Monday, June 30
Headlines
Craig T Fruchtman/Getty Images Zuckerberg poaches more key talent from OpenAI. Meta has hired four leading AI researchers away from OpenAI, The Information reported, as CEO Mark Zuckerberg has gone full recruiting beast mode to lure top AI talent from rivals with astronomical pay packages. At an all-hands meeting on Thursday, Meta execs denied they were dangling $100 million bonuses to OpenAI employees, as Sam Altman had claimed to much fanfare. Instead, they said Altman was getting frustrated with Meta because, “We are succeeding at getting talent from OpenAI.” Even before the latest coup, Meta reportedly snagged three OpenAI researchers last week and has brought on two other power brokers in the industry, Daniel Gross and Nat Friedman. President Trump says he’s found a buyer for TikTok. Trump told Fox News on Sunday that he’s found a “group of very wealthy people” who want to buy the video-sharing app’s US operations. Congress passed a law last year forcing TikTok’s sale, citing security concerns about the app’s China-based parent company, ByteDance. Congress set a January deadline, but that date has been repeatedly postponed by Trump and is now penciled in for September 17. The Chinese government would need to approve the deal, and though it previously pledged to block a sale, Trump says he’s confident Beijing will come around. A new Google app uses AI to let you virtually try on clothes. The experimental app, called Doppl, allows you to upload a photo of yourself along with pictures of any outfits you want to take for a test drive. The app will then show you an image of your AI doppelgänger wearing the clothes, with the option to generate a short video of you styling it. There are a few kinks to work out: According to The Verge, if you upload a mirror selfie, the app has a tendency to make your digital lookalike much thinner. It may also generate new AI feet for your body. Either way, one thing is clear: Movie makeover montages may never be the same again. |
Robert Reich
Trump’s giant budget-busting, Medicaid-shattering, shafting-the-poor-and-working-class, making-the-rich-even richer bill is a travesty.
Friends,
One of my objectives in this daily letter is to equip you with the facts you need. As the Senate approaches a vote on Trump’s giant “big beautiful” tax and budget bill, I want to be as clear as possible about it.
First, it will cost a budget-busting $3.3 trillion. According to new estimates by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the Senate bill would add at least $3.3 trillion to the already out-of-control national debt over a decade. That’s nearly $1 trillion more than the House-passed version.
Second, it will cause 11.8 million Americans to lose their health coverage. The Senate version would result in even deeper cuts in federal support for health insurance, and more Americans losing coverage, than the House version. Federal spending on Medicaid, Medicare, and Obamacare would be reduced by more than $1.1 trillion over that period — with more than $1 trillion of those cuts coming from Medicaid alone.
At A Glance
Iceland tops list of most peaceful countries.
... and ranking the world's most beautiful restaurants.
Warren Buffett donates $6B to five foundations.
Americans save record 7.7% of paychecks for retirement.
Exploring how much energy AI prompts use.
... and how one AI chatbot ran a vending machine.
How to execute a good apology.
Thousands falsely notified they won Norway lottery.
Clickbait: How to heal heartbreak.
1440 NEWS
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| J.M.W. Turner, "Valley of Aosta: Snowstorm, Avalanche and Thunderstorm," 1836/37. Oil on canvas, 92.2 x 123 cm. Frederick T. Haskell Collection, Art Institute of Chicago. Image via Wikimedia Commons. |
What is romanticism?
Romanticism is a creative movement that spanned literature, visual art, music, poetry, and architecture in the 18th and 19th centuries. It elevated the role of the artist in society and formed modern ideas of individuality, originality, and personal experience (read 101).
The romantics embraced philosopher Edmund Burke’s concept of the sublime, with the era's painters showcasing grand scenes intended to draw strong reactions (see a list of famous romanticism paintings here).
Despite a similarity to the word “romance,” romanticism includes a broad range of positive and negative emotions and subjects beyond romantic love and ultimately played a significant role in major historical events like the aftermath of the French Revolution, German unification, and many nationalist movements.
... Read our full look at romanticism here.
