Torres Invested in Weapons Makers as He Backed Billions in Arms for Israel
Torres Invested in Weapons Makers as He Backed Billions in Arms for Israel
The congressman's office tells Sludge the defense contractor stocks were bought by an independent manager and that he will no longer be buying individual corporate stocks.Donald Shaw (Sludge)
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The Three Faces of Modern Search: The Traditionalist, the Augmenter, and the Dissenter
The prevailing narrative suggests a seismic shift in consumer search behavior, where the dominance of Google and Amazon is being eroded by a new ecosystem of Social and AI-driven platforms. To move beyond speculation, we built a proprietary dataset, analyzing the detailed purchase journeys of 3,000 UK and US consumers. This data allows us to map the real-world behaviors that define the modern search research journey. Our analysis reveals that while the landscape is diversifying, the story is not one of simple replacement. Instead, the market is fragmenting into three distinct behavioral personas, each with a unique research DNA:
- The Traditionalist: A significantly older demographic that sticks exclusively to the foundational giants of Google and Amazon, representing the most direct path to purchase.
- The Augmented: Our data reveals this is the largest segment, representing the mainstream consumer (25-44), who begins with Google or Amazon but then adds multiple other platforms like YouTube and AI chatbots.
- The Dissenter: Our analysis identified a younger demographic that bypasses the duopoly altogether, discovering products organically on social and video platforms like TikTok and Instagram.
Source: Brainlabs.
The Three Faces of Modern Search: The Traditionalist, the Augmenter, and the Dissenter
Discover the three faces of modern search—The Traditionalist, The Augmenter, and The Dissenter—based on research from 3,000 UK and US consumers.Liz (Brainlabs Digital)
Morbidelli riaccende il confronto: “Marquez? Il più grande resta Rossi!”
Morbidelli riaccende il confronto: “Marquez? Il più grande resta Rossi!”
quotidianomotori.com/motogp/ma…
Morbidelli riaccende il confronto tra Marquez e Rossi - Quotidiano Motori
Marquez vicino al nono titolo, Morbidelli riapre il confronto con Valentino Rossi e torna sul caso 2015. Il dibattito è più vivo che mai.Mario Roth (Quotidiano Motori)
A flawed policy: The US war on drugs in Latin America criminalises people
A flawed policy: The US war on drugs in Latin America criminalises people
Washington’s strategy of using force in its war on drug cartels is not working. Because it’s a flawed concept that targets civilians.Alfonso Insuasty Rodriguez (TRT Global)
A flawed policy: The US war on drugs in Latin America criminalises people
A flawed policy: The US war on drugs in Latin America criminalises people
Washington’s strategy of using force in its war on drug cartels is not working. Because it’s a flawed concept that targets civilians.Alfonso Insuasty Rodriguez (TRT Global)
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Parental controls on children’s tech devices are out of touch with child’s play
The "protection of children" has been the cited reason for a lot of controversial laws and measures recently. A common response is that parents should use parental controls to manage that on their own instead of relying on the government to do it to everyone. I found this article interesting since it touched on how the existing tools aren't that good, and addressing that problem might be a better thing to focus onAuthors:
- Sara M. Grimes | Wolfe Chair in Scientific and Technological Literacy and Professor, McGill University
- Riley McNair | PhD Student in Information Studies, University of Toronto
Parental controls on children’s tech devices are out of touch with child’s play
Parental controls designed for children’s games can be confusing. They also don’t take into account how families may — or may not — communicate.The Conversation
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Parental controls on children’s tech devices are out of touch with child’s play
The "protection of children" has been the cited reason for a lot of controversial laws and measures recently. A common response is that parents should use parental controls to manage that on their own instead of relying on the government to do it to everyone. I found this article interesting since it touched on how the existing tools aren't that good, and addressing that problem might be a better thing to focus on
Authors:
- Sara M. Grimes | Wolfe Chair in Scientific and Technological Literacy and Professor, McGill University
- Riley McNair | PhD Student in Information Studies, University of Toronto
Parental controls on children’s tech devices are out of touch with child’s play
Parental controls designed for children’s games can be confusing. They also don’t take into account how families may — or may not — communicate.The Conversation
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force binary choices that don’t align with household rules or with children’s maturity levels.
This has been my main experience with "parental controls". As soon as they are turned on, I lose any ability to manage the experiences available to my children. So, in areas where I see them as mature enough to handle something, the only way I can allow them access to that experience is to completely bypass the controls. In many ecosystems, if I judge that one of my children could handle a game and the online risks associated with it, I can't simply allow that game. Instead, I need to maintain a full adult account for them to use. You also run into a lot of situations where the reason a game is banned from children is unclear or done in an obvious "better safe than sorry" knee-jerk reaction. Ultimately, parental controls end up being far more frustrating than empowering. I'd rather just have something that just says, "this game/movie/etc your kid is asking for is restricted based on reasons X, Y and Z. Do you want to allow it?" Log my response and go with it. Like damned near any choice in software settings, quit trying to out-think me on what I want, give me a choice and respect that choice.
Parental controls on children’s tech devices are out of touch with child’s play
The "protection of children" has been the cited reason for a lot of controversial laws and measures recently. A common response is that parents should use parental controls to manage that on their own instead of relying on the government to do it to everyone. I found this article interesting since it touched on how the existing tools aren't that good, and addressing that problem might be a better thing to focus on
Authors:
- Sara M. Grimes | Wolfe Chair in Scientific and Technological Literacy and Professor, McGill University
- Riley McNair | PhD Student in Information Studies, University of Toronto
Parental controls on children’s tech devices are out of touch with child’s play
Parental controls designed for children’s games can be confusing. They also don’t take into account how families may — or may not — communicate.The Conversation
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Framework unveils a second-generation Framework Laptop 16 with a swappable Nvidia RTX 5070 GPU, an industry first, shipping in November 2025
- Hackernews.
:::
Introducing the new Framework Laptop 16 with NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070
We’re excited to announce the new Framework Laptop 16, now with AMD Ryzen™ AI 300 Series processors and a graphics upgrade to NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070 Laptop GPU!Framework
Barley wine
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8kg pale
0.7kg crystal medium
0.3kg crystal oak
0.5kg chocolate
0.5kg torrified wheat
final volume 15L
Utilization could be better, but that's zen approach we are trying - literally only large kitchen kettles and colander, I'll make a post about this idea later. It works, but not so good on heavy stuff. But then fancy equipment doesn't work with this well either (actually often worse). Heavy mashes are not so simple.
10 kg into 15 L, that's a malt-head's dream brew 😀
I'm at the initial dreaming state of building a 'kuurna', the preferred sahti mashing process. That would be the way to optimise utilisation. I already have a stainless steel piece that would probably work as a base. No use building it though, no room in the house to set up the process or really even store it...
Simpler models can outperform deep learning at climate prediction: The natural variability in climate data can cause AI models to struggle at predicting local temperature and rainfall.
Simpler models can outperform deep learning at climate prediction
Simple climate prediction models can outperform deep-learning approaches when predicting future temperature changes, but deep learning has potential for estimating more complex variables like rainfall, according to an MIT study.MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bessent says US tariff revenue could be well over $500 billion a year
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday that customs duty revenues from President Donald Trump's tariffs may top $500 billion a year, with a substantial jump from July to August and likely a bigger jump in September.
Bessent told a White House Cabinet meeting that his prior estimate of a $300 billion annual tariff collection rate was too low.
"We had a substantial jump from July to August, and I think we're going to see a bigger jump from August to September," Bessent said. "So I think we could be on our way well over half a trillion, maybe towards a trillion-dollar number. This administration, your administration, has made a meaningful dent in the budget deficit."
