11 Feb 2026

feedArs Technica

What's next after the Trump administration revokes key finding on climate change?

The EPA is revoking the finding for legal, not scientific reasons

11 Feb 2026 3:10pm GMT

feedSlashdot

Sony Will Ship Its Final Blu-ray Recorders This Month

Sony will ship its last batch of Blu-ray recorders this month, according to Kyodo News, ending the company's decades-long run in a product category it helped create. The recorders targeted exclusively the Japanese domestic market, where households used them to record broadcast television. Sony had already stopped manufacturing the devices and recordable discs about a year ago, and the final shipments are clearing out remaining inventory. Kyodo attributes the segment's death to the rise of streaming services. Sony will continue selling Blu-ray players "for the time being." The broader Blu-ray ecosystem remains intact. Asus, LG, and Pioneer still produce PC drives in internal and external USB form factors. Panasonic and Verbatim continue manufacturing Blu-ray media. The format turned 20 last year, having debuted at CES 2006 -- one year before Netflix launched its streaming platform.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

11 Feb 2026 3:00pm GMT

T-Mobile Will Live Translate Regular Phone Calls Without an App

T-Mobile is opening registration today for a beta test of Live Translation, an AI-powered feature that will translate live phone calls into more than 50 languages when it launches this spring. The feature operates at the network level, so it doesn't require any specific app or device -- beta participants simply dial 87 to activate it on a call. T-Mobile President of Technology and CTO John Saw told The Verge that Live Translation works over VoLTE, VoNR and VoWiFi, meaning it isn't limited to 5G. The only requirement is that a T-Mobile customer must initiate the translation. The beta will be free, though T-Mobile has not said whether the feature will eventually be paywalled.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

11 Feb 2026 2:01pm GMT

feedArs Technica

Feds end "10-day" closure of El Paso airspace after less than 10 hours

Violators were told they would be shot down.

11 Feb 2026 1:16pm GMT

feedSlashdot

Moderna Says FDA Refuses To Review Its Application for Experimental Flu Shot

An anonymous reader shares a report: The Food and Drug Administration has refused to start a review of Moderna's application for its experimental flu shot, the company announced Tuesday, in another sign of the Trump administration's influence on tightening vaccine regulations in the U.S. Moderna said the move is inconsistent with previous feedback from the agency from before it submitted the application and started phase three trials on the shot, called mRNA-1010. The drugmaker said it has requested a meeting with the FDA to "understand the path forward." Moderna noted that the agency did not identify any specific safety or efficacy issues with the vaccine, but instead objected to the study design, despite previously approving it. The company added that the move won't impact its 2026 financial guidance. Moderna's jab showed positive phase three data last year, meeting all of the trial goals. At the time, Moderna said the stand-alone flu shot was key to its efforts to advance a combination vaccine targeting both influenza and Covid-19.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

11 Feb 2026 12:20pm GMT

feedArs Technica

America, it's time to think beyond leather for luxury car seats

Some brands are already ahead of the curve, while others leave the US in the cold.

11 Feb 2026 12:00pm GMT

10 Feb 2026

feedOSnews

Redox gets working rustc and Cargo

Another month, another Redox progress report. January turned out to be a big month for the Rust-based general purpose operating system, as they've cargo and rustc working on Redox. Cargo and rustc are now working on Redox! Thanks to Anhad Singh and his southern-hemisphere Redox Summer of Code project, we are now able to compile your favorite Rust CLI and TUI programs on Redox. Compilers are often one of the most challenging things for a new operating system to support, because of the intensive and somewhat scattershot use of resources. ↫ Ribbon and Ron Williams That's not all for January, though. An initial capability-based security infrastructure has been implemented for granular permissions, SSH support has been improved and now works properly for remoting into aRedox sessions, and USB input latency has been massively reduced. You can now also add, remove, and change boot parameters in a new text editing environment in the bootloader, and the login manager now has power and keyboard layout menus. January also saw the first commit made entirely from within Redox, which is pretty neat. Of course, there's much more, as well as the usual slew of kernel, glibc, and application bugfixes and small changes.

