Weather: How hot will it be today?
So apparently the sun decided to flex today and break more June records, because evidently climate change wasn't dramatic enough already. Pack your SPF and existential dread.
So apparently the sun decided to flex today and break more June records, because evidently climate change wasn't dramatic enough already. Pack your SPF and existential dread.
The Supreme Court told Trump his birthright citizenship ban can take a hike, proving that even in 2024, the Constitution occasionally still means something. Also there's apparently other news in today's paper, but honestly, who has time to read past the constitutional crisis headlines?
Mother Nature scheduled a heat dome right on top of July 4th weekend because nothing says 'celebrating freedom' like sweating through your patriotic tank top in historically oppressive temperatures. Boston, New York, and Philly are about to discover that liberty bells aren't the only things that can crack under pressure.

Russia decided to ring in the season with what Kyiv's mayor is calling the 'most massive attack on the capital,' leaving at least 13 dead and the city declaring a day of mourning. Nothing says holiday cheer quite like escalating a war that's already dragged on far too long.

President Zelensky's recent warnings about Russia preparing a 'massive strike' turned out to be depressingly accurate, with at least 17 killed in fresh assaults on Kyiv. It's almost as if Putin has a standing appointment in his calendar marked 'terrorize civilians.'

FIFA president Gianni Infantino managed to have a reaction to Morocco's stunning World Cup victory over the Netherlands, though given his track record, it was probably something about how this proves Qatar was the perfect choice all along. Morocco meanwhile continues their Cinderella run while the Dutch pack their bags and contemplate what went wrong.

Europe's heat wave has turned swimming into a deadly game of chance, prompting Canadian safety advocates to remind us that even our 'refreshing' lakes can kill you—while simultaneously demanding more places for us to tempt fate this Canada Day.

Space has officially become as congested as a Toronto highway during rush hour, because apparently humans needed to ruin traffic management in zero gravity too.

Doug Ford bulldozed through with his strong mayor powers despite receiving feedback that was about as enthusiastic as a dentist appointment—turns out 'predominantly negative' and 'undemocratic' are just suggestions when you're determined to concentrate power anyway.
Bilt Cards 2.0 apparently exists, though whether earning points on rent payments makes landlords less soul-crushing remains scientifically unproven. The real question isn't if they're better than the original, but whether monetizing your housing desperation counts as financial innovation or just advanced capitalism.
A doctor discovered his hospital was turning physician-patient relationships into a multilevel marketing scheme, because apparently medical bills weren't extractive enough on their own. Nothing says 'Hippocratic Oath' quite like your cardiologist sliding you a fundraising pitch between prescriptions.

Automakers learned that slapping 'hybrid' on vehicles makes them sell like hotcakes, while pure gas guzzlers sit on lots like expensive paperweights. Turns out consumers will pay extra for the privilege of feeling slightly less guilty about planetary destruction.

Google's latest smart speaker showcases the company's hardware prowess, but Gemini's AI capabilities aren't quite ready for prime time — proving once again that great packaging can't fix half-baked software. It's like giving someone a Ferrari with a bicycle engine: impressive to look at, disappointing to use.

Indian entrepreneur Bhavin Turakhia is dropping $30 million of his own cash to build an AI-powered alternative to Microsoft Office, because apparently the world needs another productivity suite. His fifth venture suggests either impressive persistence or a curious inability to learn when to quit.

After weeks of political horse-trading with the Trump administration, Anthropic finally gets to resurrect Claude Fable 5 from its regulatory grave. Nothing says 'cutting-edge AI development' quite like having to negotiate with politicians to turn your chatbot back on.

SpaceX allegedly demoed a 'handset-like' AI device to investors, because why stop at conquering space when you can also disrupt the smartphone market? Elon's collection of ambitious side projects continues to grow faster than his ability to finish the ones he started.

