31 Jan 2026

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htmx: Server Sent Event (SSE) Extension

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31 Jan 2026 10:30am GMT

Automatic Programming

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31 Jan 2026 10:11am GMT

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Author of Systemd Quits Microsoft To Prove Linux Can Be Trusted

Lennart Poettering has left Microsoft to co-found Amutable, a new Berlin-based company aiming to bring cryptographically verifiable integrity and deterministic trust guarantees to Linux systems. He said in a post on Mastodon that his "role in upstream maintenance for the Linux kernel will continue as it always has." Poettering will also continue to remain deeply involved in the systemd ecosystem. The Register reports: Linux celeb Lennart Poettering has left Microsoft and co-founded a new company, Amutable, with Chris Kuhl and Christian Brauner. Poettering is best known for systemd. After a lengthy stint at Red Hat, he joined Microsoft in 2022. Kuhl was a Microsoft employee until last year, and Brauner, who also joined Microsoft in 2022, left this month. [...] It is unclear why Poettering decided to leave Microsoft. We asked the company to comment but have not received a response. Other than the announcement of systemd 259 in December, Poettering's blog has been silent on the matter, aside from the announcement of Amutable this week. In its first post, the Amutable team wrote: "Over the coming months, we'll be pouring foundations for verification and building robust capabilities on top." It will be interesting to see what form this takes. In addition to Poettering, the lead developer of systemd, Amutable's team includes contributors and maintainers for projects such as Linux, Kubernetes, and containerd. Its members are also very familiar with the likes of Debian, Fedora, SUSE, and Ubuntu.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

31 Jan 2026 10:00am GMT

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CERN accepts $1B in private cash towards Future Circular Collider

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31 Jan 2026 9:58am GMT

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'Reverse Solar Panel' Generates Electricity at Night

Researchers at the University of New South Wales are developing a "reverse solar panel" that generates small amounts of electricity at night by harvesting infrared heat radiated from Earth. "In the past, scientists have demonstrated that a 'thermoradiative diode' can convert infrared radiation directly into electricity; when used to convert heat from Earth, they exploit the temperature difference between Earth and the night sky, generating a current directly from heat," notes ExtremeTech. "This approach completely eliminates the need for heat to generate steam, though the resulting capacity is fairly low." From the report: The researchers estimate they could generate only about a watt per square meter, which isn't much. One reason for the low output is that the Earth's atmosphere lessens the heat differential that drives the generative process; in space, though, that's not an issue. Now, researchers believe that the ability to generate power in the moments between direct sunlight could help power satellites. That could be especially true in deep space, where periods without sunlight can be longer, and sunlight is often weaker; in these situations, losing electricity to heat loss is unacceptable. Many satellites already use heat to generate electricity, though with a much more rarified "thermoelectric generator" that uses rare, expensive materials like plutonium to create heat. With thermoradiative diodes, the heat source can be the Sun-warmed body of the satellite itself.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

31 Jan 2026 7:00am GMT

UK's First Rapid-Charging Battery Train Ready For Boarding

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: The UK's first superfast-charging train running only on battery power will come into passenger service this weekend -- operating a five-mile return route in west London. Great Western Railway (GWR) will send the converted London Underground train out from 5.30am to cover the full Saturday timetable on the West Ealing to Greenford branch line, four stops and 12 minutes each way, and now carrying up to 273 passengers, should its celebrity stoke up the demand. The battery will recharge in just three and a half minutes back at West Ealing station between trips, using a 2,000kW charger connected to a few meters of rail that only becomes live when the train stops directly overhead. There are hopes within government and industry that this technology could one day replace diesel trains on routes that have proved difficult or expensive to electrify with overhead wires, as the decarbonization of rail continues. The train has proved itself capable of going more than 200 miles on a single charge -- last year setting a world record for the farthest travelled by a battery-electric train, smashing a German record set in 2021. The GWR train and the fast-charge technology has been trialled on the 2.5-mile line since early 2024, but has not yet carried paying passengers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

31 Jan 2026 3:30am GMT

30 Jan 2026

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LastSignal Is a New Open-Source Dead Man’s Switch You Can Self-Host

LastSignal Is a New Open-Source Dead Man’s Switch You Can Self-Host

LastSignal lets users run a dead man's switch on their own servers, using zero-knowledge encryption, and releases messages only after a missed activity check.

30 Jan 2026 8:06pm GMT

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How far does $5,000 go when you want an electric car?

You won't be going on road trips, but a very cheap electric runabout is possible.

30 Jan 2026 3:55pm GMT

NASA faces a crucial choice on a Mars spacecraft—and it must decide soon

"We think that's a really important mission, and something that we can do."

30 Jan 2026 3:31pm GMT

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AerynOS January 2026 Snapshot Updates GNOME, KDE Plasma, and COSMIC

AerynOS January 2026 Snapshot Updates GNOME, KDE Plasma, and COSMIC

AerynOS publishes its January 2026 Alpha ISO, featuring Linux kernel 6.18 and a refreshed package stack across multiple desktop environments.

30 Jan 2026 2:35pm GMT

cpx Introduced as a Faster, Modern Replacement for Linux cp

cpx Introduced as a Faster, Modern Replacement for Linux cp

A new Rust-based tool called cpx offers a modern alternative to the traditional cp command on Linux, adding parallel copying, progress bars, resume support, and configurable defaults.

30 Jan 2026 1:36pm GMT

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Rocket Report: How a 5-ton satellite fell off a booster; will SpaceX and xAI merge?

"We're seeing remarkable growth year after year."

30 Jan 2026 12:00pm GMT