Intel and Google signed a multi-year deal to keep Xeon in cloud infrastructure
Google Cloud instances C4 and N4 already run on Xeon 6 processors
Intel and Google are co-developing custom IPUs for networking and storage
Intel and Google have announced a multi-year collaboration that will keep Intel Xeon processors at the heart of Google Cloud infrastructure for the foreseeable future.
The agreement spans multiple generations of Xeon chips and includes systems used for AI workloads, inference tasks, and general-purpose computing across Google’s global data centers.
Google Cloud instances such as C4 and N4 already rely on Xeon 6 processors, and this deal ensures that pattern continues.
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Why CPUs still matter in an era of specialized AI hardware
“AI is reshaping how infrastructure is built and scaled,” said Lip-Bu Tan, CEO of Intel.
“Scaling AI requires more than accelerators — it requires balanced systems. CPUs and IPUs are central to delivering the performance, efficiency, and flexibility modern AI workloads demand.”
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The announcement comes at a time when many hyperscalers are accelerating adoption of custom Arm-based processors for AI tasks.
Counterpoint Research recently claimed 90% of AI servers running custom silicon will rely on the Arm instruction set architecture, leaving x86 with only a small share of new deployments.
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To ensure Xeon remains relevant, Intel and Google are also jointly developing custom infrastructure processing units designed to handle networking, storage, and security workloads.
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These IPUs operate as ASIC-based accelerators that move infrastructure tasks away from host CPUs, freeing Xeon processors to focus on application execution.
This separation improves system efficiency and resource allocation across large cloud deployments running AI tools, AI agents, and large language models.
CPUs and infrastructure acceleration remain a cornerstone of AI systems — from training orchestration to inference and deployment,” said Amin Vahdat, SVP and Chief Technologist for AI Infrastructure at Google.
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Google currently uses both Xeon 5 and Xeon 6 processors across multiple service layers alongside its own custom Arm-based Axion processors.
These deployments continue alongside Google’s own custom processors used in other parts of its infrastructure stack.
Intel and Google state that collaboration across CPUs and IPUs will continue across future system generations, covering ongoing integration efforts across cloud infrastructure layers.
They maintain that CPUs and infrastructure accelerators remain part of current cloud design patterns across distributed systems.
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Many workloads running in Google’s data centers require backward compatibility with x86 architecture, while others need maximum single-thread performance that Xeon CPUs deliver.
These requirements are expected to persist for years, which explains why Intel and Google signed this multi-year agreement.
The Trump administration’s war on science has been a furious one. Be it deep cuts to scientific research, policies that ignore scientific research, or the appointment of deeply unscientific people to lead scientific cabinet positions, it seems that Trump thinks that knowledge is the enemy.
You will recall how RFK Jr. fired every single member of the CDC’s ACIP vaccination panel last summer. It became obvious in the aftermath why he did so, after installing a cadre of anti-vaxxers to replace them and moving to shift immunization policy away from vaccines at the federal level. Trump appears to have taken a page from Kennedy’s playbook, as he recently terminated the entire board of the National Science Foundation days ago.
All 22 members of the National Science Board were terminated by the Trump administration via a terse email on Friday. The administration has provided no explanation for purging the board, which helps steer the National Science Foundation and acts as an independent advisory body for the president and Congress on scientific and engineering issues, providing reports throughout the year. The ousters represent another severe blow to the NSF and the overall scientific enterprise in America.
Members received a two-sentence email saying that, “On behalf of President Donald J. Trump,” their positions were “terminated, effective immediately.”
The post is filled with commentary from the board members and others pointing out that this leaves America with a gaping hole of leadership from a scientific advisory standpoint. The NSB advises both the Executive and Legislative branches. Trump has also nominated Jim O’Neill, an investor, to be the next Director of NSF. There is speculation that this move was done as a way to clear the field for O’Neill to replace them with hand-picked members that will further his tech bro agenda. He also already works for the federal government as Kennedy’s Deputy Secretary of HHS.
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But maybe the explanation for the timing here is much more simple: Trump may have caught wind of a forthcoming NSB report about America falling behind in scientific research.
Multiple dismissed members believe the timing was deliberate, as the board was finalizing a report highlighting a widening U.S.–China gap in research and development spending. The report addresses areas central to Trump’s stated priorities, such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and the Moon race, but underscores lagging U.S. investment. Critics suggest the administration may seek a board more aligned with short-term political goals rather than long-term, exploratory research.
Now that sounds more like the Donald Trump I’ve come to know. This is less likely to be 4D chess at work then he simply didn’t want to be embarrassed by this report. There’s a simple test for whether that was part of the impetus here. If that same report does get finalized eventually and gets released, then it wasn’t. If we never get that report, it probably was. Simple.
