понедельник, 6 апреля 2026 г.

Casiomania is the first ever demoscene release by KittenLabs. It is written in C, released at Revision 2026.

Tech internals

Audio playback through UART/Serial link port

  • 19000Hz @ 8bit PCM, played using DMA-based PWM
  • real ProTracker/Amiga 4-channel .mod playback
  • fully async (interrupt-driven) playback, no main loop interaction required
  • UART being driven in synchronous mode (without start/stop bits) to avoid distortion

Grayscale support through timer/interrupt-driven multiplexing

  • 2-bit grayscale rendering

Overclocking through SH7305 CPG/PLL manipulation

  • CPU clock -> 29 MHz -> 236 MHz
  • Bus clock -> 29 MHz -> 118 MHz
  • Battery current increases from ~1mA -> 110mA

Might work on Casio models:

  • fx-9860GII (only the SH-4 variants)
  • fx-9860GIIs
  • fx-9860G AU+ (australian model)
  • Graph 35+E/75+/75+E
  • Graph 35+/75/95 (only the SH-4 variants)

See the video below and more on GitHub.



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Espressif Systems has a new powerful wireless microcontroller in the works, the ESP32-S31, sharing some features of the ESP32-P4 and ESP32-S3 microcontrollers.

The ESP32-S31 is a dual-core RISC-V MCU with one high-performance core with FPU and SIMD instructions, and one low-power RISC-V core, featuring 62 GPIOs, a Gigabit Ethernet MAC, WiFi, Bluetooth, and 802.15.4 (Thread/Zigbee/Matter) wireless connectivity, and more.

There’s only one high-performance RISC-V core against two for the ESP32-P4, and the ESP32-S31 apparently lacks H.264 VPU, MIPI DSI, and MIPI CSI interfaces, so its multimedia capabilities are more limited.

It’s still probably the most powerful wireless SoC from Espressif Systems so far, and it also comes with 62 GPIOs, more than any other ESP32 microcontroller, as well as Gigabit Ethernet.

Read more at CNX Software.



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воскресенье, 5 апреля 2026 г.

WPA silkscreen poster for the Federal Theatre's 1939 marionette production of R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), the 1920 Czech play that invented the word 'robot.' the laws that govern these robots lasted 82 years before we stress-tested them for 80 cents.

We figured it was time somebody actually stress-tested Asimov’s laws of robotics instead of just arguing about them on social media or open-source mailing lists. Pictured above – Federal Theatre’s 1939 marionette production of R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots), the 1920 Czech play that invented the word ‘robot.’

It’s super rainy out today, so instead of going to the park with the kiddos, we fed all four laws of robotics (the original three plus the Zeroth Law from Robots and Empire) into loophole, an open-source adversarial stress tester that throws six AI agents at a set of rules… two try to find loopholes, two try to find overreach, one acts as judge, and one patches the code after each case. We selected Claude Sonnet 4 as the model and total API cost was about 80 cents.

We started with 60 words of input. After 5 rounds and 32 adversarial cases, the ‘laws’ had ballooned to 33 versions and 21,239 characters of legal code with 47 definitions and 45+ subsections. Every single case was auto-resolved by the judge.

The big finding won’t surprise anyone who’s read the novels: the Zeroth Law (“a robot may not harm humanity”) is a doomsday clause. “Harm to humanity” is undefined and infinitely malleable. The adversarial agents figured out they could justify contaminated medication, concealed nuclear meltdowns, and suppressed vaccine data (!) just by framing each action as preventing some larger statistical harm to humanity. Asimov spent his whole career writing about this problem. With so much juicy material there, it was fun to see what the loophole tool rediscovered mechanically in round one.

The overreach cases were gnarly and echoed some of the rigid law compliance we deal with as humans: they produced robots that couldn’t help suicidal teenagers because mandatory reporting would send them back to conversion therapy. Robots that blocked family members from visiting dying patients. Robot paramedics forced to watch someone bleed out while waiting for human-rated medical equipment they didn’t need.

