2026-05-14


etc

  • How ASML took over the world

    While ASML is now the sole supplier of these machines, and will be for some time to come, it started out as a laggard in the chipmaking industry. Overtaking its competition required many things rarely associated with European companies: close collaboration with the American government, selling large stakes to foreign competitors, and a huge gamble on an unproven technology.

    Since almost all of the parts in ASML’s machines are made by other companies, it has become master of a sprawling supply chain of over five thousand companies. It has diversified its suppliers over the years in a very deliberate way: 80 percent of its spending goes to companies across Europe and the Middle East (notably not the US, despite prior agreements), which reduces the risk of potential export restrictions, tariffs, and other geopolitical risks that may face critical suppliers based in the US or Asia. It also aims for its suppliers to make no more than 25 percent of their revenue from ASML, to force them not to become overreliant on the volatile semiconductor market.

    ASML sank billions of dollars into the development and commercialization of EUV technology, with no guarantee that it would ever work. As late as the 2010s, many semiconductor experts doubted that the technology could be successfully commercialized. Now it is the most important technology in the world.

  • American Airlines flight from Miami lands in Chicago with two flat tires

Horseshit


Rank Propaganda / Thought Policing / World Disordering

Robot uprising / Humanioid Helpers

  • The Dark Side Of Unitree Robot Dogs

    Benn found that the original task that he’d envisioned for the robot, as in protecting his chickens from uninvited visitors, wouldn’t quite work as the robot is rather blind. The reason for this is the placement of the Lidar below the head, which obscures most of what’s behind and around the robot. Rather than risk trampled chickens and chicks, this plan was thus abandoned.

  • Unitree will sell you a 'transformable mecha' for $650k

Edumacationalizing / Acedemia Nuts

TechSuck / Geek Bait

  • ESR has been brainwashed by AI

    What sealed the deal is that code, even code in a language as rebarbative as Rust, is wet clay now. If, against all odds I get a bug report that says somebody wants to play greed on something that isn't an ANSI terminal emulator, reinstating full curses support will take a one-sentence prompt to my robot friend and mere minutes. I hadn't had to directly confront before the fact that the entire set of assumptions that made TERM and terminfo a thing are as obsolete as dial-up acoustic modems. Still, the moment when I tossed away one of the ancient laws of Unix coding felt a bit like the universe lurching sideways.

AI Will (Save | Destroy) The World

Gubmint / Poilitcks / Law Making

  • Linguistic workaround allows Marco Rubio to travel to China

  • FCC walks back router update ban before it bricks America's network security

  • FAA adding transponders to all its airport vehicles after LaGuardia runway crash

  • CIA spy blames Dr Fauci for covering up Covid lab leak

    An active CIA agent has accused Dr. Anthony Fauci of orchestrating a cover-up that derailed American spies from blaming the Covid pandemic on China. CIA officer James Erdman told senators on Capitol Hill that in August 2021, the intelligence community was on the verge of concluding the pandemic leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China. But just days before the bombshell finding could be released, Fauci 'injected himself' into the probe and 'significantly influenced' intelligence officials to drop their conclusion. Fauci was then head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

    'Dr. Fauci's role in the cover-up was intentional,' Erdman told the Senate Homeland Security Committee on Wednesday morning. 'Dr. Fauci influenced the analytical process and findings by leveraging his position to ensure the IC [Intelligence Community] consulted with a conflicted list of curated subject matter experts, public health officials and scientists,' he said. Republican Senator Rand Paul asked Erdman, a career CIA special operations officer, whether Fauci played a 'significant' role in CIA scientists abandoning their consensus that the disease originated from a lab. 'It was significantly influenced,' Erdman replied before claiming that documentation shows the CIA was poised to declare Covid a lab leak on August 12, 2021. Just five days later, on August 17, that position had mysteriously flipped.

    Erdman also revealed at Wednesday's Senate hearing that the CIA 'illegally monitored' the phones and computers of federal analysts investigating the origins of the virus. 'The CIA illegally monitored the computer and phone usage of DIG [Director's Initiatives Group] personnel, their investigations, and contact with whistleblowers,' he added.

Trump

  • Gas tax holiday momentum grows with Trump support

    Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) has been similarly skeptical. “I don’t know that the federal gas tax is going to lower [gas prices] by a lot,” Thune said earlier this year. But momentum appears to be shifting in favor of the idea. The question is whether pressure from the White House will be enough to convince lawmakers to join the push. “We’re going to take off the gas tax for a period of time, and when gas goes down, we’ll let it phase back in,” President Donald Trump told CBS News on Monday.

  • Elon Musk and Jensen Huang Among CEOs Joining Trump on China Trip

Left Angst

Law Breaking / Police / Internal Security

Israel

  • “The End of Our Illusions,”

    That is part of the reason for the pained reaction to Nick Kristof’s opinion column yesterday, in which he claimed (without evidence, obviously) that Israel has instituted a state policy of militaristized bestiality. Today, a meticulous, harrowing report was released on Hamas’s systematic rape and sexual violence toward Israelis on and after October 7. The commission that undertook this investigation “has examined over 10,000 photographs and videos of the attack totaling more than 1,800 hours of visual analysis.” We want to believe that Nick Kristof and all the people who defended and shared his article are just like us—believers in honesty, men and women of integrity, a community of truth-seekers with a baseline sense of human decency. We want to believe this in part because of that very sense of human decency. But we are making a massive error. Kristof’s named sources not only provided no evidence for his lurid bestiality fantasies but themselves were also people with massive credibility deficits.

    I’ve also visited the NYT office and helped NYT reporters with numerous stories about quantum computing and beyond. In the wake of Cade Metz’s hatchet job against the rationalist community, I resolved no longer to talk to Metz, but it never even occurred to me to extend that to a broader ban against the NYT itself. After all, it’s the friggin’ NYT! This week, however, Nicholas Kristof—a man who I praised fulsomely in a blog post 20 years ago, for his coverage of the genocide in Darfur—has used the NYT to broadcast the oldest, crudest form of antisemitic libel, accusing the Jews of garishly preposterous crimes (poisoning wells, baking blood into matzo, or in this case, training dogs to rape prisoners). As countless others have since pointed out, the sole source for this ludicrous accusation was a Hamas-linked organization called “Euro-Med” that praised the October 7 “martyrs.” Kristof’s piece came out the same day an Israeli human rights organization released a major report meticulously documenting Hamas’s mass rapes on October 7–something that did happen—and was apparently designed to neutralize the impact of that.

    While the debunking of Kristof came fast, it wasn’t fast enough: now that antisemitic blood libel (dog libel?) has the Gray Lady’s imprimatur, I expect it to ignite violence against Jews all over the world, and I expect my kids to be less safe. So I hereby announce:

    I, Scott Aaronson, member of the National Academy of Sciences, will no longer cooperate with anyone from NYT on anything—neither quantum computing stories nor anything else—until NYT, at minimum, formally retracts its dog-rape libel and fires Kristof.

    • Will he consider that they may have been lying to him about other things, all this time? Even having had numerous examples of similarly thinly sourced libels that he liked because they did match his prejudices? ... ain't holding my breath.

Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp