertainty.... before you accept an AI’s answer, ask it for the strongest argument against itself.”

And they’re also urging new performance benchmarks for AI-human hybrid teams.

Nothing surprising here!

By oldgraybeard • Score: 3 Thread
Using AI to (1) tell you the answer vs (2) confirm your answer vs (3) a tool to assist. Most humans will will go the route of 1 or 2 because they don’t have the thinking thing going in the first place to use 3.
Today’s AI-less(AI)(no reasoning/thinking going on here folks) will create less able humans that can’t function and don’t know how to do much of anything.

Always check sources

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 3 Thread
Modern search AI catalogues everything. Then it finds links/sources that it summarizes. Within that, you can find the links, and from there you can actually see what pages say, some of them written by humans. Generally, when I search like this, I find answers, eventually.

Trump Fires All 24 Members of America’s National Science Board

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
America’s National Science Board (NSB) “was established in 1950 to guide the governance of the National Science Foundation,” writes the Washington Post, “in an unusual structure within the federal government that echoes the setup of a company board in the private sector. It helps guide an agency that operates Antarctic research stations, telescopes, a fleet of research vessels and supports basic science research in laboratories across the United States.” (NSF research has helped evolve the technology used in MRIs, cellphones and LASIK eye surgery.)

But yesterday President Trump fired all 24 members of the National Science Board (NSB), the body that oversees the National Science Foundation (NSF), reports Science magazine:
In addition to advising the administration and Congress on national science policy, it has statutory authority to oversee the actions of the $9-billion NSF, setting policy and approving large expenditures. Its presidentially appointed members, typically prominent academics and industry leaders, serve 6-year terms, with eight members chosen every 2 years....

Keivan Stassun, one of the dismissed board members, says the mass firing is the latest indication that the White House is ignoring the board’s authority and dictating policies at NSF, which has been without a permanent director since Sethuraman Panchanathan resigned exactly one year ago. Stassun, an astrophysicist at Vanderbilt University who was appointed to the board in 2022, thinks the board’s public criticism in May 2025 of Trump’s proposed 55% cut to NSF’s current budget — which Congress ultimately ignored — antagonized the administration. “Maybe one way to say it from the administration’s perspective,” Stassun says, “is that this group of presidential appointees was advising the Congress to not follow the president’s wishes.”
The Washington Post adds that “The White House did not immediately respond to inquiries about why the members were terminated.”

Republicans will avoid this thread

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Because the only way to stay Republican in 2026 is to either be balls to the walls stupid or two stick to safe spaces where your republicanism never gets challenged by facts or reality or basic human decency.

And is depressing as it is the people here on this site tend to be in the more intelligent side, relatively speaking of course, so simply put they’re not stupid enough to naturally remain Republican

Re:There goes the neighbourhood…

By ClickOnThis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Trump wants to control the neighbourhood. It’s a simple as that. Watch as the new board is filled with loyalists.

That’s if there actually is a board in the future. There’s evidence the administration finds the board inconvenient. Per the Science article linked in TFS:

The White House’s decision last month to ask Congress to give NSF $900 million next year for a new Antarctic research icebreaker is another example of how the Trump administration’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has prevented the board from meeting its obligations, says [dismissed board-member Keivan] Stassun, who until yesterday chaired the group’s committee on large research facilities.

“OMB basically said very directly to NSF’s chief of research facilities that ‘you will build a new research vessel,’ and there was no involvement by the board, which is required to approve and authorize any major infrastructure investment by NSF,” Stassun notes. “And when the board asked, the response was, ‘Well, OMB was very clear in its directive.’”

Re: Welcome to the dictatorship!

By homerbrew • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
All because they also gave the GOP the house and the senate and they are all too scared to hold Trump accountable or even assert their own power, they have given him total control. The Dems have very few weapons available to prevent the biggest abuses. Not to even mention he was allowed to fire virtually every single person that could have oversight or check on his power

Re:NSF does outstanding work, most of the time …

By Ogive17 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
What you mean to say is enough of those funds aren’t being directed to the Trump family.

Re: NSF does outstanding work, most of the time ..

By belthize • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Nonsense. They weren’t fired because of iffy grants, they don’t decide grants. They’re the interface between the NSF and Congress. They advise both groups on what the national priorities should be, like whether to fund a billion dollar telescope vs a collider.

They were fired because they unanimously wrote a letter pushing back on Trumps request to significantly cut NSF’s budget last year. A request that Congress pretty much ignored in a bipartisan manner.

No they were fired for having the gall to question Trump.