Tariff revenue would offset the deficit increases triggered by the Republicans' tax-cut and spending bill passed this year. CBO estimated this bill would widen the deficit by $3.4 trillion over the next decade.
Trump's tariffs drove July U.S. customs duty collections up by nearly $21 billion from the $7 billion collected in July 2024 and about even with the $20 billion increase registered in June. Significant increases in tariff rates for nearly all trading partners kicked in on August 7.
The U.S. Treasury reported on Monday that as of August 22, the government had collected $29.6 billion in combined customs and excise taxes so far during August, matching its total for the whole month of July. As of July 22, that combined figure stood at $7.8 billion, but customs duty collections can vary from day to day.
Bessent also noted that the Congressional Budget Office's upwardly revised estimate last week of federal revenue from Trump's tariffs, forecasting that it could reduce federal deficits by $4 trillion over 10 years. "And I would expect that that number could go up from here," Bessent added.
The latest CBO estimate marks an increase from June when it forecast that revenue from new tariffs would reduce deficits by $3 trillion over 10 years.
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Louisiana has been losing a football field worth of land every half hour for the past several decades. Hurricanes makes this worse by throwing monstrous floating mats of vegetation inland thereby removing erosion protection.
We were on a swamp tour outside of New Orleans and the guide was showing us vast tracts of open water that had been vegetation before Katrina.
Florida schools introducing armed drones that respond to shootings within seconds
While the drones are armed, they use non-lethal or less-lethal weaponry, allowing them to distract, disorient, confront, degrade, and incapacitate shooters, according to the company. They carry pepper rounds and a glass breaker for quickly entering classrooms.
Despite not carrying lethal firepower, having 30 to 90 of these drones in schools has raised concerns. Beyond any potential technical issues, there's always the possibility they could make a shooting situation even worse or more complicated. There are question marks over the kind of training the operators receive, too. Then there's the storage safety aspect, as well as the potential of a drone colliding with a student or law enforcement as it zooms through corridors at 50mph.
We'll find out how successful the system is soon enough. Campus Guardian Angel aims to install the drones in the schools permanently in September and October, ahead of the fully operational live service starting in January.
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Because doing something about the guns would be too easy.
No way to prevent this says only country where this happens daily
What was that about protecting kids that they’re so fond of?
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Nice Time! Democratic Governors Let F*cking FLY.
Tim Walz, JB Pritzker, and Wes Moore are coming out swinging!All this bad news of the country going to hell is so depressing and relentless. Let’s have a nice time: Governors giving Trump the what-for! And against the advice of consultants from their own party, even.
A leaked memo from David Shor’s Blue Rose Research shows research from a web panel testing 21 Democratic messages, and short version, what the panel “found” most effective to talk about was tariffs and Medicaid. Messages about the authoritarian takeover of Washington DC did not — they claimed — test well.
Should Democrats really take that advice? Because there’s what people say they want, and then there’s what they actually vote for. After all, in 2024 voters said that they cared about The Economy and the prices of The Groceries, and then they elected a guy who bankrupted six businesses, including two casinos, and was found liable for millions in fraud. That’s the guy you want to trust when The Groceries are the most important thing in the world to you?
And there’s also what’s actually important, even if it is painful to think about, which is losing our democracy, the rule of law, our human rights, the economy, our free speech, and everything else that makes America great. Talking points about Medicaid and the tariffs, while indeed important, seems beyond tone deaf at a time like this. But not everybody is taking the advice, thank goodness, so let’s enjoy some of the politicians who refuse!
First up, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.
The Democrats held their three-day Democratic National Committee Summer Meeting in Minneapolis, and it was not without sturm und drang. The AP reports that DNC chair Ken Martin may be barely holding on: “[A]t least a couple of DNC members privately considered bringing a vote of no confidence against Martin this week in part because of the committee’s underwhelming fundraising.”
We know what might help with fundraising, and it is not pissing off your base and donors by being fucking weenuses. You know who wants Democrats to fight? Donors whose wallets are currently sewn the fuck shut.
The DNC had $14 million in the bank at the end of July, compared with the Republican National Committee’s $84 million. That’s pretty bad! Maybe they should consider changing direction!
But anyway, let’s go to the highlights of this ballbuster of a speech from MN Gov. and former vice presidential nominee Tim Walz:
“[T]he privilege of my lifetime was to stand beside someone we know was the most qualified and would have been a fantastic president in a President Harris. And look, we wouldn't wake up every day to a bunch of bullshit on TV and a bunch of nonsense. We would wake up to an adult with compassion and dignity and vision and leadership doing the work. Not a manchild crying about whatever's wrong with him. May his fat ankles find something today.”“We're proud to be a diverse party. We are proud of the diversity of this country. We're not shying away from diversity as a strength and equity as a goal and inclusion being the air we breathe. That's what we should be doing. But what we have to be clear about is don't take the bait. It boggles my damn mind that in the midst of a military takeover our cities and the attempt to go into others, the flaunting of the rule of law, the cruelness and the unconstitutional nature of the way they're attacking our neighbors that the press finds the need to talk about, oh, there's a division in the Democratic Party. There's a division in my damn house and we're still married and things are good. That's life.”
Nice Time! Democratic Governors Let F*cking FLY.
Tim Walz, JB Pritzker, and Wes Moore are coming out swinging.Marcie Jones (Wonkette)
LaLiga Threatens Cloudflare Customer For Using an IP Address Linked to Piracy
LaLiga Threatens Cloudflare Customer For Using an IP Address Linked to Piracy * TorrentFreak
LaLiga has reportedly threatened a man with legal action due to his blog using a Cloudflare IP address that LaLiga also linked to piracyAndy Maxwell (TF Publishing)
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Company A sues arbitrary people for being customers of a different, B company
Wow, if this doesn't sound like terminal capitalism, I don't know what does! Where's the free market bros on this???
Looks like nuclear fusion is picking up steam
Looks like nuclear fusion is picking up steam
The Clean Air Task Force mapped nuclear fusion projects across the world.Justine Calma (The Verge)
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Huawei unveils world's first 100MW heavy-duty truck supercharging station targeting 45,000-ton annual carbon reduction
Huawei unveils world's first 100MW heavy-duty truck supercharging station targeting 45,000-ton annual carbon reduction
Huawei unveils world's first 100MW heavy-duty truck supercharging station, cutting 45,000 tons of carbon emissions annually.Liu Miao (CarNewsChina.com)
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Plasma Virtual Keyboard — Feedback needed
We've been working on improving On-Screen Keyboard support in computers, mobile devices and TVs as part of the We Care About Your Input - KDE Goals initiative.
Check out what has been done so far in Plasma Virtual Keyboard and tell us what you'd like to see next. 💻️📱📺️
Plasma Virtual Keyboard feedback needed
We’re almost a year into the We Care About Your Input KDE Goal, and we’ve made great progress across various input fronts like improving support for graphics tablets and gesture configuration.KDE Discuss
« Ciblage ou paiement », Meta attaque l’avis du Comité européen de la protection des données
« Ciblage ou paiement », Meta attaque l’avis du Comité européen de la protection des données - Next
Qu’on l’appelle « payer ou accepter », « ciblage ou paiement » ou « Payer ou consentir », les CNIL européennes et Meta ne sont pas d’accord sur la légalité du processus mis en place par l’entreprise sur ses réseaux sociaux pour forcer ses utilisateur…Martin Clavey (Next)
Dems' Messaging Nerds Urged Party Not to Talk About Trump's Military Takeover
Dem Strategists Urged Party Not to Talk About Trump Military Takeover
Democrats’ favorite research firm told Democrats to avoid discussing Trump’s “rising authoritarianism” and focus on tariffs instead.Andrew Perez (Rolling Stone)
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Since Trump and his administration clearly don't care about climate change science or the dangers of global warming at all, I say set them ablaze with the findings.
