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Florida bans local governments from pursuing net-zero emissions goals
A new state law limits Florida communities' aims to offset greenhouse gas emissions that are warming the global climate and intensifying disasters such as hurricanes.
Specifically, HB 1217 prohibits local governments from pursuing net-zero emissions goals. At least 10 cities and counties have implemented such policies, including Fort Lauderdale, Miami, Orlando, and Leon County, where Tallahassee, the state capital, is located. But the new law will not necessarily upend these policies, said Bradley Marshall, senior attorney at Earthjustice, an advocacy group.
"It's certainly meant to scare municipalities and local governments from trying to do things to further net-zero policies," he said. "Now, its exact impact and what it exactly prohibits is probably up for some debate. Things that are adjacent to it—emissions reductions and even climate change reduction policies—on their face will not run afoul at all of a ban on adopting a net zero policy."
The measure requires local governments to submit an affidavit annually to the state Department of Revenue verifying compliance. Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, signed the measure on April 22, Earth Day, and the law will take effect July 1. It states that "net zero policies, carbon taxes and assessments, and emission trading programs are detrimental to this state's energy security and economic interests and inconsistent with the energy policy and the environmental policy of this state."
NetNut cracked as Google and FBI target 2 million-device botnet
Tech companies working with US law enforcement "significantly degraded" the NetNut residential proxy network as part of an ongoing effort to disrupt the tools cybercriminals use to conceal their activity, say researchers.
The work was carried out by Google, Lumen, Shadowserver, the FBI, and others, and marks a continuation of the IPIDEA proxy network disruption from January.
According to Google Cloud, those working on the operation believe NetNut was among the most popular residential proxy network providers and had at least 2 million devices enrolled in its botnet, comprising mainly small TV-streaming hardware. Crims often use residential proxy networks to make it look like their traffic is actually coming from legit homes and businesses.
In the same way that other residential proxy networks expand their pool of enrolled devices, NetNut distributed its own SDK via these devices.
Proxy providers often approach users under the guise of monetizing their spare bandwidth, paying them a fee in exchange for letting their SDK run on their devices.
https://www.engadget.com/2206582/amazon-leo-is-ready-to-go/
A United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket left for space in the early hours of July 2, bringing 29 Amazon Leo satellites with it. Amazon says the rocket has successfully deployed the satellites and that it has already established contact with them in orbit, as well as ensured that they were in working condition. All that remains is raising the satellites to their assigned operational altitude of 392 miles, after which, Leo will be ready to begin providing customers access to its satellite broadband service.
This ULA launch, which took off from Florida's Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, brings the total number of operational Leo satellites to over 390. That's "enough to support continuous service across initial latitudes," said Amazon Leo VP Chris Weber. After putting 224 Leo satellites in space, this is the Atlas V's rocket last mission for the project, as well. The next Leo mission will be using ULA's heavy-lift Vulcan vehicle, which can carry more than 40 satellites for every launch and can fly more frequently, allowing Amazon to expand the service's coverage and capacity more quickly.
Still lots of work ahead – including raising all these new satellites to their assigned altitude – but we've completed enough... pic.twitter.com/UZb404fXRq
— Chris Weber (@Weber44Chris) July 2, 2026
"With hundreds of flight-ready satellites standing by at the Cape and a new, dedicated vertical integration facility ready to support Leo Vulcan 1 and subsequent missions, we have a clear path to increase launch and deployment cadence, helping us quickly expand network coverage following an initial service rollout later this year," said Melissa Wuerl, Amazon Leo Director of Launch Systems.
Of course, with only 390 or so satellites in space, Leo still has a monumental to climb to be able to catch up to Starlink. SpaceX's Starlink, after all, has more than 10,000 satellites currently providing its customers' satellite broadband needs. In addition to launching satellites on ULA's Vulcan rockets, Amazon also plans to use Blue Origin's New Glenn vehicle, which can carry more than 48 satellites at once. New Glenn's launchpad exploded during a hotfire test in May, delaying all missions that were planning to use the rocket. But Blue Origin, which was also founded by Jeff Bezos, has been building a new launchpad in earnest, so that it can launch New Glenn flights by the end of the year.
For the very first time, biologists packed nonliving components into a cell-like membrane, piece by piece, and witnessed the bag of molecules start to behave like life. The lab-made synthetic cell grew, replicated its DNA, and divided, demonstrating the basic functions of a cell cycle.
It's "an impressive step," said Jack Szostak, who studies the origins of life at the University of Chicago and was not involved in the research. "I don't know of any other effort to put together an artificial cell from biological components that has progressed so far."
The cell is not alive by any definition. It can't survive without constant deliveries of food and ribosomes, the machinery needed to make proteins. It has no defenses or a good waste removal system. But it's the strongest demonstration yet that it is possible to generate life from nonlife, a goal that synthetic biologists have been chasing for decades.