But wasn’t isn’t simple is going to be digging ourselves out of the scientific debt that Trump is placing upon the country. If knowledge is power, as the saying goes, then America is less powerful today than it was before this administration.
New Year’s Day is one of the easiest days to end up scrolling Netflix without actually committing to anything. The problem isn’t a lack of options, but choosing something that fits how you’re likely to watch, which usually means a show that starts quickly or keeps a steady rhythm without demanding too much attention.
Whether you’re recovering from a late night or just easing into a slower start to the year, the right show can do most of the work for you. This list narrows it down to five that are particularly effective right now, not just because they’re popular, but because they’re built for this kind of viewing. Some are structured for fast, high-retention binges, others are easier to sit with, and a couple justify a more focused watch if you’re in the mood to engage. Each one fits the kind of momentum that makes getting through a full season or a limited series feel natural, whether it’s today or any other day you want something that holds up without effort.
XO, Kitty is one of those shows that pulls you back into rom-coms without trying to overcomplicate what makes the genre work. Built as an extension of the To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before films, it follows Kitty as she navigates relationships, friendships, and her own impulsive decisions, which is where most of the appeal lies.
The show leans into those shifting dynamics rather than forcing high-stakes drama, which is also why it works better here than something like Nobody Wants This. That show leans more into a slightly older, messier version of romance, while XO, Kitty keeps things breezier and easier to stay with. The K-drama influence shows up in how emotional beats are handled, but the tone stays light and accessible.
It’s the kind of series you can return to easily because the pull comes from characters rather than plot. This is also the one on this list that holds up best for repeat viewing, and the one I’d most likely go back to without thinking too much about where I left off.
Best for: A mystery that rewards attention and gives you something to stay with beyond the episode
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His & Hers stands out because of how it builds its story through shifting perspectives, which keeps you actively involved rather than just following along. The structure isn’t complicated for the sake of it, but it does expect you to stay with it, and that’s where the engagement comes from.
This is one of those shows where the experience carries beyond individual episodes. It’s the kind of mystery that keeps you thinking about it even when you’re not watching, which is also why it works as a strong pick here if you’re in the mood for something more involving.
If XO, Kitty is the one you can let run, this is the one you sit with. It’s not passive viewing, but it doesn’t feel heavy either. It just asks for a bit more attention, and rewards it.
Best for: A high-retention binge that keeps moving without effort
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With three seasons now available, including Season 3 released in February 2026, The Night Agent is no longer just a breakout hit. It’s one of the few Netflix thrillers that still delivers a clean, episode-to-episode hook without slowing down.
Each season runs at around 10 episodes, which means you’re not realistically finishing the full series in a day. What does work is committing to a single season, and Season 1 remains the strongest entry point if you’re starting fresh. It introduces the core premise quickly and maintains a steady pace without getting weighed down by subplots. Season 2 and Season 3 expand the scale, but follow the same structure, making it easy to continue if you want to stay in that rhythm.
What makes it worth watching right now is how little friction there is once you start. There’s no slow build, no complicated setup, and no need to track multiple threads. It’s built to keep moving, which is exactly what works on a day like this. If you’re looking for something that can hold attention without demanding it, this is one of the safest picks on Netflix. And If you are all done with the Night Agent and looking for similar show, then here’s another 10 similar shows for you to consider.
Best for: A familiar, high-stakes binge that’s easy to pick up or revisit
Netflix
With Season 5 rolling out through late 2025 and its final episode landing on New Year’s Eve, Stranger Things comes back into focus at exactly the right time. Whether you’ve been following it or haven’t started yet, this is one of those rare points where the entire story is available to move through without waiting.
What makes the show work is how it balances scale with simplicity. The world expands with each season, but the story always stays anchored in its core group, which keeps it easy to follow even as the stakes get bigger. That clarity, along with its mix of nostalgia, horror, and character-driven storytelling, is what gives it that lasting cult appeal.
It’s also one of the few shows that works equally well as a rewatch. Personally, this is one that holds up every time you go back to it, whether you’re revisiting key moments or staying with it across multiple episodes without having to think too much about it.
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Avatar: The Last Airbender
Best for: A family-friendly watch that’s easy to get into and stay with
Netflix
Netflix’s live-action Avatar: The Last Airbender is a good pick for this time of year because it gives you something structured without feeling heavy. Season 1 lays out the world clearly, so you’re not spending time figuring things out, and it’s easy to move from one episode to the next without losing track.
With Season 2 confirmed and the story continuing, it also doesn’t feel like a one-off watch. You can start it now and know there’s more to come, which adds to the appeal if you’re looking to settle into something over a few days.
What stands out is how it balances familiarity with accessibility. Whether you’ve seen the original or not, the story stays clear, the characters are easy to follow, and the progression is steady. That makes it one of the easier shows to put on with others, while still being engaging enough to keep watching on your own.