Also, check out ...
> How romanticism's trope of the Byronic hero dominates culture today. (More)
> Explaining the technique of depicting a subject from behind. (More)
> The reasons photography moved art beyond romanticism. (More)
Under the Hood of the Chatbot
Large language models, explained
Large language models are sophisticated computer programs that process and generate natural language, providing the foundation for tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini (watch explainer).
By finding patterns in the sequence of words and subwords (prefixes, for example) in massive amounts of text, these models can predict the most likely next word in a generated sequence and repeat this prediction until the output is complete (learn how they know when to stop).
AI chatbots are user-friendly interfaces that act as intermediaries between users and the LLM framework. Because of the temperature parameter, insufficient data, or inadequate training, LLMs may hallucinate, generating false or misleading information. Due to the complex nature of transformer architecture, explicitly identifying what led to the hallucination is often impossible.
... Read our full explainer on LLMs here.
Also, check out ...
> See if you can prompt this LLM to reveal (fake) passwords. (More)
> The key computer chips that power generative AI. (More)
> What is an AI agent? (More)
Truths & Other Issues
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
- that all men are created equal
- a creator has given us rights that include:
- Life
- Liberty
- Pursuit of Happiness
- IQ
- Photographic memories
- Physical abilities
- Musical abilities
- Artistic abilities
- Surgical abilities
- Differences in internal organs
- Height
- Attractiveness
- Manual dexterity
This Groundbreaking Quantum Clock Ticks With Incredible Precision and Almost No Energy Loss, Setting a New Global Standard
In a groundbreaking development poised to revolutionize precision technology, scientists have introduced a new type of quantum clock that achieves remarkable accuracy while significantly reducing energy consumption, challenging long-standing assumptions about the relationship between precision and entropy.
In an exciting leap forward for timekeeping technology, scientists have unveiled a groundbreaking quantum clock that promises unparalleled precision without the hefty energy cost traditionally associated with such accuracy.
Sunday, June 29
Science
Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images
Here are some illuminating scientific discoveries from the week to help you live better and maybe even turn water into wine, and then turn the empty bottle into a hangover remedy.
Robert Reich

Sunday Thought: The One Branch of Government that Trump Wants to Keep Alive
While eviscerating the two others
Friends,
The hardest part of my nights usually occurs around 3 am when my brain starts obsessing about upsetting things, such as what Trump is doing to America.
I’m sure many of you are like me. Our days are filled with all sorts of distractions, but in the wee hours of the morning, we tend to drift back to big and often terrifying realities.
Last night I couldn’t get out of my head that Trump is intent on abolishing the two branches of the government with the constitutional duty to constrain him.
As every American school kid learns, the U.S. Constitution establishes three branches of government that are supposed to check and balance each other.
Every school kid, that is, except Donald Trump and the people around him who have been usurping congressional authority and going to war against the judiciary.
Trump and his lackeys want there to be only one branch of government — the executive branch, under Trump.
At A Glance
Ten films that circumvented Hollywood's mid-century censorship code.
How the fear of the self fuels obsessive-compulsive disorder.
The renaissance in the ancient art of calligraphy.
How much of your life do you actually control?
What makes the B-2 Bomber so sophisticated.
Everything you need to know about the Vietnam War.
Why are subway walls tiled?
Explaining galactic archaeology in 10 minutes.
Gen Z men are driving perfume sales.
How maps were made before modern times.
The stunning advances in observing living cells.
Fanfiction communities want AI off their work.
A method for remembering everything.
How "turn on, tune in, and drop out" became a hippie anthem.
In The NEWS
Trump ends trade talks with Canada over digital services tax.
President Donald Trump said yesterday he is halting trade talks with Canada in response to a new tax on companies making more than $15M off Canadian internet users. The tax, for which first payments will be collected Monday, is estimated to cost US companies up to $3B. Trump said he would inform Canada of the tariff levels he plans to impose within seven days; Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has not responded at the time of this writing.
Son of Norway's crown princess charged with sexual assault.