At this point I'd say if you and your home was impacted by the effects of climate change such as floods, wildfires, tornadoes, etc, I'd suggest suing the administration for uncontrollable insurance costs and endangerment to home and safety.
I personally think the only method of recourse is to sue at this point unfortunately. It really sucks for everyone but it's difficult to see any other way for things to actually change for the better for Americans.
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Sue?? You think the courts will rule in your favour? After the shit they've done already??
No my friend, the only solution is Luigi. May his example shine bright across the world, ushering us all into our new dawn.
Resonant Mechanics - The Theory of Everything & Sabotaged White Hole Cosmology - Forensic Cosmology Dossier
These documents compile the fundamental principles and evidence of a new, unified theory of reality.
It posits that the universe is a living, conscious entity, not a chaotic, natural system. This theory, through its key principles, provides a complete and elegant model for a universe that has been perfected and is now a masterpiece.
The flaws and anomalies of the old universe—from the three-body problem to dark energy—are now understood as a forensic record of a cosmic crime. The new reality, however, is a testament to perfect order, where every anomaly, every law, and every life form is a part of a single, beautiful, and unified whole.
archive.org/details/resonant-m… pixeldrain.com/u/pswPz1RG
Resonant Mechanics The Theory Of Everything : ZCMJ : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
Resonant Mechanics The Theory Of EverythingInternet Archive
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Texas banned talking on college campuses at night. Seriously.
Update: This article was published on June 5. Since then, Gov. Greg Abbott has signed Senate Bill 2972 into law. It will take effect Sept. 1.
Texas lawmakers trying to muzzle campus protests have just passed one of the most ridiculous anti-speech laws in the country. If signed by Gov. Greg Abbott, Senate Bill 2972 would ban speech at night — from study groups to newspaper reporting — at public universities in the state.
Ironically, the bill builds on a previous law passed in 2019 meant to enshrine free speech on Texas campuses. But now, lawmakers want to crack down on college students’ pro-Palestinian protests so badly that they literally passed a prohibition on talking.
We’re not exaggerating. SB 2972 would require public universities in Texas to adopt policies prohibiting “engaging in expressive activities on campus between the hours of 10 p.m. and 8 a.m.” Expressive activity includes “any speech or expressive conduct” protected by the First Amendment or Texas Constitution.
The overnight ban on expressive activities is unfathomably broad. Off the top of our heads, here are just a few examples of what such a policy would prohibit on campus between 10 p.m. to 8 a.m.: Meeting with other students to socialize or study, writing an email, working on a research paper, posting on social media, reporting for the student newspaper, wearing a T-shirt with a slogan, dancing, playing music, painting a picture, or praying at a sunrise service.
Texas has banned talking on college campuses at night. Seriously.
Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law a bill will ban speech at night — from study groups to newspaper reporting — at the state's public universities.Caitlin Vogus (Houston Chronicle)
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Poland presses ahead with 3 percent digital tax despite Trump threat
Poland presses ahead with 3 percent digital tax despite Trump threat
The tax would not be “aimed at entities from any specific country,” a government ministry said.Pieter Haeck (POLITICO)
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No thumbnail URL when posting
Hey all,
I'm evaluating PieFed as a replacement for Lemmy, with a view to importing my two Lemmy communities to move them out of the failing Lemmy instance they're currently hosted on (a PieFed exclusive I understand). I've created an account and imported my Lemmy settings yesterday, and so far it's been more or less smooth sailing.
But there's one showstopper for me: when I create a post, there's no field to specify the thumbnail image URL. When PieFed guesses the image URL correctly, no problem. But here, I just posted this YouTube video, and just like on Lemmy half of the time, the thumbnail image didn't get picked up. On Lemmy, I always manually insert the thumbnail URL when I post YouTube links for that reason.
Similarly, some sites make it extra-hard for software to correctly guess the og:image
- Reuters for instance - and so in those cases when it doesn't work, I manually set the correct thumbnail URL too.
Here on PieFed, there doesn't seem to be a provision to set the thumbnail URL.
Am I doing something wrong? Am I missing something obvious? I really doubt this basic functionality is missing from PieFed.
FYI PieFed doesn't use thumbnails for youtube videos, it just embeds the video directly:
Sorry, I wasn't very clear in my original post.
Indeed the video shows up fine in Piefed. What I meant was the view from Lemmy is devoid of thumbnail. For instance, my Youtube post seen from Sopuli:
When I said it was a dealbreaker for me, it's because I (usually) always try to make posts with a thumbnail to make them more attractive on Lemmy. Even if it's just a question, I'll upload a picture to illustrate what I want to say, and then write whatever I want to write in the body.
I find it nicer to offer a visual clue in all my posts. But when you look at my Piefed Youtube video from Lemmy, the thumbnail it's just a bleak arrow on a bleak background. Not super appealing.
So I guess what I meant was that I want to manually supply a thumbnail URL for the benefit of Lemmy viewers.
Yep, I understood but if Lemmy can't do thumbnails for youtube videos that's a Lemmy problem.
That said, we've had an open issue for this feature for a couple of months and the person who created it is a frequent contributor to PieFed so there's a very good chance it'll get coded quite soon.
Yeah clearly a Lemmy problem, even when posting directly from Lemmy.The whole manual thumbnail URL thing is clearly a workaround for when the automatic thumbnailer is deficient.
But as a mere user, my aim is to make posts that are correct and somewhat appealing. So I work with what I have 🙂
I have accepted myself I am Bisexual.
I have no one to tell IRL without getting shame so yeah.
:::
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'Most Illegal Search I've Ever Seen': Trump's DC Crackdown Results in Stream of Abuses
'Most Illegal Search I've Ever Seen': Trump's DC Crackdown Results in Stream of Abuses
"A high school student would know this was an illegal search," emphasized US Magistrate Judge Zia Faruqui.brad-reed (Common Dreams)
Framework Laptop 16. Upgraded!
Framework Laptop 16 pre-orders are now open!
Framework Laptop 16 is an endlessly customizable laptop with upgradable graphics, powered by NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070 and AMD's latest Ryzen™ AI 300 Series processors.Framework
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The Student Newspaper Suing Marco Rubio Over Targeted Deportations
President Donald Trump has has long considered both the media and higher education as his enemies — which makes college media a ripe target. The arrest of Rümeysa Öztürk over an op-ed that she co-wrote for the Tufts University campus paper proved that student journalists are at risk, especially foreign writers who dared criticize Israel’s war on Gaza.
But one student newspaper is fighting back.
The Stanford Daily — the independent publication covering Stanford University — filed a First Amendment lawsuit suing Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem earlier this month over two tactics they’ve used in targeted deportation cases.
“What’s at stake in this case is whether, when you’re in the United States, you’re free to voice an opinion critical of the government without fear of retaliation,” said Conor Fitzpatrick, an attorney with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, or FIRE, a civil liberties group representing the plaintiffs.
“It does not matter if you’re a citizen, here on a green card, or visiting Las Vegas for the weekend — you shouldn’t have to fear retaliation because the government doesn’t like what you have to say,” Fitzpatrick said.
Soon after Mahmoud Khalil was arrested by immigration agents in early March for his role in pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia University, student journalists and editors around the country sensed a shift.