Morgan Stanley similarly doubted the potential cost savings. “On the expense side, we also think the potential opportunities would likely be minimal as physical and digital business require different cost bases, as do 3P marketplaces vs. 1P wholesalers. To add another challenge, GameStop has already undergone a series of large cost cuts,” the research note said.
Morgan Stanley analysts expressed skepticism about “how a deal would be financed given the material valuation gap.” If completed, they said it could end up as the largest leveraged buyout ever, “surpassing the recently announced $55 billion Electronic Arts transaction.”
GameStop said that eBay spent $2.4 billion on sales and marketing in fiscal 2025 but added only 1 million net active buyers, increasing the total from 134 million to 135 million. GameStop said it would cut $1.2 billion from eBay’s sales and marketing budget, arguing that the current spending “is not producing more users on a marketplace with near-universal brand recognition.”
GameStop proposed cutting another $300 million from eBay’s product development expenses and $500 million from general and administrative functions. The combined company will consolidate its finance, HR, real estate, legal, IT, and professional services after the merger to save money, GameStop said.
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GameStop touted its own financial performance under Cohen, saying that it “moved from a $381 million net loss in fiscal 2021 to $418 million of net income in fiscal 2025.” eBay meanwhile said in its press release today that its “board and leadership team are executing a focused strategy to drive sustainable growth and long-term shareholder value.”
eBay last week reported Q1 2026 revenue of $3.1 billion, up 19 percent year over year. eBay’s GAAP net income was $512 million, up 2 percent.
GameStop, which is on a different fiscal schedule, reported net sales of $1.1 billion in Q4 2026. That was down from $1.28 billion in the prior year’s fourth quarter. GameStop’s Q4 net income also fell year over year, from $131.3 million to $127.9 million.
Online collaboration is an important tool for companies, big and small. Services like Slack and Microsoft Teams are perhaps the most successful, but their scope is limited primarily to real-time chatting between colleagues, regardless of platform. Another solution is Nextcloud Hub, an open-source, self-hosted content collaboration platform.
Admittedly, I knew little about Nextcloud Hub until recently. However, as a Hostinger client, I noticed the solution was easy to install on my website and recognized it could be a perfect solution for some of our readers.
With this in mind, I tested Nextcloud Hub and here’s what I found out.
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What is Nextcloud Hub?
(Image credit: Nextcloud Hub)
Nextcloud Hub is a self-hosted open-source content collaboration platform that transforms online collaboration. The platform delivers digital collaborative benefits without introducing the privacy and security vulnerabilities that third-party cloud services commonly present. Open-source status is the main advantage of Nextcloud Hub because it gives users complete control and ownership of their data.
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The Talk solution in Nextcloud Hub goes beyond being a Slack alternative because it includes numerous additional features. Users can conduct private audio/video conferences and text chats through the Talk feature of Nextcloud Hub. The platform consists of all the necessary tools that make modern communication effective.
The system includes group chats and direct messaging, screen sharing and live reactions, breakout rooms, moderation tools for webinars, end-to-end encrypted calls, and Federated chatting to connect between different Nextcloud Talk instances.
The digital workspace functionality of Nextcloud Hub emerges from integrating multiple essential components.
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Nextcloud Files is the core component that delivers self-hosted file storage with instant synchronization capabilities. The platform includes vital functions such as secure file sharing, password protection and expiration features, granular permission controls, and file versioning with commenting capabilities.
The suite Nextcloud Groupware integrates three essential productivity tools: calendar, Contacts, and Mail. The platform allows users to manage shared calendars while providing efficient scheduling tools. It also completes email administration with features for shared mailboxes and integrated task management capabilities.
Through LibreOffice power, Nextcloud Office delivers a full-featured online office suite that enables browser-based real-time collaborative document editing alongside spreadsheet and presentation creation. The platform supports major file formats, including .docx,.pptx, and .xlsx.
(Image credit: Nextcloud Hub)
Nextcloud Assistant is an integrated AI assistant that utilizes AI tools throughout Nextcloud applications. The platform uses AI to produce content while providing data-related questions, email summaries, text translation capabilities, automatic message sending, and appointment creation functionality. These AI features’ self-hosting capability guarantees your data privacy and total control over your information.
The tools in Nextcloud Hub also provide automation features and data management solutions for workflow optimization.
The automation features allow users to set triggers and actions that optimize workflows and automate repetitive tasks through a simple interface. Meanwhile, Nextcloud Tables operates as a database-like application that provides users with powerful spreadsheet functionality for structured data management. Users can create and manage data structures while Nextcloud components enable enhanced automation through seamless integration.
The complete and customizable secure environment provided by Nextcloud Hub keeps your data under control.
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What is Hostinger?
Hostinger is a major web hosting service that enables businesses and individuals to create an online presence. The company provides complete hosting solutions, including WordPress and VPS services.
