Articles by Brajeshwar
3

Microsoft teases a big Windows Terminal redesign and visual upgrade (neowin.net)

8

Desalination Technology, by the Numbers (technologyreview.com)

2

Benchmarking LLM Tool-Use in the Wild (arxiv.org)

1

What the Verdict Against Meta and Google Says About the Way We Live Now (newyorker.com)

2

Two supermassive black holes are on a collision course (popsci.com)

6

Gen Z's fading AI hype (axios.com)

5

Liquid or solid? Oobleck droplets are both (nature.com)

1

Study: Google's AI Overviews show wrong answers every hour (popsci.com)

3

A mysterious ghost admin is digitally bricking Samsung phones (androidauthority.com)

1

With Claude Managed Agents, Anthropic wants to run your AI agents for you (thenewstack.io)

5

LinkedIn scanning users' browser extensions sparks controversy and two lawsuits (arstechnica.com)

3

Eurail says December data breach impacts 300k individuals (bleepingcomputer.com)

2

Zephyr Energy loses £700K in cyber hit that rerouted contractor payment (theregister.com)

2

Capita's pension portal exposes civil servants' private data (theregister.com)

4

OpenAI halts UK stargate project amid regulatory and energy price concerns (cnbc.com)

15

YouTube starts showing 90-second unskippable ads to TV viewers (9to5google.com)

2

Record-Breaking Octopus Fossil Isn't an Octopus After All (nautil.us)

3

A century-long argument over light's true nature came to an end (newscientist.com)

5

Experiments Ring the 'Death Knell' for Sterile Neutrinos (quantamagazine.org)

1

Anthropic limits access to Mythos, its new cybersecurity AI model (arstechnica.com)

3

DARPA puts money where bots' mouths are, seeks new science of AI communication (theregister.com)

8

Brit says he is not elusive Bitcoin creator named by New York Times (bbc.com)

4

Greece to ban social media for under-15s from next year (bbc.com)

2

What Happened to the Ancient Bug Giants of 300M Years Ago? (nautil.us)

2

What is 'muscle memory' and can I improve mine? (theconversation.com)

1

My Blissful Week as a 'Do Not Disturb' Maximalist (wired.com)

2

Why AI Systems Fail Quietly (ieee.org)

2

Only 28% of AI infrastructure projects pay off, survey finds (theregister.com)

1

Why Your Automated Pentesting Tool Just Hit a Wall (bleepingcomputer.com)

1

Device code phishing attacks surge 37x as new kits spread online (bleepingcomputer.com)

91

Phone-free bars and restaurants on the rise across the U.S. (axios.com)

2

I'm Worried About the Helpless AI Disruptors of the Future (gizmodo.com)

2

AI agents promise to 'run the business,' but who is liable if things go wrong? (theregister.com)

5

10 years later, no phone has replaced what Google promised (androidauthority.com)

1

You Weren't Meant for the Factory (twitter.com/julianweisser)

1

Not all of this is new (natemeyvis.com)

2

We may have seen a 'dirty fireball' star explosion for the first time (newscientist.com)

2

I Asked Claude Why It Won't Stop Flattering Me (nautil.us)

4

Hims and Hers warns of data breach after Zendesk support ticket breach (bleepingcomputer.com)

2

ENIAC's Architects Wove Stories Through Computing (ieee.org)

3

Ice Age dice show early Native Americans may have understood probability (arstechnica.com)

3

New Advances Bring the Era of Quantum Computers Closer (quantamagazine.org)

3

UK's leading AI research institute told to make 'significant' changes (theguardian.com)

4

Microsoft execs warn Agentic AI is hollowing out the junior developer pipeline (thenewstack.io)

3

SpaceX tries to convince FCC that Amazon put satellites into wrong altitude (arstechnica.com)

3

Anyone with a link can view your Granola notes by default (theverge.com)

1

AO3 is finally out of beta after 17 years (theverge.com)

2

The TeamPCP attacks are a warning: Your CI/CD pipeline is the new front line (thenewstack.io)

1

Man admits to locking Windows devices in extortion plot (bleepingcomputer.com)

11

Chatbots are now prescribing psychiatric drugs (theverge.com)