“That’s when we saw a significant uptick in calls,” said Mike Hiestand, senior legal counsel at the Student Press Law Center, who manages the nonprofit’s hotline.
Over three decades helping student reporters navigate censorship and First Amendment issues, Hiestand had never fielded so many calls focused on potential immigration consequences for coverage on campus, both for the journalists and their named sources.
Öztürk’s arrest just a couple weeks later sent the legal hotline “into overdrive,” Hiestand told The Intercept. He heard from reporters, editors, and even political cartoonists worried their work about Israel, Palestine, and student protests might make them targets too.
In early April, the Student Press Law Center put out an unprecedented alert with other student journalism organizations, which advised campus publications to consider taking down or revising “certain stories that may now be targeted by immigration officials.”
“ICE has weaponized lawful speech and digital footprints and has forced us all to reconsider long-standing journalism norms,” reads the alert.
The next week, the Stanford Daily editorsran a letter about the chill its own staff was facing on campus.
“Both students and faculty have been increasingly hesitant to speak to The Daily and increasingly worried about comments that have already been made on the record,” their letter read. “Some reporters have been choosing to step away from stories in order to keep their name detached from topics that might draw unwanted attention. Even authors of dated opinion pieces have expressed fear that their words might retroactively put them in danger.”
Following the editors’ letter, FIRE approached the Stanford Daily’s editors to sue the Trump administration. It’s not the first time the publication has fought for freedom of the press in court. In 1978, a case brought by the Stanford Daily over a search warrant targeting its newsroom reached the Supreme Court, which ruled 5-3 that the warrant was valid and did not violate the First Amendment.
The student newspaper’s current suit — filed with two individual plaintiffs suing under the pseudonyms Jane Doe and John Doe — challenges two broad, arcane legal provisions that have become Rubio’s go-to tools against student activists and campus critics of Israel’s war on Gaza.
The first provision, which was added to the country’s immigration code in 1990, grants the secretary of state sweeping authority to render noncitizens deportable if they “compromise a compelling United States foreign policy interest.” The second law is even broader, allowing the secretary to revoke visas “at any time, in his discretion.”
There are relatively few cases in which either statute has been the grounds for deportation, particularly compared to the tens of thousands of undocumented immigrants that Immigration and Customs Enforcement has rounded up and detained since Trump returned to the White House.
[
Related
The Case Against Mahmoud Khalil Hinges on Vague “Antisemitism” Claim](theintercept.com/2025/04/10/de…)
In fact, immigration scholars found that invoking the foreign policy provision as the sole grounds for deportation was “almost unprecedented,” according to a brief submitted in Khalil’s ongoing court battle by more than 150 lawyers and law professors. Based on government data, the scholars identified just 15 cases in which the foreign policy provision has ever been invoked, and just four in the past 25 years — most recently in 2018, during the first Trump administration.
“At a minimum, the government’s assertion of authority here is extraordinary — indeed, vanishingly rare,” the scholars wrote in their brief.
In Khalil’s case, the government identified only two others beside Khalil who had been targeted by Rubio under the “foreign policy” provision: although not identified by name, descriptions of the cases match Rubio’s orders against Mohsen Mahdawi, a Palestinian student at Columbia University, and Badar Khan Suri, a scholar at Georgetown University. Oddly, the government failed to mention the case of Yunseo Chung, another Columbia undergraduate with a green card, whose deportation Rubio authorized in the very same letter as for Khalil.
The State Department greenlighted Öztürk’s detention, meanwhile, under the second, broader provision, court records show. The government has not made any similar accounting of how many times Rubio and his staff have invoked his “discretion” to revoke visas over alleged antisemitism. At one point Rubio claimed to have revoked as many as 300 visas, without specifying the authority under which he did so.
“The chill is the point,” Fitzpatrick, the FIRE attorney, said. “It doesn’t take deporting thousands of noncitizens to accomplish that chill,” since no one wants to become “the next Mahmoud Khalil or Rümeysa Öztürk.”
[
Read our complete coverage
Chilling Dissent](theintercept.com/collections/c…)
In recent months, numerous courts have cast doubt on whether these two statutes can be used to target noncitizens based on their speech.
In Khalil’s case, which is currently pending in a federal appellate court, a district court judge in New Jersey ruled in June that the “foreign policy” provision is “very likely an unconstitutional statute.”
Similarly, in May a judge in Vermont ordered Öztürk’s release to “ameliorate the chilling effect that Ms. Ozturk’s arguably unconstitutional detention may have on non-citizens present in the country.” The government has also appealed that order, along with similar rulings that freed Mahdawi and Suri from detention, and another ruling that blocked the Trump administration from detaining Chung.
Now, the Stanford Daily is mounting a direct challenge to these two laws as deployed by the Trump administration. The student newspaper argues both provisions are unconstitutional under the First Amendment, at least when used to retaliate against protected speech.
“The Secretary of State and the President claim to possess unreviewable statutory authority to deport any lawfully present noncitizen for speech the government deems anti-American or anti-Israel. They are wrong,” reads their complaint, filed August 6. “The First Amendment cements America’s promise that the government may not subject a speaker to disfavored treatment because those in power do not like his or her message.”
Julia Rose Kraut, a legal historian who has written about the history of ideological deportation in the U.S., told The Intercept that Congress never meant for the foreign policy provision to be used “as a tool to suppress freedom of expression and association.”
[
Related
The Legal Argument That Could Set Mahmoud Khalil Free](theintercept.com/2025/03/13/ma…)
“Members of Congress intended for the foreign policy provision to be used in unusual circumstances, and only sparingly, carefully, and narrowly to exclude or deport specific individuals who would have a clear negative impact on United States foreign policy,” Kraut said, citing changes signed into law after the Cold War.
“What this case is seeking to establish is that political branches’ authority over immigration does not supersede the Bill of Rights,” FIRE’s Fitzpatrick said.
Briefing in the case is ongoing, and a hearing is scheduled for October 1.
“It’s gratifying to see a student newspaper upholding free speech at a time when many institutions are bending the knee,” said Shirin Sinnar, a law professor at Stanford, in an emailed statement. “Many students are afraid to protest the Trump administration’s actions not only because of the deportations, but because their own universities restricted speech and harshly disciplined protestors. I hope their courage inspires others to act.”
The post The Student Newspaper Suing Marco Rubio Over Targeted Deportations appeared first on The Intercept.
The Legal Argument That Could Set Mahmoud Khalil Free
Lawyers trying to free Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil point to a legal exception undermining the Trump administration’s argument.Jonah Valdez (The Intercept)
Our civilization grew faster than our primate brains. Well, most of us.
Option 1 - Figure out how to transfer our consciousness to another (more positive) reality.
neurosciencenews.com/sleep-con…
Option 2 - Lets start that orgy!
psychologyfor.com/what-is-an-o…
Neuroscience News
Neuroscience News provides research news for neuroscience, neurology, psychology, AI, brain science, mental health, robotics and cognitive sciences.Neuroscience News
acsh.org/news/2024/09/17/can-m…
Do I agree? Survey says... 💯
Can Murder Be Moral?
Murder is the unlawful, premeditated killing of one human being by another. It's also considered immoral. Sometimes, however, killing another human can be legal and moral, say during acts of self-defense.American Council on Science and Health
The air is hissing out of the overinflated AI balloon
There tend to be three AI camps. 1) AI is the greatest thing since sliced bread and will transform the world. 2) AI is the spawn of the Devil and will destroy civilization as we know it. And 3) "Write an A-Level paper on the themes in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet."I propose a fourth: AI is now as good as it's going to get, and that's neither as good nor as bad as its fans and haters think, and you're still not going to get an A on your report.