Hostinger was established in 2004 to provide affordable hosting solutions backed by a 99.9% uptime guarantee and multiple management tools for website administration. The company’s hPanel control panel offers an easy-to-use interface for managing hosting accounts, websites, and associated services.
The Auto-Installer tool is Hostinger’s primary usability feature. It enables users to easily install popular web apps.
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Further, this tool eliminates the need for manual database creation and file uploads through automated technical procedures. This benefits both new users and those who want fast setup processes. Users can choose their desired app from a list before providing it.
Installing Nextcloud Hub on your Hostinger account
Installing NextCloud on Hostinger typically involves two main approaches: using Hostinger’s Auto Installer or a manual installation process, which is the more common and reliable method given NextCloud’s open-source nature. For my use, I installed NextCloud using the Auto Installer feature.
To do so:
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Log in to your Hostinger account on the company website.
Next, in the directory on the left, choose Websites.
Choose Dashboard next to the name of your account.
Once again in the directory on the left, choose Websites followed by Auto Install.
Under Other, choose Select.
In the pulldown menu, choose NextCloud.
Choose Select.
The next steps involve setting up a database for NextCloud. I would suggest that you install NextCloud on a subdirectory of your website. As such:
Add a Website title, administrator email, administrator username, and administrator password on the pop-up menu.
Select Advanced.
Type in a name for your subdirectory in the Enter Subdirectory box.
Be sure to create a new database and assign it a password.
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Once the database is installed, you can set up NextCloud by going to the main page of the NextCloud installation. This is the location at http://yourdomain)/(the subdirectory you created).
On that menu, you’ll need to add the username and password you chose above.
Final steps
After successfully installing Nextcloud Hub on your server, the immediate next steps involve completing the initial setup wizard, which guides you through creating your administrator account with a strong password, defining the data directory where Nextcloud will store user files, and configuring the database connection. The wizard may also offer to install recommended apps like Nextcloud Office or Talk, which you should generally enable for a complete experience.
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Once this initial setup is finalized, it’s crucial to move onto post-installation configurations and hardening: this includes setting up background jobs via cron for efficient task handling, implementing memory caching (like Redis or APCu) to boost performance, and, most importantly, enabling HTTPS (SSL/TLS) encryption to secure all communication. Additionally, you’ll need to review PHP settings, properly secure your `config.php` file, add all valid access domains to trusted domains, and establish regular updates to Nextcloud and your server to ensure ongoing security and stability.
Denmark’s grid operator Energinet has paused all new grid connection agreements after a 60-gigawatt queue, nearly nine times the country’s peak demand, overwhelmed the system. AI data centres are the proximate cause: hyperscalers chose Denmark for its clean grid and cool climate, and are now consuming more electricity than the infrastructure was designed to deliver. Denmark is the first Nordic country to confront the tension between building the world’s cleanest grid and attracting the world’s most power-hungry industry.
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Denmark generates more than 80 per cent of its electricity from renewable sources. Its wind farms, both onshore and offshore, have made the country a global model for clean energy transition. Its grid operator, Energinet, has spent decades building the infrastructure to support a decarbonised power system. In March, Energinet paused all new grid connection agreements. The reason was not a failure of renewable capacity. It was an explosion of demand from AI data centres that the grid was never designed to accommodate. Denmark, the country that solved clean energy, has become the first Nordic nation to confront a question that the rest of Europe will face within months: what happens when the AI industry’s appetite for electricity exceeds the grid that was built for something else entirely.
The pause
Energinet’s temporary moratorium covers all new large-scale grid connection agreements, not only data centres, but data centres are the proximate cause. Approximately 60 gigawatts of projects are waiting for grid connections in Denmark. The country’s peak electricity demand is roughly 7 gigawatts. The queue is nearly nine times the peak load, and a significant portion of it is data centre capacity. Denmark had around 398 megawatts of installed data centre capacity at the start of 2026, with an additional 208 megawatts under construction and projections to reach 1.2 gigawatts by 2030. Hyperscale facilities, the kind operated by Microsoft, Google, and Apple, account for 60 per cent of the country’s current data centre footprint.
Microsoft alone has committed $3 billion to data centre construction in Denmark between 2023 and 2027. Apple operates a data centre in Viborg. Google has expanded its Danish operations. The hyperscalers chose Denmark for the same reasons the country built its renewable grid: stable governance, reliable infrastructure, cool climate that reduces cooling costs, and abundant wind power. The irony is that the success of Denmark’s green energy model is what attracted the data centres, and the data centres are now overwhelming the grid that made Denmark attractive in the first place.
