For the few people who have spent the past weeks living under a security rock, the Linux kernel has found itself the subject of multiple severe bugs in the form of Copy Fail and Dirty Frag, both of which allow for privilege escalation. They’ve made many people very upset, and also potentially put many thousands of systems at risk of exploitation. Worse is that system managers are generally left to twiddle their thumbs while waiting for patches to be rolled out. This is where NVIDIA engineer [Sasha Levin] has proposed a ‘kill switch’ for affected kernel functions.
The basic concept seems rather simple, with this feature merely intercepting a call to the affected function and instead returning a predefined return value. This makes it less extreme than hitting a general SCRAM button on the entire kernel, and could theoretically allow the affected systems to keep running until the patched kernel becomes available.
A disadvantage of this is that it obviously modifies the kernel, patching it in-memory so that you need to reboot the system to clear it. Another potential disadvantage is that it opens a potentially massive attack vector, with people in the Cybersecurity sub-Reddit roundly rejecting the idea. Amidst all the other anxious conversions there is also the concern that this particular patch was at least partially generated by an LLM (Claude Opus 4.7) , so one may hope that if it does gets merged into mainline it’ll at least be properly vetted by multiple pairs of well-caffeinated human eyes.
The HBO drama Euphoria is premiering new episodes. It may be hard to believe that the previous season wrapped up in 2022. On my TikTok “For You” page, I still regularly see clips from early episodes.
Season 3 takes place five years after season 2 (see our finale recap here), well after high school. The new season once again stars Zendaya, Hunter Schafer, Jacob Elordi, Sydney Sweeney, Alexa Demie, Maude Apatow, Colman Domingo and Eric Dane. It adds new guest stars, including Sharon Stone, Rosalía, Danielle Deadwyler, Natasha Lyonne and Trisha Paytas.
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According to an official synopsis, season 3 sees “a group of childhood friends wrestle with the virtue of faith, the possibility of redemption and the problem of evil.”
While it’s swapped from HBO Max to Max and back to HBO Max again in the time it’s taken for Euphoria to return to TV, you’ll be able to tune into the HBO streaming service for new episodes each week. Here’s a release schedule for Euphoria season 3.
When to watch Euphoria Season 3 on HBO Max
In the US? You can stream episode 6 of Euphoria season 3 on HBO Max on Sunday, May 17, at 9 p.m. ET (6 p.m. PT). It’ll also air on HBO at 9 p.m. ET and PT. Subsequent installments will debut on Sundays through May 31.
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Episode 6, Stand Still and See: May 17
Episode 7, Rain or Shine: May 24
Episode 8, In God We Trust: May 31
HBO Max last increased its plan prices in October, raising the ad-supported tier to $11 per month, the ad-free Standard tier to $18.50 per month and the ad-free Premium tier to $23 per month.
Warner Bros. Discovery
You might be able to save money by paying upfront for 12 months of HBO Max, which costs less than paying month-by-month for a year. In addition to HBO Max’s standalone plans, you can bundle it with Disney Plus and Hulu, either with ads for all three services or without.
Most budget headphones today look painfully similar. Same safe designs, same recycled “deep bass” marketing, and the same feature checklists. That’s exactly why Edifier’s newly launched Auro Ace immediately stands out, thanks to its animated dot-matrix display built directly into the earcups and a design that clearly prioritizes personality as much as audio.
Edifier’s Auro Ace headphones put lyrics directly on the earcups
The biggest highlight of the Auro Ace is its customizable dot-matrix display that can show synced song lyrics, animations, custom text, and pixel-style graphics directly on the headphones. Users can tweak these effects through Edifier’s companion app.
Edifier
Beyond the flashy visuals, the headphones also come with fairly respectable specs for the price. The Auro Ace packs 32mm dynamic drivers, Bluetooth 6.0, dual-device connectivity, USB audio support, and AI-backed call noise reduction. Edifier claims the headphones can deliver up to 62 hours of battery life with the display disabled, while a 15-minute charge can provide roughly 11 hours of playback.
Edifier
The headphones are priced at 279 yuan in China, which converts to roughly $40, firmly placing them in the affordable audio category.
I’m still trying to understand who the lyric display is actually for
I’ll be honest, the whole lyric-syncing feature feels a little baffling to me. If I’m the one listening to the song, why would I want the lyrics glowing on the outside of my headphones where literally everyone else can see them except me? It almost feels like a feature designed less for the listener and more for random strangers sitting across the metro.
Edifier
Then again, that also seems to be exactly what Edifier is going for here. The company has included multiple built-in visual themes and customization options designed to match different outfits, moods, or aesthetics, treating the Auro Ace more like a wearable fashion accessory than just another pair of budget headphones.
