All 54 lost clickwheel iPod games have now been preserved for posterity
Finding working copies of the last few titles was an "especially cursed" journey.
https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2025/09/all-54-lost-clickwheel-ipod-games-have-now-been-preserved-for-posterity/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social
2nd of to nights fixes. A 139 year old electrotherapy machine.
Three problems, a brush wasn't contacting the rotor (bent back into shape). The handles were suffering from corrosion (cleaned), and the horseshoe magnet had lost most of its power(see 2nd image).
Works well now... no wonder they were nervous :)
A VM tuning case study: Balancing power and performance on AMD processors
📣 IDA 9.2 is here!
➥ Smarter Go decompilation
➥ New Dynamic Xref Graph & Xref Tree
➥ Debugger & UI upgrades
➥ Expanded processor support (ARM, RISC-V)
➥ And more...
Explore the full release here: https://hex-rays.com/blog/ida-9.2-release
Imagine that the first-ever commercial transistor computer fell into your laps (figuratively!). What would you do with it? Is it even practical to use?
Now you can answer these and many other questions, because I made a thing~
"My first transistorised computer: A Crash Course" is a short user manual for the simulator and the autocode/assembler of a computer highly inspired and mostly compatible with Metrovick 950, the first-ever commercially available transistor computer from 1956.
https://git.sr.ht/~nkali/mv950toy/tree/main/item/docs/crash_course.md
Getting silly with C, part ~(~1<<1) https://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/blog/c3/?n
Also, the Trend Micro story about a billion Google accounts being breached is also bullshit - the story is written using GenAI. That one also went global.
We've reached the point where vendors are just throwing shit at customers and journalists are just single source running it, nothing matters basically.
As a follow up, The Register did the actual journalism on this and yes - the #PromptLock generative AI ransomware story which went worldwide was bullshit. https://www.theregister.com/2025/09/05/real_story_ai_ransomware_promptlock/
The CVE-2025-7775 generative AI exploit story also worldwide right now is also bullshit, I don't have the energy to explain why (hint: several of the Netscaler versions shown in the CheckPoint write up aren't even vulnerable).
Keep an eye on my Medium blog posts. Will be doing more of these crash dump analysis and other troubleshooting related stuff.
https://bird.makeup/users/debugprivilege/statuses/1963541699247943917
If you've ever spent time around Wikipedians, you've doubtless heard its motto: "Wikipedia only works in practice. In theory, it's a mess." It's a delicious line, which is why I stole it for my 2017 novel *Walkaway*.
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
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This long read in The Verge does a remarkable job of describing how Wikipedia's editing community works, the project's strengths and weaknesses, and the threats it faces.
https://www.theverge.com/cs/features/717322/wikipedia-attacks-neutrality-history-jimmy-wales
"In a time of misinformation, in a time of suppression, having this place where people can come and bring knowledge and share knowledge, that is a statement."
yesterday's weird discovery is that every regular sized carrot I have tested is almost exactly 100kΩ end to end with sharp probes stuck in it. a couple of them come out at 100.0k on the dot.
inb4 NIST carrot-based electrical resistance metrology reference