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The numbers
The scale of AI-driven electricity demand has outrun every forecast. The International Energy Agency reported that data centre electricity consumption surged 17 per cent in 2025, with AI-focused facilities growing even faster. Global data centre electricity use is projected to double by 2030, and power consumption from AI-specific data centres is expected to triple. Startups are racing to curb data centre energy consumption, but the efficiency gains from hardware innovation and cooling technology are being overwhelmed by the sheer volume of new capacity coming online.
A single AI inference task can consume up to 1,000 times more electricity than a traditional web search. Training runs for frontier models require hundreds of megawatts sustained over weeks. The hyperscalers’ combined capital expenditure is projected to exceed $690 billion in 2026, a 36 per cent increase over 2025, and the majority of that spending is directed at data centre construction and the power infrastructure to support it. Efforts to reduce AI’s computational footprint through architectural innovation, including brain-inspired approaches that promise orders-of-magnitude efficiency gains, are years from deployment at scale. In the meantime, the industry is building as fast as grid operators will allow, and Denmark has just demonstrated that grid operators have limits.
The Nordic question
Denmark is not alone among the Nordics in facing this pressure, but it is the first to act. Sweden, Finland, and Norway have all attracted significant data centre investment for the same reasons: renewable energy, cool climates, and stable governance. Sweden’s Lulea, home to a major Facebook data centre, and Finland’s Hamina, where Google operates a facility cooled by Baltic Sea water, are established hyperscale locations. But none of these countries have implemented a grid connection pause.
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The Danish moratorium is designed to last three months, during which Energinet will assess how to manage the queue and develop new criteria for prioritising grid connection requests from large energy users. Soren Dupont Kristensen, Energinet’s Chief Operating Officer, described the pause as a “window of opportunity” to rethink regulation. Data centre operators globally are accelerating capital deployment, with Australia’s NEXTDC launching a A$2.2 billion plan anchored by a new campus in Western Sydney. The concern among data centre operators in Denmark is that a three-month pause becomes a longer-term regulatory framework that deprioritises their projects in favour of other industrial uses or residential demand growth.
The tension
The structural tension is between two policy objectives that Denmark has pursued simultaneously: building the world’s cleanest electricity grid and attracting the world’s largest technology companies. Both objectives succeeded. The grid is among the cleanest in Europe. The technology companies arrived. But the grid was designed for a decarbonised industrial economy, not for an AI industry that treats electricity as a raw material consumed at petrochemical scale. Data centres are becoming a financial asset class, with Blackstone preparing the first AI-era data centre REIT. The financialisation of data centre capacity means that capital will flow toward the jurisdictions with the fastest grid connections and the most permissive regulatory environments, and away from jurisdictions that pause.
Denmark’s dilemma is that a pause protects the grid but signals to the hyperscalers that their next billion-dollar facility should be built somewhere else. Ireland faced a similar situation in 2021 when EirGrid imposed a moratorium on new data centre connections in the Dublin area, a pause that lasted more than two years and redirected investment toward other European markets. Denmark’s grid operator has been explicit that the current pause is temporary, but the precedent it sets may be more important than its duration. If Denmark establishes that grid capacity for data centres is not guaranteed, the hyperscalers will diversify their Nordic footprint toward Sweden and Norway, where grid operators have not yet imposed similar restrictions.
The reckoning
Europe has been trying to build a tech ecosystem that can compete with the United States and China. Data centres are the physical infrastructure of that competition: every AI model, every cloud service, and every enterprise deployment runs on hardware that sits in a data centre connected to a power grid. Europe’s total data centre investment is projected to reach €176 billion between 2026 and 2031, but the European Commission’s own analysis warns that future capacity growth will be constrained primarily by grid readiness rather than access to capital. Denmark is the first demonstration of that constraint in practice.
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The question Denmark’s pause raises is not whether it was necessary. Given a 60-gigawatt connection queue against 7 gigawatts of peak demand, some form of prioritisation was inevitable. The question is what comes after the pause. If Energinet develops a framework that allocates grid capacity based on economic value, energy efficiency, and contribution to the domestic economy, Denmark could emerge with a model that other European grid operators adopt. If the pause simply delays projects without resolving the underlying capacity mismatch, it will have achieved nothing except pushing investment toward competitors. Denmark built the grid the AI industry wanted. The AI industry showed up with an appetite the grid cannot satisfy. What happens next will determine whether Europe’s cleanest energy market can also be its most competitive data centre market, or whether those two ambitions are, at the scale AI demands, incompatible.
NGC 3137 is a spiral galaxy located 53 million light-years away in the constellation Antlia, and the Hubble Space Telescope has captured it in exquisite clarity. It captured images of this galaxy at six different wavelengths, enabling astronomers to combine ultraviolet, visible, and hydrogen emission data into a single complete picture. At first impression, the image is beautiful, with the galaxy dominating the frame at a sharp angle and its loose arms fanning out like feathers in a summer wind. The older stars in the galaxy’s center have a warm golden tone, whilst the hotter, younger groups of stars on the periphery appear pale blue.
