Article note: I'm old enough to remember in the post-9/11 era when we were rushing into the existence of DHS (legislated in 2002, established in 2003 - it's not old) and the criticism from either wing warned about the creation of a giant, unaccountable, inevitably overreaching monster due to a poorly considered knee-jerk reaction to one incident.
Oh look, an overreaching, unaccountable monster. Let's learn and fucking dismantle it.
Article note: It certainly seems to be a "The capitalists are ripping apart working systems so the number keeps going up" situation.
I think the most shocking bit is how uncorrelated with distance or difficulty it all is, I regularly have stuff get from China to a nearby sorting center faster than it gets from the sorting center to me, and see large fragile items like TVs that seem to be being sold for less than I'd expect shipping to cost... but also have letters take months, or packages disappear.
Article note: That went about as poorly as everyone expected.
Forget Premium, Pro, and Pro Max — Dell backtracked so hard its new laptops don’t even say Dell on top.
Nearly one year ago to the day, Dell killed off its long-standing XPS brand name in favor of milquetoast Premium, Plus, Pro, and Pro Max monikers - but it's back for CES 2026. The new XPS 14 and XPS 16 laptops look to win back fans of the "Extreme Performance System" with Dell's thinnest designs to date, a row of proper function keys, improved battery life, and Intel's new Panther Lake Core Ultra Series 3 processors. Dell even went as far as putting the XPS brand name on the lid, and finally marking the edges of its seamless haptic trackpad with subtle glass etching lines.
The XPS 14 and 16 are launching in select configurations on January …
Article note: Oh man, that's _delightful_ for playing with old laptops.
Modern Wifi, storage emulation including CD drives, all the things that are usually a hassle.
yyzkevin is launching an open source project to make a multifunction PCMCIA (later named PC) card for vintage computers. Details:
This is a Type II, 5V, 16-bit PC Card designed for use in compliant PCMCIA sockets and should work in most devices.
Built around the RP2350 and leveraging the ISA-like nature of the PCMCIA bus, this project benefits greatly from code interchangeability with other RP-based retro projects, most notably PicoGUS and PicoMEM.
The card has an onboard wireless module containing the Infineon CYW43439, same as found on the Raspberry Pi Pico W. This allows the card to attach to modern Wi-Fi networks (2.4GHz 802.11b/g/n WPA2). It can then emulate an NE2000 adapter and/or a dialup modem.
The card has an included Texas Instruments TLV320AIC3254 which calls itself a “Very Low-Power Stereo Audio CODEC with programmable miniDSP”.
Emulation of intelligent mode MPU-401 is possible thanks to implementation done by PicoGUS base on SoftMPU/HardMPU.
Sound Blaster emulation and the worlds first PCMCIA Gravis Ultrasound
Emulated Panasonic MKE CD-ROM
Storage Emulation
The USB port for the RP2354 is made available on the external connector
Article note: Years ago, I was arguing (with some CS/EE PhDs) that democracy can't survive without anonymity because mass surveillance implies mass coercion, even without any specific action.
Now that it's actively happening, the one who was most arguing against the idea has admitted they no longer go to protests because there doesn't seem to be an upshot and they're afraid of being the subject of some "Radical Leftist UK Professors Seen At Anti-Government Protest" propaganda.
I looked over my glasses at them but didn't say anything.
Article note: Oh look, an AMD accelerator architecture with no widely adopted programming system, several generations of false start abandoned tooling, and a programing model that is thesis-getting to figure out even narrowly (and apparently incompletely because there's nothing obvious about managing memory or execution latency, and the platform is full of it).
Surely someday they'll have a product that doesn't describe.
Article note: That's quite the trajectory.
The "I demand an immediate personalized answer to my specific question, even if it's merely a mis-phrased version of a question answered correctly and authoritatively in an easy to find location" vs. "Trying to build a knowledge base of quality reference material" tension of ...the web... has always been interesting.
It also hits the "LLMs trained on the predecessor platforms full of human experts, what do they do now that they've killed most of the platforms with human data" problem head on.
Article note: Neat! It shouldn't have nearly the resolution decimation of plenoptic methods, and the optical function is fun. The phase modulator is basically a weird liquid crystal display missing layers, which is practical hardware.