Australia’s Teen Social Media Ban Isn’t Working. Half Their Teens Still Have Access, Survey Finds

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
After Australia banned social media for users younger than 16, teenagers "immediately worked to circumvent the restrictions,” reports Fortune:
14-year-old in New South Wales, told The Washington Post in December 2025, just before the implementation of the ban, she planned to use her mother’s face ID to log in to Snapchat and . In a Reddit thread on ways to bypass the ban, one user suggested using a printed mesh face mask from Temu to outsmart apps’ facial recognition tools. Others still have tried VPNs that obscure their locations.

A new report suggests these efforts are working. In a survey of 1,050 Australians ages 12 to 15 conducted last month, the UK-based suicide prevention organization the Molly Rose Foundation found more than 60% of teens who had social media accounts before the ban still had access to at least one of those platforms. Social media sites including TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram, have retained more than half of their users under 16. About two-thirds of young users say these platforms have taken “no action” to remove or reactive accounts that existed before the restrictions.

The survey comes at the heels of the Australian internet regulator calling for an investigation into the five largest social media platforms over potential breaches of the ban.
The article points out that “Greece, France, Indonesia, Austria, Spain, and the UK have or are considering similar action, and eight U.S. states are weighing legislation that would put guardrails or ban social media use for minors.

The kids are alright

By OzJimbob • Score: 3 Thread

Imagine if we punished social media companies for the harm they are responsible for, rather than punishing kids for wanting to communicate with their friends and the world.

Shift the burden of implementation to the

By hwstar • Score: 3 Thread

social media companies. They’ll either pull out of the country/state or comply. Make it so there’s severe tort exposure if they do nothing by private right of action.

Age verification is being implemented in the wrong place. Like others have said, the endgame my be no internet access unless we know who you are.

What alternatives are they promoting?

By balaam’s ass • Score: 3 Thread

Okay, ban social media, but have they also instituted any programs to help kids socialize IRL? Because the world has largely forgotten how to do that. After school programs, sports clubs — are they pushing anything to to replace or *displace* social media to fill the void left by the social media ban?

Colorado Adds Open-Source Exemption to Age-Verification Bill

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Colorado’s “age-attestation” bill left the House committee with new exemptions for open-source operating systems, applications, code repositories, and containerized software distribution, reports the blog Linuxiac:
[The bill] focuses on operating system providers and application stores. Its main requirement is that these providers supply an age-related signal via an interface, so applications can determine whether a user is a minor… System76 founder Carl Richell shared on Fosstodon that the updated bill now includes “a strong exemption for open source distros and apps” and has passed in the House committee. He also quoted the key part, which says Article 30 does not apply to an operating system provider or developer that distributes software under license terms that let recipients copy, redistribute, and modify the software without restrictions from the provider or developer… This wording covers Linux distributions and many open-source applications without linking the exemption to any specific project, company, or ecosystem.

The amendment also excludes applications from free, public code repositories from being considered covered applications. It also excludes code repository providers and containerized software distribution from being defined as covered application stores. This is meant to prevent platforms like GitHub, GitLab, Docker, or Podman-based distributions from being treated like commercial app stores under the bill.
“There are more steps but we’re on our way to protecting the open source community,” Richell posted on Fosstodon, “at least in Colorado.”

Cool

By darkain • Score: 3 Thread

But will my TV still need to validate my age in order to operate at all? That’s still an “operating system” that is closed source.

Re:Wonderful!

By sarren1901 • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

None of this is about keeping kids safe. It’s just baby stepping our way to killing anonymous Internet browsing and posting. The end goal is to force everyone to use government ID to do anything online.

Is the World Ready For a Car Without a Rear Window?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
There’s a glass roof — but no rear-view window. Instead the Polestar 4 replaces the rear-view mirror with a live feed from a wide-angle camera. Its high-resolution display (1480 x 320 pixels) promises “a panoramic view of the outside,” according to Polestar’s web site, showing more of what’s behind you. “Visibility in the dark and in rainy conditions is also vastly improved.”

Besides the camera feed (and side mirrors), the Polestar 4 offers four short-range cameras (for 360-degree views), and even short-range ultrasonics, the Wall Street Journal points out. (Car rear-view windows are usually five feet off the ground, “making a typical traffic cone invisible from closer than about 35 feet.” ) And this new design also improves “aero efficiency,” reducing drag and shearing turbulence, “critical, since the Polestar 4 is all-electric, and aero drag is the mortal enemy of range.”
[A]s a practical matter, the Polestar 4’s innovation only acknowledges what drivers already know. In many modern cars, the rearview mirror is all but useless, anyway. In a typical full-size SUV, the glass in the rear hatch is about 10 feet away from the rearview mirror, with two sets of headrests in between… Having spent a few days in what Polestar calls an “SUV coupe” I am here to report that drivers won’t miss the mirror. For one thing, the display is shaped like a conventional mirror, imbuing it with the comfort of the familiar. The imagery is convincingly mirror-like — reversed — with eye-like focal length, decent resolution and lowlight sensitivity, making it easy to trust when judging distances, with the help of graphical overlays and warning tones. It also has excellent auto-dimming algorithms....