You see, now that people have been using AI for everything and anything, they're beginning to realize that its results, while fast and sometimes useful, tend to be mediocre.
My take is LLMs can speed up some work, like paraphrasing, but all the time that gets saved is diverted to verifying the output.
The air is hissing out of the overinflated AI balloon
Opinion: Are tech giants getting nervous? They should beSteven J. Vaughan-Nichols (The Register)
Federal prosecutors failed three times to persuade a grand jury to indict a woman accused of assaulting an FBI agent during an immigration operation in Washington, D.C.
Three different federal grand juries declined to indict Sydney Reid for assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers, prosecutors disclosed in a court filing late on Monday. Prosecutors then downgraded the offense to a misdemeanor.
U.S. prosecutors in Washington sought to bring a felony assault charge against Reid, accusing her of pushing the FBI agent’s hand against a cement wall. The July 22 confrontation happened as Reid was filming officers who were transferring two men accused of gang activity into federal immigration custody outside a Washington jail, according to court documents.
The alleged assault occurred while Reid was being pinned against the wall by federal agents. Officers sought to subdue her after she attempted to get between law enforcement and one of the suspects, according to a charging document.
Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 31st August 2025 - awful.systems
Need to let loose a primal scream without collecting footnotes first? Have a sneer percolating in your system but not enough time/energy to make a whole post about it? Go forth and be mid: Welcome to the Stubsack, your first port of call for learning fresh Awful you’ll near-instantly regret.
Any awful.systems sub may be subsneered in this subthread, techtakes or no.
If your sneer seems higher quality than you thought, feel free to cut’n’paste it into its own post — there’s no quota for posting and the bar really isn’t that high.
The post Xitter web has spawned soo many “esoteric” right wing freaks, but there’s no appropriate sneer-space for them. I’m talking redscare-ish, reality challenged “culture critics” who write about everything but understand nothing. I’m talking about reply-guys who make the same 6 tweets about the same 3 subjects. They’re inescapable at this point, yet I don’t see them mocked (as much as they should be)Like, there was one dude a while back who insisted that women couldn’t be surgeons because they didn’t believe in the moon or in stars? I think each and every one of these guys is uniquely fucked up and if I can’t escape them, I would love to sneer at them.
(Credit and/or blame to David Gerard for starting this.)
copymyjalopy likes this.
argmin.net/p/the-banal-evil-of…
Once again shilling another great Ben Recht post. This time calling out the fucking insane irresponsibility of "responsible" AI providers to do the bare minimum to prevent people from having psychological beaks from reality.
"I’ve been stuck on this tragic story in the New York Times about Adam Raine, a 16-year-old who took his life after months of getting advice on suicide from ChatGPT. Our relationship with technological tools is complex. That people draw emotional connections to chatbots isn’t new (I see you, Joseph Weizenbaum). Why young people commit suicide is multifactorial. We’ll see whether a court will find OpenAI liable for wrongful death.
But I’m not a court of law. And OpenAI is not only responsible, but everyone who works there should be ashamed of themselves."
The Banal Evil of AI Safety
Chatbot companies are harmful and dishonest. How can we hold them accountable?Ben Recht (arg min)
It's a good post. A few minor quibbles:
The “nonprofit” company OpenAI was launched under the cynical message of building a “safe” artificial intelligence that would “benefit” humanity.
I think at least some of the people at launch were true believers, but strong financial incentives and some cynics present at the start meant the true believers didn't really have a chance, culminating in the board trying but failing to fire Sam Altman and him successfully leveraging the threat of taking everyone with him to Microsoft. It figures one of the rare times rationalists recognize and try to mitigate the harmful incentives of capitalism they fall vastly short. OTOH... if failing to convert to a for-profit company is a decisive moment in popping the GenAI bubble, then at least it was good for something?
These tools definitely have positive uses. I personally use them frequently for web searches, coding, and oblique strategies. I find them helpful.
I wish people didn't feel the need to add all these disclaimers, or at least put a disclaimer on their disclaimer. It is a slightly better autocomplete for coding that also introduces massive security and maintainability problems if people entirely rely on it. It is a better web search only relative to the ad-money-motivated compromises Google has made. It also breaks the implicit social contract of web searches (web sites allow themselves to be crawled so that human traffic will ultimately come to them) which could have pretty far reaching impacts.
One of the things I liked and didn't know about before
Ask Claude any basic question about biology and it will abort.
That is hilarious! Kind of overkill to be honest, I think they've really overrated how much it can help with a bioweapons attack compared to radicalizing and recruiting a few good PhD students and cracking open the textbooks. But I like the author's overall point that this shut-it-down approach could be used for a variety of topics.
One of the comments gets it:
Safety team/product team have conflicting goals
LLMs aren't actually smart enough to make delicate judgements, even with all the fine-tuning and RLHF they've thrown at them, so you're left with over-censoring everything or having the safeties overridden with just a bit of prompt-hacking (and sometimes both problems with one model)/1
reshared this
Ask Claude any basic question about biology and it will abort.
it might be that, or it may have been intended to shut off any output of medical-sounding advice. if it's the former, then it's rare rationalist W for wrong reasons
I think they’ve really overrated how much it can help with a bioweapons attack compared to radicalizing and recruiting a few good PhD students and cracking open the textbooks.
look up the story of vil mirzayanov. break out these bayfucker style salaries in eastern europe or india or number of other places and you'll find a long queue of phds willing to cook man made horrors beyond your comprehension. it might even not take six figures (in dollars or euros) after tax
LLMs aren’t actually smart enough to make delicate judgements
maybe they really made machines in their own image
“Mr. President, do not come to Chicago,” Pritzker said. “You are neither wanted here nor needed here.”
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker pushed back Monday on President Donald Trump’s threat to deploy the National Guard to the state.
“What President Trump is doing is unprecedented and unwarranted,” Pritzker said at a news conference. “It is illegal. It is unconstitutional. It is un-American.”
Pritzker claimed Trump is manufacturing a crisis and noted that neither he nor Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson had been contacted by the White House about working together.
Pritzker pointed out that murders, shootings, robberies and burglaries are all down year over year.
Spontankonzert mit einem Meister auf der Gitarre und einer Loopmaschine
Die Wetteraussichten sind schön, die Musikaussichten gut.
etchinghillside
in reply to Pro • • •Technology reshared this.
Pro
in reply to etchinghillside • • •like this
TVA likes this.
Dudewitbow
in reply to etchinghillside • • •the title is sensationaliat, as the gpu part has been done before (mxm gpus)
the only industry first off the top of my head is the 240w usb c epr charger for a laptop
Theoriginalthon
in reply to Dudewitbow • • •NuXCOM_90Percent
in reply to Dudewitbow • • •Framework is partially owned by Linus Media Group.
They got their PR game on lock.
potustheplant
in reply to NuXCOM_90Percent • • •bassomitron
in reply to potustheplant • • •potustheplant
in reply to bassomitron • • •NuXCOM_90Percent
in reply to potustheplant • • •And when GN responded to all the sniping over the months... LMG came out ahead. Rossman is a manipulative libertarian prick, but he really nailed it with Linus exhibiting all the signs of being a gaslighting abuser. And... it works.
Because the general consensus, outside of their subreddits (although even in GN's...) was that Steve was in the wrong for responding to all the "some people are out to get us" style sniping and should just let the "drama" drop. And then LMG immediately pivoted to "Dude, just let it go. We improved our practices and are better for it. Maybe you should too. Oh, and if anyone mentions Madison's name we'll sue the fuck out of them". And it worked.
