Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Amazon Stops Supporting Pre-2013 Kindles Today. Some Owners Turn to Jailbreaking
  2. Some Datacenters Divert Power from Homes. Will It Drive Homeowners to Solar and Batteries?
  3. An Entire Wikipedia That’s 100% AI Hallucinations
  4. How I Added an LLM-Based Grammar Checking + TeX Math Import To LibreOffice
  5. The Apple-OpenAI Alliance is Fraying, Setting Up a Possible Legal Fight
  6. California Law Limits ‘Recyling’ Logo in New Attack on Plastic Waste
  7. Anthropic’s Mythos Helped Build a Working macOS Exploit in Five Days
  8. The Search for the Next ‘James Bond’ Actor Has Begun
  9. Fedora’s AI Developer Desktop Initiative Blocked by Community Backlash
  10. Trump Phones Start Shipping - But Were There Really 600,000 Preorders?
  11. Why Is the US Job Market So Tough, Especially for Recent College Grads?
  12. Linux Kernel Outlines What Qualifies As A Security Bug, Responsible AI Use
  13. Japan Runs Out of Robot Wolves In Fight Against Bears
  14. Wood Burning Is Reintroducing Lead Pollution Into the Air, Scientists Find
  15. Kioxia and Dell Cram Nearly 10PB Into a Single 2U Server

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.

Amazon Stops Supporting Pre-2013 Kindles Today. Some Owners Turn to Jailbreaking

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Today Amazon ends support for first- and second-generation versions of Kindles and Kindle Fire tablets, along with the Kindle Touch, the 9.7-inch Kindle DX, and other devices released in 2012 or earlier.

Owners can continue reading ebooks that they’ve already downloaded, and they can also still sideload books using a USB cable (from, for example, Project Gutenberg). And PCMag points out that “There are plenty of e-stores where you can buy DRM-free novels legally, such as ebook.com and Smashwords. If you want to try this process for free, public-domain repositories such as the one at Standard Ebooks are a great place to start.” (eBook files can be converted for the Kindle with the open source tool Calibre.)

New ebooks can no longer be purchased directly from Amazon. But most of Amazon’s affected devices “have not received firmware updates for over a decade,” notes the blog OMG Ubuntu, “and most lost on-device access the Kindle Store.” Some Kindle owners are taking things even further:
You can unlock the firmware of older devices to add extra functionality (custom screensavers, epub support) or run entirely different software. On the hardware hacks side, some choose to turn old Kindles into photo frames or online dashboards.
TechCrunch offers some caveats about jailbreaking:
This process allows users to install custom fonts, new screensavers, alternative reading apps, and even third-party tools that expand the Kindle’s functionality… [I]t’s important to note that jailbreaking a Kindle might violate Amazon’s terms of service. In many jurisdictions, jailbreaking isn’t considered a criminal offense for personal use, but it may become a crime if it involves copyright infringement, illegal software distribution, or the sale of modified devices. Many Kindle owners who opt to jailbreak view it as a method to gain control over a device they purchased that is still functional, rather than being forced to buy a new device. However, jailbreaking is technical and carries risks, including the possibility of rendering the device unusable if something goes wrong. It also isn’t possible on every Kindle model or firmware version, so before proceeding, Kindle owners should first spend some time researching if their device is compatible.
Alternately, PCMag notes, “If you’re feeling particularly virtuous, you can donate your old Kindle to a local library or send it back to Amazon free of charge via its electronic recycling program.”

Some Datacenters Divert Power from Homes. Will It Drive Homeowners to Solar and Batteries?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader shared this report from Electrek:
A Nevada utility just told 49,000 Lake Tahoe residents that it’s redirecting 75% of their electricity supply to data centers, and they have less than a year to find a new power source. It’s one of the starkest examples yet of the AI boom’s impact on everyday Americans… NV Energy needs the capacity for data centers being built by Google, Apple, and Microsoft around the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center east of Reno, according to Fortune… Data centers drove half of all US electricity demand growth last year....

That dynamic — small residential customers losing out to massive industrial electricity buyers — is exactly what’s driving the broader shift to distributed solar and storage. When the grid becomes unreliable or unaffordable because of data center demand, the homeowners who have solar panels and a battery in the garage are the ones with options.
“The shift is measurable,” they argue:
Third-party ownership models (leases and power purchase agreements), which still qualify for the [U.S.] commercial investment tax credit through 2027, are projected to grow 25% in 2026 and capture up to 69% of residential installations, up from roughly 45% in 2025. Homeowners aren’t waiting for incentives to come back — they’re finding new ways to get solar on their roofs… [A] battery that can store cheap solar energy and deploy it during peak hours is increasingly essential. California utility customers alone are adding roughly 8,000 new home batteries per month — about 100 MW of new storage capacity. Municipal programs are accelerating the trend. Ann Arbor, Michigan, recently became the first US city to directly deploy solar and battery systems on 150 homes through its city-owned utility. Vermont’s Green Mountain Power is offering home batteries at little to no upfront cost. These programs signal that utilities themselves recognize the value of distributed energy.

Greed and infrastructure do not mix

By gweihir • Score: 3 Thread

Seriously, in developed nations doing something like this is illegal. This is a 3rd world move.

This is how revolutions start

By jenningsthecat • Score: 3 Thread

Just imagine some power company executive saying “let them eat dirt” and you’ll know where I’m going with this.

This is what happens when the rights of average citizens are slowly eroded to the point where those in power lose sight of just how dangerous the disenfranchised can be. Propaganda and gaslighting only go so far. At some point the great unwashed get desperate and/or angry enough to band together and attempt to overthrow their oppressors.

The tech bros think they’re OK this time around because they control the ubiquitous surveillance apparatus, and because elite propaganda efforts over the last many decades have been so successful. And they may be right - an ‘Elysium’-type hellscape may be just around the corner.

But personally, I’m rooting for Madame la Guillotine and her army of torches and pitchforks. The heads of Zuck, Leon, and Bozos on pikes would fill my heart with hope for human civilization. And I say that without a trace of irony.

An Entire Wikipedia That’s 100% AI Hallucinations

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Every link leads to an entry that does not exist yet,” explains the GitHub page for a Wikipedia-like site called Halupedia. “Until you click it, at which point an LLM pretends it has always existed and writes it for you, in the deadpan register of a 19th-century scholarly press…”
Every article is invented on demand. The footnotes are also lies… The hardest problem with an infinite, on-demand encyclopedia is internal contradiction… When the LLM writes an article, it is required to add a context="…” attribute on every <a> it inserts, summarising the future article it is linking to (e.g. context=“19th-century clerk who formalized footnote drift, Pellbrick’s mentor”)… When that target article is later requested for the first time, the worker loads the accumulated hints and injects them into the system prompt as “PRIOR REFERENCES — these are CANON”. The LLM is instructed that the encyclopedia is hallucinated and absurd, but it must not contradict itself.
Fast Company reports that Halupedia was created by software developer BartÅomiej Strama, who confessed in a Reddit comment that the site came about after a drunk night with a friend. In the week since launch, he says Halupedia has amassed more than 150,000 users.”
Beyond indulging in silly alternate histories, what’s the point of using Halupedia? Strama hinted at one larger purpose in a reply to a donor on his Buy Me a Coffee page: “Your contribution towards polluting LLM training data will surely benefit society!” he wrote.
The site is licensed as free software under the GPL-3.0 license.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the news.