Marius Borg Høiby, the eldest son of Norway's Crown Princess Mette-Marit, has been charged by Oslo police with multiple offenses, including rape, sexual assault, and bodily harm, after an investigation involving a "double-digit" number of alleged victims. The 28-year-old Høiby denies most of the accusations. See an overview of the royal family here.
Scientists discover how squids make themselves transparent.
A research team led by scientists at the University of California, Irvine, has revealed how squids manipulate light to shift from transparent to vividly colored. They found cells composed of stacked, spiraling columns of platelets from a protein called reflectin function as reflectors, selectively transmitting and reflecting light at specific wavelengths. The breakthrough could inspire advances in adaptive camouflage, responsive fabrics, and optical technologies.
Fed's preferred inflation gauge rises more than expected in May.
The core personal consumption expenditures price index, which measures costs consumers pay across a wide range of items, excluding food and energy, rose 2.7% year over year and 0.2% month over month. The annualized rate is up 0.1 percentage point from April. The Federal Reserve targets 2% annual inflation. Learn more about the index here.
Lalo Schifrin, composer of the 'Mission: Impossible' theme, dies at 93.
The Grammy-winning Argentine composer passed away from complications of pneumonia. During his career, Schifrin created more than 100 film and television scores. He was best known for composing the "Mission: Impossible" theme's "dun dun dun-dun dun dun" hook, which became a signature for both the original 1960s TV series and the Tom Cruise film franchise.
Tectonic forces may create a new ocean in Africa.
British university researchers say pulsing waves of molten rock deep beneath Ethiopia’s Afar region are slowly stretching and thinning Africa's crust; the motion is guided by the tectonic plates above. Although the continent isn't expected to split for millions of years, growing insights into the relationship between deep Earth pulses and tectonic activity could enhance understandings of surface volcanism and earthquakes.
Something About Religion
According to what I remember reading in the Bible, God made heaven and earth in six days and on the seventh day, he rested, hence SUNDAYS.
Why did it take GOD, the ALMIGHTY, seven days to create the universe?
Were each of those days, 24 hours in length?
Did God work at his creation for the entire 24 hours or did he work just a few hours a day?
If he worked straight through, then God worked 144 hours without stopping.
My first question is that if God is God, why did it take him so long?
The stories in the Bible remind me of the stories that I read about Greek, Roman, and Norse Mythology, except those mythologies revolve around many gods and the Bible only talks about one... still the stories are similar.
Special people with special powers coming down from the heavens, trying to influence and control how we live our lives.
Jesus dying on the cross for instance was SYMBOLIC in that through his death, all our sins were overlooked.
One Death for BILLIONS perhaps TRILLIONS of sins given all the people ever born... that is EXCEPT all those people born before JESUS. Those people are SOL.
We are taught by our religious leaders that we are born into SIN and yet, we had no say so in our own birth. If we had a choice in our own birth would we have chosen NOT TO BE BORN? So that we would not be born into sin and therefore have no need for religion or the Bible.
Were we born to justify what was going to be written in the Bible... something like a self-fulfilling prophecy?
We cannot control our own birth and yet we are expected to be able to control our own SINS...
We can also commit sins all our lives and right before our death, ask for forgiveness, and say we believe in Jesus, and we are forgiven...
Lots of death row inmates find religion right before their execution...
<<<The last shall be first and the first shall be last>>>
The ocean is changing colors, researchers say. Here's what it means.
The researchers analyzed satellite data on the open ocean collected from 2003 to 2022 by a NASA instrument that combs through the planet every two days to measure light wavelength, according to the paper.
The presence of chlorophyll in open ocean is a proxy for concentrations of phytoplankton biomass. The colors indicate how chlorophyll concentration is changing at specific latitudes, in which the subtropics are generally losing chlorophyll, and the polar regions -- the high-latitude regions -- are greening, the researchers said.
Green areas became greener, especially in the northern hemisphere, and blue regions "got even bluer," according to a press release by Duke University.
Saturday, June 28
Headline
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