The Polestar 4 is called that because it is the fourth model from the Swedish-Chinese premium/luxury collab, born out of Volvo Cars’ performance subbrand. Describing it as an “SUV coupe” almost feels like a translation error. The design eschews signaling traditional utility in favor of a jocund modernism — call it orbital chic.... As for missing the rear window, my advice is, don’t look back.
“In sports cars, rearview mirrors have been essentially decorative for some time,” the article points out. (The 1974 Lamborghini Countach LP400 originally envisioned “a rear-facing periscope fitted in a dorsal channel in the roof.”)

“The era’s contempt for rearview mirrors was captured in a scene from The Gumball Rally (1976) when Raul Julia’s character snaps the mirror off his Ferrari Daytona and throws it away. ‘The first rule of Italian driving,’ he says. ‘What’s behind me is not important.’"

There’s 11 exterior cameras, plus 12 ultrasonic sensors and a mid-range radar to watch for threats and “intervene if necessary”. One feature even reads speed limit signs and shows the posted limit on the driver’s display. (“If the car exceeds the limit, the driver will hear a warning sound.”) Even the windshield has built-in camera sensors to provide automatically “adaptive” headlights that switch from high beam to low beam when they identify approaching vehicles or the taillights of cars ahead.

“A total of seven airbags are deployed in the event of a collision.”

Thanks to Slashdot reader fjo3 for sharing the article.

For once, yes

By AmiMoJo • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Obviously the world is ready, because they have existed since near the dawn of automobiles.

Lots of vehicles don’t have a rear view window, or one so small it is useless. Some manufacturers, like Nissan, have been supplying rear view cameras in place of the mirror for many years too. The screen is places where the rear view mirror normally goes.

I’m just sad that side cameras didn’t replace wing mirrors. Especially now that everyone has super bright headlights, not having a mirror means no light reflected at you.

Lamborghini Countach

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The last models didn’t have any rear window, at all.

Re:I have a Tesla Model Y

By Ol Olsoc • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

I love the rear facing camera, it’s really useful for backing on a curvy driveway at night, and many other things One small problem. It’s really wide angle, so it gives a distorted view and makes it hard to judge distance When I’m 3 feet from an obstacle, the camera view makes it appear more like 10-15 feet

Jeep has backup lines superimposed on the image, that in conjunction with a sensor on the wheels, moves around and tells you where you will end up if you continue backing up with the wheel turned in the direction you have it. plus green, yellow, and red distance markers You can back up like a Boss, make super accurate 3 point turns, and in the woods on narrow roads with a steep drop it can be a lifesaver. If someone is coming the other way and we meet, I tell them I’ll back up. I’ve done over a quarter mile just watching the backup camera.

Sure, why not

By quonset • Score: 3 Thread

What’s one other piece of electronics to go bad over time or have the driver pay an exorbitant amount to have repaired if they’re in an accident.

The K.I.S.S. principle is dead.

Confusion

By coopertempleclause • Score: 3 Thread
This summary is confused about the difference between a rear-view mirror and a rear window.

The Polestar 4 is replacing the MIRROR with a display feed, and not the window… Which is actually a pretty great idea because maybe they can both improve the angle of coverage and deal with blinding headlights from behind.

Problem is we have to trust they won’t paywall the functionality at a later date.

Open Source Developer Brings Linux to Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows ME

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Microsoft released the “Windows Subsystem for Linux” in 2016, adding an optional Linux environment into every operating system since Windows 10. But now an open source developer has brought Linux to Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows Me, reports the blog It’s FOSS, “with Linux kernel 6.19 running alongside the Windows 9x kernel, letting both operate on the same machine at the same time.”
A virtual device driver handles initialization, loads the kernel off disk and manages the event loop for page faults and syscalls. Since Win9x lacks the right interrupt table support for the standard Linux syscall interrupt, WSL9x reroutes those calls through the fault handler instead. Rounding it all out is wsl.com, a small 16-bit DOS program that pipes the terminal output from Linux back to whatever MS-DOS prompt window you ran it from.
The end result is that WSL9x requires no hardware virtualization, and can run on hardware as old as the i486, the article points out. On Mastodon the developer says they “really got this one in right under the wire, before they start removing 486 support from Linux.”

The source code for WSL9x is released under the GPL-3 license, and was “proudly written without AI.”

Finally!

