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I Bought the $3,000 Fitness Suit That Electrocutes You.

[404 Media] [archive] One of the instructors in the app said pins and needles in your hands can happen and should go away quickly. But mine would last for hours, and my feet multiple days. Then my limbs would feel numb and I would be incredibly cold, so much I would start sneezing. [Katalyst's CEO Brendan] Kennedy told me getting pins and needles for this long was "extremely abnormal." [...] "This suit looks like the biggest scam I've ever seen," Johnston wrote. She pointed to the Relaxacisor, a device from 1949 that blasted your abs with electrical pulses. "This thing is no different, and equally scammy," Johnston said.

"More water is better," Katalyst's CEO Brendan Kennedy told me. You then clip the vest and shorts together, creating a single, dripping suit. After wrapping those around your body and zipping up, you put on the arm straps and connect them to the main suit with a pair of delicate cables. You slip a battery pack into a pocket near your thigh, snap its magnetic plugs to the vests and shorts, and you're ready to work out, soaking wet and maybe cold if you took too long to assemble the contraption. What the fuck am I even doing? I eventually thought to myself, dripping water all over my apartment floor.

Found Anscochrome Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Anscochrome Slide

date stamped on slide August 1973

Back When You Were the One

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Back When You Were the One

Weg met condoleren!

Terwijl de zon zichzelf de afgelopen weken met het enthousiasme van een Bart Chabot door de hemel slingerde, bezocht ik de ene na de andere uitvaart.

De uitzonderlijke brand in het bos van Fontainebleau treft een ecologische, historische en toeristische hotspot van Frankrijk

Sinds zondag woedt een omvangrijke natuurbrand in het bos bij Fontainebleau, op veertig minuten met de trein van Parijs. Dit ecologisch belangrijke woud, vernoemd naar een koninklijke jachthond, heeft ook in de Franse cultuur een ereplaats.

Apple tegen OpenAI, de onvermijdelijke rechtszaak over de opvolger van de iPhone

Techreus Apple sleept OpenAI voor de rechter. Dit bedrijf zou via oud-medewerkers bedrijfsgeheimen hebben gestolen om AI-gadgets te ontwikkelen.

Experts: ‘Nederland had rapporten over mogelijke oorlogsmisdaden moeten veiligstellen en delen’

Landen in oorlog moeten niet alleen zelf het humanitair oorlogsrecht naleven, maar ook zorgen dat andere landen dit doen. De vraag is of Nederland genoeg gedaan heeft om misstanden in Afghanistan op te sporen en uit te zoeken. Twee experts oorlogsrecht vinden van niet. „Iedereen heeft het recht om niet vermist te zijn.”


