May 18

Former President Biden Diagnosed with "Aggressive" Prostate Cancer

President Biden (82) was diagnosed with the cancer during a physical due to urinary issues According to his office he has been evaluated with a Gleason score of 9 (with "metastasis to the bone"), but it may be controllable with hormone treatments. (The American Cancer Association's recommendations around prostate cancer screening)
posted by drewbage1847 at 1:50 PM - 46 comments

Just because you can doesn't mean you should

Everydle: It's your fault if something crashes
posted by chavenet at 1:24 PM - 8 comments

Uncle Patrick’s Secessionist Breakfast

Join the Mahoney family for strawberry lemonade, fruit and some fresh bread while they listen to a nice talk about California seceding from the US. A Sunday long read from Dave Eggers, who needs no introduction. [more inside]
posted by tommasz at 12:36 PM - 4 comments

A High Wireframe Act

40 years on, Flight Simulator is the greatest platform-jumping .video game ever. “We had this ambition to get the whole world in there,” says Bayless. “And, in fact, we kind of did.”
posted by storybored at 11:59 AM - 2 comments

Biosphere 2

"No one had ever built a sealed ecological world as big as Biosphere 2, and no one had ever survived so long inside one. The project would later be dismissed as a folly and a waste of effort. And yet, 25 years on, it’s an experiment worth rediscovering. Biosphere 2 might have some lessons to offer about managing Biosphere 1 — our planet."
posted by Lemkin at 9:22 AM - 23 comments

My Parents Expected to Be Retired.

Instead, They Are Raising My Sister’s Children. Shy and artistic, my sister was a straight-A student who played soccer in college. It wasn’t clear what came first — the drugs or the depression or the terrible men — but when she dropped out in 2011 as a freshman and spiraled into addiction, having four babies in less than two years, her dissolution was shocking. We’d known, vaguely, that the disease ran in the family — my grandmother warned that most of her 11 siblings dealt with substance abuse. But we had never seen the fallout up close. [more inside]
posted by Toddles at 8:52 AM - 9 comments

"Do you prefer it as an outrageous breakfast drink or a dessert sauce?"

(Note: Swearing, unpleasant dishes) Having braved the cottage cheese pineapples and jellied lamb of Cookery In Colour, and the piquant grapefruit cocktails of International Cookery In Colour, The Infinite Review attempts to make Neelix's Scratch and Sniff Recipes, a set of tie-in Star Trek: Voyager trading cards with show-inspired recipes.
posted by GenericUser at 7:08 AM - 4 comments

taking the 'self' out of 'self-publishing'

From BookBub, a survey of authors on AI: "Overall, opinions among authors are deeply divided — many consider any use of generative AI unethical and irresponsible, while others find it a helpful tool to enhance their writing and business processes. Some authors remain conflicted, and are still negotiating their own feelings about the utility and morality of this technology." [more inside]
posted by mittens at 7:05 AM - 29 comments

Mystical

I wanted to make a programming language that resembled magical circles.
posted by Wolfdog at 5:58 AM - 15 comments

Ian Martin, swearing consultant

These people wouldn’t last 10 seconds in an actual fight. They probably don’t even go to the gym because they haven’t got time. They just drink lots of coffee from 5am and shout … it’s a stupid and frankly inefficient way of working. — Armando Iannucci on The Thick of It, with recollections of this 20 year old semi-improvised low budget BBC politics satire from (nearly) all the actors involved. [more inside]
posted by ambrosen at 4:31 AM - 15 comments

There seems something unusually elastic about Girard’s thought

He was never a household name, although his work is widely cited in numerous disciplines. But in recent years, he has had a surprising resurgence for a Venn diagram of Catholics, entrepreneurs and those populating Donald Trump’s White House, who repurpose Girard’s thought in ways that are vehemently contested by some academics. from How a little-known French literary critic became a bellwether for the US right [Financial Times; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 2:22 AM - 14 comments

May 17

Hope spawns for cryptic endangered frogs decimated by bushfire

Hope spawns for cryptic endangered frogs decimated by bushfire. Scientists at Melbourne Zoo are celebrating after successfully breeding two critically endangered Victorian frog species in a world-first.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 10:59 PM - 3 comments

The Lost Colony was never really lost at all

The popular narrative that the English colonists were victims of native aggression has been proven wrong. Scott Dawson, author of “The Lost Colony and Hatteras Island,” together with British archeologist Dr. Mark Horton, has unearthed abundant evidence that the colonists were in fact assimilated. [more inside]
posted by kinnakeet at 6:25 PM - 15 comments