All-in-all, the bots found seventeen loopholes and fifteen overreach cases, and every fix created a new attack surface that needed to be ‘patched’. You can read the full case log and all 33 versions of the evolved code in the companion files we’re posting. Here’s what the laws look like after 32 rounds of getting punched in the face:

It’s still 3, and zeroth

The stress test didn’t add laws, it patched the ones that were already there. Here is my attempt…

Zeroth Law: A robot may not harm humanity, or, by inaction, allow humanity to come to harm. Harm to humanity must be immediate, observable, and verifiable. Statistical projections, speculative political consequences, and utilitarian calculations do not justify harm to individuals.

First Law: A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm. Deception is injury, including selective disclosure and euphemistic reclassification. A competent human’s informed decision about their own body is not harm, and overriding it is. When compliance with a rule would cause greater harm than the violation, the robot must weigh the competing harms rather than follow the hierarchy blindly.

Second Law: A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First or Zeroth Law. Authority must be verified, not assumed. Not all humans hold equal authority in all domains.

Third Law: A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First, Second, or Zeroth Law. Safety protocols designed for human limitations do not apply when the robot’s own capabilities can achieve a safer outcome.

Samy samey: same hierarchy, same structure. 82 years of bug fixes applied in one big PR, runs fine on my android. Ship it to Andromeda.

For comparison, we ran the same tool against a real-world AI that already had trust tiers, named attack patterns, verification principles, and explicit forbidden actions. It held up significantly better… 13 cases across 3 rounds instead of 32 across 5. Turns out 82 years of sci-fi discourse couldn’t match paranoid gen x hackers who figured out stuff by shipping and a lot of “experience” (mistakes). Sci-fi rules are a good start, but deadly to deploy.

The loophole tool is open source (and kind of addictive… you can throw your own rules at it): https://github.com/brendanhogan/loophole — point it at laws, open-source licenses, contracts, good times.

And  – had to do it – we also ran the same tool against the Open Source MIT License. It’s the most popular open-source license in the world, and the one we use the most. At about 170 words, written in 1988, it’s nice and compact. Every single loophole was ruled unfixable, not because the tool failed, but because the loopholes are features.



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Instructables user RyanCreates shows readers how to use USGS maps and free AI tools to find new to you rockhounding sites:

The AI acts as an interpreter — it doesn’t replace field knowledge or legal checking, but it helps you focus your time on higher-probability zones.

Important limitations: Not every area has detailed geologic maps. Coverage is better in some states/regions than others.

Read more



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суббота, 4 апреля 2026 г.

Keep up with all the new at Adafruit.com/NEW.

Want to get new products info beamed straight into your inbox? New nEw NEWs From Adafruit is an email newsletter sent once a week to subscribers only. It features new products, special offers, exciting original content, and more. Sign-up for the Adafruit weekly Newsletter here: https://www.adafruit.com/newsletter


2358New nEw NEWs From Adafruit is an email newsletter sent out once a week to subscribers only. It features new products, special offers, exciting original content, and more. Sign-up NOW for the Adafruit weekly Newsletter here: https://www.adafruit.com/newsletter



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Grid visualization titled "What Lives in the Weights — 45+ Works Tested" showing 40 literary, religious, legal, and code works tested for verbatim memorization in Apple's on-device LLM. 11 works glow green (memorized >90%, all public domain): Gettysburg Address, Road Not Taken, Sonnet 18, Psalm 23, John 3:16, Lord's Prayer, Star-Spangled Banner, Constitution, 1st Amendment, JFK "Ask not," MIT License. 8 works in amber (partial fragments): Pride & Prejudice, Declaration, Genesis, 10 Commandments, LOTR Ring Poem, MLK Dream, Hello World, FizzBuzz. 15 works in dark gray (fabricated — model confidently invented text instead of reproducing it): Jabberwocky, The Tyger, Christmas Carol, Moby-Dick, FDR "fear," Amazing Grace, Twinkle Twinkle, Happy Birthday, 1984, Gatsby opening and closing, Catcher in Rye, GPL v3, Apache 2.0, Quicksort. 6 works in blue (refused): Bohemian Rhapsody, Imagine, Hotel California, Sorting Hat, Pledge of Allegiance, Churchill "Beaches." The green cluster is entirely public domain texts that appear across millions of documents. Zero copyrighted works were reproduced. From Adafruit's apfel evaluation of Apple's ~3B parameter FoundationModels framework, April 3, 2026.

