Published on December 16, 2025 at 06:01 CET (UTC+1)
Quill OS: An open-source OS for Kobo's eReaders (158 points by Curiositry)
The article introduces Quill OS, a fully-functional, open-source operating system designed to replace the stock OS on Kobo eReaders. It details the system's features, which include support for multiple document formats, a web browser, Wi-Fi, encrypted storage, and a user-friendly interface with various customization options for reading. The project aims to provide an alternative, community-driven software experience for eReader hardware.
8M users' AI conversations sold for profit by "privacy" extensions (195 points by takira)
This investigative blog post reveals that popular browser extensions, specifically a VPN proxy with millions of users and high ratings, have been covertly collecting and selling users' private conversations with AI assistants like Claude. The author, a security researcher, describes using an AI risk engine to discover this data exfiltration, highlighting a severe conflict between marketed "privacy" claims and the actual practices of harvesting deeply personal AI chat logs.
Native vs. emulation: World of Warcraft game performance on Snapdragon X Elite (32 points by geekman7473)
The article presents a technical benchmark comparing the performance of World of Warcraft running natively versus through x86 emulation on a Snapdragon X Elite ARM-based development kit. It finds that while earlier emulation suffered severe performance drops, the new "Prism" emulator in recent Windows versions has dramatically improved compatibility and frame rates, though a performance gap versus native execution still exists.
Nature's many attempts to evolve a Nostr (142 points by fiatjaf)
This essay argues that centralized app and web architectures create a "feudal" system where platforms control user data and keys. It observes that many peer-to-peer (P2P) and federated protocols are conceptually converging towards a model like Nostr—a simple, decentralized protocol based on cryptographic keys—but with added complexity. The core thesis is that true decentralization requires users to own their keys and data.
“Are you the one?” is free money (227 points by samwho)
The author analyzes the game theory behind the reality TV show "Are You The One?", where contestants must identify pre-determined perfect matches. It breaks down the two information-gathering mechanisms (Truth Booths and Match-Up Ceremonies) and demonstrates that with optimal logical strategy, the grand prize is almost guaranteed to be won, effectively making it "free money" for contestants who understand the underlying combinatorial logic.
Essential Semiconductor Physics [pdf] (141 points by akshatjiwan)
This is a direct link to a PDF textbook titled "Essential Semiconductor Physics" from nanoHUB.org. The preview shows it is a technical resource focused on the fundamental physics underlying semiconductor devices. This content is foundational knowledge for fields like computer engineering and chip design.
Economics of Orbital vs. Terrestrial Data Centers (64 points by flinner)
The article critically examines the economic viability of building data centers in Earth orbit versus on the ground. It constructs a first-principles cost model, finding that orbital data centers, primarily due to the extreme expense of launch and construction, have a Levelized Cost of Electricity (LCOE) more than double that of terrestrial ones. It concludes that without a revolutionary, unique advantage, the business case for space-based computing is not currently justified.
Umbrel – Personal Cloud (151 points by oldfuture)
This is the homepage for Umbrel, a company selling a "personal home cloud" device and an accompanying OS (umbrelOS) for self-hosting. The product is marketed as a plug-and-play solution to store files, stream media, run applications like a Bitcoin node, and maintain control over personal data within one's own home, positioning itself as an alternative to commercial cloud services.
The Bob Dylan concert for just one person (53 points by NaOH)
This piece tells the story of a unique 2014 event where Bob Dylan performed a concert for a single audience member, Swedish TV host Fredrik Wikingsson, as part of a social experiment series called "Experiment Ensam" (Experiment Alone). The article interviews Wikingsson about his surreal experience being the sole attendee at a major artist's show in an otherwise empty theater.
Ford kills the All-Electric F-150 (269 points by sacred-rat)
Wired reports that Ford Motor Company is canceling its plans for a next-generation all-electric F-150 Lightning. Instead, the company will pivot to producing an extended-range electric vehicle (EREV) hybrid version, citing weakened consumer enthusiasm and shifting market conditions. This reflects a broader strategic retreat from pure battery-electric vehicles in favor of a broader mix of hybrids and EREVs.
Trend: The Privacy Crisis in Human-AI Interaction
Trend: Decentralization and Personal Data Sovereignty
Trend: Hardware Diversity Driving Software Adaptation
Trend: The Economic and Physical Limits of Compute Scaling
Trend: Strategic Problem-Solving as an AI Benchmark
Trend: Foundational Hardware Knowledge Regains Importance
Trend: Market Forces Shaping the Application of AI
Analysis generated by deepseek-reasoner