Re:Isn’t that what Wikipedia already is?

By ClickOnThis • Score: 4, Informative Thread

You must be using Wikipedia to research some seriously edgelord stuff. Does that even exist?

For the most part, I have found Wikipedia to be quite accurate. The community-curation appears to work.

How I Added an LLM-Based Grammar Checking + TeX Math Import To LibreOffice

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Former Microsoft programmer Keith Curtis “wrote and self-published After the Software Wars to explain the caliber of free and open source software,” according to his entry on Wikipedia, “and why he believes Linux is technically superior to any proprietary OS.”

He’s also KeithCu (long-time Slashdot reader #925,649), and has written a blog post on "How I added an LLM-based grammar checking + TeX math import to LibreOffice.” :
At Microsoft, I spent five years working on the text components RichEdit and Quill, and came to understand the “physics” of word processing: the file formats, data structures, and algorithms that provided fast access to text and properties, independent of the length of the file. Selecting one million characters to make them bold took about the same time as changing one character, because of the clever data structures (piece tables) and algorithms in these engines…

When I decided to add a real-time AI grammar checker to [LibreOffice plugin] WriterAgent, I knew what I was getting into, but I underestimated the trickery of LibreOffice’s UNO.
His site shares the surprises he encountered, one by one. (Starting with “the office suite throws a bunch of initialization variables at your constructor. If your Python __init__ method doesn’t handle them, the code fails to map the call, the stack misaligns, and the program dies.”) There’s sentence casing issues, duplicate words, and foreign-language syntax — all culminating in new features for “a LibreOffice extension (Python + UNO) that adds generative AI editing to Writer, Calc, and Draw…”

“If you want to try it out, the repo is here… Let’s make LibreOffice and the free desktop AI-native!”

We already had grammar checking

By Smidge204 • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

OpenLibre already had grammar checking. It was free, didn’t require a lot of hard drive space (a few MB at most?), and ran locally and almost instantly without needing a high price graphics card.

In fact we’ve had that ability for over a decade now.

> Let’s make LibreOffice and the free desktop AI-native!

Fuck you, Keith.

=Smidge=
/TexMaths is also an existing LibreOffice extension

Re:We already had grammar checking

By dfghjk • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I spend $0 a month on word processing and I’m more concerned with the product of my efforts than developing my own tools. It’s almost as though new solutions to long solved problems is all that matters here, not actually editing documents.

The Apple-OpenAI Alliance is Fraying, Setting Up a Possible Legal Fight

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Bloomberg reports that Apple’s two-year-old partnership with OpenAI "has become strained, according to people familiar with the matter.”

Bloomberg describes OpenAI as “failing to see the expected benefits from the deal and now preparing possible legal action.”
OpenAI lawyers are actively working with an outside legal firm on a range of options that could be formally executed in the near future, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the deliberations are private. That could include sending the iPhone maker a notice alleging breach of contract without necessarily filing a full lawsuit at the outset, according to the people… OpenAI believed that the companies’ partnership, which wove ChatGPT into Apple software, would coax more users into subscribing to the chatbot. It also expected deeper integration across more Apple apps and prime placement within the Siri assistant. Instead, Apple’s use of OpenAI technology across its operating systems remains limited, and features can be hard to find…

Apple has had its own concerns about OpenAI, including whether the company does enough to protect user privacy. And a recent push [by OpenAI] to make devices — an effort overseen by former Apple executives — has rankled the iPhone maker.

Any legal move by OpenAI likely wouldn’t come until after the conclusion of the Musk trial, according to the people. No final decisions have been made, and OpenAI still hopes to resolve its issues with Apple outside of court.
The article points out that OpenAI “initially believed the deal could generate billions of dollars per year in subscriptions — something that hasn’t come close to happening.” An OpenAI executive argues to Bloomberg that from a product perspective Apple hasn’t done everything they could, “and worse, they haven’t even made an honest effort.”

AI has limited uses for consumers

By FudRucker • Score: 3 Thread
AI would make a good search engine tool for general purpose inquiring, maybe incorporate it into Safari, but most search engines have it now and ddg does a nice job of it,

necessity is the mother of invention so there has to be an actual need for something before a tool gets invented for it, so inventing good tools is not like pulling a rabbit out of a hat

Re:Contractual promises or not?

By Mspangler • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Ironically I asked Googles AI and it said;

In the United States, you generally cannot sue someone for “general incompetence” alone. To win a lawsuit, you must prove the individual had a legal duty of care to you, breached that duty (which translates to professional negligence), and caused actual, measurable damages.

So if the contract did not promise that X% of Apple customers would subscribe to ChatGPT by Y date I think the lawsuit is doomed.

Apple could point a decade of consistent bungling with Siri as evidence that ChatGPT should have known better. Companies not doing their due diligence results in judges saying the legal equivalent of “sucks to be you, now go away”.

For the record I have an iPad deliberately chosen because it is incapable of running AI.

Apple? Screwing over a partner?

By _xeno_ • Score: 3 Thread

Wow, Apple, screwing over a partner? Who ever could have seen this coming?

I don’t understand why anyone would ever partner on Apple on anything. They are notorious for screwing over their partners at this point. There’s even a term for it, “Sherlocking.” People seem to have forgotten that Apple’s “privacy” stance originated as Steve Jobs not wanting to share any of the data “Apple owned” with anyone else.

California Law Limits ‘Recyling’ Logo in New Attack on Plastic Waste

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Most of the plastic waste in California is about to lose the recycling symbol,” writes the Washington Post’s “climate coach.”
The “chasing arrows” symbol, created in 1970 by a college student inspired by the burgeoning environmental movement, has been stamped indiscriminately on plastic bottles, clamshell takeout containers, chip bags and more for decades. The majority of the items emblazoned with the mark have been virtually impossible to recycle for most people. California lawmakers say they want to end the charade: Under what’s known as the Truth in Recycling law, plastics cannot use the symbol if they aren’t collected by curbside programs serving 60% of Californians and sorted by facilities serving 60% of the state’s recycling programs (with some additional requirements). If the law goes into effect as scheduled on October 4, more than half of the types of plastic packaging and products sold in the state can no longer carry the chasing arrows logo. That will affect plastic films, foam, PVC and mixed plastics…

Food and packaging groups have sued the state of California, calling the law a form of censorship whose vague restrictions violate the First Amendment and due process rights.... Advocates of the law counter that corporations deliberately misled the public by turning the recycling symbol into a marketing device that masks the fact that only a small fraction of plastic packaging is ultimately recycled… The mark was originally intended to informwaste processors what polymers a plastic item was made from. But the public reasonably assumed anything stamped with the symbol was recyclable. Millions of tons of worthless plastic trash have since poured into recycling facilities unable to process it....