And honestly? Maybe that’s not such a bad thing. Budget audio products have become incredibly repetitive lately, with brands endlessly recycling the same ANC and bass-heavy marketing buzzwords while the hardware itself looks nearly identical. At least the Auro Ace has some personality. Weird personality, sure, but personality nonetheless.
Arduino projects often involve small robots that roll forward and steer clear of walls using basic sensors. Maker UncleStem decided to push that familiar idea into uncharted territory by enlarging every part of a classic turtle-style design by a factor of seven. He had just wrapped up work on a matching seven-times-larger Arduino Uno board and wanted a project that could put the oversized microcontroller through its paces. A tortoise bot offered the perfect match because the original small version already relies on straightforward code and simple hardware.
Construction began with motors sourced from children’s ride-on toys. Anyone who has experimented with ordinary turtle bots knows that those tiny hobby motors can’t keep up; twenty-four-volt ones from children’s ride-ons, on the other hand, provide a lot more power. UncleStem devised a brilliant solution: bespoke shells that slide perfectly over the motors, giving the overall appearance of a scaled-up version of the originals. The laser-cut plywood required special attention, so UncleStem hired a professional to make the cuts on a large sheet of 1mm thick acrylic. Any workshop cutter would have been unable to handle such large materials.
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The wheels, which came straight from the lawn equipment supplier, are actually very smooth beneath the robot’s heavy chassis. Three-dimensionally printed hubcaps round off the look, keeping the enormous concept consistent across all visible components. Control is centered on a gigantic Arduino Uno designed by UncleStem. A regular old Arduino Nano is stashed away inside the main board to conduct all of the real processing and code execution. The gigantic jumper wires were made of metal rods because there are no commercial versions available at this scale.
The motor driver board is essentially a larger L298N setup, but it’s mounted on a three-layer plywood board and powered by a 300 watt driver capable of handling big motors. There is also a small voltage regulator that reduces the power to 5 volts for the Nano. Sensors required the same level of attention, as the ultrasonic distance module is disguised behind a dummy outer shell to maintain detection range while the robot appears to have been scaled up (parked in its own small printed housing that looks just like the mini-part). Navigation works exactly like the usual turtle bot formula. The robot just continues straight ahead until it collides with something in front of it, at which point it stops and swings the sensor left, center, and right to find the widest open path before turning in that direction and continuing. [Source]
Looking for the most recent Strands answer? Click here for our daily Strands hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.
Today’s NYT Strands puzzle was a fun one for me, but then, I get a huge kick out of the game that is today’s topic. Game? Sport? I guess it’s both, depending on your dedication level. Some of the answers are difficult to unscramble, so if you need hints and answers, read on.
If that doesn’t help you, here’s a clue: Put your shoes on and start rolling!
Clue words to unlock in-game hints
Your goal is to find hidden words that fit the puzzle’s theme. If you’re stuck, find any words you can. Every time you find three words of four letters or more, Strands will reveal one of the theme words. These are the words I used to get those hints, but any words of four or more letters that you find will work:
COAL, BOWL, RACE, RACED, DEAL, LEAD, BALE, SPIN
Answers for today’s Strands puzzle
These are the answers that tie into the theme. The goal of the puzzle is to find them all, including the spangram, a theme word that reaches from one side of the puzzle to the other. When you have all of them (I originally thought there were always eight but learned that the number can vary), every letter on the board will be used. Here are the nonspangram answers:
PINS, BALLS, LOUNGE, LANES, ARCADE, SCOREBOARD
Today’s Strands spangram
The completed NYT Strands puzzle for May 17, 2026.
NYT/Screenshot by CNET
Today’s Strands spangram is BOWLINGALLEY. To find it, start with the B that’s two letters over on the top row, and wind over and then down.
“Every link leads to an entry that does not exist yet,” explains the GitHub page for a Wikipedia-like site called Halupedia. “Until you click it, at which point an LLM pretends it has always existed and writes it for you, in the deadpan register of a 19th-century scholarly press…”
Fast Company reports that Halupedia was created by software developer BartÅomiej Strama, who confessed in a Reddit comment that the site came about after a drunk night with a friend. In the week since launch, he says Halupedia has amassed more than 150,000 users.”
Beyond indulging in silly alternate histories, what’s the point of using Halupedia? Strama hinted at one larger purpose in a reply to a donor on his Buy Me a Coffee page: “Your contribution towards polluting LLM training data will surely benefit society!” he wrote.