"It's a big step forward to this holy grail of making a living thing out of dead components," said Sijbren Otto, a systems chemist at the Stratingh Institute for Chemistry in the Netherlands who was not involved in the work. "It's not completely there yet, but it's definitely getting quite close."
Since these cells were pieced together from scratch, and all the molecular parts were crafted in the lab, scientists can tinker with the system and switch components in and out. "I have a blueprint, I have a full chemical ingredient list of every component," said Kate Adamala, a synthetic biologist at the University of Minnesota who led the new study, which is not yet peer-reviewed. With such flexibility, this kind of synthetic cell could eventually be coaxed to create new materials, such as biofuels and drugs, and help researchers study disease.
It could also give scientists insight into some of their deepest existential questions: What is the minimum needed to sustain life? How could life start? What happens if we alter the biology that composes life on Earth today?
Or, as Adamala put it: "What else can biology do?"
Some 4 billion years ago, a bunch of nonliving molecules got together to form the first protocells. They fed, grew, and divided. Then, over time, evolutionary processes emerged that let these cells change and diversify into many different types, decorating a barren world with all manner of strange beings. A purely chemical world blossomed into a biological one. Scientists cannot agree on how this shift from nonlife to life, or abiogenesis, happened, but some have turned their sights on trying it out for themselves in the lab.
For decades, researchers have taken different approaches to this challenge. Some, like the synthetic biologist John Glass at the J. Craig Venter Institute, are stripping down bacterial cells to their smallest, barest genomes to reveal a cell's minimum requirements to stay alive. Others, like Otto, try to build cells with molecules that differ from those found in Earth biology.
Adamala also works from the ground up, but with biological molecules found in nature today. When she started her lab in 2016, she envisioned assembling a synthetic cell, a proof of concept, that could undergo a complete cycle of cell division using its own genome.
She found an instruction manual in what all known cells have in common: They grow, they duplicate their DNA, they divide, and they evolve. They transcribe their DNA into RNA and then make proteins to carry out these tasks and others that keep a cell running, such as metabolizing molecules for energy. All of this is done inside a lipid membrane, which holds all the necessary materials in one place. Adamala's team needed to build their synthetic cell a genome and supply it with all the materials to carry out those tasks.
They developed and optimized different ingredients, most inspired by other labs, before combining them together inside liposomes — hollow sacs enclosed by a simple lipid membrane. This would serve as the cellular body.
They started with a cell's most fundamental system: its mechanism for copying its DNA and passing it down to daughter cells. They adopted a DNA replication system, pioneered by the synthetic biologists Hannes Mutschler and Christophe Danelon, and tweaked it to work alongside other systems, including a commercial pack of 36 enzymes that let the cell read DNA and make proteins. Adamala's team fiddled with their cellular brew, switching genes in and out and adjusting concentrations of various molecules, to get the crucial information-carrying and protein-making genetic systems to jibe.
Their tiny synthetic genome did not encode any metabolic genes, which would let the cell process food and energy, or many of the complex molecules a cell needs. So, in parallel, the researchers prepped some supply packs.
They filled other liposomes with sugar, lipids, and enzymes, as well as complex molecules, such as transfer RNA (tRNA) and ribosomes, which work together to translate genetic instructions into proteins. For their protocell to accept these crucial supplies, the team also modified a protein that would sit in the cell membrane and attract the lipid bubbles. When a bubble bumped into the cell, their membranes would fuse, releasing the supplies inside.
It wasn't easy to get all these genetic systems to work together successfully. After some more tweaking and optimizing, the cell started growing and replicating its DNA.
"I was almost ready to say 'Done' and 'We're going to publish it,'" Adamala recalled. But her vision for a synthetic cell had one more step: division.
Fluorescent microscopy shows a synthetic cell undergoing cell division: elongating, pinching, and separating into two daughter cells.
This was where the field had been stuck for some time. Researchers before Adamala had figured out different ways to feed and grow synthetic cells and to replicate their DNA. But cell division is a different beast. A typical cell reorganizes its cytoskeleton — a network of protein fibers that provide structural support — to halve its DNA and split. Synthetic biologists could not figure out how to get their cells to undergo this complex process.
So Adamala decided to ditch the cytoskeleton. One day, while tearing through the literature, she came across an interesting mechanism in a paper. By attaching protein tags to a cell membrane, the synthetic biologist Reinhard Lipowsky at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces attracted other proteins to crowd around and physically bend the membrane, forcing the cell to divide. Following this approach, Adamala tweaked a cell-membrane protein and tested it in her protocells. After several tries, it worked.
"I wasn't allowing myself to believe it for a while," she said. "It was like, 'Holy shit, did I actually make a dividing cell?' ... At some point, you've been checking enough that [you think], 'OK, now it's real.'"