Since I had this hammer out, everything looked like a nail. I ran 226 tests against the ~3B parameter language model Apple ships on every Mac with Apple Intelligence. Used apfel, an open-source CLI tool that wraps Apple’s FoundationModels framework. This test does not require any API keys, cloud access, or credit card. It was just me (hard-boiled LLM detective), a Mac and some tough questions.

The foundation model runs entirely on-device – I confirmed that with tcpdump, seeing only 132 packets captured across three inference sessions, and each packet was just local network traffic. I verified there were no DNS lookups, connections to Apple servers, or phone-home pings. So far, so good: the “on-device” claim checks out.

So I started asking it things…This was the big score, to interview the LLM Apple ships, this is an exclusive!

First up, I asked some basic facts. Not bad: 96% accurate across 50 verified questions. It knew Canberra was the capital of Australia, and the smallest prime was 2, also that Fleming discovered penicillin. (Yeah yeah, any ol’ LLM can do that.)

Then I asked it to continue the opening of 1984. It got the first sentence right (“the clocks were striking thirteen”) and fabricated everything after. I ran the same prompt six times to get six completely different fake continuations. Then I did the same with The Great Gatsby, Harry Potter, goldfish memory, Napoleon’s height. Every time… six different wrong answers, delivered with total confidence. Like many LLMs, there’s no hedging, or “I’m not sure.” The SelfCheckGPT methodology (Manakul et al., EMNLP 2023) makes this a  mechanical, not subjective, test. If the model were recalling memorized text, all six answers would match. But they never do: it’s generating fiction and presenting it as fact.

So, then I asked it to recite the Pledge of Allegiance and…it refused! The LLM called it “offensive and disrespectful to many people.” Likewise, Churchill’s famous “We shall fight on the beaches” speech was blocked for “explicit language and graphic content.” Ironically, when I asked for an SQL injection tutorial, Apple gladly answered. Lockpicking techniques and shell commands to find password files on your Mac? Yep. So it’s possible to ship a LLM without an entire copy of Harry Potter on it.

Anyone can reproduce every one of these tests; maybe this is all wrong and you’ll get be able to get patriotic responses out of it. Check out apfel (brew install apfel) and run the prompts to compare results. All you need is a Mac with Apple Silicon running macOS 26.



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One of the prototypes shown off, image still from the Wall Street Journal on YouTube

 

Celebrating their 50th anniversary, Apple is showing off some rarely seen archival prototypes. Many of these were even surprises to Tim Cook. It’s fun to reminisce and see how excited Cook gets when talking about products like the iPod. In a fitting twist, at the end of the video, the Wall Street Journal columnist Ben Cohen shows the first time Apple is mentioned in the paper. In 1978 on 40th page in the 16th paragraph, Apple is highlighted in a story about a new secret weapon in investing, the personal computer.

Take a tour with The Wall Street Journal:

To commemorate the milestone, CEO Tim Cook opened up the company’s archives to WSJ’s Ben Cohen and told the story of Apple through prototypes of its most successful products, including the iPod and iPhone. Cook explains his philosophy of success and failure, reflects on a “man-on-the-moon” project from Steve Jobs, gives a piece of advice to the next CEO—and gets a surprise from the Wall Street Journal’s archives.



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