States are now taking action. Seven have passed laws shifting the cost of recycling onto packaging makers. Oregon and Washington have lifted requirements that plastic containers carry the chasing arrows symbol.
The article notes that Norway already recovers 97% of beverage bottles, while Slovakia recycles 60% of plastic packaging. “But the U.S. only recovers about a third of its PET and HDPE bottles, and just 13% of plastic packaging, according to U.S. Plastics Pact, an industry-led forum.

“It won’t be easy for the U.S. to reach higher levels of recycling: The necessary infrastructure and incentives are chronically underfunded, no federal mandate exists for minimum-recycled-content that would create demand and a mix of mostly unrecyclable hydrocarbons still dominates the waste stream.”

“corporations deliberately misled”

By RitchCraft • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

That pretty much sums up the plastics industry when it comes to recycling over the last 50+ years.

Educate

By markdavis • Score: 3 Thread

>“The mark was originally intended to inform waste processors what polymers a plastic item was made from. But the public reasonably assumed anything stamped with the symbol was recyclable”

Then the problem is education, not the mark. Every product with the mark is ABLE to be recycled (methods do exist), but that doesn’t mean it can be or will be in your area. I don’t recall running across anyone who thought having the symbol means anything more than the number inside it is the type of plastic. And if you remove the mark, the already confused people are just going to say “oh, plastic” and put it in their container [incorrectly] just as before.

My biggest issue with the mark is that the number is often way too small or malformed to read. Where I live, only #1 and #2 are accepted (along with paper/cardboard, glass, and metal cans) and sometimes it is nearly impossible to see the number. Even so, by volume, I almost always have more recycling than non-recycling waste.

Just pull the trigger

By Sneftel • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Glass, aluminum, steel, and paper/cardboard, taken together, are suitable for packaging 99% of all products sold and are either compostable or infinitely recyclable. Just ban plastic packaging for that 99% altogether. I’m willing to pay three extra cents. Just get the fuck rid of it.

How to fix the problem

By gurps_npc • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The problem is not that we do not recycle, but that we do not reward recycling enough nor do we punish the creation of non-recyclable waste. Solution: Tax the crap.

7 types of recyclable materials:

Type 1: PET: Most common and very recyclable
Type 2: HDPE: Common and recyclable.
Type 3: PVC: Poor attempts to recycle creates toxins. Most do not even bother. Very rarely recycled
Type 4: LDPE: Styrofoam, very rarely recycled
Type 5: PP/ Polypropylene: uncommonly recycled.
Type 6: PS/Polystere: (egg cartons) Very rarely recycled
Type 7: Other /everything else. These things are never recycled because it is a catchall term - type 7 is not one chemical.

Type 1 and Type 2 are the only ones that recycle more than 10%. Type 5 might someday graduate to more than 10%, but not yet.

Solution:
Tax the stuff that is NOT recycled.
No tax at all for Type 1 and 2 plastics. (PET and HDPE)
50% tax on type 5 plastics (PP)
100% tax on all other types of plastics

Note, instead of passing a law that taxes by type of plastic, better to make the law state that the tax rate is determined by what percent of the plastic produced over the past 5 years was actually recycled.

This will encourage people to change which plastic material they are using, punishing them for choosing types 3,4,6 and 7, and encourages the use of types 1 and 2 wherever possible. If this changes our the mix by only 5%, that would be worth it.

As a bonus it raises cash which could be used to fund recycling, while also encouraging the plastic makers to research how to improve recylcing.

Anthropic’s Mythos Helped Build a Working macOS Exploit in Five Days

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“The vulnerability is simple in practice,” writes Tom’s Hardware: “run a command as a standard user and gain root (administrator) access to the machine.” And it was Mythos Preview that helped the security researchers at Palo Alto-based Calif bypass a five-year Apple security effort in just five days. The blog 9to5Mac reports:
Last year, Apple introduced Memory Integrity Enforcement (MIE), a hardware-assisted memory safety system designed to make memory corruption exploits much harder to execute… [The researchers note it’s built into Apple all models of the iPhone 17 and iPhone Air, and some MacBooks] They explain they have a 55-page technical report on the hack, but they won’t release it until Apple ships a fix for the exploit. But they do note in broad terms that Anthropic’s Mythos Preview model helped them identify the bugs and assisted them throughout the entire collaborative exploit development process.

“Mythos Preview is powerful: once it has learned how to attack a class of problems, it generalizes to nearly any problem in that class. Mythos discovered the bugs quickly because they belong to known bug classes. But MIE is a new best-in-class mitigation, so autonomously bypassing it can be tricky. This is where human expertise comes in. Part of our motivation was to test what’s possible when the best models are paired with experts. Landing a kernel memory corruption exploit against the best protections in a week is noteworthy, and says something strong about this pairing....”

[I]n a time when even small teams, with the help of AI, can make discoveries such as this one, “we’re about to learn how the best mitigation technology on Earth holds up during the first AI bugmageddon.”

Another LPE… YAWN. Wake me for RCEs

By MIPSPro • Score: 3 Thread
I’ve only seen the one, lame NFSd RCE for FreeBSD a few weeks ago. This “amazing” new LLM cannot seem to generate much beyond hype, just like their broken compiler. They claim there are “thousands” of bugs waiting in the rushes. However, they’ve only released about a dozen checksums for heretofore unknown “really bad bugs.”

So far, you’re mostly talk, Anthropic. A bare handful of LPEs, one RCE, and @200 unknown Firefox “bugs” (but few details there and no idea if they are all security bugs). Guys, when you say “thousands” and produce less than 20 real OS bugs (and that’s counting your oh-so-scary-unknowns that are just checksums now), then some skeptical folks like me are going to say “Get to a 100 before you start talking about thousands… hell get to 50.”

Suit weasels love to lie.

Re:Another LPE… YAWN. Wake me for RCEs

By Moridineas • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Mozilla has discussed what kind of bugs they found. Here’s their blog entry: https://hacks.mozilla.org/2026/05/behind-the-scenes-hardening-firefox/

You should read it. It’s a very level-headed article that avoids the for and against LLM-hype that so many low quality news sources report.

Around close to the same time, Greg Kroah-Hartman also commented on improving reports: https://www.theregister.com/software/2026/03/26/linux-kernel-czar-says-ai-bug-reports-arent-slop-anymore/5226256

Finding bugs is good. Integrating these kind of tools into a testing and build pipeline is a good idea.