The Register

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

SREs to AI agents: Prove yourself before you touch production

Trusting an AI agent to summarize user complaints about downtime is one thing; trusting it to fix the problem unattended is something else entirely. A survey of 696 experts The Register ran with NeuBird AI in April 2026 found that 73 percent are not using AIOps at all, another 19 percent are in pilot, and only eight percent have it in production. Asked what's stopping them, 60 percent of respondents cited a lack of trust, by far the biggest issue, with concerns about ROI, security and data quality each registering at around 12 to 13 percent. NeuBird AI's Production Ops Agent is designed to close that trust deficit. Rather than summarizing the alert queue, it continuously correlates metrics, logs, traces, infrastructure telemetry, deployment activity and dependency relationships, then runs investigations across that combined picture to suggest probable root causes and next actions. It also works a step upstream. Rather than bolting a faster responder onto a noisy alert queue, NeuBird AI fixes observability at its source: through agentic instrumentation it generates the right signals, so the alert is high-signal by design. As Martel puts it, the point is to fix observability at the source, not patch the output. Field CTO Francois Martel sat down with The Register to talk through what the survey found, and why the next phase of AIOps will look nothing like the dashboards engineers have stared at for a decade. He also has views on what must change before SRE teams will let agents near their production systems. Lots of interest, very little deployment The data confirmed what Martel was already hearing in the field. "There's a lot of interest, but not a lot of action," he says. The pattern is familiar across agentic workloads: the categories that have taken off are the ones that come with an obvious human in the loop and an obvious verification path, such as coding agents and content generation. Operations is harder, because the work happens inside the running environment, on data the engineer hasn't seen yet, with consequences that show up in customer-facing systems. He saw the same gap inside enterprises long before he joined NeuBird: a backlog of 300 candidate AI fixes and a flurry of early enthusiasm, followed by a year of slog before the first one shipped. Part of that delay comes down to the speed of market development, since waiting six months for the tools to catch up with your expectations is sometimes the right call. Another part of it is the wrong choice of tool category, because general-purpose agents do not fit SRE problems. "There are specialized agents that can do a much better job," Martel says, "and address some of the concerns" of safety, security, guardrails and hallucinations. The tool also has to fit into the team's existing workflows. Trust is built, not declared Martel doesn't try to argue with the trust-heavy concerns the survey surfaced. "Working with AI is a trust-building exercise, and AI has to learn in order to gain trust," he says. "I would say that's kind of the killer feature for AI agents. If you can show that you're learning and getting better, then you can gain trust." That's why explainability sits at the center of NeuBird AI's design rather than being grafted on for the security review. The platform records the reasoning behind every decision so an engineer can interrogate it the way they'd interrogate a colleague's incident report. "Whenever you have an agent, you want to be able to audit the decisions that were made, and understand the reasoning behind the decision," Martel says. Internally, NeuBird AI captures every reasoning step via Langfuse. Explainability is only half of it. The platform is also SOC 2 Type II certified, read-only, and stores nothing, so trust is built into the architecture, not just the reasoning. Externally, the harder problem is presentation: early versions of the system surfaced so much detail that users described it as a wall of text. The fix was to make the reasoning interrogable rather than dumped, so engineers can chat with the system's memory the way they'd query a more senior teammate. Context is what makes the answer credible The same survey found that 59 percent of respondents require near-perfect accuracy before they'll adopt, while another three in every ten will tolerate around 80 percent accuracy. That bar is unforgiving, and Martel argues it can only be cleared with better context engineering, not bigger models. "The key to accuracy is this sweet spot between just enough context so that you're not missing things, and then discoverability of context," he says. "Certainly not too much context." Creating a solution that achieves that balance is beyond the reach of anybody with just a coding agent on their desktop, he argues. NeuBird AI's argument rests on the fact that most outages cannot be reasoned about inside a single dashboard or service. Any enterprise large enough to need an SRE team has silos throughout the tech stack, from storage and networking through to operating platforms and applications, especially after microservices fragmented the estate. An investigation has to traverse boundaries that no single human has full visibility into , and NeuBird handles this by doing the dependency mapping before the incident starts, so that when an investigation kicks off the system already knows where to look and how the pieces relate. Co-pilot now, autonomy later, maybe The clearest signal from the research, and the one Martel finds least surprising, is the preference for co-pilot models, with 62 percent wanting AI to assist rather than replace. He recognizes this stage from his own work with coding agents, though he also acknowledges an evolutionary arc. A year ago he wouldn't walk away from a coding agent for a minute, and now he's tempted to flip it into dangerous mode and let it run. He still checks in and architects everything, though. "I'm not going to completely surrender my responsibilities," he says. The pragmatic path he describes for operations looks similar. NeuBirdAI is starting to wire up automation through Ansible's Model Context Protocol (MCP) server, with certain playbooks marked as safe to automate in production and the rest gated behind human approval. Adding memory to a pod up to a known ceiling is something an agent can handle; anything riskier waits for a person. How much an engineer delegates, Martel says, depends on their appetite for risk and the experience they have built up working alongside the tool. The five-minute clock and the death of the war room Response time dominates the AIOps brief: just over half of survey respondents expect operational answers in under five minutes, and 75 percent want them inside ten, putting immense pressure on workflows that were never built for the cadence. Getting six specialists up to speed and pulling them onto a war-room conference bridge takes time the SLA cannot absorb. Martel's argument is that the on-call experience has to change before the clock can. "You want to get to the situation where you're not on a call with 20 other teams. Instead you're in front of a document that's outlining the explanation of what's happening and either giving me a solution or telling me who should get involved," he says. The agent does the legwork before the engineer logs in, so by the time the engineer arrives, the early triage questions have already been answered and only the interesting decisions remain. What IT means for the observability bill The most provocative finding, for incumbent observability vendors at least, is that 52 percent of respondents would consider switching telemetry tools if AI-driven insights worked across any back-end. Asked where this goes, Martel doesn't hedge. "In the future observability will be dominated by open source, cost effective storage indexing technology like Grafana, Elasticsearch, or OpenSearch." In that scenario the strategic asset shifts from whoever hoards the most telemetry to whoever can investigate it most intelligently, which means a context engine sitting above whatever storage layer is cheapest. This is a useful lens for buyers about to renew an observability contract, because the dashboards they have paid a fortune for are the human-readable layer of a system that increasingly has machine readers too. What next? The survey describes a market that badly wants AI in operations but has learned to be suspicious of vendors promising results without evidence. Martel's pitch is that the platforms surviving the next two years will be the ones that show their work and fit into the existing change-management apparatus rather than demanding a rewrite of it. The winners will treat operational context as a first-class engineering problem rather than a prompt-stuffing exercise. Martel has a blunt answer for SRE leads still wondering whether their team is behind the curve. "There are advantages you'll gain in terms of keeping up with a growing production estate with flat operational budgets," he says. "If you don't adopt it, what are you going to do? You're going to struggle." Sponsored by NeuBird AI.