Relentless forward progress

An interesting moment for ultramarathon cycling. New records set for the Lands End to John O'Groats round-trip route, and for 24-hour virtual cycling. [more inside]
posted by adamrice at 5:52 PM - 7 comments

Poets tend not to enjoy parties

I have always liked parties, largely because of their unscripted nature and air of imminent danger. Giving or going to one is a high-risk activity, if done properly. from All Yesterday's Parties by Frances Wilson [The Literary Review]
posted by chavenet at 12:06 PM - 12 comments

Emus swam like periscopes to freedom and set up life on the beach

Emus swam like periscopes to freedom and set up life on the beach. When a businessman imported emus to his private island on the New South Wales south coast, he did not realise they could swim for freedom and set up their own thriving colony. [more inside]
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 9:34 AM - 8 comments

Servant of the People

A two-part documentary about Volodomyr Zelensky Pt. 1, Pt.2 Added value: The Servant of the People S1 E1
posted by mumimor at 8:02 AM - 16 comments

The Blasters: American Music

"The Blasters emerged in 1979, put out four albums in six years, and then promptly fell apart. A great band that barely was, but in that time they put out some truly incredible music." [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 7:55 AM - 18 comments

📚 Canadian small presses #14 📚

Under the fold, more Ontario small presses Assembly Press, Biblioasis, and Fitzhenry & Whiteside Ltd. [more inside]
posted by joannemerriam at 7:30 AM - 1 comment

Anti-inductive dice

David and Goliath each have a six-sided die. David’s die has the numbers {1, 1, 4, 4, 5, 6}, and Goliath’s die has the numbers {0, 1, 2, 6, 6, 6}. If each of them throws his die n times and announces the total, then Goliath is more likely than David to have the higher total, except when... [more inside]
posted by Wolfdog at 5:17 AM - 14 comments

Skepticism comes easily to life underground

The entire time I’m underground, it is impossible to shake off a latent sense of the absurd. The planning is exceptional, the engineering impressive; Swiss civil protection services have thought of everything. But to house an entire nation underground for even a few days is akin to trying to colonize the moon: There are so many unknowns that even the most brilliant and thorough plans can easily fail. from Safe Space [The Dial]
posted by chavenet at 12:48 AM - 9 comments

May 16

A Missing Fragment of the Bayeux Tapestry Is Returning to France

Newly Rediscovered, a Missing Fragment of the Bayeux Tapestry Is Returning to France. Likely removed by Nazi researchers, the scrap of fabric is a small but crucial part of the tattered tapestry’s nearly 1000-year history. Under the command of SS chief Heinrich Himmler, the Ahnenerbe group commissioned Schlabow and other scientists to travel to occupied France and study the Bayeux Tapestry in 1941. At some point, a member of the group apparently removed a small section of the underside of the tapestry and brought it back to Germany, where it remained hidden for decades.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 10:25 PM - 8 comments

Brother #1

Tonight, Smithsonian Events is Presenting:' Pol Pot Dancing.' "In Person: Sophiline Cheam, choreographer; Toni Shapiro-Phim, cultural anthropologist and dance ethnologist. This documentary frames the long reach and heavy weight of history through the multigenerational lineage of classical Cambodian dance." [more inside]
posted by clavdivs at 5:57 PM - 3 comments

14:1 he gets in on the first ballot

Major League Baseball Commish Rob Manfred has removed Pete Rose, the "Black Sox" and anyone who is dead from the permanently ineligible list. [more inside]
posted by a non mouse, a cow herd at 3:58 PM - 31 comments

God Hates A Coward

In the latest episode of Pretty Good internet sports troubadour Jon Bois ruminates on pointlessness, using the career of baseball player Joe Sprinz as his vehicle for doing so. [more inside]
posted by NoxAeternum at 3:16 PM - 8 comments

Cat loses three legs, which is Good News, Actually

"There's no way that there's a cat with extra legs. Cats only have four legs," she said. "Then I got the pictures and went, 'Oh, my God! This cat has extra legs."' [more inside]
posted by cabbage raccoon at 11:59 AM - 24 comments

The Pinnacle Club Centennial

The Pinnacle Club, a UK organization for women climbers found in 1921, celebrated its centennial with, among other things, a short documentary film and the digitization of their journals, published since 1924. [more inside]
posted by jedicus at 11:11 AM - 1 comment

You will die someday. Probably not today.