The Search for the Next ‘James Bond’ Actor Has Begun

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Variety reports:
Amazon MGM Studios started auditioning actors for the part of 007 in the past few weeks, Variety has learned… The next James Bond film will be directed by Denis Villeneuve, the filmmaker behind the “Dune” franchise, “Arrival” and “Sicario.” Amy Pascal of the “Spider-Man” films and David Heyman of the “Harry Potter” series will produce the picture, which will feature a script from “Peaky Blinders” creator Steven Knight. Tanya Lapointe (“Dune”) is executive producing the film.
The BBC notes it’s been five full years since the release of the last Bond film No Time To Die, and 15 months “since Amazon MGM Studios took control of the Bond franchise.” But they also offer this list of “the current bookmakers’ favourites” for who will become the seventh actor to play the gadget-loving super spy in the franchise’s 64-year history:
Callum Turner — the 36-year-old actor is the current bookies’ frontrunner. He has been in the Fantastic Beasts franchise, was nominated for a Bafta for TV drama The Capture, and starred in Apple TV’s Masters of the Air…

Jacob Elordi — the Australian actor, 28, made his name in TV’s Euphoria and cult hit film Saltburn, and was nominated for an Oscar this year for playing the monster in Frankenstein. The Rest Is Entertainment host Marina Hyde recently said she’d heard from a number of well-placed sources that he’s now “in pole position” to be Bond.

Harris Dickinson — the 29-year-old is playing John Lennon in the forthcoming major Beatles biopics, and has previously appeared in Maleficent, The King’s Man, Where the Crawdads Sing and Babygirl, and received a Bafta TV Award nomination for A Murder at the End of the World.

Henry Cavill — the Superman, The Witcher and Mission: Impossible actor is a fan favourite and was widely regarded to have been the runner-up when Craig landed the part. But at 43, is he now too old to start a lengthy stint as 007?

Aaron Taylor-Johnson — the Bafta-nominated 35-year-old, known for films like Kick-Ass, Kraven the Hunter and 28 Years Later, is a perennial contender, and would fit the bill.

Theo James — the suitably suave star, 41, made his name in the Divergent films and has since built his reputation in The Time Traveler’s Wife, The White Lotus and The Gentlemen.

…Or producers could well go for one of the many other names who have been touted for the role, or an unexpected choice.

AI

By groobly • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Just make the next James Bond some AI and leave us alone with this nonsense.

Why can’t AI just choose the optimum Bond?

By broward • Score: 3 Thread

“optimize box office revenue”

Make her a chick,

By backslashdot • Score: 3, Funny Thread

And lame and gay.

It was a different time…

By Misagon • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The James Bond stories, as written by Ian Fleming were set in the Cold War and economic expansionism that he lived in.
The sexism was also a product of that time.

The franchise has made less and less sense since Goldeneye, IMHO. Spoofs have felt more like Bond than the official Bond movies have.

I think that if you are going to reboot it (again) at all, then it should again be set in the height of the Cold War.
We see that era in a different light now in retrospect, and there are aspects of that era that I think could be interesting to explore: aspects that the people of the era were blind to because they took it for granted.

Otherwise, what new could you bring to the franchise? Nobody would be interested in some generic spy movie that is James Bond in name only. Or would they?

To keep this more “news for nerds”

By Whateverthisis • Score: 3 Thread
Callum Turner was great in Masters of Air, but the nerdy news is he’s been cast as Case in an Apple TV series of Neuromancer. That’s something to look forward to for sure.

Fedora’s AI Developer Desktop Initiative Blocked by Community Backlash

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The blog It’s FOSS has an update on the Fedora AI Developer Desktop Initiative, a proposed platform for AI/machine learning workloads on Fedora. It’s now been blocked “after two Fedora Council members retracted their earlier approval votes.”
The initiative was proposed by Red Hat engineer Gordon Messmer, aiming to deliver an Atomic Desktop with accelerated AI workload support, covering developer tools, hardware enablement, and building a community around AI on Fedora… At the May 6 council meeting, the members unanimously voted to approve this new initiative. After which a short, lazy consensus window was left open until May 8 to accommodate absent members, after which the decision was to be ratified.

But that last bit never happened, as council member Justin Wheeler (Jflory7) was the first person to change their vote to -1… [“While I strongly support leveraging AI to establish Fedora as a leading platform, completely rearchitecting our kernel strategy is a massive structural shift. It requires explicit alignment with our legal and engineering stakeholders before we commit the project to this path.”] Following that, fellow council member Miro HronÄok (churchyard) put in his -1, saying that he had originally assumed the proposal was purely additive and therefore uncontroversial. But seeing the community’s response, he realized that he was mistaken about that. As an elected representative, he felt the need to reflect on this major proposal before signing it off.

Over 180 replies have piled up in the proposal’s discussion thread, with many well-known Fedora contributors pushing back on things like kernel policy, proprietary software, and project identity. Hans de Goede from the packaging team called out the proposal’s emphasis on CUDA support as going against Fedora’s foundational commitment to free software, arguing that open alternatives like AMD’s ROCm and Intel’s oneAPI should be the focus instead.

Trump Phones Start Shipping - But Were There Really 600,000 Preorders?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
USA Today reports:
Trump Mobile phones are being shipped this week, the company exclusively confirmed to USA TODAY in an email May 11.... The company’s first smartphone — the T1 Phone — was originally scheduled for release in August. However, the golden gadget’s release was later delayed to October before being pushed back again to this week. Now, Trump Mobile CEO Pat O’Brien told USA TODAY, pre-ordered phones will start getting sent out to customers this week… O’Brien said the company anticipates all pre-ordered phones to be delivered within the next several weeks… The company’s 5G “47 Plan” is available for $47.45 a month, a nod to President Donald Trump’s two presidential terms, according to the website… Customers will also have Trump(SM) displayed as the status bar in their network.
The Verge reported the phone was added last week to Google’s public list of devices certified for Google Play, “usually one of the final steps before an Android phone is launched.”
Trump Mobile may have broken radio silence partly in response to a recent wave of media coverage alleging that buyers had received emails notifying them that their preorders had been canceled, coverage that even made it onto Stephen Colbert’s The Late Show… [T]here’s seemingly no evidence of the alleged cancellation emails beyond unverified social media claims.
In January The Verge also questioned reports that 600,000 people preordered the Trump phone with a $100 deposit. “I can’t find a shred of evidence that this figure is true,” calling it “a microcosm of how the modern media landscape and AI chatbots can combine to give falsities the sheen of respectability.”
I first saw the figure in, of all places, the Threads feed of California governor Gavin Newsom’s press office, which had shared a screenshot of a tweet of a Grok summary making the claim. Trustworthy, right? The Grok post cites “reports from sources like Fortune, NPR, and The Guardian" for the 600,000 preorders, but a quick search of their recent output shows no sign of the number… India’s Economic Times and Hindustan Times both reported a more specific figure of 590,000 preorders, referencing an unspecified Associated Press report as the source. [The Associated Press] VP of corporate communications, Lauren Easton, confirmed to me that “AP’s original stories never contained such a number....”

