The Guardian

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These election results don’t mean tacking left or right, but delivering for the whole country | Keir Starmer

In the coming days I will be setting out our path to break with the status quo once and for all by building a stronger and fairer UK

These were very tough election results. It hurts to lose brilliant local candidates and leaders – friends and colleagues who represent the best of the Labour party. I take responsibility for that and feel it very deeply. It is right we reflect and learn the right lessons.

While the results will understandably lead to much debate about what’s changed in British politics, that should not overshadow the fact that for years voters have been deeply frustrated with the status quo – constantly hoping that things will get better and that politics will deliver real change in their lives.

Keir Starmer is the UK prime minister

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Premier League news: There’s nothing wrong with Liverpool’s standards, fumes Slot; Guardiola: title chase not over

Salah’s claims about a winning culture spark reaction as City manager rows back on his perfect-finish stance

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Hull City v Millwall: Championship playoff semi-final, first leg – live

⚽ Championship news from the first leg; kick-off 8pm BST
Forty years of playoffs | Follow on Bluesky | Mail Simon

1 min: From kick-off a long ball leads to a long throw, which leads to a corner, which is headed away.

1 min: Peeeep! Millwall get the game started “in their cream strip with navy and mint v-neck”, we’re told.

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Jeroen Jongeleen – Second Rotterdam Sculpture Run

Je moet het zien! Je moet het meemaken! Wat een leuk en geweldig project is dit weer en hoe ongrijpbaar en glashelder. Zien is geloven maar dat ga ik dus niet doen want gemakkelijk is [Meer...]

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Iran: gevechten met Amerikaanse marine in Straat van Hormuz zijn beëindigd

Als een van de eerste in Nederland zag Karin Spaink de privacyrisico’s van het internet

In 1999 was ze medeoprichter van de digitale burgerrechtenbeweging Bits of Freedom. Karin Spaink koos deze week voor euthanasie. „Ik ben niet ziek, het is mijn lichaam”, zei ze over haar ziekte multiple sclerose.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

GPT-5.5 may burn fewer tokens, but it always burns more cash

It's getting more expensive to use the latest models. OpenAI last month bumped the version number of its GPT model family to 5.5, and per-token prices rose too, in some cases doubling compared to its predecessor. For 1 million tokens, GPT-5.5 is priced at $5 (input), $0.50 (cached input), and $30 (output). Its predecessor GPT-5.4 charges $2.50 (input), $0.25 (cached input), and $15 (output) per 1 million tokens. The AI biz claims that the cost increase is offset to some extent by token processing efficiency – delivering better results using fewer tokens. "While GPT‑5.5 is priced higher than GPT‑5.4, it is both more intelligent and much more token efficient," the company said during the rollout. But the cost is still going up, more than efficiency improvements are reducing costs. According to an analysis conducted by OpenRouter, GPT-5.5 is anywhere from 50 percent more expensive to nearly twice as expensive, depending on prompt length. "Our analysis shows that GPT-5.5 actual costs increased 49 percent to 92 percent," OpenRouter said. "Longer prompts, over 10k tokens, saw costs offset by shorter completions. Shorter prompts, under 10k, experience a higher cost increase where completions did not get shorter." That range – 49 percent to 92 percent – factors in the model's token efficiency improvements, which are more relevant for longer prompts. According to OpenRouter's measurements, GPT-5.5 generates between 19 percent and 34 percent fewer completion tokens for longer prompts (10,000 tokens and up). If reports of OpenAI's projected $14 billion loss in 2026 prove accurate, costs will have to rise much more to balance its insistent spending. But this is a problem also faced by rival Anthropic, set to lose a reported $11 billion in 2026. Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.7 arrived without a visible list price change amid claims about an improved tokenizer. The result, according to OpenRouter, is potential savings for shorter prompts but larger bills for longer ones. "Our study of real Opus 4.7 usage shows that actual costs increased 12–27 percent for prompts above 2K tokens when cache absorption is taken into account," the biz said. "Short prompts under 2K were the exception, where significantly shorter completions offset the tokenizer overhead entirely." Expect further price increases for premium models. ®

Friday Squid Blogging: Giant Squid Live in the Waters of Western Australia

Evidence of them has been found by analyzing DNA in the seawater.

As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that I haven’t covered.

Blog moderation policy.

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Apple, Intel Have Reached Preliminary Chip-Making Agreement

Apple and Intel have reportedly reached a preliminary agreement (paywalled; alternative source) for Intel to manufacture some chips used in Apple devices, after more than a year of talks and pressure from the Trump administration. It's still unclear which Apple products would use Intel-made chips, but the deal would mark a major potential win for Intel's foundry ambitions and give Apple another manufacturing option beyond TSMC.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Now is the Winter of My Discontent

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Now is the Winter of My Discontent