By organgtool • Score: 5, Funny Thread
I can enjoy the stability and security of a Windows 9x host with the ease-of-use of the Linux userland.

Proudly written without AI?

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 3, Insightful Thread
I’m sorry, but software isn’t shaker furniture.

Just one question

By spaceman375 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Why? /s

Interesting use case

By CAIMLAS • Score: 3 Thread

This is really interesting for old-but-not-broken hardware you’ve got sitting around where you want to run win9x - but it isn’t well supported.

Clearly you can run W9x under emulation just fine, but there are some use cases where that’s not going to be enough (eg. you need explicit access to the hardware or there’s weird clock-related eccentricities with the software). I’m sure the use case is quite narrow, but interesting none the less. This would’ve been far cooler 20 years ago when w9x was still relevant, though.

I’m sure this project idea was kicking around in his head all that time and it wasn’t until recently that he was able to implement it (perhaps due to the assistance of AI - if not to write code, then to figure things out so he could). I’ve personally had a couple fun projects like this, where the itch could finally be scratched. Really amazing tech.

Everyone needs a hobby

By sarren1901 • Score: 3 Thread

I’m glad they did this for the fun of it but for the vast majority, this isn’t remotely practical or usable. 486 hardware? Umm, yeah not since the early 90s. Probably fine one in a museum at this point. Really, those days were terrible. Hardware was really expensive, slow and significantly more detail orientated to setup. You had to pair your ram by both size and parity, as well as setting jumpers on the motherboard. Screw this step up and you’ll fry the board and possibly the CPU as well.

Zero part of me has nostalgia for that old hardware and even less nostalgia for Windows 3.1/9x. Shit, remember you had to reboot the entire system just to change the resolution? Yeah, screw that. At least in Linux back then, you could just restart the the Xwindowing system without a reboot.

Windows XP and Win 7 were pretty much the only decent versions of Windows to ever exist. Good riddance.

Let’s see if I can recall the joke for Windows from the 90s. Something along the lines of this:

Windows 95 is 32 bit extensions and a graphical shell for a 16 bit patch to an 8 bit operating system originally coded for a 4 bit microprocessor, written by a 2 bit company, that can’t stand 1 bit of competition.

Pretty much sums up the situation.

Linux Drops ISDN Subsystem and Other Old Network Drivers

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Old code like amateur radio and NFC have long been a burden to core networking developers,” reads the pull request.

And so Thursday Linus Torvald merged the pull request “to rid the Linux kernel of the old Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) subsystem,” reports Phoronix, “and various other old network drivers largely for PCMCIA era network adapters.”
This was the code suggested for removal given the recent influx of AI/LLM-generated bug reports against this dated code that likely has no active upstream users remaining… [W]ith the large language models and increased code fuzzing finding potential issues with these drivers for obsolete hardware, it’s easier to just get rid of these drivers if no one is actively using the hardware from decades ago… This merge lightens the kernel by 138,161 lines of code with ISDN gone and numerous old network adapters and also getting rid of legacy ATM device drivers as well as the amateur ham radio support. The main networking drivers removed affect the 3com 3c509 / 3c515 / 3c574 / 3c589, AMD Lance, AMD NMCLAN, SMSC SMC9194 / SMC91C92, Fujitsu FMVJ18X, and 8390 AX88190 / Ultra / WD80X3.

Linux 7.1 also has removed the long-obsolete bus mouse support as well as beginning to phase out Intel 486 CPU support and removing support for Russia’s Baikal CPUs.

But I remember those techs!

By JoshuaZ • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Bus mouses were not that common, but we’re a thing when I was growing up. But the phasing out of the 486 support is really what I have to object to. It was cutting edge when I was young, so if it is now so rare and obsolete that support isn’t justified then I must be old and that can’t be right. I don’t care for Linux’s refusal to indulge my denial of the passage of time.

Re:no one is using a 3c509 yea no don’t believe th

By demon driver • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Right. Not even 35 years old, the 3C509. I remember it like it were yesterday how we wrapped coax cable around that three-storey house with rented flats to get us four people connected. Probably need to go back to OS/2 if Linux drops support!

Nobody uses HAM-based packet radio?

By jd • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

That surprises me. Obviously, if it’s true it’s true, but with satellite Internet availability decided by politics, and Internet traffic regularly monitored, I’d have thought some people in remote communities would prefer alternatives. I’ve been known to be wrong on occasion, and if this happens to be such an occasion, then ok. It just seems… odd that people desperate to be seen as independent and off the regular grid would deliberately not use technology that would permit them to communicate long-distance on a grid they themselves had control over.

Re:The Windows 11ing of Linux

By organgtool • Score: 5, Funny Thread
When Linux ends support for a device, the Linux Gnome sneaks into the building and destroys the unsupported hardware. Everybody knows this.