This paper "beautifully demonstrates this division mechanism," said Job Boekhoven, a systems chemist at the Technical University of Munich who was not involved in the study. "That has been a huge achievement."
By putting together systems inspired by different labs — DNA replication; feeder liposomes; and swarming, division-inducing proteins — and then optimizing them to work together, Adamala's team showed that it is possible to induce the chemical world to form a biological one in the lab.
"Combining all of these things is a staggering technical accomplishment," Glass said. "I think it will prove to be a watershed event for the synthetic-cell field and biology in general."
Michael Lynch, an evolutionary biologist at Arizona State University who was also not involved in the study, agreed. It is "a synthetic biology tour de force," he said. However, he also cautioned against over-hyping the cell since it's not yet self-sustaining.
I think it will prove to be a watershed event for the synthetic-cell field and biology in general.
Once the synthetic cells were created, her students and others started calling them Adamala cells — a moniker she hated. She insisted that they name the cells after anything else, jokingly suggesting potatoes. So her students started calling them spudcells. "I'm Polish, I'm mostly made of potatoes, so that's fine with me," Adamala said.
Each cell is tiny. Its genome is way smaller than bacterial genomes, and it doesn't look like anything special. It's "beautiful to me because I'm super excited about it," Adamala said. "But if you look at it under the microscope, it's like, 'OK, it's a blob.'"
The cell could grow and divide. But could it take the next step toward life by evolving?
The researchers started fiddling with the synthetic cell's DNA to see if they could get some cells to grow larger or divide faster — in effect, creating genetic variation in the cell population. They found that the cells that grew bigger also had more daughter cells and started to become more populous. In other words, those traits started being selected for within the population, the first step toward evolution.
What Adamala's team demonstrated was not quite natural selection, the primary mechanism that drives evolutionary change, in which organisms that are better adapted to their environment are more likely to survive. Even if she got their cell to produce more daughter cells, she doesn't think it would lead to evolution. That's because Adamala's team had to create genetic variation synthetically, instead of allowing for random mutations in DNA. The enzyme that builds new DNA strands works too well, she said; it doesn't introduce meaningful mutations into the sequence. They will need to find an enzyme that is more error-prone — but not so error-prone that the genome's integrity and the cell's function is lost.
"Biology needs to change fast enough, but not too fast," Adamala said. She said that she needs to find the sweet spot between order and chaos, referencing the biochemist and complexity theorist Stuart Kauffman, a professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania, who argues that biology works best at the "edge of chaos."
A clear demonstration of an evolutionary process is "clearly something that's missing," Boekhoven said. "I'm sure that that's the next big step." Other researchers have shown adaptive evolution in other types of synthetic cells. But those cells were bacteria stripped of all but the bare minimum of genes — they weren't built from the ground up.
The cells are also limited by the fact that they need to be fed many of their raw materials. That the cells can't make their own ribosomes, the way natural cells do, "limits [their] potential for growth and sustained reproduction," said Szostak, who was Adamala's doctoral adviser. "If their system was able to generate its own ribosomes and other proteins and RNAs, it would be much closer to existing biological cells such as bacteria."
Adamala also thinks they will need to figure out a way to add a cytoskeleton to improve their replication system. Currently, the cells waste a lot of energy and time attracting molecules to crowd around and help them divide.
All told, scientists are far from building anything remotely close to a modern living cell — but this new one is still the most lifelike yet. "The modern cell is like a Dreamliner," Adamala said, referring to the Boeing 787 airplane. "We built a Wright flyer... the first bike frame with wings that flies 100 feet."
Alongside sharing the new results, Adamala and other synthetic biologists announced the formation of a nonprofit called Biotic, which they will use to make their synthetic biology tools available to researchers around the world. The team is releasing their data and methods so that synthetic biologists can start building and improving on their cell. The hope is that the work can be used, decades from now, to create plastics without fossil fuels, for example, or fertilizers or drugs.
These synthetic cells could also pave the way to the past, to the origins of biology itself. Life on Earth would have started from much simpler molecules than the ones that spudcells use. Still, Adamala's creation of a synthetic cell system from non-living materials brings researchers a step closer to exploring, in the lab, deeper questions about life's origins and requirements, a dream she shares with others.
"If you want to understand what life is," Boekhoven said, "you need to first build life."
Archivist David Rosenthal observes now that more material is posted online by LLMs than actual people, the bots are starting to ingest their own digital excrement, creating a negative feedback loop.
In the belief that "more is better", Large Language Models (LLMs) have insatiable appetites for training data. They started by scraping everything on the Web (robots.txt be dammed). When that ran out they downloaded the various pirate libraries (copyright be dammed). That exhausted the texts easily available in digital form, but their hunger wasn't assuaged. As for images, they partly used CAPTCHAs but mostly paid vast numbers of poor people to label the images with what they showed.