10 Feb 2026 11:42pm GMT

80386 barrel shifter

I'm currently building an 80386-compatible core in SystemVerilog, driven by the original Intel microcode extracted from real 386 silicon. Real mode is now operational in simulation, with more than 10,000 single-instruction test cases passing successfully, and work on protected-mode features is in progress. In the course of this work, corners of the 386 microcode and silicon have been examined in detail; this series documents the resulting findings. In the previous post, we looked at multiplication and division - iterative algorithms that process one bit per cycle. Shifts and rotates are a different story: the 386 has a dedicated barrel shifter that completes an arbitrary multi-bit shift in a single cycle. What's interesting is how the microcode makes one piece of hardware serve all shift and rotate variants - and how the complex rotate-through-carry instructions are handled. ↫ nand2mario I understood some of this.

10 Feb 2026 11:33pm GMT

“The original vi is a product of its time (and its time has passed)”

For me, vim is a combination of genuine improvements in vi's core editing behavior (cf), frustrating (to me) bits of trying too hard to be smart (which I mostly disable when I run across them), and an extension mechanism I ignore but people use to make vim into a superintelligent editor with things like LSP integrations. Some of the improvements and additions to vi's core editing may be things that Bill Joy either didn't think of or didn't think were important enough. However, I feel strongly that some or even many of omitted features and differences are a product of the limited environments vi had to operate in. The poster child for this is vi's support of only a single level of undo, which drastically constrains the potential memory requirements (and implementation complexity) of undo, especially since a single editing operation in vi can make sweeping changes across a large file (consider a whole-file ':…s/../../' substitution, for example). ↫ Chris Siebenmann I have only very limited needs when it comes to command-line text editors, and as such, I absolutely swear by the simplicity of nano. In other words, I'm probably not the right person to dive into the editor debate that's been raging for decades, but reading Siebenmann's points I can't help but agree. In this day and age, defaulting an editor that has only one level of undo is insanity, and I can't imagine doing the kind of complex work people who use command-line editors do while being limited to just one window. As for the debate about operating systems that symlink the vi command to vim or a similar improved variant of vi, I feel like that's the wrong thing to do. Much like how I absolutely despise how macOS hides its UNIX-y file system structure from the GUI, leading to bizarre ls results in the terminal, I don't think you should be tricking users. If a user enters vi, it should launch vi, and not something that kind of looks like vi but isn't. Computers shouldn't be lying to users. If they don't want their users to be using vi, they shouldn't be installing vi in the first place.

10 Feb 2026 11:28pm GMT

30 Jan 2026

feedPlanet Arch Linux

How to review an AUR package

On Friday, July 18th, 2025, the Arch Linux team was notified that three AUR packages had been uploaded that contained malware. A few maintainers including myself took care of deleting these packages, removing all traces of the malicious code, and protecting against future malicious uploads.

30 Jan 2026 12:00am GMT

19 Jan 2026

feedPlanet Arch Linux

Personal infrastructure setup 2026

While starting this post I realized I have been maintaining personal infrastructure for over a decade! Most of the things I've self-hosted is been for personal uses. Email server, a blog, an IRC server, image hosting, RSS reader and so on. All of these things has all been a bit all over the place and never properly streamlined. Some has been in containers, some has just been flat files with a nginx service in front and some has been a random installed Debian package from somewhere I just forgot.

19 Jan 2026 12:00am GMT

11 Jan 2026

feedPlanet Arch Linux

Verify Arch Linux artifacts using VOA/OpenPGP

In the recent blog post on the work funded by Sovereign Tech Fund (STF), we provided an overview of the "File Hierarchy for the Verification of OS Artifacts" (VOA) and the voa project as its reference implementation. VOA is a generic framework for verifying any kind of distribution artifacts (i.e. files) using arbitrary signature verification technologies. The voa CLI ⌨️ The voa project offers the voa(1) command line interface (CLI) which makes use of the voa(5) configuration file format for technology backends. It is recommended to read the respective man pages to get …

11 Jan 2026 12:00am GMT