I remember ISDN

By MpVpRb • Score: 5, Funny Thread

When I worked in IT in the 90s, I struggled with SPIDs and provisioning
I even wrote a set of lyrics about it, set to the music of YMCA by the Village People

Phone man, oh my modem’s too slow
I need answers, and I’m ready to go
What’s the distance to my local CO
Am I close enough to get it

Phone man, oh I need it today
I can’t wait for the fiber coming my way
It’s one hundred and twenty eight K
And it’s good enough
So get me

ISDN
You know I’m talkin’ bout
ISDN

It’s the best you can get
But the word on the street
Says it’s already obsolete

ISDN....

White House Pushed Out New AI Official After Just Four Days on the Job

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
It’s the U.S. government’s main link to the AI industry, reports The Washington Post, working to assess national security risks of new models like Anthropic’s “Mythos”.

To run it they’d hired Collin Burns, who’d worked at OpenAI and then Anthropic. But Burns started work Monday at the Center for AI Standards and Innovation — and then "was pushed out Thursday by the White House, according to the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversations.”
Officials were concerned about Burns having worked at the AI company, which has fought bitterly with the Trump administration in recent months, according to one of the people and another person. That person said some senior figures at the White House had not been briefed on Burns’s selection in advance… The new pick was Chris Fall, a scientist with a long career spanning the federal government and academia. Burns had been asked to resign that afternoon, according to one of the people familiar with the situation…

Dean Ball, a former Trump administration AI adviser, said on social media that Burns had given up valuable Anthropic stock and moved across the country to take the government position, and had been “rewarded by his country with a punch in the face.” “Obviously what happened is Burns was bumped because of his association with Anthropic,” Ball wrote. “A dumb but predictable own goal.”

Re:Never seen a new hire that was a bad idea?

By ChatHuant • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Have you never seen a new hire that got past management and team reviews, and then in their first weeks turned out to be a bad idea?

This doesn’t seem to be the case here though. There were no “first weeks”. The guy was fired as soon as the White House got wind of the hire. It doesn’t appear to be an issue of competency; rather it’s an issue of loyalty to Trump.

They hired somebody competent by accident?

By gweihir • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

No surprise they had to fire that person immediately. They have to maintain their standards that all members of government need to be incompetent and stupid, drug addiction, a history of sexual abuse, etc. a bonus.

Re:Never seen a new hire that was a bad idea?

By Bahbus • Score: 5, Informative Thread

4 days is not enough time to determine the guy isn’t a good fit.

Seems ill thought out.

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Obviously we aren’t expecting a merit hire from the current administration; but this seems like a weird move even by their low standards of thuggish demands for compliance and sniveling loyalists. Hegseth is having a tantrum over anthropic allegedly getting in the way of the DoD fulfiling his fantasies of masculine adequacy; so you fire the guy who left anthropic to work for you?

Isn’t the whole point of treating any differences of opinion as personal insults to be dealt with regardless of their legality, while coddling loyalists regardless of their actions, to encourage people to obey you rather than others? Especially if this guy wasn’t in a position to personally change Anthropic’s contract with the DoD what lesson are you conveying by punishing him anyway? “We might just fuck you over because we don’t like your old boss” seems like an actively counterproductive line because it essentially tells a nontrivial number of people that compliance isn’t worth it because they’ll be punished anyway; rather than encouraging them to turn on whoever your enemies are in order to be rewarded.

Re:They hired somebody competent by accident?

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That’s not how a competent administration works. But yes that is how a fascist admin works, loyalty first, us vs them.

“He was clearly there as an influence peddler, not to do what was in his job description.”
The Trump admin is full of influence peddlers, they don’t have a problem with that, as long as you kiss the ring. But if you come from the “enemy”, you’d better be ready to go full propaganda against your old friends.

Free Software Foundation Says ‘Responsible AI’ Licenses Which Restrict Harmful Uses are Unethical and Nonfree

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The Free Software Foundation’s Licensing and Compliance Manager published a blog post this week to explicitly state that”Responsible AI” Licenses (RAIL) are nonfree and unethical. The licenses restrict AI and ML software “from being used in a specific list of harmful applications,” according to the license’s web site, “e.g. in surveillance and crime prediction.” (The license’s steering committee is volunteers from multiple academic institutions.)