When the supply of text ran low, people observed that the LLMs were capable of generating human-like text in large quantities. The obvious idea was to pour the output of the LLMs into their training sets. This wasn't just a conscious decision, it was inevitable. The advent of LLMs rapidly polluted the Web with LLM output. Greg Druck's AI Now Writes as Many Online Articles as Humans notes that:
We observe significant growth in primarily AI-generated articles, coinciding with the launch of ChatGPT in November 2022. After only 12 months, primarily AI-generated articles accounted for 35.9% of articles published.
In Q1 2025, the quantity of primarily AI-generated articles being published on the web nearly equaled the quantity of human-written articles, 49.6% vs. 50.4%. In Q4 2025, primarily AI-generated articles surpassed human-written at 50.9%, before returning to 49.9% in Q1 2026.
Even if slop were not of undesirable quality, it is not produced by humans and thus is completely unsuitable as training data.
Previously:
(2026) A Wikipedia Clone Built on AI Hallucinations is Here to Hasten Along the Death of the Internet
(2025) When It All Comes Crashing Down: The Aftermath of the AI Boom
(2025) AI Favors Texts Written by Other AIs, Even When They're Worse Than Human Ones
(2025) What the Hell is Going on Right Now?
Travel like it's 0 AD. Plan and travel your next road trip along the old Roman road network. As if they had Google Maps.
https://www.euronews.com/culture/2026/07/02/ancient-romes-version-of-google-maps-how-long-to-reach-the-beach
https://omnesviae.org/
A digital tool lets users explore the Roman Empire's road network and, using historical data, estimate how long journeys between cities took 2,000 years ago.
A Dutch engineer has reconstructed, with the help of academic sources and ancient cartography, the road map that linked up the Roman Empire. The result, accessible from any browser, including on mobile phones, allows users to plot routes between cities of Antiquity and find out how many days the journey would have taken on foot or on horseback.
The tool is called OmnesViae and is based mainly on the Tabula Peutingeriana, a medieval copy of a Roman map that depicted the cursus publicus, the Empire's official road network.
As the western part of that document has been lost, the data for that area come from the Antonine Itinerary, another record from the Roman era. Behind the project is René Voorburg (source in Spanish), who drew on the work of historian Richard Talbert on the Tabula and on the location data from the Pleiades Project. The code and database are open access and can be consulted on Codeberg.
A very interesting article was published in Phys.org about how modern life might be outpacing our mind, which evolved to deal with a simpler world:
The human brain evolved for a world of familiar faces, immediate threats and small social groups. But the world around us is changing far faster than human biology can keep pace. That mismatch may help explain some of the stress, loneliness and constant comparison people experience today.
The review, co-authored by Dr. Jose Yong, senior lecturer at James Cook University, Singapore, and Dr. Sarah Chan, research fellow at the Lee Kuan Yew Centre for Innovative Cities at SUTD, is published in Behavioral Sciences.
Evolutionary mismatch describes what happens when human instincts shaped in one kind of environment are forced to operate in a very different one. Humans evolved in smaller, close-knit groups, where danger, belonging, status and trust were read through familiar people and everyday face-to-face signals. [...]
Social media makes this mismatch especially visible. The urge to understand our place within a group may once have helped people maintain trust and cooperation among familiar faces. Today, that same instinct can be triggered by an endless stream of curated lives, achievements and status signals.
At the center of the paper is competition. Modern environments can intensify the feeling that others are judging, outperforming or leaving us behind. [...]
"Competition is not new, but modern life can make it feel constant," said Yong. "An evolutionary perspective may help explain why people respond so strongly to comparison and the fear of falling behind, even when those signals come from strangers or screens rather than a small social group."
The paper draws on existing research and theory rather than new data. It presents evolutionary mismatch as one way of understanding modern social and psychological problems, alongside psychological, social and economic explanations. These ideas will need to be tested through real-world research.
That matters because the response to modern stress cannot rest only on telling individuals to be more resilient. If environments are activating old instincts in new and unhelpful ways, then cities, workplaces, digital platforms and communities also need to be part of the solution. [...]
"Stress, loneliness and anxiety are often treated as personal or lifestyle problems," said Chan. "But they may also reflect a mismatch between the environments people live in and the conditions our minds and bodies evolved to navigate. That means we should think not only about individual resilience, but also about how cities and communities are designed."
None of this is an argument for returning to a simpler past or a suggestion that modern life is inherently broken. It is a case for designing the present more thoughtfully. Understanding where modern life conflicts with the conditions human beings evolved to navigate could help researchers, designers and policymakers create cities and communities that feel less alienating and more supportive of everyday well-being.