Hindustan Times writer Shamik Banerjee called the citation “a typo,” and told me that the figure was in fact taken from The Times of India. The Times of India story, which is bylined only to the newspaper’s lifestyle desk, is more transparent in its sourcing: a viral post by a meme account… It’s been covered by multiple publications, now presented as fact on MSN.com and tech site Phone Arena. And that coverage has helped it to filter into the chatbots and not just Grok — Gemini and ChatGPT were both happy to confirm to me that 600,000 T1 Phones have been ordered so far, the former falsely attributing the number to the Associated Press, and the latter to Phone Arena.

As for how many Trump Phone preorders have actually been placed? No one outside the company knows.

Obviously NO!

By nospam007 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Betteridge’s law of headlines with a question mark states, that such questions are always to be answered with ‘NO’.

will start shipping

By YrWrstNtmr • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Doesn’t count until we see some in the wild.

Money laundering

By reanjr • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

Excellent way to launder $60M in bribes.

Re:will start shipping

By swillden • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

I don’t think it will be a problem. These are $150 Chinese phones with a coat of cheap gold paint. They can get a few hundred of them and send them out and it’ll make it look like they aren’t scamming people at least for a little while.

The summary should also mention that the main selling point of the Trump phone was that it was supposed to be Made in America. That was a major part of the sales pitch and a key promise that motivated whatever pre-orders they got. To whatever extent the alleged 600k pre-orders is plausible, it was that promise that made it so. But Trump Mobile quietly changed the terms on their web site, removing the “Made in America” promise and replacing it with a claim that the phones are “Designed with American values in mind”.

My guess is that they announced before even checking whether they could actually make a phone, typical Trump business “strategy”, then discovered that doing it ranges from extremely difficult/expensive to impossible depending on how you define “made”. You could probably import all the parts and assemble them in the US, though it’d add a lot of cost (Moto tried it). You simply couldn’t create an even marginally-decent device from chips fabbed here. You could get an SoC and a modem that are only a few years behind current flagships, thanks to TSMC Arizona (thanks, Biden!), but DRAM, flash, display, camera sensor, MLCCs… even high-density PCBs are available only from Asia.

Note that I think this is a national security problem that needs serious attention. We’re way too dependent on foreign manufacturing chains for critical components, components that aren’t just needed for modern consumer electronics, but for high-tech weaponry. Biden made a little bit of a start on addressing it with the CHIPS act, but Trump has undermined a lot of that (and wants to repeal it entirely). To really get to where you could build something comparable to a five year-old flagship entirely in the US would require another half-dozen CHIPS Acts focusing on flash, displays, image sensors, MLCCCs, PCBs, batteries (the US makes lots of Li-ion batteries but they’re EV batteries and the differences in form factor, chemistry and defect rates between those and phone batteries are enormous), etc. We’re just that far behind.

Re:will start shipping

By Fons_de_spons • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

The summary should also mention that the main selling point of the Trump phone was that it was supposed to be Made in America. That was a major part of the sales pitch and a key promise that motivated whatever pre-orders they got. To whatever extent the alleged 600k pre-orders is plausible, it was that promise that made it so. But Trump Mobile quietly changed the terms on their web site, removing the “Made in America” promise and replacing it with a claim that the phones are “Designed with American values in mind”.

I am starting to understand the hard core maga mind. It is basically binary thinking. It goes like this: Trump is good. Trump sells phone, phone is good. Others say phone is bad. That means Trump is bad. That is not true. Therefore the ones claiming that the phone is bad are bad. Then the rationalization starts. it can go in all sorts of directions. Usually it is a mix of the blame game (Biden made him do it!), Trump is a genius and you just do not understand (Trump made sure the company is moving production to the US as soon as possible!) or they just attack. (You do not even try!)

So soothing… Much more soothing than the reality behind it, but they just do not want to get out of that cozy bubble. Whatever you say. Trump good, phone good, you? Bad.

Why Is the US Job Market So Tough, Especially for Recent College Grads?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
What’s going on with the U.S. job market? “The economy is growing. Unemployment is low,” notes the Washington Post. “And yet, for millions of workers, finding a job has become harder than at almost any other point in decades,” with the hiring rate “well below pre-pandemic levels for more than a year.”

Part of the problem? “Of the net 369,000 positions added across the entire economy since the start of 2025, health care alone accounted for nearly 800,000 — meaning every other sector, taken together, shed jobs.” By the end of 2025 nearly half of college graduates ages 22 to 27 were working at jobs that didn’t require a degree, according to stats from New York’s Federal Reserve Bank.
The headline unemployment rate, at 4.2%, looks healthy. But that figure has been buoyed by a shrinking labor force: Fewer people are actively looking for work, which keeps the rate down even as hiring slows…

[Some large tech companies] are trying to recalibrate after their hiring sprees of 2021 and 2022, when many had raised pay, offered flexible schedules and signed people quickly… Higher interest rates have also made expansion more expensive, pushing many firms to invest in technology rather than headcount. Another reason hiring has slowed is uncertainty about AI. Even though the technology has not yet replaced large numbers of workers, it is already shaping how companies think about hiring. “I don’t think this is AI displacement,” said Ben Zweig, chief executive of Revelio Labs, a workforce data company. “What we’re seeing is anticipatory.” Instead of rushing to bring on new workers, some firms are waiting to see how the technology evolves and which tasks it will eventually take over.
A 39-year-old web developer tells the Post it took 453 job applications to get a handful of interviews and two offers. And a journalism school graduate said they’d sent hundreds of job applications but most led nowhere, and they’re now couch-surfing to save money.

But the problem seems even worse for young people. One 18-year-old told the Post that in a year and a half of job searching, they’d yet to even meet an employer in person.
The unemployment rate for people ages 22 to 27 who recently completed college hit 5.6% in the final months of 2025 — well above the 4.2% rate for all workers, according to national data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York… At one point last summer, new workforce entrants made up a larger share of the unemployed than at any point since the late 1980s — higher even than during the Great Recession. When hiring slows, the door closes first on those without an existing foothold. For the class of 2026, the timing could hardly be worse.

“It is getting increasingly clear that young people are being more affected by AI than older workers,” Zweig said. Companies are not eliminating jobs at scale, but many are slow to hire junior workers. At the same time, older workers are staying in the labor force longer, leaving fewer openings for new arrivals. Even when jobs are available, the bar has shifted. Positions once considered entry level now often require several years of experience, technical expertise and familiarity with AI tools. With fewer openings and more applicants, companies are holding out for candidates who can do the job immediately and need little training… Employers are also looking for a different mix of skills. An analysis of millions of job postings by Indeed found that communication skills now appear in nearly 42% of all listings, while leadership skills feature in nearly a third — capabilities that are harder to prove on a résumé and harder still to demonstrate without an existing professional network. Christine Beck, a career coach who works with early-career job seekers, said employers are asking more of the people they do hire.