But even though Responsible AI licenses are marketed as addressing ethical challenges, the FSF argues “they do not require anything that is really necessary for users to control their computing done with machine learning, including: complete training inputs, training configuration settings, trained model, or — last, but not least — the source code of software used for training, testing, and running tools based on machine learning.”
Thus, RAILed machine learning can be, and most probably will be, unethical. Use restrictions do not prevent these licenses from being used to exercise power over users…

RAIL contribute to unethical marketing of machine learning, again under the disguise of morally-loaded restrictions they purport to enforce. If we want software to help decrease social injustice, we should oppose licenses that restrict how software can be used. We should focus on effective ways of addressing injustices: government and community support for freedom-respecting tools and services; releasing programs under strong copyleft licenses; and entrusting copyrights to organizations that have the resources to enforce copyleft.

Software freedom must be defended, not denied. More specifically, the more free software is out there, the more likely people will collaborate on tools and services that do not pose moral dangers and help solve existing ones. Free software also makes it more likely that users have real choices when looking for freedom-respecting ethical programs and tools based on machine learning. Denying people the freedom to a particular program, as RAIL or similar licenses would have it, prevents them from using such program for the common good.

restricted use licenses aren’t new

By david.emery • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I remember Java for years had a license restriction against using it for safety-critical applications.

It’s interesting to consider restrictive licenses as a legal liability measure (as I suspect was true for Java), versus a technical or moral measure (i.e. ‘we don’t trust this well enough to use in some circumstances.’)

But I wonder if the FSF position will change if/when AI vibe-codes non-open-license replacements for key OSS projects.... Would they claim that the LLM ‘inhaling’ GPL licensed software inherits the license terms of the input?

Restrictions…

By guygo • Score: 3 Thread

without consequences. Bah, useless drivel.

Re:What’s a thinking man to do?

By UnknownSoldier • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Imaginary Property apologist.

Username checks out.

Intel’s Stock Soars 24% Friday, Its Biggest One-Day Gain Since 1987

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Intel’s stock price soared 24% Friday. It’s the stock’s largest single-day spike since since October 1987, reports CNBC, “as investors cheered signs of renewed growth due to mounting artificial intelligence demand.”
The stock closed at $82.57 and is now up 124% this year after jumping 84% in 2025. Friday’s rally topped a 23% gain for the stock on Sept. 18, when Nvidia agreed to invest $5 billion in the company… “INTC’s new CEO fixed the balance sheet, and is executing on a strategy that appears to have put INTC back on the competitive track,” analysts at Evercore ISI wrote in a report after earnings, upgrading the shares to the equivalent of a buy rating. First-quarter revenue topped estimates and rose 7.2% to $13.58 billion from $12.67 billion a year earlier. In five of the prior seven quarters, the company posted year-over-year declines in revenue…

The rally on Wall Street marks a stark turnaround for the U.S. chipmaker, which lost 60% of its value in 2024, leading to the ouster of Pat Gelsinger as CEO in December of that year… Intel’s data center business is driving much of the current growth. Revenue jumped 22% from a year earlier to $5.1 billion, as AI fuels renewed demand for central processing units. Analysts at Citi upgraded the stock to a buy from a neutral rating, anticipating an uplift in CPU sales for all suppliers over the next few years.
Besides Tesla, Intel’s CEO said Thursday that “multiple customers” are “actively evaluating the technology” their new 14A chip technology, according to CNBC, and that 14A development is happening faster than its 18A technology.

The sudden spike in Intel’s stock price makes the stock chart look almost like a straigbht line up. Last August it was selling for less than $20 a share — so it’s quadrupled in value less that nine months.

Proving Analysts are Dumb

By Luthair • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
It takes years to design and ship CPUs, same thing for fab processes. Everything from a technical perspective would have been started and seen through a lot of its development under Gelsinger.

They do have good fabs.

By drnb • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Say what you will about the x86 … but they do have good fabs.

Physicists Revive 1990s Laser Concept To Propose a Next-Generation Atomic Clock

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Physicists have proposed a new kind of atomic clock based on a revived superradiant laser concept that could produce an extraordinarily stable signal with a linewidth around 100 microhertz, potentially the narrowest ever for an optical laser. “The implications of this result could stretch well beyond timekeeping,” reports Phys.org. “A laser immune to environmental frequency shifts would be a powerful tool in optical interferometry — using interference patterns in light to make ultra-precise measurements.” From the report:
In a conventional laser, a mirrored cavity bounces light back and forth between atoms, building up a bright, coherent beam. A superradiant laser works differently: rather than relying on the cavity to maintain coherence, the atoms themselves act as single coordinated emitters, collectively synchronizing their light emission. Following early theoretical ideas emerged in the 1990s, the concept didn’t gain concrete traction until 2008, when researchers at the University of Colorado proposed that superradiant lasers could serve as a new kind of atomic clock.