You can see thin dust lanes flowing through the galaxy’s disk, as well as these gorgeous pink spots showing where new stars are being formed as we speak. There are thick clusters of dazzling blue stars that have formed amid the pink clouds of incandescent gas, and each cluster represents a new generation of stars that are just beginning to light. Hubble targeted these features as part of a wider study to examine fifty-five neighboring galaxies. The data is being used to determine how star clusters age from when they first begin to shine brightly until they finally become the older populations that make up the majority of a galaxy. The results provide a vivid picture of life in a spiral galaxy similar to our own Milky Way.
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So, what exactly is NGC 3137? It belongs to a small group of galaxies known as the NGC 3175 group, which is named after the Local Group, of which we are a member. It comprises of two large spiral galaxies, NGC 3137 and its neighbor NGC 3175, as well as hundreds of smaller, microscopic galaxies that are still being tallied. Astronomers are interested in this group because the layout and movement of the galaxies are quite similar to what we see in the Local Group. Every new discovery about how galaxies behave and interact allows us to gain a better understanding of how our own cosmic backyard operates.
NGC 3137 has a supermassive black hole that is estimated to be sixty million times the mass of our own Sun. There are small dust clouds ringing the core location, adding a lot of dimension to the scene. Because NGC 3137 is inclined slightly towards us rather than directly facing us, we obtain a side-on perspective of the galaxy, which highlights the 3D structure of the arms. There are a few background galaxies in the scene, but they’re just small orange dots, and then there are a few foreground stars that have drifted into the shot; they’re like photobombs, coming out of nowhere and taking the spotlight.
Bazzite 44 is a big one. Built on Fedora 44, this gaming-focused Linux distro lands with KDE Plasma 6.6 and Gnome 50, the OGC kernel 6.19, and Mesa 26.0.5 for better GPU support across Vulkan and OpenGL titles. The release also strengthens security with signed ISOs and updates bundled tools.
With such a large portfolio of products and multiple retail partners, there are many advantages to investing in the Milwaukee ecosystem. Whether you’re looking for hand tools, power tools, or adding another toolbox to your modular Packout storage system, there’s always something new in the lineup. Although some non-tool Milwaukee products are also known to fall short of expectations, like their poorly made Packout bags, it’s generally a pretty beloved manufacturer that is trusted by professionals, homeowners, and DIYers alike.
However, when you’re just getting started with building your tool collection, it can be easy to overspend on tools you don’t need or miss out on added benefits that come with its network of distributors. To help you get more bang for your buck, here are some common mistakes that people make when buying Milwaukee tools, why they matter, and how you can avoid making them yourself.
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1. Taking into account future tool needs
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Apart from the tools themselves, you might also want to think about how the rest of the Milwaukee ecosystem can play a role in your life. While Milwaukee has a lot to offer, there are many tools offered by its competitors that it doesn’t have, like Ryobi’s Power Carver Kit and Foam Cutter. Although you can mix and match tools from other brands, it’s not always ideal if you need to invest in separate battery systems. If you’re dead set on Milwaukee as a brand, the next step is to check its product line-up for the tools you actually need.
If you have an unlimited budget and need to use power tools regularly, you don’t necessarily have to choose between the brand’s different battery systems. But while you can get the strongest battery in the Milwaukee lineup, it’s not necessarily the one that best fits your needs. While the M18 battery system offers 250+ compatible tools, it’s possible that the tools you actually need are already covered by its least powerful M12 battery system, which has 150+ compatible products. If you do occasionally need to use more powerful Milwaukee tools, you can also just rent them for as long as you need them. Not only will this save you money, but it also eliminates the need for long-term storage and reduces the number of tools you need to maintain.
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2. Not considering regular maintenance requirements
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Although Milwaukee tools already come at a premium price point, the spending doesn’t stop after you check out your cart. In fact, many people buying tools for the first time often don’t take into consideration the overall cost of operation, which includes consistent maintenance. Previously, we’ve mentioned that some Milwaukee power tools require more maintenance than you expect, especially those in its lineup that require sharpness to function properly, like its lawn mowers, chainsaws, saws, and trimmers. In some cases, they may need everything from cleaning and oiling to full blade replacements, all of which require time, effort, and skill.
As for its battery-powered tools, the Milwaukee batteries are not immune to the slew of other issues associated with lithium-ion batteries. One of the many Milwaukee products you should definitely not buy secondhand is its power tool batteries, which will naturally degrade with normal use. However, you can get more years out of it if you practice good battery-use habits and store it according to Milwaukee’s care guidelines.
If you’re not diligent about your tool maintenance, the least you have to worry about is that it stops working properly and causes delays with your projects. But in more serious cases, it can void the warranty and even lead to injuries or accidents. That said, you can do everything right but still end up with a defective product, since Milwaukee batteries have a history of recalls due to the risk of explosions.