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The site is licensed as free software under the GPL-3.0 license.
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the news.
Alienware is finally stepping into budget territory with the Alienware 15, its first properly affordable gaming laptop in decades.
Honestly, the timing couldn’t be better. With gaming hardware prices climbing across the board, this feels like Alienware responding directly to where the market is heading.
The Alienware 15 starts at $1299, which gets you an AMD Ryzen 5 220, 16GB of RAM, 512GB SSD storage, and an NVIDIA RTX 4050 GPU. There’s also an Intel option with a Core 5 210H chip for $1349. In select regions, a lower RTX 3050 variant will be available. That’s a solid entry point for modern 1080p (and beyond) gaming.
The laptop uses a 15.3-inch 1920 x 1200 display with a 16:10 aspect ratio, a 165Hz refresh rate, and 300 nits of brightness. It’s not trying to be flashy, but it covers the basics well enough for smooth gameplay.
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Connectivity is another strong point – you’re getting two USB-C ports, two USB-A ports (all USB 3.1 or better), HDMI 2.1, a headphone jack, and even an Ethernet port. Notably, that’s still surprisingly rare in thinner gaming laptops.
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Design-wise, Alienware has clearly dialled things back. Instead of the usual RGB-heavy aesthetic, the Alienware 15 comes in a more understated nova black finish. There is a simpler iridescent logo, It’s also slim at under an inch thick. This is thanks to a design that avoids the bulky thermal shelf seen on higher-end Alienware models.
There are also a few smart usability touches here. A full numpad makes it more useful for productivity, while a Stealth key lets you instantly disable lighting and switch to quiet performance mode. That’s handy if you’re using it in class or a shared space. Inside, there’s also room to upgrade. There is a second SO-DIMM slot for adding more RAM later.
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It’s not perfect. The webcam is limited to 720p at 30fps, which won’t impress anyone relying on video calls, and there’s no microSD card reader. However, those feel like understandable trade-offs at this price point rather than deal-breakers.
Overall, the Alienware 15 should be a meaningful shift for the brand. Instead of chasing extremes, it’s just offering a more accessible way into serious PC gaming. This comes at a time when affordability actually matters again.
Amazon’s Kiro AI coding tool is getting a new feature that uses mathematical proofs to catch flawed software requirements before AI agents start writing code. (GeekWire Photo / Todd Bishop)
Amazon Web Services is adding a feature to its Kiro AI coding tool designed to mathematically prove that software requirements are free of contradictions and gaps before any code gets written, addressing one of the core risks of AI-assisted software development.
The feature, called Requirements Analysis, is designed to catch the kind of bugs that can often be the hardest to spot and most expensive to fix — problems that start not in the resulting code but in the initial requirements that define what the software is supposed to do.
The announcement Tuesday morning comes three months after Amazon publicly pushed back on a Financial Times report that its AI coding tools contributed to AWS outages, an episode that highlighted the risks of giving AI agents too much autonomy in software development.
It also comes a day after AWS hired former Microsoft exec Shawn Bice to return to Amazon as VP of AI Services leading its Automated Reasoning Group, the team behind the new feature. Bice will report to Swami Sivasubramanian, Amazon’s VP of Agentic AI.
Requirements Analysis combines large language models with an automated reasoning engine called an SMT solver. The LLM translates natural-language requirements into formal logic.
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The solver then checks those requirements by mathematically proving whether they contradict each other or leave gaps that could be filled in erroneously by the AI coding tool — a common problem as AI increasingly generates software faster than developers can review it.
“Every vague prompt produces a vague spec or plan, and the AI agent implementing that spec produces code full of undisclosed decisions made on your behalf, without your awareness or agreement,” wrote AWS applied scientists in a blog post accompanying the news.
Kiro competes in a crowded and fast-growing market for AI coding tools that includes Cursor, GitHub Copilot, Anthropic’s Claude Code, Google’s Antigravity, and OpenAI’s Codex.
While those tools have increasingly added planning and agent workflows alongside code generation, Kiro has built its identity around a spec-first approach that requires developers to formalize their intent before the AI starts building.
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AWS also announced two other Kiro features designed to speed up the development process.
Parallel Task Execution runs independent coding tasks concurrently rather than sequentially, cutting implementation times for large projects by roughly 75 percent, according to the company.
AWS says a new Quick Plan mode lets developers skip the step-by-step approval process for well-understood features, generating a full set of requirements, design, and tasks in one pass.
US Army seeks lighter rations to reduce battlefield logistical burdens significantly
Gel and powder meals under review for combat ration development
Insect and lab-grown meat excluded from current Army study
The US Army wants to change what soldiers eat during combat operations through a new source sought announcement.