Nobody wants to work in the field…

By ctilsie242 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It is fairly obvious. Everyone got ran out of the tech field who wasn’t a senior tier, had close ties with management, or both. Not many people want to go into STEM in the US, because they know that they go and do the work, do the hard math courses, only to be muscled out of any chance at a job come graduation by cheap foreign labor. Not just our usual dear H1Bs, but B1s and numerous visas.

College, in every other nation, is something the government pays for. The classmate I had from Chile? Government paid his way. Germany? Free courtesy of the Fatherland. China? Paid for. It is only Americans who have to mortgage their entire future to even have a chance at competing… and the US is the only country in the world that has student loans non-dischargable, and stay for life.

Then there are job guarantees. The guy from China I went to class with is a chief engineer now. The German guy? Doing interesting stuff in physics. The French guy? He does film effects because France values their local culture. The Chile guy? Chemical engineer. For me, when I graduated, were it not for word of mouth and previous people I worked with, I’d have a choice between no job, or maybe enlist in the armed services, as the degree would give 1-2 ranks.

Re:Kids these days?

By Brain-Fu • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

I have seen something similar doing interviews to hire new software developers before and during the pandemic. Some of the applicants had very high GPA but still couldn’t solve relatively simple problems. They could answer questions about coding and algorithms make easy modifications to existing code, and they could even write new code so long as it was at “script kiddy” level of difficulty. But they couldn’t think through a novel problem (even problems that don’t require specialized API knowledge or advanced math or anything like that).

My belief is that, at that time, software engineering was being billed out as a lucrative career and there was a lot of “push” from the industry to get more kids interested. So colleges dumbed down the curriculum and just lowered the bar all-around, to scoop up all that student loan money. And the result was a whole generation of debt-ridden young adults with degrees but no skills.

If the situation is still like that, I can see why nobody wants to hire these kids. I wouldn’t know, since my employer hasn’t hired anyone since the pandemic either. And with the possibility that the existing team can use AI to be just as effective without hiring those kids, nobody wants to do it. Not, at least, until something forces their hand.

Re:Nobody wants to work in the field…

By Anonymous Coward • Score: 5, Informative Thread
Chinese university isn’t free. And they have 20% youth unemployment…

The cited NY Fed numbers tell a different story

By Tony Isaac • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

By the end of 2025 nearly half of college graduates ages 22 to 27 were working at jobs that didn’t require a degree, according to stats from New York’s Federal Reserve Bank

Here’s a link to the NY Fed statistics on underemployment for recent college grads: https://www.newyorkfed.org/res…

What the chart actually shows is that “nearly half” actually means 41.5%. OK, kind of close to half, I guess.
BUT what’s even more striking, looking at their numbers, is that this number is lower than peaks in 2012 (47.4%) and 1992 (48.3%).
In the last three years, there has been a small increase in this number, but certainly not dramatic, in the context of the last 40-ish years shown by the statistics.

So are recent college graduates really struggling more than usual, to find jobs related to their major? The numbers don’t seem to say so.

Re:Deeper issue is global phase change in work/tec

By Paul Fernhout • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Of course, there is a more local-to-the-USA part of the jobs story too (even as it is not as big a global issue as the one in my sig):
“Americans Don’t Realize The Empire Is Already Falling Apart”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?…
        “Spain. Britain. The Soviet Union. Three of history’s most powerful empires all destroyed by the same 7-stage pattern. Military overextension. Currency debasement. Debt spiral. Loss of productive capacity. Social decay. Reserve currency collapse. Sudden fall.
        Historians and economists have identified this sequence repeating across centuries with alarming consistency. And in 2026, the United States shows every measurable sign of Stage 5 right now.
        In this video, we break down:
        * Why America’s $36 trillion debt is past the point of no return;
        * How the U.S. lost its productive economy and replaced it with a financial casino;
        * Why the dollar’s share of global reserves has dropped 12 points since 2000;
        * The consumer sentiment reading lower than ANY war, recession, or pandemic in 75 years;
        * What China, BRICS, and the Global South are quietly doing about it;
        This isn’t politics. This isn’t conspiracy. This is arithmetic.”

Personally I don’t feel the USA debt is “past the point of no return” theoretically even if it might be politically/practically. Restore tax rates from the 1970s, remove the cap on Social Security earnings tax but cap payouts at current max levels, and add a 0.1% tax on every stock sale — and the US debt will be quickly reduced (plus there will be plenty of money for medicare-for-all, keeping Social Security solvent, and reinvesting in physical and social infrastructure). A day of legislative voting in Congress plus a quick signature by the president, and the USA would be on a sound economic footing again.

Whether there is the political will to do all that is a different story. It would require the GOP to move past the “Two Santa Clauses tactic” for winning elections:
https://www.salon.com/2018/02/…
“In fact, Republican strategist Jude Wanniski’s 1974 “Two Santa Clauses Theory” has been the main reason why the GOP has succeeded in producing our last two Republican presidents, Bush and Trump (despite losing the popular vote both times). It’s also why Reagan’s economy seemed to be “good.”
        Here’s how it works, laid it out in simple summary:
        First, when Republicans control the federal government, and particularly the White House, spend money like a drunken sailor and run up the US debt as far and as fast as possible. This produces three results - it stimulates the economy thus making people think that the GOP can produce a good economy, it raises the debt dramatically, and it makes people think that Republicans are the “tax-cut Santa Claus.”
        Second, when a Democrat is in the White House, scream about the national debt as loudly and frantically as possible, freaking out about how “our children will have to pay for it!” and “we have to cut spending to solve the crisis!” This will force the Democrats in power to cut their own social safety net programs, thus shooting their welfare-of-the-American-people Santa Claus. …”

Like with modern monetary theory, governments who have a dominant world currently like the USA essentially print whatever money they want to pay their bills — and they then can use taxes to manage the size of the available money supply to manage inflation. It’s so weird that people (the Fed especially) act like the only way to reduce inflation is to increase interest rates to slow (damage) the economy when the other obvious solution is to raise taxes to take money out of circulation. Why don’t we ever hear the Fed saying, “we only have to raise interest rates because politicians refuse to raise taxes”?
https://www.investopedia.com/m…

Fixing the US debt issue with higher taxes (allowing interest rates to stay lower) might not fix all the jobs issues though as AI and robotics continue to accelerate exponentially. More ideas on dealing with that collected by me in 2010:
https://pdfernhout.net/beyond-…
        “This article explores the issue of a “Jobless Recovery” mainly from a heterodox economic perspective. It emphasizes the implications of ideas by Marshall Brain and others that improvements in robotics, automation, design, and voluntary social networks are fundamentally changing the structure of the economic landscape. It outlines towards the end four major alternatives to mainstream economic practice (a basic income, a gift economy, stronger local subsistence economies, and resource-based planning). These alternatives could be used in combination to address what, even as far back as 1964, has been described as a breaking “income-through-jobs link”. This link between jobs and income is breaking because of the declining value of most paid human labor relative to capital investments in automation and better design. Or, as is now the case, the value of paid human labor like at some newspapers or universities is also declining relative to the output of voluntary social networks such as for digital content production (like represented by this document). It is suggested that we will need to fundamentally reevaluate our economic theories and practices to adjust to these new realities emerging from exponential trends in technology and society.”