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3. Buying from unauthorized retailers
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It should go without saying that it’s always a good idea to only buy from authorized retailers. We’ve cautioned against buying Milwaukee products on Amazon, as there have been recurring reports of people receiving counterfeit batteries. While not all Amazon sellers are guilty, they’re not held to the same accountability as authorized retailers. In the long run, this could damage your legitimate Milwaukee tools and pose safety risks, including fire hazards. If you’re not sure where to find authentic Milwaukee products, you can check the Milwaukee partners page on its official website. Some of the popular online retailers with physical stores in the United States that are part of its official distribution network include Home Depot, White Cap, and Ace Hardware. Plus, there are plenty of other stores that carry Milwaukee products, like Summit Racing, West Marine, NAPA Auto Parts, and Blain’s Farm and Fleet.
Apart from the peace of mind that comes from knowing you are buying legitimate products, purchasing from an authorized retailer ensures Milwaukee will honor the warranty. Even without registration, Milwaukee notes that the tool’s date is enough to check if you’re still eligible for support. Milwaukee also mentions that having the receipt on hand can make a difference during verification. That said, even authorized retailers have their own fair share of problems. Previously, we’ve reported how lenient return policies have led to people accidentally buying used tools from Home Depot straight off the shelf.
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4. Not understanding different return policies
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Similar to other brands, normal wear and tear isn’t usually considered grounds for warranty coverage. While Milwaukee does offer repairs and replacements, it only covers defective materials or workmanship. However, there are other ways to get your money back if you’ve changed your mind or realized that you didn’t get the right tool. The specific retailer you purchase your Milwaukee tools from makes a difference, since store return policies vary. The scope will vary depending on where you made the purchase and on the condition you return it in.
For example, we’ve gone in-depth into what happens to returned tools at Home Depot, wherein many “like-new” tools can be returned within a 30- or 90-day window. But take note: its return policy has additional conditions, including an extended 365-day return window if you’re a Home Depot credit card holder or have a commercial account. If you don’t have the receipt on hand, you’ll only have 30 days to return it unless you’re okay with store credit. Conversely, other sellers, like Capital Tools USA, are a little bit stricter. Apart from a 30-day window, you’ll need to both have it in its original packaging and provide your proof of purchase. Depending on the retailer, you’ll also have the option to return the product in-store or by mail. If it isn’t defective or damaged, you can expect to pay the shipping cost if you buy it from Ace Hardware.
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5. Not taking advantage of promotions
If you have a little more wiggle room in your budget, opting for bundles and kits can be a great way to get your tools at a lower price. Depending on the retailer, some limited-time deals you can expect include coupons, bundles, and kits. For example, Home Depot had a special Black Friday sale offering free batteries with eligible Milwaukee tools, which can be a great way to hit two birds with one stone. For people looking to make one-time investments, there are also tool kit options, like the Milwaukee 7-Tool Combo Kit, which covers a lot of ground.
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While it isn’t always the case, it is important to watch out for bundles that include discontinued products. In some cases, they may be discounted because newer models offer better value, given improvements in technology, performance, and overall longevity. As your collection grows, the bundle strategy may not be worth doing since you will probably already have most of the tools you need in your arsenal. That said, some bundles can still offer good value, even if you end up with duplicates. Apart from selling them separately or gifting them to friends, there are many places that accept old tools for donation, like Goodwill, Habitat for Humanity, or your local tool library.
A new NYT Connections puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Monday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Connections hints and answers for Monday, May 4 (game #1058).
Good morning! Let’s play Connections, the NYT’s clever word game that challenges you to group answers in various categories. It can be tough, so read on if you need Connections hints.
What should you do once you’ve finished? Why, play some more word games of course. I’ve also got daily Strands hints and answers and Quordle hints and answers articles if you need help for those too, while Marc’s Wordle today page covers the original viral word game.
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SPOILER WARNING: Information about NYT Connections today is below, so don’t read on if you don’t want to know the answers.
Article continues below
NYT Connections today (game #1059) – today’s words
(Image credit: New York Times)
Today’s NYT Connections words are…
HINT
HITCH
POINTER
HICCUP
BEND
SETBACK
BLINK
SUGGESTION
SNEEZE
WHIFF
SHIVER
FLICKER
GAMELAN
SHEEPSHANK
MATCHSTICK
BOWLINE
NYT Connections today (game #1059) – hint #1 – group hints
What are some clues for today’s NYT Connections groups?
YELLOW: Shimmer
GREEN: Can’t be helped
BLUE: All tied up
PURPLE: Elements of tennis scoring
Need more clues?
We’re firmly in spoiler territory now, but read on if you want to know what the four theme answers are for today’s NYT Connections puzzles…
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NYT Connections today (game #1059) – hint #2 – group answers
What are the answers for today’s NYT Connections groups?