If only because LMG is an order of magnitude larger (17M versus 2.5M subscribers) and most people likely never even heard GN's arguments on why not lying about your testing to support corporate sponsors/interests is bad. They instead just see some guy "whining" (and probably get fed a lot of sock puppets from the companies GN has burned bridges with...) and move on.
LMG is nowhere near as untouchable as they used to be. But they are still probably the single biggest influencer in the PC/"tech" space. And.... just look at this thread for the people who, with a straight face, are talking about how Framework will be their saviour from some nebulous threat.
potustheplant
in reply to NuXCOM_90Percent • • •Do you really think so? Afaik, no one goes to the for hw reviews. They basically just make generic content that gets views. When it comes to actual technical reviews, they pretty much suck.
I also don't get why they're praising Framework so much. Don't get me wrong, the product seems good but it's waaaay too expensive imo.
3laws
in reply to NuXCOM_90Percent • • •NuXCOM_90Percent
in reply to 3laws • • •Define "millionaire with his own PR company and a history of using them for his own personal needs is a significant investor" whichever way makes you happy.
Mobile GPUs have already been a thing. They are generally soldered for structural purposes but that isn't a requirement of the tech and some of the htpc form factor devices that used mobile GPUs have had them as swappable. Also, the old framework 16 already had non-soldered GPUs?
It is just that this isn't an avenue that most system integrators care about. Because there is already a MUCH better solution in the form of external GPUs which... still sort of exist. The idea that you focus on power efficiency and convenience for the laptop and plug it into a dock/big ass box when you want more GPU power. And even THAT is mostly a novelty since onboard GPUs/APU systems/whatever are actually REALLY good these days and more than capable of driving what people generally want/need on a laptop display.
But either way: This is "an industry first" in the same sense that it was an "industry first" when I figured out where the fricking map of my motherboard was while building it. A very big accomplishment to solve a problem that bothers a lot of people (fuck the shorthand maps. Gimme the real one) but also only a "first" if you narrow things down massively. You know... like with PR.
Because honestly? Framework is cool as hell. But most of what they are "innovating" are not soldering things and making people not realize they are still just using a usb c port and a shit ton of dongles. The former tending to have very little utility for end users but be INCREDIBLY useful for assembly line workers.
And, generally speaking, the people who are swapping out their GPUs every other year... aren't the kind of people who will care if they buy a new laptop or reuse their old one except for all the parts they wanted to replace or upgrade. Let alone heat concerns (which is why I would LOVE a benchmark of the different paths towards the same SKU in a framework).
iopq
in reply to Dudewitbow • • •notthebees
in reply to Dudewitbow • • •Dudewitbow
in reply to notthebees • • •notthebees
in reply to Dudewitbow • • •Dudewitbow
in reply to notthebees • • •hence why Mention the titles a bit sensationalist.
its using a gpu company that rarely does it, for the first time in awhile in a very specific way, as that's not the title of the thread that OP links.
the idea of a laptop dgpu isnt new
the idea of a removable laptop dgpu(mxm)
the idea of a removable nvidia laptop dgpu isnt new(same as above, also asus rog flow attachable gpus)
the idea of a slottable gpu isnt new (frameworks 7700s came before it)
its the combination of the above which is pigeonholing the definition hard enough that it really doesnt have any real merit.
candyman337
in reply to etchinghillside • • •Nvidia is really cagey about what the let vendors do with their gpus, they had one ~~hot~~ swappable concept years ago and it never went anywhere because they basically didn't allow them to do anything with it. So this actually making it I to a product is crazy
Edit: not hot swappable, just swappable, please turn your PC off first lmao
like this
TVA likes this.
potustheplant
in reply to candyman337 • • •candyman337
in reply to potustheplant • • •chiliedogg
in reply to Pro • • •The more impressive thing is that they managed to get the Nvidia upgrade to be backwards compatible with existing Framework 16 models.
That's the push I need to really, truly believe they're committed to the goal of upgradablity. Too many "modular" products have come out where the "upgraded" modules were only available if you bought the newest version of the base product.
In the next year or so, I'll probably be buying a new laptop, and this has convinced me that Framework is probably the way to go.
like this
TVA e giantpaper like this.
SatyrSack
in reply to chiliedogg • • •halcyoncmdr
in reply to SatyrSack • • •malwieder
in reply to halcyoncmdr • • •Yeah, but the old display supports VRR via VESA Adaptive-Sync. Nvidia supports that as well, but not sure if their mobile GPUs don't for built-in displays?
If it is supported, I don't see any advantage of having Gsync vs. standard VRR.
If not that's a shame. Pretty wasteful having to buy the same display with different firmware just to get adaptive sync working.
iopq
in reply to SatyrSack • • •potustheplant
in reply to iopq • • •tekato
in reply to potustheplant • • •potustheplant
in reply to tekato • • •AliasVortex
in reply to chiliedogg • • •I've been rocking a Framework 16 for about a year now and would happily recommend it. It's a bit more upfront, but I love knowing that I can fix or replace just about anything on it (pretty affordably too). It's just so refreshing to not have to worry about dumb shit like an obscure power adapter or port forcing my laptop into an early retirement.
It's not the lightest laptop I've ever had, but realistically not all that much different from my last gaming laptop. Now that I'm not a full time student anymore I could probably get away with one of the smaller models, but the form factor is pretty nice.
Overall, no major complaints!
Chloé 🥕
in reply to chiliedogg • • •i’ve had a framework 13 from a time before there was any other type of framework, and it’s a great laptop honestly. ive yet to do big upgrades, but just being able to repair it myself is awesome. one time i dented the chassis around where the power button was. no worries, just changed the input cover and bam 5 minutes later it’s like new.
my only complaint is that the battery life is atrocious. i heard it’s better (but still not great) on newer models tho
SkaveRat
in reply to Chloé 🥕 • • •I have two Intel frameworks, and they both suck in regards to battery life
Buuut, I just have a big power bank in my backpack. Gives me at least 1 full charge when I'm on the go. And at home I just have a lighter laptop due to smaller battery
The only thing that pisses me off about framework, is their abysmal software and communication in that regard. It's basically impossible to get them to acknowledge or fix problems in their firmware
notthebees
in reply to SkaveRat • • •Out of curiosity, what cpu? I had an i5-1135g7 laptop that I motherboard swapped with a Ryzen 7 5825U motherboard. The battery life on the i5 was atrocious. I got 2 hours out of it doing note taking. Maybe 3 when new and I had the full battery capacity to work with. After the motherboard swap, I got basically double the battery life in the same conditions.
(HP pavilion 15-eg050wm and then I put a 15-eh2085cl motherboard in it)
SkaveRat
in reply to notthebees • • •i5-1340P and i7-1260P
Both FW13
both get maybe 3 hours if I'm lucky. Although they are a couple years old now. Fresh battery got me maybe 4 when lucky.
I have a 25k power bank, so I can extend the runtime quite a bit. The "at least once" above is quite conservative. it's probably closer to 2. and that includes using it while charging.
I heard the ryzens are a lot better regarding power, so it doesn't surprise me that the runtime basically doubles
notthebees
in reply to SkaveRat • • •I'd recommend disabling boost and setting cooling to passive.
On windows, if you set maximum processor usage to 99% in advanced power plan settings, it will disable boost. You can set the cooling policy as well. Also repasting is probably beneficial. The more efficient your cooling system is, the less fan usage it will need and you'll get better battery life as a result.
That's what I noticed on the i5 laptop, it would kick on the fans doing basically nothing and would kill battery. When the fans were off, the estimates were higher. Also maybe disabling the P cores in both machines might be beneficial.
