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AMD threatens to go medieval on Nvidia with Epyc and Instinct: What we know so far

AMD boasts 1000x higher AI perf by 2027 and pulls the lid off Helios compute tray ahead of 2H 2026 launch

AMD teased its next-generation of AI accelerators at CES 2026, with CEO Lisa Su boasting the the MI500-series will deliver a 1,000x uplift in performance over its two-year-old MI300X GPUs.…

IBM's AI agent Bob easily duped to run malware, researchers show

Prompt injection lets risky commands slip past guardrails

IBM describes its coding agent thus: "Bob is your AI software development partner that understands your intent, repo, and security standards." Unfortunately, Bob doesn't always follow those security standards.…

the zebra, such a beautiful animal

BertvB posted a photo:

the zebra, such a beautiful animal

Osaka, Japan 大阪

Mr Mikage (ミスター御影) posted a photo:

Osaka, Japan 大阪

Mardi Gras World

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Mardi Gras World

Found Photograph

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photograph

Colossal

The best of art, craft, and visual culture since 2010.

Paintings on Antique Navigational Tools Are a Poetic Nod to Bird Migration by Steeven Salvat

Paintings on Antique Navigational Tools Are a Poetic Nod to Bird Migration by Steeven Salvat

Known for his meticulous drawings of insects, birds, and other creatures hybridized with mechanical gears and intricate filigree, Steeven Salvat has a penchant for detail. Often tapping into historical analog technology like clocks, typewriters, globes, and hourglasses, the artist nods nostalgically to a pre-digital age.

Salvat’s forthcoming exhibition, Latitude/Longitude at Galerie Hamon, continues the artist’s interest in the convergence of nature and human activity. This recent body of work, created using acrylic and Chinese ink, focuses more specifically on navigation and cartography. Vintage maps, charts, and globes provide the foundation for beautiful renderings of songbirds and butterflies in a meditation on migration.

A painting of a bird on a vintage celestial chart by Steeven Salvat

In light of the current climate crisis, migratory patterns of a wide range of creatures—from monarch butterflies to terns to gray whales—are at increased risk of disruption due to shifts in the timing of seasonal changes, habitat destruction, and more extreme weather. Salvat looks to the past as a means of thinking more critically about the inherent beauty and vulnerability of birds.

“I work on carefully sourced antique maps and navigation objects such as compasses, barometers, and globes, using them as starting points to paint different bird species,” Salvat says. “These works reflect instinctive trajectories and the memory of invisible journeys. Together, they create an immersive space, somewhere between a map room and a contemporary cabinet of curiosities.”

Latitude/Longitude runs from February 6 to March 4 in Le Havre, France. Find more on the artist’s Instagram and Behance.

A painting of a flying bird on a vintage map by Steeven Salvat
A painting of flying birds on a vintage map by Steeven Salvat
A vintage globe with monarch butterflies painted around it by Steeven Salvat
A painting of a flying bird on a vintage map by Steeven Salvat
A painting of two birds on a vintage navigational chart by Steeven Salvat
A painting of a flying bird on a vintage map by Steeven Salvat

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Paintings on Antique Navigational Tools Are a Poetic Nod to Bird Migration by Steeven Salvat appeared first on Colossal.

Vreemdelingenpolitie ICE doodt vrouw in Minneapolis. ‘Sodemieter op uit onze stad’, zegt de burgemeester

Een agent van de vreemdelingenpolitie ICE, de dienst achter de „grootste deportatie-operatie ooit”, heeft een vrouw in Minneapolis doodgeschoten. De vrouw pleegde „een terreurdaad”, zegt de verantwoordelijke minister. „Kletskoek”, zegt de burgemeester van de stad.

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Power Bank Feature Creep is Out of Control

The humble power bank has transformed from a simple pocket-sized battery into a feature-laden gadget that now sometimes includes screensavers, Bluetooth connectivity and built-in Wi-Fi hotspots. The Verge's Thomas Ricker highlighted the $270 EcoFlow Rapid Pro X Power Bank 27k at CES 2026 as a prime offender -- a device he declared "too expensive, too big, too slow, and too heavy." Its giant display takes 30 seconds to wake from sleep, plays swirly graphics and blinking eyeballs, and requires a screensaver while slowly draining the battery it's meant to preserve.

The feature creep is industry-wide. Anker no longer lists a display-less model in its 20,000mAh range, and both companies sell proprietary desk chargers. Basic alternatives exist -- Anker's PowerCore 10k runs $26 -- but they're becoming harder to find.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

xiffy's favorites

xiffy's favorites on Flickr.

Osaka, Japan 大阪

Mr Mikage (ミスター御影) posted a photo:

Osaka, Japan 大阪