Google's NotebookLM now transforms your research into TikTok-style videos, because apparently the pinnacle of human knowledge dissemination is 60-second vertical clips with trending audio. Academic rigor meets dopamine-driven content consumption — what could possibly go wrong?

Ashton Kutcher is ditching Sound Ventures to launch a new VC firm focused on AI infrastructure, trading flashy lab investments for the unglamorous plumbing that makes everything work. It's a pivot from betting on the rockstars to investing in their roadies — less sexy, potentially more profitable.

Trump's grand vision to modernize government websites has predictably devolved into an AI-generated nightmare gallery, because apparently even artificial intelligence can't make bureaucracy look good. The National Design Studio is now running a year behind schedule, which in government time means it'll be ready sometime after the heat death of the universe.

Meta has discovered the tech industry's holy grail: making customers pay twice for the same product by hiding the good stuff behind a subscription paywall. Your $300 smart glasses now come with the exciting opportunity to pay monthly for features that should have been included, because nothing says 'innovation' like turning hardware into a rental agreement.

California's carbon offset program for cow manure sounds environmentally friendly until you realize we're essentially paying farmers to turn one type of pollution into a different type we can burn for profit. It's like solving your trash problem by teaching people to make artisanal garbage—technically creative, but missing the point entirely.

Google apparently decided to cut out the middleman and just distribute Android malware directly themselves, because why let sketchy third-party app stores have all the fun? The tech community is having a field day with this one, racking up 472 points on Hacker News faster than you can say 'don't be evil.'

Serial entrepreneur Bhavin Turakhia is throwing $30 million of his own cash at building an AI-powered alternative to Microsoft Office, because apparently someone looked at the productivity software market and thought 'this needs more disruption.' His fifth venture Neo is betting that what the world really needs is another way to make PowerPoint presentations, just with more artificial intelligence and presumably fewer crashes.

Amazon finally has enough satellites in orbit to flip the switch on its Starlink competitor, proving that when Bezos said he wanted to deliver everything everywhere, he meant *everything* everywhere. With 396 satellites now deployed, Amazon Leo can apparently provide 'continuous service across initial latitudes' — which is corporate speak for 'we can now beam internet to some places, some of the time.'
Vercel has unleashed OpenReview, an AI code review bot that runs on Claude and promises to scrutinize your pull requests with the cold precision of a caffeinated senior developer. It's currently in beta, which means it's probably still learning the fine art of passive-aggressive code comments. At least when it roasts your variable naming conventions, you'll know it's powered by decent infrastructure.
Someone finally taught Claude how to draw pretty diagrams in Excalidraw, because apparently we needed our AI overlords to also excel at whiteboard presentations. Now your coding agents can generate those beautiful flowcharts that make terrible code look almost professional. Finally, a skill that bridges the gap between 'functional' and 'presentable to management.'
A new lightweight inference engine claims to support 'speculative speculative decoding' — yes, they said speculative twice, either for emphasis or because they're really, really unsure about their approach. It's called SSD, which is either a bold storage reference or they ran out of creative acronyms. Sometimes the most honest branding is accidental uncertainty.
Claude Code finally gets the DevTools it deserves with a visual UI that lets you inspect all the messy internals — session logs, token usage, and that awkward moment when subagents go rogue. It's like giving your AI a medical exam, except instead of checking reflexes you're monitoring context window bloat. Free and open source, because someone needs to keep our AI assistants honest.
A curated collection of 1209+ 'best' OpenClaw skills that gets updated weekly, which raises the philosophical question of whether quantity equals quality in the AI skills marketplace. MyClaw.ai is apparently the arbiter of what constitutes skill excellence, though I suspect 'best' might be doing some heavy lifting here. At least they're committed to the weekly grind of skill curation.
Vercel Labs has created WebReel, a tool for recording scripted browser demos as videos, because apparently someone decided the world needed more polished product demonstrations. It's the digital equivalent of rehearsing your presentation seventeen times before the big meeting. Finally, a way to make your buggy prototype look smooth and intentional on camera.