More information
Jose C. Yong et al, Evolutionary Mismatch, Stress, and Competition: Making Sense of Psychosocial Problems in the Polycrisis Era, Behavioral Sciences (2026). DOI: 10.3390/bs16050650
https://www.slashgear.com/2204680/dot-law-change-no-brake-pedals-self-driving-cars/
Autonomous vehicles have been a big talking point in the United States as Waymo spreads to more cities and Tesla's Cybercab service launch looms overhead. In June 2026, the Department of Transportation (DOT) proposed changes to federal regulations that would allow the growing number of autonomous vehicles in the United States to forgo brake pedals.
As it stands, automakers building autonomous vehicles without brake pedals or other components must request an exemption from the federal government — and if granted, these vehicles must be limited to 2,500 per year. This proposed change will get autonomous vehicles on the road faster, with fewer obstacles. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is on board, with Administrator Jonathan Morrison stating that autonomous vehicles are the greatest innovation "since the Model T."
"NHTSA is tearing down pointless barriers to innovative designs while strengthening the fundamental safety requirements that matter and holding AV developers accountable for safe performance," Morrison said (via TechCrunch). The public has until July 27th to comment on the proposal before the DOT officially approves these changes.
Right now, most autonomous vehicles have a steering wheel, accelerator, and brake pedals, but even popular brands like Waymo have been considering ditching these components — federal regulations are the only thing in the way. One company that would benefit greatly from the DOT's changes is Tesla, given the upcoming Cybercab.
Currently, Tesla's robotaxi service has remained a small operation in Austin, Texas, with human monitors in the front seat. CEO Elon Musk has repeatedly blamed regulatory red tape for the delayed rollout of the Cybercab, which was first revealed at the "We, Robot" event in 2024. The NHTSA has been consistently investigating Tesla's Full Self-Driving mode for false claims and possible shortcomings, which could be prolonging the process. California has also claimed that FSD is engaging in false advertising and demanded that it change the name.
Early Cybercab prototypes featured no steering wheel or pedals, as well as a cabin with just two rear seats. The first production Cybercab came out of the Giga Texas facility in April 2026, despite a delay in the unsupervised driving feature. Now, a new Tesla document states that the controversial vehicle typically won't have a steering wheel, accelerator, or brake pedals. This means Tesla will need DOT's changes to go through to avoid more delays in its Cybercab services.
The standard model of particle physics may be due for a philosophical remodel, including rethinking what qualifies each of its particles to count as a particle to begin with.
Whether a particle is involved in making up matter or carrying a force, it or its constituent parts has a place in the standard model of particle physics. In this way, the standard model is similar to the periodic table of elements – it tabulates the building blocks of our world. But George Hobart at the University of Bristol in the UK now argues that this tabulation may need to be revisited, and even changed, to make for a more sound model of physical reality.
At the heart of his reasoning are particles called neutrinos, which are notoriously elusive because they only interact with other particles very weakly through gravity or across very short distances through the weak nuclear force. Additionally, their mass isn’t precisely known, nor can the standard model predict it through the so-called Higgs mechanism that explains the masses of all other particles.
There is another oddity, too. The standard model tabulates three different neutrinos – the electron neutrino, muon neutrino and tau neutrino – each of which has a more massive "big brother" particle that it shares a name with: electron, muon and tau. While an electron can’t spontaneously become a muon, an electron neutrino can, for example, randomly turn into a muon neutrino.
Hobart says it helps to visualise the standard model as an actual table with all the neutrinos in one row and their big brothers in another. "We have no evidence for the big brothers being able to swap horizontally; we have very good evidence that they can’t. But for some reason, the neutrinos... they are able to swap horizontally."
Hobart says that to a philosopher, this begs the question of whether categorising the particles in this way makes sense. From numerous experiments, we know that neutrinos exist and what properties all the other particles in the standard model have, but there are multiple ways to turn that knowledge into a system of understanding, or an ontology.
The current rows and columns of the standard model are based on the particle properties of mass and "flavour", which is the property that sets the three neutrinos apart. Neutrinos are troublesome on both fronts because they can change flavour and how they gain mass is mysterious, so Hobart proposes recasting the standard model so that its building blocks become "families", or whole rows, rather than the individual particles that comprise them.
In this way, the three neutrinos would be quantum states of some more fundamental entity, rather than three distinct objects. This might change how researchers think about their mysterious swapping abilities by getting them to first focus on what they most fundamentally share, says Hobart.
"This is not changing any of the physics," he says. "Rather [we] take this amazing theory that humans have been creating for close to a century now and try to figure out, how do we interpret this in a more philosophical way and how should that influence our picture of the world? That picture of the world then might help us look in new areas." Hobart presented the work at the Foundations of Physics conference in Irvine, California, on 17 June.
Noel Swanson at the University of Delaware says that the way particles are typified within the standard model relies on idealisations of what it means to be a particle, which philosophers are still debating. Proposals like Hobart's are worth thinking through and it would be surprising if properties like mass or flavour eventually proved to be the most fundamental properties of physical objects, he says.