YELLOW: GLIMMER
GREEN: INVOLUNTARY ACTIONS
BLUE: KINDS OF KNOTS
PURPLE: STARTING WITH UNITS IN COMPETITIONS
Right, the answers are below, so DO NOT SCROLL ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO SEE THEM.
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NYT Connections today (game #1059) – the answers
(Image credit: New York Times)
The answers to today’s Connections, game #1059, are…
BLUE: KINDS OF KNOTS BEND, BOWLINE, HITCH, SHEEPSHANK
PURPLE: STARTING WITH UNITS IN COMPETITIONS GAMELAN, MATCHSTICK, POINTER, SETBACK
My rating: Easy
My score: Perfect
My only moment of hesitation in today’s game was connecting HITCH, SETBACK and HICCUP thinking we were looking for a group about unexpected delays, but thankfully I held back as I couldn’t find a fourth.
Instead, I took the leap and joined the dots between the four INVOLUNTARY ACTIONS and KINDS OF KNOTS.
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I saw STARTING WITH UNITS IN COMPETITIONS too late — although surely the link is specific to the game, set and match of tennis?
Yesterday’s NYT Connections answers (Monday, May 4, game #1058)
YELLOW: TENDER-HEARTED PERSON MARSHMALLOW, SOFTIE, SWEETHEART, TEDDY BEAR
BLUE: THINGS WITH KNOBS CONTROL PANEL, ETCH A SKETCH, RADIO, STOVE
PURPLE: STARTING WITH FAMILIAR NAMES FOR KINDS OF DOGS CHOWDER, DOODLEBUG, LABUBU, PITTER-PATTER
What is NYT Connections?
NYT Connections is one of several increasingly popular word games made by the New York Times. It challenges you to find groups of four items that share something in common, and each group has a different difficulty level: green is easy, yellow a little harder, blue often quite tough and purple usually very difficult.
On the plus side, you don’t technically need to solve the final one, as you’ll be able to answer that one by a process of elimination. What’s more, you can make up to four mistakes, which gives you a little bit of breathing room.
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It’s a little more involved than something like Wordle, however, and there are plenty of opportunities for the game to trip you up with tricks. For instance, watch out for homophones and other word games that could disguise the answers.
It’s playable for free via the NYT Games site on desktop or mobile.
A malicious version of the PyTorch Lightning package published on the Python Package Index (PyPI) delivers a credential-stealing payload targeting browsers, environment files, and cloud services.
The developer disclosed the supply-chain attack on April 30, saying that version 2.6.3 of the package included a hidden execution chain that downloads and executes a JavaScript payload.
PyTorch Lightning is a deep learning framework used for pretraining and fine-tuning AI models. It is a popular package, amassing more than 11 million downloads last month.
The security advisory from the maintainer notes that the malicious execution chain triggers automatically on import and silently spawns a background process.
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Spawning a background process Source: GitHub
That process downloads a JavaScript runtime (‘Bun v1.3.13’) from GitHub, and executes a 11.4 MB heavily obfuscated JavaScript payload (‘router_runtime.js’).
In a post over the weekend, Microsoft Threat Intelligence says that Defender detected and prevented the malicious routine on customer environments, and notified the package maintainer.
The payload, which Defender detects as “ShaiWorm,” is an information-stealing malware that targets .env files, API keys, secrets, GitHub tokens, and data stored in Chrome, Firefox, and Brave browsers.
It also interacts with cloud service APIs (AWS, Azure, GCP) to steal credentials and supports arbitrary system command execution.
“lightning==2.6.3 (published on PyPI as py3-none-any wheel) contains a hidden execution chain that silently downloads a JavaScript runtime (Bun) and executes an 11.4 MB heavily obfuscated JavaScript payload upon import lightning,” Lightning AI says in the security advisory.
According to Microsoft’s telemetry, the malicious activity affected “a small number of devices” and appears to have been “contained to a narrow set of environments.”
Lightning AI warns that users who ran ‘import lightning’ with version 2.6.3 may have had their secrets, keys, and tokens compromised. In this case, an immediate rotation of all secrets is strongly recommended.
Currently, PyTorch Lightning has been reverted to 2.6.1 on PyPi, which is safe to use.
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At this time, it is unclear exactly how the supply-chain compromise occurred, and the package’s publishers are currently investigating how the build/release pipeline was breached.
Additionally, all other recent releases will be audited for similar payloads, and users will be notified via all available channels.
AI chained four zero-days into one exploit that bypassed both renderer and OS sandboxes. A wave of new exploits is coming.
At the Autonomous Validation Summit (May 12 & 14), see how autonomous, context-rich validation finds what’s exploitable, proves controls hold, and closes the remediation loop.
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