Atomic clocks work by using laser light to probe a very precise transition in an atom, causing electrons to transition between energy levels at an extraordinarily stable frequency. Because a superradiant laser stores its coherence in the atoms rather than the cavity, its output frequency is far less vulnerable to environmental disturbances like vibrations or temperature fluctuations. Yet although this concept was first demonstrated experimentally in 2012 in a pulsed regime, the influence of heating has so far held superradiant lasers back from their full potential. To keep the laser running continuously as an atomic clock requires, atoms must be constantly replenished with energy. Doing this atom-by-atom delivers random kicks that heat the atomic sample and disrupt the lasing process, confining it to brief pulses rather than a steady beam.

In their study, Reilly’s team considered whether a modification to earlier theoretical concepts could make a continuous laser suitable for an atomic clock. In almost all previous studies, atoms were treated as simple two-level systems: an electron sitting in a ground state, occasionally jumping up to an excited state and back again. The team proposed that the heating problem could be solved by adding one extra ground state to the picture. In a two-level system, if both the pumping (re-energizing) and decay processes happen collectively through the cavity, the mathematics constrains the system in a way that prevents stable, continuous lasing. But with three levels available, pumping and decay can operate on entirely separate transitions, breaking that constraint and allowing the collective approach to work.
The findings have been published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

Standard location for ‘absolute’ time measurement

By Alain Williams • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

With highly accurate time measurement the location matters as there is one environmental factor that cannot be shielded: gravity. So depending how far you are in the earth’s gravity well time will flow at different speeds. So: is there a standard position or do we just accept that these clocks will measure slightly different times ?

This does not matter for almost all of us, it will not affect my decision as to when I eat my breakfast - I will not notice.

Re:Standard location for ‘absolute’ time measureme

By CommunityMember • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I think the SI definition accounts for this. This is the kind of problem metrologists love to solve.

The SI standard specifies mean sea level as the base, and gravity compensation is done in different ways depending on the clock type. The clocks are now so precise that they can detect changes in height (gravity) of around 1mm (it has probably gotten better since the last time I talked to some true time geeks).

Gravitational time dilation

By Geoffrey.landis • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The clocks are now so precise that they can detect changes in height (gravity) of around 1mm (it has probably gotten better since the last time I talked to some true time geeks).

Wow, I hadn’t realized that measurements of the gravitational time dilation were now so precise as to be measurable on such a sub-centimeter scale! Amazing!

https://physicsworld.com/a/gra…

Someone needs to say it

By cpurdy • Score: 3 Thread
It’s about time …

FDA Gives Green Light To the First Gene Therapy For Deafness

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR:
The Food and Drug Administration approved the first gene therapy to restore hearing for people who were born deaf. The decision, while only immediately affecting people born with a very rare form of genetic deafness, is being hailed as a milestone in the quest to treat hearing loss. “It’s the first time in history there’s a new drug for hearing loss,” says Zheng-Yi Chen, an associate scientist at Mass Eye and Ear in Boston who was not involved in the development of the therapy approved by the FDA Thursday. But his research team reported very promising results with a similar approach Wednesday. “I think it’s an historical event, a landmark, a great development for the whole field,” he says of the approval. […] The FDA’s decision was based on the results from the treatment of 20 patients born with a defective version of a gene known as OTOF, which is necessary to transmit sound from the ears to the brain.

Doctors infused billions of adeno-associated viruses into the patients’ ears by making a small incision behind the ear to open a small hole in the skull. The viruses carried a healthy version of the OTOF gene that had been split in half to fit inside the virus. The gene provides instructions to make the otoferlin protein, which is necessary for hair cells in the inner ear to transmit sound to the brain. Most of the patients began to hear for the first time within weeks, with the quality of their hearing improving over the following months, according to [Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, which developed the gene therapy and plans to offer it for free in the U.S. It should be available within weeks.]. The amount of hearing patients gained varied, but 80% achieved at least some significant hearing restoration and 42% ended up with normal hearing, which included the ability to hear whispers, Regeneron says. The hearing ability has lasted at least two years so far.

The treatment can only help patients with the very rare form of deafness that Smith was born with, which only affects about 50 children each year in the U.S. But similar gene therapies are showing promise for other forms of genetic deafness. And researchers hope someday gene therapy may help with common types of hearing loss, like from aging and loud noise.

How long…

By Viol8 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

… before some extremist clowns from the deaf “community” start protesting about how this diminishes deaf “culture”. Think I’m joking? This happened when cochlear implants first came along. Never mind the reduced quality of life people - particularly children - suffer being deaf, far more important is some kind of specious group identity being maintained.