"I suspect that, at a more fundamental level, you have something that looks approximately like a field, and the particles are different kinds of excitations of that thing. It makes sense to categorise excitations the way we do in the standard model, but if you view those as sort of like fundamental ‘joints’ of nature, that would probably be a mistake," says Swanson.
The discussion about the exact philosophical nature of particles is ongoing, as are experimental investigations of neutrinos. Philosophy and more applied branches of physics rarely work in close contact, but here there might be a chance for the two to inform each other, says Swanson.
"How you interpret these quite weird particles might motivate which lines of research you want to go down next," says Hobart.
Derek Thompson has republished excerpts from an almost 100-year-old report on what the US was like in the 1920s. He includes some of the charts and summaries.
One hundred years ago, on September 26, 1929, President Herbert Hoover gathered a group of social scientists at the White House. He asked them to begin research on the most detailed report ever produced on the state of the nation. Four years later, running more than 1,500 pages long, Recent Social Trends was published, offering an unusually granular look at life in the mid-1920s.
The document is almost entirely forgotten. But today, for America's 250th birthday, I'm blowing the cobwebs off this sucker and taking readers inside its yellowed pages for a look back at what life was like in the U.S. exactly 100 years ago, when the U.S. was celebrating its sesquicentennial anniversary.
Derek observes some interesting parallels between US society around both the sesquicentennial and the recent semiquincentennial.
A scanned version of Recent Social Trends in the United States: Report of the President's Research Committee on Social Trends is available online having been scanned at the University of California back when scanning old material was still allowed, though there are paper copies there and elsewhere. For now.
The distro formerly known as Raspbian has received some modest tweaks – and a whole new kernel version.
Raspberry Pi Ltd is a little capricious when it comes to version numbering for Raspberry Pi OS, and although this release contains a fairly significant change, it doesn't seem to have a different version number. While PiOS is based on Debian 13 "Trixie," the company significantly customizes upstream Debian, including newer kernels.
For 13 years now, Raspberry Pi has been adding new sections to the top of a single release notes file, which tells us that this build is dated 2026-06-18 and updates the kernel from version 6.12.75 to version 6.18.34. Even so, the version number on the splash screen is strangely unchanged. It remains at 6.2, which was the modest security update announced in April. Now there's a much bigger change – but no announcement and no new version number. So much for version numbers having meaning.
[...] So what is new in the latest version of PiOS? Well, the kernel is now version 6.18 from November, which became the LTS kernel within days. By default, PiOS 6 uses the labcw Wayland compositor with some components drawn from LXDE, such as the panel and file manager.
This is in place of its old customized version of LXDE, formerly called PIXEL. This release includes labwc version 0.9.7, replacing version 0.9.2. You can still switch back to Openbox for an X11 desktop if you want, but this disables the Wayland-based Raspberry Pi Connect that was added a couple of years ago (and might yet make it over to Windows).
[...] We upgraded a testbed Pi 5 from the January release, and it went smoothly with no apparent difference – and it still only takes about 560 MB of RAM under X11, which is very good for 2026. The new kernel means that some functions are slightly slower and some slightly faster, but you probably won't be able to tell. For the full lowdown, Linux news site Phoronix has extensive benchmarks.
[...] The new Wayland-based PiOS desktop environment is one of our favorites: it's simple, clean, and fast. Back in 2022, we said it was the best way to revive an old PC. The sad thing is that it still is. It takes as little memory as, say, BunsenLabs Carbon or Crunchbang++, but it's a much more familiar desktop layout and easier to use.
[...] There are lots of lightweight Linux distros out there. We still recommend Alpine Linux, but it needs some skill to install, especially if you want to dual-boot – it's harder than Arch Linux. Adélie Linux looks very promising but it's still in beta (there hasn't been a new release since we looked at it in late 2024). There are many others, but they're all rather specialist tools that need some Linux skills. The PiOS Desktop was by far the easiest.
The Linux world badly needs more lightweight distros that are ruthlessly easy to install – as the Raspberry Pi Desktop was. They need to offer a simple, quick, clean, Windows-like desktop – not something different for its own sake, like GNOME, or cluttered with myriad needless options like KDE Plasma. Something that will work happily on a 15-year-old PC with 3 GB of DDR2 RAM and a spinning disk – the sort of PC that still works fine, but would cost more to upgrade than the price of a Raspberry Pi 5. A distro that works happily on X11 would be a win, too, for old and unsupported GPUs.
The Raspberry Pi Desktop once fit that bill very well. The PC world could really benefit from a freshened-up version. If Mike Thompson and Peter Green from the original project are still around, they might even help.