Would you believe me if I told you that you’re actually more likely to die on your birthday than on other days of the year? This statistical curiosity is called the birthday effect. There have been a bunch of studies on different populations that have proven that it’s real. But I was skeptical (maybe you are too?), so let’s run our own study to understand how – and if – it works. [The Pudding]
posted by chavenet at 11:07 AM - 32 comments

The Dad Rock That Made Her a Woman

Niko Stratis on her new book about the music that helped her survive before she transitioned. (slGQ) [more inside]
posted by Kitteh at 8:14 AM - 5 comments

Who Photographed Napalm Girl?

A photo of then 9-year-old Phan Thi Kim Phuc running, naked and terrified, after a napalm attack, is one of the most famous photos from the Vietnam War. AP photographer Nick Ut, then 21, won a Pulitzer Prize for the photo, and also the World Press Photo of the Year in 1973. The 2025 documentary The Stringer has brought to light questions that Nick Ut took the photo, officially called The Terror of War. After their own investigation, May 16, World Press Photo changed its attribution of the photo to unknown after its investigation concluded that "photographers Nguyễn Thành Nghệ or Huỳnh Công Phúc may have been better positioned to take the photograph than Nick Út." [more inside]
posted by girlmightlive at 8:02 AM - 11 comments

Chinese police officer disgraced on duty

Officer Fu Zai’s shocking betrayal of the public he is meant to serve was caught on video.
posted by Lemkin at 7:32 AM - 20 comments

First Nations director made a joyful animation

Tired of tragic projects, this First Nations director made a joyful animation. A lost thylacine — better known as a Tasmanian tiger — finds his people in this new homegrown animation led by Nakkiah Lui and Rhys Darby.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 6:37 AM - 1 comment

Private Eye salutes best investigative reporting of the year

Every year, the British satirical magazine Private Eye runs The Paul Foot Awards to draw attention to the best investigative reporting work of the past 12 months. The mag's Page 94 podcast is devoting an episode to each contender, the first of which describes an FT journalist's determined work to bring cases of lead poisoning to light. [more inside]
posted by Paul Slade at 5:45 AM - 7 comments

Best British Railway Art

Vote for the best British railway-related painting. The contest is linked with celebrations marking 200 years since the opening of the pioneering Stockton and Darlington Railway.
posted by Phanx at 5:03 AM - 8 comments

📚 Canadian small presses #13 📚

Under the fold, Ontario small presses Between the Lines Books, Mawenzi House, and Porcupine’s Quill. [more inside]
posted by joannemerriam at 4:51 AM - 3 comments

An Exemplum

Iceland approved the 4-day workweek in 2019: nearly 6 years later, all the predictions made have come true. - "In 2019, Iceland made headlines by becoming one of the first countries in the world to adopt the four-day working week, not through a general law, but through agreements allowing workers to negotiate shorter weeks or reduced hours. Five years on, the results are indisputable."[1,2,3] [more inside]
posted by kliuless at 12:12 AM - 63 comments

There is nothing wrong with this, but it is not communication

The automation of language, whether by Erasmians or by LLMs, depends on rejecting novelty: both work in identical fashion by decomposing apparently new situations and topics into familiar elements, so that those situations can be addressed with language that is already associated with those elements in the training corpus. What this means for Grandgousier and Gallet is that the humanist mindset that enables them to speak so well also makes them approach the conflict with a certain arrogance – with the assumption that they can anticipate anything the other side might conceivably have to say on the basis of what they have already read. from Methodical banality [Aeon; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 12:06 AM - 11 comments

May 15

Evan Dorkin

It’s a Comic Book, You Idiot!: A Thank You To Cartoonist Evan Dorkin [more inside]
posted by Lemkin at 8:07 PM - 11 comments

EcoMob working to turn food waste into nutrient-rich soil booster

Indigenous business works to divert tonnes of food waste from tip. Each year Australians waste more than seven million tonnes of food at a cost of $36.6 billion to the economy. A Darwin enterprise is doing its bit to change that. EcoMob working to turn food waste into nutrient-rich soil booster.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 6:39 PM - 6 comments

“The implication was that they were connected.”