The military branch is asking for help developing alternative protein technologies for field rations in the near future.
The stated goal is to create lightweight and nutrient-dense meals that reduce logistical burdens on individual troops.
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Lightening combat rations
Anyone who has carried heavy MREs on a long march understands why lighter rations matter for survival – however the proposed delivery formats do not sound particularly appetizing to anyone who has eaten military food before.
The military is seeking innovative technologies like fermentation and other biomanufacturing methods for alternative protein production.
Meat alternative products could eventually join the standard MRE lineup for soldiers operating in combat zones.
The Army also wants comprehensive consumer research to understand what troops will actually eat under field conditions.
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Food samples will go to government taste testers for evaluation of sensory acceptability and other performance characteristics.
“Gel/semi-solid formats, dry powder mixes, [and] sauce-style components” are all under consideration for future ration components.
The Army explicitly excludes cell-cultured lab-grown meat and insect protein from this particular announcement, so soldiers will likely appreciate that there will be no bugs in their immediate future of military dining.
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Past MRE preferences might predict future success or failure
Vegetarian MRE options from twenty years ago were surprisingly popular among soldiers who normally ate meat without any hesitation – perhaps as those meals replaced the usual military mystery meat with something far more appealing to eat out of a sealed envelope.
Soldiers chose those vegetarian rations not for ethical alignment with any personal philosophy about animal products – but simply wanted a meal that did not taste terrible after a 15-mile march with heavy gear on their backs.
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This same logic will apply to any future alternative protein ration that the Army develops for field use.
If a fermented mushroom gel or a dry protein powder tastes bad, no soldier will eat it regardless of its logistical benefits.
The Army’s current research into gels, sauces, and semi-solid formats must prioritize palatability above every other technical requirement.
Beef frankfurters and compressed meat loaves earned a famously bad reputation among soldiers who served in the early 2000s.
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The Army should learn from those failures before asking troops to swallow unholy shakes or fermented fungus from a pouch.
A lighter ration is useless if soldiers throw it away and march on an empty stomach instead.
The veteran’s perspective matters here because past behaviour predicts future behaviour under similar stressful conditions.
Soldiers will always choose the least terrible option available, regardless of what food scientists think sounds innovative or efficient.
Something that never was a problem for years suddenly became a thing after Trump’s return to office. As his administration ramped up its cruelty towards non-white people, Democratic leaders suddenly became much more interested in seeing how ICE was handling this influx of detainees.
Not that they were wrong to do so. The history of ICE detention is extremely ugly, with detainees regularly treated like the subhumans ICE (and their subcontractors) seem to believe these human beings are. But with ICE and the DHS making all the wrong kinds of headlines as the administration carried out its racial cleansing programs, DHS started to pretend congressional members were no longer allowed to perform inspections of ICE detention facilities.
In some cases, this refusal to comply with the law resulted in the arrest of politicians trying to engage in their legally ordained oversight duties. When that intimidation failed to stem the flow of congressional reps to ICE facilities, DHS started issuing its own limitations on inspections — exactly zero of which were supported by current law.
Kristi Noem issued “guidance” last year pretending that Trump’s budget bill freed ICE from having to open their facilities to congressional inspection. Noem’s theory was that while normally DHS couldn’t make congressional reps give ICE 72 hours to seven days advance notice of inspections, the “Big Beautiful Bill” concocted by the GOP created pathways for pretending existing law didn’t exist.
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That guidance specifically noted the DC Appeals Court had already ruled against the DHS by stating its current demands for advance notice were “inconsistent” with existing law. No doubt we’ll see similar misleading “guidance” issued by the DHS again in the near future as the DC Appeals Court has (again) rejected the government’s attempts to violate the law while litigation over these new policies continues.
A federal appeals court on Friday required the Trump administration to continue allowing lawmakers to inspect immigration detention facilities without advance notice, ruling unanimously that the impromptu visits posed minimal problems for the government.
The decision by a three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit preserved, for now, the ability of Democrats in Congress to make unannounced visits to detention centers and check on the conditions inside.
The one-page order [PDF] (and its 10-page explanation by Judge Rao) is inexplicably absent from the New York Times reporting. But it’s embedded below (and linked above).
Judge Rao says the government does have some interest in controlling access to its facilities for several, mostly credible reasons. But its belief that these concerns override existing law allowing congressional inspections is misplaced.
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The government is entitled to deference on how it maintains the security of detention facilities, but the current record does not substantiate the government’s claim that oversight visits without advance notice impose harms beyond administrative inconvenience. While a close call, particularly because of the strong likelihood of success on the merits, I concur in denying a stay.