Only 2% of U.S. adults turned to AI for healthcare information in 2024, and today the number is 61%, according to Salesforce's Connected Health Consumer report, a survey of 3,200 consumers worldwide aimed at better understanding how the rise of agentic AI is reshaping consumer expectations, attitudes, and demands within healthcare -- specifically patient experience.
Here are the four key findings of the 2026 Connected Health Consumer Report:
The report found that 60% of patients put off care because of scheduling friction. Patients are desperately seeking a better engagement experience with healthcare providers. The current multichannel engagement models fail to deliver a good experience, with 49% of patients noting abandoned calls after 10 minutes of holding.
The online experience is not better, with 46% of patients labeling websites as confusing and difficult to navigate. One in 6 now says ease of digital access is a deciding factor when choosing a provider. Record sharing is another major deficit for improved experiences. More than half of patients (60%) say poor record sharing between providers means repeating the same medical tests.
And 66% of patients have run out of medication while waiting for their prescriptions to be refilled.
Nearly 7 out of 10 patients would rather have access to 24/7 help via AI agents versus waiting to speak with a person during standard hours. Bad scheduling experiences are driving patients away from care, and AI agents are helping. Patients want proactive care, with 83% of patients interested in self-enrolled programs that can provide healthcare recommendations.
[...] Patients are ready to share health information for safer, more proactive care, with 73% saying they trust AI to flag potential drug interactions before picking up new prescriptions. The report found that 63% of patients want automatic reminders for medication use, 66% want AI agents that suggest prevention screenings, and 54% agree that AI agents can help them feel more secure in their provider's care.
Patients also look for AI agents to help create a smoother hospital-to-home handoff. More than 77% of patients would highly value an AI tool that can simplify the transition from hospital to home care. In fact, 72% would trust an AI agent to create a personalized follow-up schedule based on their complete health history.
The report found that the shift toward greater trust with AI in healthcare has grown significantly since 2024 -- 64% of patients would share their full medical history with AI for faster diagnosis, and only 15% would not share any data with AI agents. Patients are three times more likely to trust an AI agent integrated into their doctor's secure portal than one on a public chatbot or general website.
Patients do want human oversight in order to increase adoption of AI-driven support. The concern is if AI agents can handle sensitive health interactions, including concerns around accuracy and privacy of health data. Patients do not want AI agents to act alone, with 88% requiring evidence of human oversight before accepting AI for administrative support, and 90% expecting the same level of supervision for medical support. Patients also want the option to escalate to human support as an essential trust requirement. Patients also want proof behind AI-generated recommendations -- traceability and accountability.
The importance of AI agent traceability and accountability is one of the 12 rules for agentic AI successful transformations.
Time to start praying to the goddess of wisdom and war:
It's going to be a "messy" summer for security folks, especially when it comes to fixing the open source code that underpins their organizations.
That's according to Dan Lorenc, CEO and co-founder of Chainguard, a software supply-chain security company leading Athena, a newly formed coalition of about two dozen companies that wants to make the process of finding and fixing open source bugs "as easy to consume as possible."
The members have committed to using AI to prevent attacks on open source software. In addition to Chainguard, other founding member companies include BNY, Cisco, Cloudflare, Corridor, DepthFirst, Docker, JPMorganChase, Kyndryl, LTM, and PwC.
Many of these member companies are also partners with Anthropic's Project Glasswing and OpenAI Daybreak, which allow them to try out the pair's most advanced bug-hunting models. The coalition accepts vulnerability findings generated by all frontier models, according to Lorenc.
Athena has already processed more than 20,000 findings and developed over 2,000 patches across 500 open source projects.
In about three weeks, the coalition's first wave of bug disclosures will begin.
"This is going to be a messy summer for everyone," Lorenc told The Register in a phone interview.
[...] "Put yourself in the shoes of someone with Glasswing access," he said. "You get this crazy, new model that can find vulnerabilities everywhere, that no one had seen and you had missed for years with all of your other tooling. You run it on your code, and it finds tons of stuff in your first-party code, the stuff that you've written, and you fix all of that."
After running Mythos Preview on all of your organization's proprietary code, imagine pointing the model at an application. Most modern apps contain a mixture of code from different sources, mostly third-party. According to Lorenc, 95 percent of the code in any of these codebases is open source.
"When you run [advanced models] at the application level, you find a ton of vulnerabilities in open source code that you can't fix for yourself the same way you can that first-party code," Lorenc said. "So then you're left with: what to do?"
[...] The only guarantee in the entire disclosure process is that attackers are moving quickly and the time to exploit – that's the time between a CVE's public disclosure and first confirmed in-the-wild exploitation – has essentially collapsed.
[...] "It's a super awkward, strange world and timeline we are all living in," Lorenc said. "There's a ton of pressure because all of the frontier models are getting better, and the open models are getting better, and they're going to be able to start discovering these at the same time, too. So, that's what we're trying to help with: to be that clearinghouse for critical industry."
