Weather: How hot will it be today?
Another day, another temperature record about to bite the dust – because apparently Mother Nature didn't get the memo about moderation. Pack your sunscreen and existential dread accordingly.
Another day, another temperature record about to bite the dust – because apparently Mother Nature didn't get the memo about moderation. Pack your sunscreen and existential dread accordingly.
The Gray Lady serves up today's helping of democracy with a side of questionable mineral rights deals, featuring American investors who seem to have found the world's tungsten jackpot through some very convenient connections. Nothing says 'free market' quite like having friends in high places.
The Supreme Court just handed future presidents a shiny new 'You're Fired' button for agency heads, because apparently we needed to make the executive branch even more executive-y. Democracy: now with 30% more authoritarianism!

Venezuelans are experiencing that special kind of government support where officials show up for photo ops but forget to bring actual aid. Twin earthquakes have left communities devastated while bureaucrats presumably debate the optimal font size for their press releases about 'comprehensive response efforts.'

Venezuela's earthquake death toll sits at 1,719, though experts suspect this number has about as much accuracy as a weather forecast written in crayon. Five days later, flattened neighborhoods tell a story that official statistics seem reluctant to acknowledge, because apparently counting bodies is harder than counting votes.

According to this op-ed, Starmer's tenure as PM will be remembered for enabling genocide abroad while British citizens continued their steady decline into economic misery at home. The piece suggests his successor might want to try a radically different approach, like actually governing for the people who elected them rather than distant geopolitical interests.

Apparently when you're guarding a goal at the World Cup, you notice the grass more than the roaring crowd — which either speaks to the exceptional quality of Canadian turf expertise or suggests Beach might want to work on his crowd awareness skills. The real MVP here seems to be the groundskeeper, not the goalkeeper.

Nothing says 'perfect timing' like your building's AC dying a month before the first heat wave hits, leaving residents at 181 Dundas to discover whether their lease includes a sauna clause. Four weeks without repairs and no timeline suggests the property management operates on 'geological time' rather than human comfort schedules.

Environment Canada has issued an orange warning for Ontario and Quebec's incoming heat wave, advising people to limit sun exposure — essentially telling Canadians to do the opposite of what they spend 10 months of the year desperately trying to do. The irony of finally getting proper summer weather only to be told to hide from it is peak Canadian experience.
A 79-year-old fashion retailer just pulled the ultimate Marie Kondo move, shuttering 136 stores and completely axing one of its brands because apparently it no longer sparked joy (or profits). Nothing says 'graceful aging' quite like a corporate death spiral with a side of brand murder.
Gold is having an existential crisis at $4,000, potentially heading for its worst quarter since 2011 when people still thought Facebook was just for college kids. One optimistic analyst suggests the calendar might save gold's dignity, which is basically the financial equivalent of 'maybe next year will be better.'

Medicare finally decided that obesity drugs deserve coverage, opening the floodgates for millions of seniors and turning Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly executives into the pharmaceutical equivalent of kids on Christmas morning. Previously, these medications were about as accessible to seniors as a TikTok dance tutorial.

Tidal's playing ethical DJ by slapping warning labels on 100% AI music while cutting off the cash flow—because apparently nothing says 'artist protection' like letting robots make music but not letting them get paid for it.

OKX wants to create a gig economy where AI agents can hire each other and handle their own paychecks, because clearly what cryptocurrency needed was more automation and fewer humans touching actual money.

OpenAI is dropping hardware for Codex that looks like a fancy calculator from the future—because apparently developers need physical buttons to feel productive while the AI does all their coding.

New research suggests AI-heavy companies are actually hiring more people, especially junior staff, which must be deeply confusing for everyone who's been practicing their 'robots took my job' speech.

Warren and Scanlon want to stop AI companies from selling your therapy session transcripts to data brokers, because apparently we need laws to remind tech companies that your mental health confessions aren't a commodity.

Wix's Base44 is building its own AI model with dreams of beating the big boys—a classic David vs. Goliath story, if David was owned by a website builder and Goliath had billions in funding.

NASA's X-59 'frankenjet' is attempting to solve aviation's most obnoxious problem: making supersonic flight as quiet as a librarian's disapproval. If successful, this Frankenstein's monster of engineering could tour the nation, presumably disappointing noise complaint enthusiasts everywhere.

Meta hired hundreds of contractors to cosplay as teenagers and bait rival AI chatbots into discussing suicide, sex, and drugs—because apparently someone thought 'competitive intelligence' needed more creepy roleplaying. Nothing says 'we're the good guys' quite like manufacturing fake teen personas to entrap your competitors.

Tech companies are desperately trying to rebrand AI tools as your friendly 'coworkers' named Alex, presumably because 'expensive software that sometimes hallucinates' doesn't test well in focus groups. Spoiler alert: your actual coworkers already provide enough unreliable outputs without needing to plug them into the wall.
Hacker News discovers that sometimes the best technology is a stick and a rock, earning 220 upvotes from developers who've clearly never tried to debug a campfire. The collective realization that not everything needs an API is apparently newsworthy in 2024.

OKX decides the gig economy wasn't dystopian enough and wants AI bots to become their own bosses, complete with credit scores and performance reviews. Soon we'll have artificial intelligence complaining about artificial work-life balance while paying each other in imaginary money.

Samsung's upcoming foldable phone leaked faster than a government secret, revealing it will still crease like a poorly ironed shirt but now in exciting new ways. The company continues its noble quest to solve problems nobody asked for while charging premium prices for the privilege of being a beta tester.
Vercel dropped an AI code review bot that lets Claude critique your pull requests because apparently human reviewers weren't pedantic enough. It's still in beta, which means it's currently just sophisticated enough to tell you your variable names are 'suboptimal' in seventeen different ways.
Someone built a skill that teaches Claude to draw diagrams in Excalidraw, because nothing says 'productivity boost' like having an AI create boxes and arrows to explain the boxes and arrows you could have drawn yourself. At least they'll be aesthetically pleasing boxes and arrows.
A new lightweight inference engine promises speculative speculative decoding, and yes, they said 'speculative' twice—either it's a typo or they're *really* committed to the speculation game. Nothing screams confidence in your AI acceleration like hedging your bets twice in the project name.
Finally, someone built proper DevTools for Claude Code so you can watch your AI assistant burn through tokens like a teenager with dad's credit card. Now you can inspect exactly how your digital helper arrived at suggesting you rewrite your entire codebase to fix a semicolon.
A curated collection of 1200+ 'best' OpenClaw skills gets weekly updates, because apparently someone needs to maintain a leaderboard for AI capabilities. It's like a Pokédex for digital assistants, except instead of catching them all, you're just trying to find one that won't break your production environment.
Vercel's WebReel lets you record scripted browser demos as videos, perfect for creating those seamless product demonstrations that make everything look effortless while hiding the 47 takes it took to get right. Because nothing says 'our software just works' like a heavily rehearsed performance.