Prachtig babynieuws! Rens Kroes 'luisterde naar de hartslag van Moeder Aarde' en is zwanger van brute verkrachter

Afdeling sociale demografie van GeenStijl feliciteert Rens Kroes - zus van Doutzen, zelf nadenkend wetenschapper bekend van de theorie dat je kanker kan genezen door door het bos te wandelen. Rens Kroes heeft in de bajes gevreeën met haar eigenaar man Sid Soumahoro, die een celstraf van 4,5 jaar uitzit wegens verkrachting. Het Hof destijds over die verkrachting: "Hij heeft haar door fysieke en verbale bedreigingen in doodsangst gebracht en haar urenlang (met tussenliggende pauzes) verkracht, zodanig dat het haar naar eigen zeggen ‘ontzettend pijn deed’. Zijn reactie daarop was: 'I hurt you because I love you'." Tijdens de verkrachting zei Siddick ook: "Je gaat nu op de bank zitten en respect voor me tonen. Je gaat nu relaxen. Ik breek je nek als je je beweegt. Ik vermoord je serieus." Enfin, leuke kerel, leuk genoeg om een liefdesbaby mee te maken! Rens Kroes op Instagram: "Ik volgde de rivier en luisterde naar de hartslag van Moeder Aarde. Ze leidde me door diepe wateren, op weg naar de oceaan. Ik heb stormen doorstaan, mijn kracht gevonden en geleerd mijn hart te vertrouwen. Nu geef ik me over aan het getij." Was het vrijwillig, meid?


Colossal

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

Uncanny Landscapes in Pen and Ink Span Wooden Panels by John Buck

Uncanny Landscapes in Pen and Ink Span Wooden Panels by John Buck

From the Three Patriarchs of Zion Canyon to the swamps of Louisiana to the immense cascade of Niagara Falls, John Buck’s dreamlike landscapes evoke the juxtapositions and proportions of dreams. His solo exhibition, Mont Blanc on Wood at Zolla / Lieberman Gallery, draws us to the fuzzy boundary between the familiar and the uncanny.

The Bozeman-based artist is known for his eccentric, often life-size wooden sculptures that draw on folklore, personal memory, and daily observations. Figures are sometimes hybridized with other objects, and idiosyncratic drawings on wood panel reveal expansive landscapes populated by anthropomorphized plants and dramatic rock pinnacles.

a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface of a rocky desert area with a small lake in the middle, in the center of which a lighthouse sits
“Lighthouse” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 27 x 36 ½ inches

The works in Mont Blanc on Wood span a range of places and references, emphasizing landscapes where things feel perhaps a little “off.” The desert stares back in “Cactus Grove (No. 13),” and in “Lighthouse (No. 18),” a light station in the middle of a desert lake shines mostly onto arid, rocky landforms.

“Buck reflects on social and political realities, environmental concerns, and the eccentricities of human behavior, all while maintaining a sense of humor and a deep engagement with craft,” the gallery says. “His art balances storytelling with formal clarity, inviting viewers into a world where the familiar becomes speculative and symbolic.”

Mont Blanc on Wood continues through August 8 in Chicago.

a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface featuring various kinds of cartoonish cacti with eyes
“Cactus Grove” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 36 ½ x 27 inches
a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface featuring the three "patriarchs" in Zion Canyon, Utah
“Three Patriarchs, Utah” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 26 ½ x 31 ½ inches
a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface of factories foregrounded by turbulent waters
“The Never Sweat Mine” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 21 ¼ x 26 ½ inches
a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface featuring a swamp setting with trees and stumps
“Atchafalaya” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 26 ½ x 32 inches
a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface featuring waterfalls amid mountains
“7 Waterfalls (No14),” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 37 x 27 inches
a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface featuring weathered and curved aspen trees
“Aspens” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 26 ½ x 37 ½ inches
a pen-and-ink drawing on a wooden surface featuring rock pinnacles in the middle of a sea with clouds that swirl in abstract, linear spiral shapes
“Sea Mount” (2024), pen and ink on wood, 52 x 37 ½ inches

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 Uncanny Landscapes in Pen and Ink Span Wooden Panels by John Buck appeared first on Colossal.