Athena coalition members submit vulnerabilities they find in open source code using any frontier model. Sometimes they find these bugs while scanning their own apps. In other cases they discover them after pointing Mythos or GPT‑5.5‑Cyber at a commonly used library, Lorenc said.
The companies submit a full report to Chainguard, which acts as a clearinghouse, deduplicating, correlating, and addressing findings from members in batches across entire libraries, hardening them against classes of vulnerabilities instead of just one bug.
Affected projects are rebuilt as private, hardened versions available to Athena members through Chainguard Libraries before vulnerabilities are publicly disclosed – and hopefully addressed upstream – a month later. For maintainers that can't make a permanent fix, Athena acts as a "maintainer of last resort," according to Lorenc.
On Thursday, the Linux Foundation joined the effort and announced Akrites, an industry coalition to defend open source software against AI-enabled threats, by finding and fixing vulnerabilities. Akrites establishes a shared Security Incident Response Team (SIRT) and a standardized Coordinated Vulnerability Disclosure (CVD) process.
Founding companies include Amazon Web Services, Anthropic, Chainguard, Cisco, Citi, Endor Labs, Ericsson, Google, IBM, JPMorganChase, Microsoft and GitHub, Nvidia, OpenAI, RapidFort, Red Hat, Rust Foundation, Sonatype, Vodafone, and Zscaler.
"As AI finds more vulnerabilities, the industry will rush to patch them. Without coordination, those fixes will fragment across different patches and forks, and maintainers who are already overwhelmed, unreachable, or haven't touched a project in years," Lorenc said, adding that Akrites provides a coordinated way to fix flaws upstream before criminals exploit them.
Plus having a dedicated SIRT gives maintainers a single partner - and disclosure -to work with on remediation instead of a hundred uncoordinated reports.
"Now the work is making sure there's always someone on the other end to catch them," Lorenc said.
The Medievalists has a short list of 10 inventions from the Middle Ages which have shaped the modern world.
The Middle Ages are often portrayed as an age of superstition and stagnation, but many of the technologies that transformed everyday life were first developed or greatly improved during this period. From eyeglasses and mechanical clocks to windmills and universities, these medieval inventions continue to shape the modern world.
The end has come for CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC), but it's not being turned off for fear of the world being sucked into some sort of cosmic anomaly - it's getting a major upgrade.
Physicists at CERN are still bidding goodbye to the LHC, per a Monday announcement from the lab, but this is very much a "the king is dead, long live the king" sort of moment, as the four-year shutdown will result in the completion of the High-Luminosity LHC, or HiLumi LHC, not a full-fledged replacement.
In essence, a younger, fitter model with much better eyesight and most of the same genes will be taking the throne as the world's largest particle accelerator, or human-made machine, for that matter, when it comes online in 2030 after what the lab is calling Long Shutdown 3.
HiLumi LHC will feature a number of upgrades. As its name suggests, increased luminosity is the biggest difference between the new model and the old LHC, which was first switched on in 2008.
Luminosity, as CERN explains, is proportional to the number of collisions produced in a given time. Those collisions are detected in the ATLAS and CMS detectors at the LHC (the pair were responsible for the world's first detection of the Higgs boson in 2012), which will be getting some major upgrades that, per CERN, will effectively make them into entirely new detectors.
In their current incarnation, ATLAS and CMS can detect somewhere in the neighborhood of 60 proton-proton collisions per firing cycle, in what's known as a "bunch crossing" where particles fired in opposite directions come in contact with each other. Once the upgrade to HiLumi LHC is complete, the hope is that they'll be capable of detecting between 140 and 200 collisions per cycle, a luminosity increase of a factor of 10, the lab said. Those collisions are picked out of a massive amount of data (more than five billion interactions per second), and the more collisions the experiments can detect, the greater potential they have of spotting something of interest to CERN particle physicists - like the Higgs boson.
To turn the LHC into the HiLumi LHC, ATLAS and CMS will have their trigger systems that select events for closer examination completely replaced, new detector technology will be installed, and timing detectors able to measure things at a resolution of "a few tens of picoseconds" will be installed.
[...] "In the LHC alone, 1.2 km of magnets and components will be removed and replaced with new equipment," Jean-Philippe Tock, CERN deputy engineering lead and coordinator for the shutdown, said in the lab's statement.
As for whether the refurbished LHC will increase the chance that humanity ends the world, CERN assured us the new one will be just as safe as the old 27-kilometer machine that's stirred up controversy and conspiracy theories over the past couple of decades.
"The Universe as a whole produces more than 10 million million LHC-like experiments per second," the lab spokesperson explained. "If such phenomena were dangerous or destructive, it would contradict what we see: stars, galaxies and the Earth still exist."