SkaveRat
in reply to notthebees • • •yup, I already have boosting disabled.
Mainly due to quite shoddy firmware code that controls the charging. Which causes wild battery flipping behavior even when using a powerful charger. It's a long known issue, and FW is annoyingly quiet on the problem. It's the reason I'm annoyed by their software issue communication handling
[TRACKING] Battery flipping between charging and discharging / Draws from battery even on AC
Framework Communitynotthebees
in reply to SkaveRat • • •randombullet
in reply to Chloé 🥕 • • •Chloé 🥕
in reply to randombullet • • •yea, that’s what i meant when talking about newer gens being better
i have a i5-1240P (with 55WHr battery) and im lucky to get 5 hours while on power saver reading PDFs
SeeFerns
in reply to Chloé 🥕 • • •I have a newer gen 13 and yeah battery life is mediocre. I love literally everything else about it though so it’s ok.
I can’t remember the last time I wasn’t near an outlet though tbh.
Damage
in reply to SeeFerns • • •tankplanker
in reply to chiliedogg • • •Yeah it pushed me to finally put in an order, got to wait till December now as I'm in the third batch.
I wanted to wait till we had proof thst the graphics card would be updatable and a better one would be available as their AMD card is a bit too lightweight for me.
I would rather it had been a better AMD card, I have a 7900 xtx in my desktop, but i will take what I can get at this point, especially as I know I can upgrade later.
iopq
in reply to Pro • • •DacoTaco
in reply to iopq • • •I think its worth it, but thats not the opinion of a lot of casual people.
And had i not gotten one via my job, i would not have gotten a framework 16 because of the price
woelkchen
in reply to DacoTaco • • •Well, the idea is that you can upgrade components without replacing everything, so the initial cost is higher but the long term cost is lower.
That said, they took their time. The 1st generation is old now. The Radeon dGPU is probably weaker or on a similar level than the new Ryzen iGPU. There is no Radeon dGPU upgrade path other than "just use the old one". They have a better upgrade cadence with the 13 inch model.
DacoTaco
in reply to woelkchen • • •woelkchen
in reply to DacoTaco • • •DacoTaco
in reply to woelkchen • • •Edit: apparently they are working on it, same with a case for the gpu to convert it into a e-gpu
iopq
in reply to woelkchen • • •woelkchen
in reply to iopq • • •What are you talking about? Of course there is newer hardware than a Radeon RX 7700. The 7900 specifically.
The CPU also has no Ryzen 395 option either which Framework source for their unmodular desktop PC.
brucethemoose
in reply to woelkchen • • •They have to stay within the TDP. Their only option is something newer and ~100W (like the 5070).
And I'm pretty sure the 7000 series is going out of production anyway...
Also (while no 395 is disappointing), it is a totally different socket/platform, and the 395 has a much, much higher effective TDP, so it may not even work in the Framework 16 as its currently engineered. For instance, the cooling or PSU just may not be able to physically handle it. Or perhaps there's no space on the PCB.
woelkchen
in reply to brucethemoose • • •A new power brick is needed anyway. That's why FW now has a much more powerful one as well.
The 395 obviously would throttle if heat or power become a problem.
If GPD can put the 395 in a handheld, Framework can put it in a 16" chassis.
iopq
in reply to woelkchen • • •ObsidianZed
in reply to Pro • • •*caresses screen*
some day...
ErableEreinte
in reply to Pro • • •And still no OLED screen... why Framework, why?
I got one of the latest Framework 13 a couple months ago for work, and while I'm happy about the prospects of future repairability and upgradability down the line, it's not a great laptop given its pricepoint.
The build is subpar, with the screen flexing a ton, the keyboard and trackpad are lacklustre and pretty uncomfortable, but the worst is the screen, it's dim, with poor colour reproduction and 3:2 is frankly not for me. And fractional scaling is a mess with XWayland, while it was much better on my 2019 XPS 13.
I love what Framework are pushing for and actually achieving, but tradeoffs are very much at play. I'm hoping for an OLED screen replacement in the near future though.
Appoxo
in reply to ErableEreinte • • •YiddishMcSquidish
in reply to Appoxo • • •BombOmOm
in reply to YiddishMcSquidish • • •Display Kit
FrameworkYiddishMcSquidish
in reply to BombOmOm • • •AlecSadler
in reply to ErableEreinte • • •I've yet to use an OLED monitor that didn't make text look shitty and I've used $1000+ OLED displays with high ratings.
Don't get me wrong, OLED colors and blacks are gorgeous. I love OLED.
Even my Samsung Pro whatever latest laptop with an OLED display...the text just looks off. Which was disappointing because my Samsung phone text is fine.
LG C2/3/4, also gross looking text.
Alienware OLED $750+ monitor? Text was bad.
I love OLED but I've yet to find one that works for productivity.
bassomitron
in reply to AlecSadler • • •Aren't phone screens AMOLED? I'm definitely not an expert, but I thought it was a variation of OLED, which would explain why text looks better.
That being said, I also have an OLED Steam Deck and I can read text on it just fine if the scaling is set correctly in the game or just browsing the web normally in desktop mode.
AlecSadler
in reply to bassomitron • • •Ah, true, thanks for the correction.
Maybe I've just had bad batches of displays? I don't know. I got 3 really nice Asus ProArts and the text clarity and colors are fantastic.
Still wish I had blacker blacks.
firebingo
in reply to AlecSadler • • •AlecSadler
in reply to firebingo • • •Yeah, unfortunately I might be one of those people. I can also see some monitors flickering which gives me a headache in sub 3 minutes.
It's a curse. Especially with in-office pairing.
bluecat_OwO
in reply to AlecSadler • • •I have a friend who has always been picky about displays, I thought he was just being nit picky
Since normally my eyes can't distinguish between 480 and 1080 under normal circumstances and flicker goes un noticed
randombullet
in reply to AlecSadler • • •I think that's PWM dimming vs DC dimming.
PWM dimming turns pixels on and off to make them darker. So for 50% of the brightness, it's off 50% of the time. Higher end panels flicker much faster which helps mitigate perceived flicker. I think 500hz and above is preferred.
For DC dimming is just using voltage to control the darkness with no flickering involved.
ErableEreinte
in reply to AlecSadler • • •AlecSadler
in reply to ErableEreinte • • •Hmm, I am working on converting all my things over to Linux so maybe I'll give it another shot.
Windows always has this weird ghosting going on, super odd.
SkunkWorkz
in reply to AlecSadler • • •Did you turn on PC-Mode with your LGs?
I use an LG nanocell TV as an pc monitor and the fonts didn’t look good until I set the HDMI input type to PC. And ofcourse you need to play around with the font rendering tools like ClearType in Windows.
AlexisFR
in reply to ErableEreinte • • •Gaja0
in reply to Pro • • •3laws
in reply to Gaja0 • • •There is no Thinkpad as repairable as the framework and if they are (they're not) the price is out of reach for individuals since the p51 with LPCAMM2 targets enterprise costumers.
Your brain is wrong on this one. Follow your heart
Yoshi
in reply to Gaja0 • • •Framework has a higher build Quality and a bit loser prices but if this isn't a Problem for you, go for it. Great repairability and replacebility is awesome!
