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Submission + - VW Bring Back Physical Buttons (caranddriver.com)

sinij writes:

Volkswagen is making a drastic change to its interiors, or at least the interiors of its electric vehicles. The automaker recently unveiled a new cockpit generation with the refreshed ID. Polo that now comes with physical buttons.

Unfortunately, glued-on-dash tablet look is still there.

Comment Re:Fuck "Eat the Rich" (Score 1) 96

And here's why that study was meaningless - "We are not going to consider the impact of the principle being decided. Rather, we just want to know who got the money in the case in question." That is, they ignore the single most important factor and focus only on the least relevant - the private fiscal implications of the ruling.

There may be something of interest in the findings, but in regards to the nature of cases being heard, not the relative finances of the claimants.

If it's the principle that's driving the decisions, not the affluence of the beneficiaries, across a sufficiently-large set of cases we'd expect to find no correlation between the political leanings of the justices and their votes benefiting wealthy vs poor people. Which is what the article said happened for many decades.

Unless, of course, the principle being applied is "Who benefits?"

It's worth pointing out that although gtall framed it as the Republicans siding with the wealthy, it's equally true that the Democrats are siding with the poor. Both sides are inordinately focused on who benefits.

Submission + - Supercritical CO2 Generators Now In Production 1

cusco writes: https://kdwalmsley.substack.co...

Chinese engineers deployed the world's first commercially viable sCO2 power generators, at a steel mill in Guizhou.

The Supercritical Carbon Dioxide (sCO2) generator converts waste heat into electricity. Compared to traditional steam and thermal systems, the sCO2 design is more than 85% more efficient, and produces 50% more electricity. . .

SCO2 is supercritical carbon dioxide. CO2 that’s maintained in a state above critical temperature and pressure, which is over 31 degrees Celsius and 1070 psi. Once there, CO2 acts both as a liquid and as a gas, and in industrial applications, that becomes very useful. As a gas, there is less resistance, and as a liquid, it provides greater thrust. And, turning CO2 into supercritical CO2 is more energy efficient than turning water into steam. . .
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Not everyone is as optimistic. Long article which assumes the Chinese will be sloppy with implementation for some reason.
https://cleantechnica.com/2026...

Experience with hydrogen suggests that expecting seals to remain effectively perfect over many years of continuous high pressure operation is absurdly optimistic, and there is little reason to assume supercritical CO systems will escape a similar long term reality. . .

Comment Re:I mean (Score 1) 137

I don't doubt that HP-UX was capable but it's exactly the situation that the guy in the article is describing -- it was 100% an enterprise product sold to banks and similar customers with zero effort made to make it sexy or accessible to even broader commercial customers.

I used HP/UX as a development platform in the mid-90s, cross-compiling to m68k boards running pSOS and VxWorks. It was a little weird, but rock solid, utterly reliable, as were the HP workstations it ran on.

Comment You will own nothing! (Score 1) 13

The system will be dead in less than 5 years. Samsung will change the terms of service and you will be left holding an empty bag having bought a pig in a poke. Not even a pig one can put lipstick on.

And Louis Rossmann will have to make yet another video about how wrong it all is.

It is almost like nobody pays attention.

Boomer here, get off my lawn. Yes, I've become the greybeard I used to make fun of 40 years ago.

Comment Re:More complicated (Score 1) 137

The 'killer app' will be a smaller lighter (and safest) solid state battery with a range over 500 miles Thats when adoption will take off to get the people that are hesitant to switch

Nah.

All that's required is that EVs be cheap. A 300-mile range is sufficient. When the purchase price of a car with a 300-mile range is at or only slightly above the purchase price of a comparable ICEV, EVs sales will explode because they're cheaper to operate and maintain. All of the range anxiety and concerns about fires (which are silly, since gasoline vehicles are a lot more prone to burning) will inhibit a few people, for a little while, but pretty soon they'll all have friends and relatives who are driving EVs and happy about it, and they'll start making the switch, too.

It's all about the benjamins.

Submission + - Namecheap takes down domain hosting video archives of Israeli war crimes (neosmart.net) 1

Devar writes: Namecheap.com, the popular domain name and webhosting platform, has taken over the Genocide.live domain name, which was home to a publicly accessible archive of over 16,000 videos documenting alleged Israeli war crimes, the vast majority of which were recorded since the onset of the war on Gaza in late 2023. The archive, formerly known as TikTokGenocide, was previously submitted as “evidence on the State of Israel’s acts of genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza” by the South African UN delegation to the United Nations Security Council in February of 2025 and is also included in ongoing court proceedings of the International Court of Justice case South Africa (et. al.) v. Israel.

Submission + - New Raymarching GPU Benchmark brings Tim Sweeney's vision to life (gaming67.com)

GhostX9 writes: In 1999, Tim Sweeney talked about the death of fixed pipeline graphics cards and predicted a future of all software based rendering. A new benchmark has been released that takes the classic game of breakout and imagines this concept by implementing the game with full raymarching. It brings even a RTX5090 to its knees above 480p. It looks gorgeous at 4K, but no hardware today can handle it.

While the website just shows the DirectX12 version by default, if you click the slider for Advanced, it will show the download links for Linux/Vulkan port as well as Apple/Metal.

Submission + - Acemagic Retro X5 packs AMD AI power into a box that looks a lot like an NES (nerds.xyz)

BrianFagioli writes: The Retro X5 from Acemagic is a modern mini PC wrapped in nostalgia, but its inspiration is anything but subtle. The box closely mirrors the original Nintendo Entertainment System in shape, color, ribbed detailing, and even power button placement. While it avoids Nintendo logos and branding, the resemblance is immediately obvious, raising questions about whether nostalgia has crossed into imitation. Given Nintendoâ(TM)s long history of aggressively defending its intellectual property, Acemagicâ(TM)s NES-like design choice could attract unwanted legal attention.

Under the hood, however, this is no toy. The Retro X5 runs on AMDâ(TM)s AI 9 HX 370 processor with 12 cores, 24 threads, Radeon 890M graphics, and an integrated XDNA 2 NPU rated at up to 50 TOPS. Acemagic pairs the hardware with RetroPlay Box software designed to strip away emulator setup friction and make classic gaming feel plug-and-play. Whether the system ends up remembered for its technical ambition or for provoking a potential design dispute may depend on how much Nintendo is willing to tolerate a look that feels uncomfortably familiar.

Submission + - 'Fish Mouth' Filter Removes 99% of Microplastics From Laundry Waste (sciencealert.com) 1

alternative_right writes: The ancient evolution of fish mouths could help solve a modern source of plastic pollution.

Inspired by these natural filtration systems, scientists in Germany have invented a way to remove 99 percent of plastic particles from water. It's based on how some fish filter-feed to eat microscopic prey.

Submission + - New Protocol Exposes Vulnerabilities in AI Factual Accuracy

techtsp writes: An evaluation method called the Drill-Down and Fabricate Test (DDFT) has been developed to assess how large language models (LLMs) handle factual accuracy when subjected to degraded information and adversarial challenges. The protocol reveals that many advanced AI systems falter in maintaining reliable knowledge under realistic pressures, regardless of their size or design. Evaluations involved nine frontier models across eight knowledge domains at five compression levels, yielding 1,800 turn-level assessments.

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