Blog

Ferrari’s first electric car isn’t for you

Ferrari’s first electric car isn’t for you

🚀 Read this must-read post from TechCrunch 📖 📂 **Category**: Transportation,electric vehicles,EVs,Ferrari,ferrari luce 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: It seems everyone is mad about Ferrari's first electric car. The car is called Los and was unveiled on Monday. The design of the five-seater (gasp!) was largely led by Jony Ive and the design company he runs with Marc Newson, LoveFrom. Although it has a lot of specs – it has 1,000 horsepower and the ability to hit 60 mph in just over two seconds – it is considered the most ridiculous new car since the Cybertruck. This widespread disapproval of Nissan's…
Read More
Beyond the Prompt: Claude Code

Beyond the Prompt: Claude Code

💥 Explore this awesome post from Hacker News 📖 📂 **Category**: 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: Claude Code is one of those tools where the difference between a casual user and someone who has internalized it is enormous. The casual user types prompts, accepts suggestions, and treats it like a fancier autocomplete. The daily driver uses it like a programmable agent with memory, custom commands, parallel sessions, and a project setup that compounds over time. This guide is for the second kind of person, assuming you already know what claude does when you type it in a terminal. 1. Claude Code…
Read More
Iranian hackers have been blamed for a breach of Los Angeles’ transportation system that took weeks to recover

Iranian hackers have been blamed for a breach of Los Angeles’ transportation system that took weeks to recover

✨ Discover this must-read post from TechCrunch 📖 📂 **Category**: Security,Ababil of Minab,cybersecurity,data breach,In Brief,iran,LACMTA,Los Angeles,Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Security researchers say the hack of Los Angeles' transit system (the Los Angeles County Transit Authority, or LACMTA) in March was the work of Iranian-backed hackers. Israeli startup Gambit Security said in a report on Tuesday that the hackers worked for the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and State Security. Reuters first reported on the maneuver report. A group of hacking activists calling themselves “Ababil Minab” claimed responsibility for the previous hack, saying it stole data…
Read More

Erin Brockovich made a map to track data centers around the country

✨ Read this trending post from Hacker News 📖 📂 **Category**: ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: Erin Brockovich, the environmental activist whose name and work you may recognize from the Oscar-winning movie Erin Brockovich, has created a tool to map data centers across the country, along with a form for people to report data centers and their impacts in their community. “The RACE to build AI infrastructures is unfolding town by town across America. In some places, data centers are welcomed,” Brockovich writes on the site (emphasis hers). “In others, they are delayed, contested or abandoned altogether. This MAP captures the…
Read More
DuckDuckGo installs rose 30% as users refused to be “forced” to search by Google’s AI

DuckDuckGo installs rose 30% as users refused to be “forced” to search by Google’s AI

✨ Explore this trending post from TechCrunch 📖 📂 **Category**: AI,Enterprise,AI search,DuckDuckGo,Google,google io 2026,Google Search 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: Last week, after Google announced its massive search overhaul, I heard a woman on the phone say she was switching to DuckDuckGo because you could “opt out of using AI.” “Google isn't Google anymore,” she said. Others seem to have the same idea. At its annual I/O developer conference, the company said that its traditional list of blue links will be replaced by an AI agent that answers queries, executes tasks, and manages background monitoring agents. The backlash was severe. Some…
Read More
The just-say-no engineer was a ZIRP phenomenon

The just-say-no engineer was a ZIRP phenomenon

🚀 Explore this trending post from Hacker News 📖 📂 **Category**: ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: The engineer who says no all the time is a real archetype among senior and staff engineers. Their role is to slow things down, to block the development of features that add complexity, and to ensure that as little code gets written as possible (since code is a liability). We can think of this as the just-say-no engineer, as opposed to the just-say-yes engineer. The just-say-yes engineer is obsessed with moving fast, approves code changes by default, values MTTR over MTBF, and tends to ship…
Read More
The Trump administration wants nuclear startups to use plutonium in their reactors

The Trump administration wants nuclear startups to use plutonium in their reactors

💥 Check out this awesome post from TechCrunch 📖 📂 **Category**: Climate,Government & Policy,nuclear fission,nuclear power,nuclear weapons,Oklo,Trump Administration 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: For decades, the United States has had a plutonium problem. About 100 tons of the material were manufactured during the Cold War for use in making powerful atomic bombs. But as the nuclear stockpiles were dismantled, the government was forced to store radioactive materials in high-security facilities. Now she wants startups to help eliminate some of it. The Energy Department said Tuesday it has selected five nuclear startups to enter into negotiations with the government to acquire a…
Read More

So, Where Does Next-Token Prediction Leave Us?

🔥 Explore this trending post from Hacker News 📖 📂 **Category**: ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: Table of Contents Solved/Cooked The Meta-Contract How Did We Get Here? What’s Left? Solved/Cooked AI maximalists in some corners of the internet hate it when people refer to LLMs as just “next-token predictors” or “stochastic parrots”. It is instinctively taken as a pejorative. They use the words “solved” or “cooked” to signal the end of industries or classes of work that take real human creativity, expertise or effort. “Animation is solved”, “Hollywood is cooked”, “coding is solved”, “postgrad students are cooked” and so forth. It…
Read More
What to look for in Startup Battlefield 2026, and how to apply in time before the May 27 deadline

What to look for in Startup Battlefield 2026, and how to apply in time before the May 27 deadline

🚀 Read this trending post from TechCrunch 📖 📂 **Category**: Startups,Startup Battlefield,Startup Battlefield 200,TechCrunch Disrupt 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: I read thousands of Startup Battlefield apps every year. And every year, I see the same pattern: the founders who are at this stage are almost always the ones who almost never apply. They think they are too early. They think they need more traction. They think the software is for businesses further than they are now. So, here's what we're really looking for and how to make sure your app reflects it. The deadline for consideration is May 27, which…
Read More
Scientists say they’ve reversed brain aging with a simple nasal spray

Scientists say they’ve reversed brain aging with a simple nasal spray

✨ Read this awesome post from Hacker News 📖 📂 **Category**: ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: Researchers at Texas A&M University say they may have found a way to do just that using a simple nasal spray designed to reduce inflammation in the brain. In a new study, scientists reported that the treatment restored memory, reduced chronic inflammation, and improved brain cell function after just two doses. The team believes the findings could eventually lead to new therapies for conditions tied to aging and cognitive decline, including dementia and Alzheimer's disease. For years, scientists have known that aging brains often experience…
Read More