As Noem pointed out in her memo, the Big Beautiful Act created a flow of funding that was (theoretically) outside of the purview of existing appropriations laws governing ICE facility inspection. This order points out that this is no longer the case as that particular rider attached to the Act lapsed along with the rest of the DHS’s funding during the shutdown. The dead rider has not been re-attached, so the DHS’s insistence this means this particular funding can be used to thwart congressional oversight isn’t exactly a foregone conclusion.
That’s not to say this decision will ultimately lead to the DHS abandoning its demands for advance notice before inspections. While the government has failed to show it will suffer irreparable harm if congressional reps are allowed on-demand access to detention facilities, the plaintiffs here are legislators — people who aren’t generally allowed to sue the same government that employs them to obtain relief.
Judge Rao says the administration is likely to emerge victorious because the Democratic congressional reps don’t have standing. But that doesn’t mean the government has presented solid arguments about its own interests in denying access to detention facilities.
The government has credibly alleged inconvenience and disruption caused by congressional visits. But the government has not shown that these harms arise from congressional visits undertaken without seven days’ advance notice, as opposed to congressional visits generally. The government cites a single security incident involving the unauthorized presence of the Mayor of Newark in the secured area of an ICE facility and the alleged obstruction of the Mayor’s arrest by Representative McIver. But the government does not explain how this incident resulted from a lack of prior notice of the Representative’s oversight visit.
To be sure, the mayor of Newark is not allowed to access ICE facilities without advance notice or explicit permission. But that doesn’t extend to everyone else ICE wishes to keep out of its facilities — a list that seems to include every congressional rep that actually might want to perform an inspection.
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In addition, this never used to be a problem. The Appeals Court isn’t convinced that it’s suddenly a problem now, just because this version of the DHS wants to pretend it is.
By contrast, the Members have provided numerous declarations attesting to congressional visits made with less than seven days’ notice that were conducted without incident since 2019. The government does not meaningfully dispute these accounts and responds only that the pending litigation incentivizes the Members to conduct their visits in a nondisruptive manner. Even if that is true, this pending appeal will continue to provide the same incentives for good behavior.
For now, congressional reps don’t need to give ICE a heads up before engaging in an inspection. That may change (at least temporarily) if the administration can show these congressional reps don’t have standing to pursue this litigation. But we can hope that any final dispensation of this case only grants the administration its argument about standing. The law is still the law, no matter how the DHS might feel about the law. When this all wraps up, the status should be reset to quo: Congressional reps have a legal right to inspect facilities without advance notice. Everything else is just mud in the water.
Campfire Audio has built its most complex in-ear monitor to date with the Chimera, a nine-driver flagship IEM that like the figure from Greek mythology that it’s named after, combines many elements, including dynamic, balanced armature, electrostatic, and bone-conduction drivers.
These drivers are all housed inside a single CNC-machined magnesium shell, which is hand-assembled at the brand’s Portland, Oregon facility.
The drivers look to divide responsibility across the frequency range, with a newly developed 10mm True-Glass dynamic driver covering low and low-mid frequencies. A dual-diaphragm balanced armature handles the midrange, with two dedicated high-frequency balanced armatures for clarity and articulation. Then there are four electrostatic super-tweeters that extend into the uppermost range for air and precision.
Alongside those eight conventional drivers sits a bone-conduction unit embedded directly into the magnesium shell, a first for Campfire Audio. It allows low-frequency energy to be felt physically through the shell as well as heard acoustically, adding tactile weight to bass content that a acoustic driver arrangement supposedly cannot replicate.
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Image Credit (Campfire Audio)
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Internally, a pressure valve regulates airflow behind the dynamic driver while a final-stage tuning damper sits integrated into the nozzle, two components that work alongside Campfire’s acoustic routing to maintain coherence across a driver array that combines four different transducer technologies operating at the same time.
The shell pairs that magnesium body with a carbon fibre and brass Damascus faceplate, where layers of brass are folded into carbon fibre and then CNC-machined to produce a patterned surface that carries subtle variation between units, with the finish available in black and gold PVD variants.
Each Chimera ships with the ALO Audio Valence-6 cable, marking the reintroduction of the ALO Audio brand and features four high-purity copper conductors alongside two mixed copper and silver-plated copper conductors, finished with black anodised aluminium hardware throughout.
Pre-sale opens on 16th May 2026 ahead of an expected June shipping window, with the Chimera priced at £6,999 / $7,500, with limited initial quantities available worldwide.
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