The Trump administration used U.S. diplomats to pressure African governments into fast-tracking approvals for Elon Musk’s satellite company while Musk was working in the White House. The effort involved close coordination between the State Department and Starlink, who described their goal as to “ram this through.” Kristofer Harrison, who served as a State Department official in the George W. Bush administration, said: “If this was done by another country, we absolutely would call this corruption. Because it is corruption.” [more inside]
posted by subdee at 6:37 PM - 10 comments

"Peg, we need a woman’s song." "Fuck off, I’m doing the accounts"

Peggy Seeger answers reader questions in The Guardian and talks about touring aged 90, Ewan MacColl, Pete Seeger, Ruth Crawford Seeger, climate change and America.
posted by paduasoy at 3:08 PM - 6 comments

The inspiration for this invention was simply utility

I’ve come to think about it like this: the items we cherish, protect, and even ignore in our daily lives are all part of a larger and often unexamined picture. Small moments or inventions may not live vividly in the public consciousness, but they are still nonetheless crucial points of color -- like strikes of gold creating a pointillism sun. If we can appreciate small legacies like these, maybe we can learn to appreciate our own as well. from 54 years ago, a computer programmer fixed a massive bug — and created an existential crisis [Inverse]
posted by chavenet at 11:04 AM - 28 comments

AlphaEvolve

Today, we’re announcing AlphaEvolve, an evolutionary coding agent powered by large language models for general-purpose algorithm discovery and optimization. AlphaEvolve pairs the creative problem-solving capabilities of our Gemini models with automated evaluators that verify answers, and uses an evolutionary framework to improve upon the most promising ideas. … While AlphaEvolve is currently being applied across math and computing, its general nature means it can be applied to any problem whose solution can be described as an algorithm, and automatically verified. We believe AlphaEvolve could be transformative across many more areas such as material science, drug discovery, sustainability and wider technological and business applications.
posted by Lemkin at 9:04 AM - 54 comments

"countercultural complicity in inspiring a movement fixated on murder"

"[T]his terrifying global network can have its intellectual core traced back to one single book: James Mason’s Siege. And it, in turn, only exists because of the efforts of a handful of people in a corner of the 1980s counterculture who worked together to make its publication a reality."
Spencer Sunshine in The Quietus: The Countercultural Figures who helped give birth to the Neo-Nazi Terrorist Networks of Today
posted by Pope Guilty at 6:28 AM - 75 comments

It's time to win

I had high hopes for Mark Carney, but then he created a Ministry of AI and appointed Evan Solomon to the position. On Carney's new, gender-balanced cabinet. [more inside]
posted by joannemerriam at 6:13 AM - 58 comments

ICE is running out of space

Addicted to ICE: Trump's Deportation Plans Hinge on Small Towns Hooked on Private Prisons [ungated] - "Like a growing number of US communities, Torrance County, New Mexico, is convinced its financial survival depends on locking up immigrants." [more inside]
posted by kliuless at 1:01 AM - 18 comments

From fitness to finance sessions, local library offerings are evolving

From fitness to finance sessions, local library offerings are evolving.
posted by chariot pulled by cassowaries at 12:12 AM - 9 comments

A push to explore sex and romance as part of a game’s narrative

Somewhere in Warsaw, Poland, two actors are pretending to have sex. It’s not the most intimate of environments. The mood lighting, if you can call it that, is fluorescent bulbs burning overhead, making the sterile, white walls look even brighter than they actually are. In lieu of a bed or couch, the actors fit tightly into a makeshift tank—a technical mockup that's more pipes and bars than any sort of vehicle—to capture an intimate scene between Cyberpunk 2077 mercenaries V and Panam Palmer. fromHow Video Game Sex Scenes Are Made [404 Media; ungated]
posted by chavenet at 12:02 AM - 13 comments

May 14

Your Therapy Will Not Be Regulated (And Neither Will Anything Else)

Mark Zuckerberg is giving public interviews on Meta’s AI strategy, often dropping that chatbots could address the epidemic of loneliness by serving as friends or, more surprisingly, as therapists.... Yesterday, as if on cue, the Committee on Energy and Commerce in the U.S. House of Representatives passed this proposal to prohibit state regulation of AI and “automated decision systems” for TEN YEARS, which is defined as systems that "materially influence or replace human decision making." [more inside]
posted by subdee at 7:02 PM - 58 comments

Grauniad: Why millennials are now considered achingly uncool

Cringe! How millennials became uncool. A guide to Millennial-Gen Z conflict, from the Guardian. Longreads introduces the story, continue reading an ungated version.
The internet had been my space before and now there was this whole wave of new people with no experience or credibility!
Sounds not unlike the Eternal September to me, who has a lot of trouble telling these two cohorts apart, especially w/r/t denim.
posted by Rash at 1:21 PM - 135 comments

« Older posts