Re: How long…

By jacks smirking reven • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

too much of a platform to too many of the absolutely most insane and extreme people out there

Before internet

>i want to fuck toasters
>dont be a fucking retard
>grow up

After internet

>I want to fuck a toaster
>google
>find a community with 1000+ members about people wanting to fuck toasters
>fuck up your life

Re:How long…

By s0nicfreak • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
I can see how being born hearing and then going deaf causes suffering, but I don’t see how being born deaf does. Seems to me that the suffering there comes from hearing people being discriminatory and exclusionary. Your attitude is part of the problem.

Maine Governor Vetoes Data Center Moratorium Bill

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Maine Gov. Janet Mills vetoed a bill that would have imposed the nation’s first statewide moratorium on new data centers, saying she supported the idea in principle but would not block a major redevelopment project tied to jobs and local investment. Instead, she said she will create a council to study data centers’ effects while also signing a separate measure to deny them certain state tax incentives. Politico reports:
“After prior redevelopment efforts failed, the Town of Jay worked for two years on a $550 million data center redevelopment project to finally bring jobs and investment back to the mill site,” Mills wrote, adding that she would issue an executive order establishing a council to examine the impact of data centers in Maine.

The legislation would have made Maine the first state to block the construction of new data centers, as both political parties grapple with how voters view them ahead of the midterm elections. In a statement accompanying the letter, the governor said she had signed a separate bill that would prohibit data center projects from receiving Maine’s business development tax incentive programs

Re: It is not binary, for or against.

By ambrandt12 • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

You don’t have to work there to know… probably one or two security people, and like one or two tech people per shift
All the techs do is monitor for drive failures and hot-swap a new one in, make sure the cooling system is working fine, and get a paycheck.
Sure it creates construction jobs until the building is finished, then it’s back to the unemployment office for those bricklayers.

The big question is: do we need these precious data centers? How is your precious “Clod” improving life? Taking over an entire department with one computer? Yeah, everybody’s gonna love that :-)

Re: It is not binary, for or against.

By Archfeld • Score: 5, Informative Thread

I’ve worked in many across North America and outside it for a decade or more and he is for the most part correct. Call Centers are good business, Data Centers are utility hogs that run dark.

Re: A moratorium is stupid

By Archfeld • Score: 5, Informative Thread

It already does. Residential building projects require a power/water/sewage infrstructure plan that ensures there is enough utility for the number of projected buildings/residents. Heck in my state they do a green space study and often make developers install a wash area for runoff.

Re:Sad that it came to a veto

By ArchieBunker • Score: 5, Informative Thread

130 people? More like 13 people. All the workers do is change out hardware when it fails.

Re: It is not binary, for or against.

By evil_aaronm • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
A lot of those centers come with tax abatements, to persuade the developers to come there in the first place. So, in fact, the centers get subsidized by the local community. And corporate income taxes are a joke. I paid more taxes, for 2025, than the top 10 companies combined.

BMW Is One Step Closer To Selling You a Color-Changing Car

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
BMW’s latest concept car moves the color-changing tech it debuted back at CES 2022 closer to reality by embedding an E Ink panel directly into the hood. The Verge reports:
BMW’s previous concepts wrapped the entire vehicle in a patchwork of E Ink panels that were all custom-sized and shaped to match its contours. It was an approach that wasn’t practical for mass production, and one that wasn’t very durable. The new BMW iX3 Flow Edition is potentially the most exciting of all of BMW’s concepts as it embeds the E Ink Prism technology directly into the structure of the vehicle’s hood panel, instead of just slapping it on top. The new approach has “undergone BMW’s stringent quality testing” so that it meets the “requirements of automotive engineering and everyday use,” according to a release from E Ink.

The BMW iX3 Flow Edition’s color-changing capabilities are limited to its hood with eight different animations (which appear restricted to a grayscale palette) that can be changed by the driver at the push of a button. It’s not exactly the color-changing car that BMW has been teasing for years and you still can’t buy one, but by focusing on making this technology more practical and functional these vehicles are one step closer to moving past the concept phase.

Great idea…

By Vrallis • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Police hate this one neat trick…

Thank goodness!

By dskoll • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Thanks, BMW, for concentrating on the important things. All those losers who want a cheap, reliable, energy-efficient means of getting from A to B have really been distorting the market all these years. Color-changing is obviously far more pressing than any of those things!

Only comes in shit brown

By awwshit • Score: 4 Thread

If you want any other color than shit brown, it will be $1000/month for the single color package.

Re:GTA style

By hcs_$reboot • Score: 4, Funny Thread
Best option is to apply `{ color: transparent; }`

BMW only care about the chinese market now

By Viol8 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Here in europe lots of people have been screaming at the german manufacturers, not just BMW, to bring back physical buttons for frequently used operations such as HVAC, media etc. BMW not only weren’t listening, they’ve gone in the opposite direction and reduced the physical controls in the neue klasse 3 series. Why? Because the chinese love tech for its own sake.