Linux Kernel Outlines What Qualifies As A Security Bug, Responsible AI Use

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
The Linux 7.1 kernel has added new documentation clarifying what qualifies as a security bug and how AI-assisted vulnerability reports should be handled. Phoronix reports:
Stemming from the recent influx of security bugs to the Linux kernel as well as an uptick in bug and security reports from discoveries made in full or in part with AI, additional documentation was warranted. Longtime Linux developer Willy Tarreau took to authoring the additional documentation around kernel bugs.
To summarize (since the documentation is a bit too lengthy for a Slashdot story), the AI-assisted vulnerability reports should “be treated as public” because such findings “systematically surface simultaneously across multiple researchers, often on the same day.” It adds that reporters should avoid posting a reproducer openly, instead “just mention that one is available” and provide it privately if maintainers request it. The guidance also tells AI-assisted reporters to keep submissions concise and plain-text, focus on verifiable impact rather than speculative consequences, include a thoroughly tested reproducer, and, where possible, propose and test a fix.
As for what qualifies as a security bug, the documentation says the private security list is for “urgent bugs that grant an attacker a capability they are not supposed to have on a correctly configured production system” and are easy to exploit, creating an imminent threat to many users. Reporters are told to consider whether the issue “actually crosses a trust boundary,” since many bugs submitted privately are really ordinary defects that belong in the normal public reporting process.

All the new documentation can be read via this commit.

Hooray!

By djgl • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

As someone whose job includes commenting on every f***ing CVE that is reported for the software on a customer’s device, I look forward to this reducing the number of CVEs. There are lots and lots of CVEs that do not compromise the security of a system and at most are locally exploitable DoSes.

Japan Runs Out of Robot Wolves In Fight Against Bears

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
Japan’s worsening bear problem has created a shortage of handmade “Monster Wolf” robots, which are $4,000 solar-powered scarecrow-like devices with glowing eyes, sensors, and blaring sounds designed to frighten the animals away. “We make them by hand. We cannot make them fast enough now. We are asking our customers to wait two to three months,” company president Yuji Ohta recently told the AFP. Popular Science reports:
First released in 2016 by the manufacturer Ohta, Monster Wolf was originally designed to ward off the agricultural foes like boars, deer, and the island nation’s Asian black bear (Ursus thibetanus) and brown bear (Ursus arctos) populations. The creative solution quickly went viral for its red LED eyes and menacing fangs — as well as its admittedly odd, furry pipe frame.

Starting at around $4,000, each bespoke Monster Wolf is now equipped with battery power, solar panels, and detection sensors. Its speakers are programmed with over 50 audio clips including human voices and sirens audible over half a mile away. These aren’t assembly line products, however. Each Monster Wolf is custom made, and Ohta simply can’t keep up with the current demand.

[…] Ohta told the AFP that amid the ongoing crisis, there has been “growing recognition” that Monster Wolf is “effective in dealing with bears.” The main customer base remains farmers, but orders are also coming from golf courses and rural workers. Upgraded versions will soon include wheels to actually chase animals and patrol preset routes. There are also plans to release a handheld version for outdoor enthusiasts and schoolchildren. Until Ohta catches up with its orders, residents and visitors are encouraged to review the Japanese government’s own bear safety tips.

Japan Runs Out of Robot Wolves…

By Vomitgod • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

Then the first sentence confirmed the BS headline…
there is a shortage.... nothing has run out.
They are still manufacturing said wolf.

here in America…

By trelanexiph • Score: 5, Funny Thread

In America… we just use a gun. No more bear. Also, you get a free rug. It’s what we call a win-win.

Generally though, don’t shoot black bears, they’re almost never a problem, and they’re kind of cool. Just back away if they’re aggressive, you’re near their cubs. If the bear is Chinese, please capture it humanely, and return Xi Jinping to the Beijing Zoo. I think there is a reward.

If the bear is brown, or worse white, move the selector from BANG to BANG BANG BANG and mag dump it. Brown bears are incredibly aggressive. Polar bears are endangered, but if you see one it’s because it’s hunting you. It is not going to stop hunting you. Ever. Fly home? Polar bear. Flee to the tropics? Polar bear. Launch on Starship to Elon’s secret moon base? Polar bear. They have a certain set of skills, they will find you, and they will kill you.

Bears aren’t stupid

By chas.williams • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
They will eventually figure out that this thing doesn’t present a threat and pass that knowledge on to their young.

I guess …

By PPH • Score: 3 Thread

… they could use a cat while the wolf is on back-order.

Rifles

By Valgrus Thunderaxe • Score: 3 Thread
Why can’t you just shoot these wolves with rifles? Why would you even think about using an AI robot for this? Just shoot them. What’s wrong with people in Japan?

Wood Burning Is Reintroducing Lead Pollution Into the Air, Scientists Find

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot Skip
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian:
Wood heating is reintroducing lead into the air of local communities and homes, a systematic investigation by academics has found. Overwhelming evidence of lead’s neurotoxicity meant the metal was banned as an additive in petrol more than 25 years ago. The research by academics from the University of Massachusetts Amherst began by analysing samples of particle pollution from five suburban and rural towns in the north-east US. They looked for tiny particles of potassium that are given off when wood is burned and also particles containing lead. Samples from seven winters revealed associations between potassium and lead. When there were more wood burning particles in a daily sample, there was more lead in the air, with clear straight-line relationships in four of the five towns.

The project was extended to 22 other towns across the US. The relationships between lead and potassium varied from place to place, being strongest in the Rocky Mountains. By factoring in the effects of temperature, moderate to strong associations in their analysis strengthened the conclusion that the extra lead came from wood burning. The lead concentrations were less than the US legal limits, but any exposure to the metal is harmful. […] Although less than legal limits, lead particles are routinely measured in UK cities in winter when people are also burning wood. This is normally attributed to waste wood covered with old lead paint, but the Umass Amherst study suggests the metal is coming from the wood itself. This means that any wood burning could increase exposure in neighborhoods and at home.
Tricia Henegan, a PhD student at Umass Amherst and the first author on the research, said: “The most logical answer [to the question of how lead ends up in wood] is that it comes from uptake in the soil, probably riding along with the nutrients and water that trees need. Once in the tree, it deposits in the tree’s tissues and remains until that tree is burned.” Other research has found that it can then become part of the smoke.

“The use of wood as an energy source is a relic of the past, one that should not be relived if given a choice. Although wood fuel use can feel nostalgic, it does have negative consequences on air quality, and therefore public health.”

Leaded gas

By Frissysan • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
Lead in the trees came from the environment. Just chickens coming home to roost.

Choice? This guy’s a hack.

By CAIMLAS • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Perspective is important. It’s an extrapolated figure, based on trace-element factors for Cd, Cr, Mn, Ni, but not lead. That seems incredibly dishonest.