2

Nations priced out of Big AI are building with frugal models (restofworld.org)

1

Chinese chip firms hit record high revenue driven by the AI boom and U.S. curbs (cnbc.com)

1

Google battles Chinese open-weights models with Gemma 4 (theregister.com)

2

Surprise fossil discoveries push back the evolution of complex animals (newscientist.com)

3

Ireland Tests Digital ID to Verify Age of Social Media Users (bloomberg.com)

1

Another reason we can't measure our productivity with AI (natemeyvis.com)

3

Apple's 'Nice Guy' Heir Apparent (bloomberg.com)

5

Protecting Your Host from Malicious Dependencies (grepular.com)

1

Apple at 50: My journey to the Mac (anderegg.ca)

2

Startup funding shatters all records in Q1 (techcrunch.com)

2

Young People Are Falling Behind, but Not Because of AI (theatlantic.com)

2

Humans have been gambling since the Ice Age (scientificamerican.com)

7

Nvidia rolls out its fix for PC gaming's "compiling shaders" wait times (arstechnica.com)

1

Ray Tracing Cores for General-Purpose Computing: A Literature Review (arxiv.org)

5

Tobacco plant altered to produce five psychedelic drugs (newscientist.com)

1

Critical Cisco IMC auth bypass gives attackers Admin access (bleepingcomputer.com)

3

What that Claude Code source leak reveals about Anthropic's plans (arstechnica.com)

1

China's Aiming for the Moon, and NASA Is Looking over Its Shoulder (nytimes.com)

1

'System failure' paralyzes Baidu robotaxis in China (techcrunch.com)

1

AI search is atomizing our information, warns government digital designer (theregister.com)

5

'Tinder for Nazis' and the woman who hacked it (theguardian.com)

4

Cloudflare: Our commitment to privacy for the 1.1.1.1 public DNS resolver (cloudflare.com)

5

(Why) do big-company engineers like AI less? (natemeyvis.com)

2

Benchmarking Permutations (koaning.io)

3

Indonesian Mega-Farm Drives Surge in Deforestation (yale.edu)

1

Portkey open-sources its AI gateway after processing 2T tokens a day (thenewstack.io)

3

Google Drive ransomware detection now on by default for paying users (bleepingcomputer.com)

1

How physicists proved that quantum weirdness is a feature, not a bug (scientificamerican.com)

1

JetBrains: AI agents are about to repeat the cloud ROI crisis (thenewstack.io)

1

The gig workers who are training humanoid robots at home (technologyreview.com)

7

Tesla Goes Ahead and Admits Its Robotaxis Are Sometimes Human-Controlled (gizmodo.com)

2

The Marco saga as a case for 10x engineering (natemeyvis.com)

3

Over hiring, not AI, behind recent tech industry redundancies (disassociated.com)

2

Bash Owns the Loop (nibzard.com)

2

Can NASA launch a nuclear mission to Mars by 2028? (scientificamerican.com)

3

The Costs of 'Helpful' AI (nature.com)

1

The world’s largest humanoid robot maker is going public (restofworld.org)

2

Workers around the world are not getting what they want from AI (restofworld.org)

2

Dutch Finance Ministry takes treasury banking portal offline after breach (bleepingcomputer.com)

2

Arm says agentic AI needs a new kind of CPU. Intel's DC chief isn't buying it (theregister.com)

1

Authors' lucky break in court may help class action over Meta torrenting (arstechnica.com)

1

AI benchmarks are broken. Here's what we need instead (technologyreview.com)

2

Raspberry Pi Pico chess timer (raspberrypi.com)

2

Why the lack of water on Mars is so mysterious (newscientist.com)

4

The weird physics of plant-based milks is only just coming to light (newscientist.com)

2

Cloudflare Client-Side Security: smarter detection, now open to everyone (cloudflare.com)

1

A Man Making Music with His Brain Implant (wired.com)

5

New 'Cicada' Covid variant is spreading in the U.S. (scientificamerican.com)

2

The Turin Shroud bears DNA from many people, plants and animals (newscientist.com)

1

The Anatomy of an LLM Benchmark (cameronrwolfe.substack.com)