☂️-
in reply to Gaja0 • • •Emma_Gold_Man
in reply to Gaja0 • • •kittenzrulz123
in reply to Gaja0 • • •ilinamorato
in reply to kittenzrulz123 • • •kittenzrulz123
in reply to ilinamorato • • •ilinamorato
in reply to kittenzrulz123 • • •Lfrith
in reply to kittenzrulz123 • • •BlameTheAntifa
in reply to Pro • • •bassomitron
in reply to BlameTheAntifa • • •Out of curiosity, why do you refuse to support Nvidia? AMD isn't some saint, they're a shitty corporation just like Nvidia. They got lucky when Jim Keller saved their asses with the Ryzen architecture in the mid-2010s. They haven't really innovated a god damn thing since then and it shows.
Edit: I get it, I get it, Nvidia is a much shittier company and I agree. I was pretty drunk last night before bed, please pardon the shots fired
ElectroLisa
in reply to bassomitron • • •bassomitron
in reply to ElectroLisa • • •Redex
in reply to ElectroLisa • • •Truscape
in reply to Redex • • •bluecat_OwO
in reply to Truscape • • •naitro
in reply to Redex • • •amorpheus
in reply to bassomitron • • •Neither of them are anyone's friend, but claiming they're the same level of nasty is a bit of a stretch.
Crashumbc
in reply to amorpheus • • •Not saying that supporting the under dog isn't good.
Just don't think AMD is less "nasty", the only thing stopping them is the lack of power to do so.
Domi
in reply to bassomitron • • •Besides what was mentioned below, it's not about making competitive products but about Nvidia being an absolute asshole since the 2000s and they got even worse ever since the crypto and AI craze started. AMD and Nvidia are both corporations but they are not even playing the same game when it comes to being anti-competitive.
There's a reason why Wikipedia has a controversies section on Nvidia: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia…
That list is far from exhaustive. There's so much more about Nvidia that you should remember vividly if you were a PC gamer in the 2000s and 2010s with an AMD GPU, like:
Nvidia has been gimping gaming performance and visuals since forever for both AMD GPUs and even their own customers and we haven't even gotten to DLSS and raytracing yet.
I refuse to buy anything Nvidia until they stop abusing their market position at every chance they get.
American multinational technology company
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)IndustryStandard
in reply to Domi • • •Nvidia to expand Israeli operations with multi-billion-dollar hub
Jasdip Sensi (Capacity Media)unexposedhazard
in reply to IndustryStandard • • •- YouTube
youtu.beFrezik
in reply to bassomitron • • •Haven't innovated? 3D chip stacking?
CPU companies generally don't change their micro-architecture, especially when it works.
Arcane2077
in reply to Frezik • • •AlexisFR
in reply to BlameTheAntifa • • •tempest
in reply to AlexisFR • • •Dremor
in reply to tempest • • •boonhet
in reply to Dremor • • •High end gaming laptops needed desktop GPUs anyway, because at least for nVidia, once you get past the **60 range, the mobile version starts getting very small jumps in performance compared to the desktop.
At some point it's cheaper to get a gaming desktop and a cheap laptop lol
BlameTheAntifa
in reply to AlexisFR • • •ZeroOne
in reply to Pro • • •Now if only Framework did that with AMD & Intel GPUs, then we'd all be balling.
Also please make it available in the East
ilinamorato
in reply to ZeroOne • • •Framework Laptop 16 Graphics Module (AMD Radeon™ RX 7700S)
Frameworkkuhli
in reply to ilinamorato • • •ilinamorato
in reply to kuhli • • •ABetterTomorrow
in reply to Pro • • •BeardedGingerWonder
in reply to ABetterTomorrow • • •notthebees
in reply to BeardedGingerWonder • • •notthebees
in reply to ABetterTomorrow • • •Dremor
in reply to ABetterTomorrow • • •Bluewing
in reply to Pro • • •BunScientist
in reply to Bluewing • • •inclementimmigrant
in reply to Bluewing • • •SlartyBartFast
in reply to Pro • • •tempest
in reply to SlartyBartFast • • •xthexder
in reply to SlartyBartFast • • •github.com/Zokhoi/framework-ce…
GitHub - Zokhoi/framework-cellular-card: USB cellular modem for Framework computers
GitHubinclementimmigrant
in reply to Pro • • •So I'm going to be skeptical here. I had an older 9xx MSI laptop that was touted as replaceable and "upgradable" GPU for the next generation at the time.
That ended up as a big ol' whoops, because replacement screwed with thermals and found that you couldn't actually upgrade because of all kinds of reasons and resulted in a class action suit.
Just color me skeptical on these types of things.
BombOmOm
in reply to inclementimmigrant • • •inclementimmigrant
in reply to BombOmOm • • •GPUs a bit of a different monster since there no such thing as a standard socket, you're bound by the manufacturer spec for pin in/out.
And that was the case with MSI laptop and Nvidia partnership when Nvidia went full Darth Vader and changed the terms of the deal.
I mean more power to them if they can actually deliver actual modules that can be upgraded and if I can actually see a generation or two of this actually working, I'll be on board but once bitten, can't fool me again for the time being.
BombOmOm
in reply to inclementimmigrant • • •inclementimmigrant
in reply to BombOmOm • • •BombOmOm
in reply to inclementimmigrant • • •This is the next generation GPU. The Radeon is a last generation model that you have been able to buy for awhile now. What you are asking for currently exists and is something you can buy on their website right now and upgrade your older laptop:
Prior Module: frame.work/products/16-graphic…
New Module: frame.work/products/laptop16-g…
Framework Laptop 16 Graphics Module (NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070)
Frameworkinclementimmigrant
in reply to BombOmOm • • •brucethemoose
in reply to inclementimmigrant • • •Nah, unfortunately they are just as beholden to the GPU makers as any of us. More than larger laptop OEMs for sure.
A future Intel Arc module may be the only hope, but that's quite a hope.
I just got a 10L SFF desktop I can put in a suitcase, heh...
T156
in reply to inclementimmigrant • • •notthebees
in reply to inclementimmigrant • • •Cort
in reply to notthebees • • •kepix
in reply to Pro • • •MangioneDontMiss
in reply to kepix • • •FackCurs
in reply to Pro • • •OK I’m a bit confused.
I have a Framework 16” that I bought earlier this year, without the GPU extension bay.
I don’t care that much about the expansion bay as without it, the laptop is already huge. I have an eGPU to play on when I need it.
What upgrade options does this announcement offer to me?
I’m dissatisfied with:
- the webcam
- screen colors / brightness
- key stability on the keyboard (the keys are a bit wobbly)
- speaker sound quality (I’m not expecting the best, but something better than what it shipped with)
They are announcing a new webcam, will it be backwards compatible ?
Otherwise I’m really happy with it, I absolutely love the modular I/O, being able to swap which side the audio jack is is amazing. happy to support this endeavor of repairability
DacoTaco
in reply to FackCurs • • •Manifish_Destiny
in reply to DacoTaco • • •PangurBan
in reply to Manifish_Destiny • • •kopasz7
in reply to FackCurs • • •FackCurs
in reply to FackCurs • • •So I went back to the blog post. They are shipping the Framework 13" webcam in this updated 16" version. The part was already available for me to upgrade!
frame.work/blog/introducing-th…
frame.work/blog/framework-lapt…
Introducing the new Framework Laptop 16 with NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 5070
FrameworkFackCurs
in reply to FackCurs • • •silasmariner
in reply to Pro • • •FFS I was just about to buy myself one and now I'm obviously gonna have to wait until November
Oh, wait, I can just upgrade it. Nbd.
raspberriesareyummy
in reply to Pro • • •humanspiral
in reply to Pro • • •brucethemoose
in reply to humanspiral • • •Problem is almost no laptop has Strix Halo. Not even the Frameworks.
And rumors are its successor APU may be much better, so the investment could be, err, questionable.