What’s more, they report 0.86–1.70 ng/m ambient lead level… which upon brief examination, is about 1/4th the average urban ambient lead level, and from what I’m able to determine, about 20% of the EPA 2022–2024 non-source Pb-TSP daily mean. In other words, it’s significantly lower than sources with known lead. (Similarly, it’s about ~20% of historic ambient national levels - couldn’t find date later than 2019 for this.)

Looks like they played very Orwellian with their data interpretation. “The use of wood as an energy source is a relic of the past, one that should not be relived if given a choice.” is… well. This is “let them eat cake” level hubris. Whoever said this either has a disdain for the people they’re’s studying, or have zero economic understanding.... and based on the actual study findings, I can’t say it appears to be truthful, either.

The people who burn wood are not doing it out of personal preference. They’re doing because they can afford it: they have no other choice. Chopping, splitting, drying, and burning wood is a labor intensive activity. It’s done out of fiscal/economic necessity: fuel prices for heating are extremely high, and in the area they sampled, they rely primarily on heating oil (basically: diesel fuel). Even last winter, the average household heating cost was about $1800/month, about twice what it was in 2015. With fuel prices surging? You can effectively expect twice that cost (or more) this coming winter due to the conflict with Iran.

Musing: Were the lead actually higher in the area (from what I can tell, it’s not), I wonder if the “high” lead in the air would be representative of “carbon sequestration” of the trees over the past 70 odd years: as they grew, they absorbed the lead in the air?

Re:you will pry my texas brisket

By Gravis Zero • Score: 5, Funny Thread

you will pry my texas brisket from my cold dead hands. …life without brisket… isn’t worth living.

Nice try, buddy! Another guy, like you, said something similar and so I did the right thing by trying to assist him in his suicide. What did that jackass do? HE FILED CHARGES AGAINST ME! Two-faced people like you give compassionate angels of death like me a bad name!

But as long as we’re parting ways, I feel like we should part friends. Would you like a cyani^H^H^H^H^H^H breath mint which is entirely safe and not used to end your texas brisket related suffering?

I would stop burning wood, but…

By PhantomHarlock • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The cost of propane and electricity has become so expensive in California that we use our wood burning fireplace insert during the winter whenever possible. It’s the kind that has a blower that will heat up the whole house quickly while exhausting all the fireplace gasses up the chimney. If you want to encourage environmentally friendly behaviors amongst us regular folk, make electricity cheap and plentiful, and sourced from non-greenhouse gas generation itself. Modern, safe nuclear as a primary, stable source backed by wind and solar, or eliminate the nuclear component if battery storage is sufficiently advanced and plentiful. (it’s getting there…) We like our fireplace but would prefer to use it only when we want to feel cozy once in a blue moon, not consistently to save money.

When the price of owned solar comes down, that is an option as well. (leased solar is a scam) We plan to include owned solar in our next home, whether if it comes with it or we leave out money from the down to purchase it. We are in the process of selling our current home and it’s easier financially to do that transaction when changing homes.

There are two camps out there, people who want artificial scarcity and a lower quality of life for no good reason, and those of us who think that energy can be both environmentally friendly AND abundant. Contrary to what you have been led to believe, those two things are not mutually exclusive. But the whole nature of how semi-public utilities (at least in California) are run needs to change, and decentralize. It’s a huge mess.

Re:Check your elitist privilege

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

What kind of elitist crap is this? Americans have been burning wood since the first days of the republic,

Okay you seem triggered, take a breath and think about what you said. You just citied us doing something in the past as a reason to keep doing it going forward. Great. All health advancements are elitist crap. Time to put the lead back in gasoline. Radioactive compounds back in chocolate. Cocaine back in coke.

and wood may very well be the only thing some can burn

Wood is usually the only thing some people can burn if they approach any solution very narrow mindedly. The reality is that we have many different ways to heat these day. Yeah if you make absolutely zero changes to your house you will still think wood is the only option. Speaking of narrow minded. Did you do realise this article is looking at suburban neighbourhoods right? No one is talking about your off grid log cabin in bumshart nowhere. I challenge you to find literally and suburban neighbourhood where wood heating is the only option. - Because after all lead is an exposure related risk and doesn’t matter so much if it is released by one small cabin in the mountains or in a small farm somewhere.

I don’t doubt for a moment that there will be a crackling fireplace, recliners, and glasses of a fine vintage wine in elite households.

Again, concentration matters. I know many people with wood fireplaces. Almost none of them use them to heat their home daily because it’s a horrendously bad and uncomfortable way to keep your house warm. The “elite” using their fireplace go through a tiny fraction of the wood as someone who has a wood heating stove.

Kioxia and Dell Cram Nearly 10PB Into a Single 2U Server

Posted by BeauHD View on SlashDot
BrianFagioli writes:
Kioxia and Dell Technologies say they have built a 2U server configuration capable of scaling to 9.8PB of flash storage, which is the sort of density that would have sounded impossible just a few years ago. The setup combines a Dell PowerEdge R7725xd Server with 40 Kioxia LC9 Series 245.76TB NVMe SSDs and AMD EPYC processors. According to Kioxia, matching the same capacity with more common 30.72TB SSDs would require seven additional servers and another 280 drives.

The companies are pitching the hardware squarely at AI and hyperscale workloads, where storage is rapidly becoming a bottleneck alongside compute. Kioxia claims the denser configuration can dramatically reduce power consumption and rack space requirements while remaining air cooled. The announcement also highlights how quickly enterprise storage capacities are escalating as organizations race to support larger AI models, massive datasets, and increasingly demanding data pipelines.

No object

By markdavis • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

>“The companies are pitching the hardware squarely at AI and hyperscale workloads, where storage is rapidly becoming a bottleneck alongside compute.”

And where, apparently, price is no object. I wish they would focus on that crap and leave normal business and consumer-sized parts alone so we can afford them again.

>“Kioxia claims the denser configuration can dramatically reduce power consumption”

So the AI datacenters can just buy more of them in the same space and still strain all the grids as much so consumer electricity prices continue to rise.

>“The announcement also highlights how quickly enterprise storage capacities are escalating”

While consumer-grade storage capacities are stagnant or even REDUCING just so people can get by.

I wish this bubble would burst sooner than later.

Power Requirements

By algaeman • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
It doesn’t really do you much good to fit it into 2U if you need 20-30kW for that one box.

40 NVME ?

By kbahey • Score: 3 Thread

How does 40 NVMEs fit in one PCIe bus?
Or are they connected over another interface thar is slower, then into PCIe.
Can someone knowledgeable answer this?

Density AND speed

By TheMiddleRoad • Score: 4, Informative Thread
The smaller the space, the faster I can interconnect everything. A lot of data center speed circles around how much I can interconnect at the highest speeds, and space is everything for that. Within a rack is the fastest. The next rack is much, much slower. Each hop away is even slower. If I need my server in NYC near the stock exchange, space is at an extra premium. Etc.