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‘Best host in the world’: Mexico keep spirits up after England heartbreak

Despite ‘a setback that will hurt for eternity’, the co-hosts exit with heads held high after bringing pride, passion and soul

On Monday music pulsated from some of the bars on Calle Genova, a narrow thoroughfare in Mexico City’s heart that rarely lives in silence. The clock was yet to strike 11am, but, spilling out on to the street, a healthy crowd of patrons were picking up where they had left off. Perhaps they had never stopped at all. National team shirts were on full display and, had anyone lived under a news blackout for 15 hours, they may have drawn a wildly different conclusion about the previous night’s events.

The truth was more evident to anyone who, upon returning from Estadio Azteca, made a beeline for Paseo de la Reforma. Long after Mexico’s last-16 victory over Ecuador this vast boulevard had been teeming, an affirmative national moment bringing 1.4 million people on to the streets. But it was virtually empty three and a half hours after England had shattered the dreams of El Tri, the clean-up operation from the evening’s mass screening already in full swing and remaining revellers confined to the sidestreets.

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MeFi's own Maciej Cegłowski (Pinboard, Idle Words) has a new Substack newsletter, Mars For The Rest of Us, where he investigates "the prospects and practicalities of exploring Mars in our lifetime." He's a Mars skeptic in a field full of (rocket) boosters, digging into the human physiology and life support problems that need to be solved before humans can make the years-long journey to Mars. This includes serious investigation about space toilets, Italy's quest to make a decent espresso in space, and how antiperspirant fumes nearly triggered an ISS evacuation.

(Many of the posts are partially behind a newsletter paywall, but there's lots of great free space nerd content.)

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Jason Kottke's weblog, home of fine hypertext products

Just dropped a couple of days ago: Lane 8’s Summer 2026...

Just dropped a couple of days ago: Lane 8’s Summer 2026 Mixtape (4 hours long). Also available on Soundcloud.

Found Photo, The Isiah Calloway Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photo, The Isiah Calloway Collection

Tacos Mexico

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Tacos Mexico

The Register

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

Boffins bet on quantum computers, AI supers to solve fusion fuel dilemma

Fusion energy has presented a tantalizing alternative to fossil fuels for the better part of a century, but creating the equivalent of a human-made sun is easier said than done. However, new research from the boffins at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), the Cleveland Clinic, and IBM in support of the Department of Energy’s (DoE) Genesis Mission suggests quantum computers and perhaps a sprinkle of AI could be what the world needs to get fusion power running at scale. Specifically, researchers are looking to quantum processing units (QPUs), like those built by IBM, to find optimal materials to extract the tritium fuel required by some of the most promising reactor designs. On Earth, tritium, a radioactive hydrogen isotope with one proton and two neutrons, is fleetingly rare. Before we can harness fusion to produce energy at scale, we need to figure out a way to mass produce the stuff. According to researchers, molten salts containing a mixture of fluorine, lithium, and beryllium (FLiBe), are one of the more promising candidates for extracting tritium for use in fusion reactors. The idea is that these molten salts, which have historically been used in experimental fission reactors as a coolant, function as a breeder environment for tritium. The trick, as you might expect, is predicting the electronic ground-state energies of FLiBe molecular clusters to better understand how they bind tritium. This is no easy task. These calculations are extremely computationally expensive and prone to error. But as it happens, one of the applications quantum computers have shown the most promise with is optimization and computational chemistry problems. Developing the quantum algorithms necessary to do this isn't easy, but researchers won't stop trying to solve it. As it turns out, the same techniques used by the Cleveland Clinic to simulate 12,635-atom proteins can be applied to FLiBe sims. The process involves using QPUs as an accelerator, similar to how GPUs are used in supercomputers and AI clusters today to perform calculations not easily performed on conventional hardware. In a blog post, IBM explains that parts of the problem are broken down into quantum circuits which can be solved by the QPU. “This allowed the team to more precisely determine the electronic structure of the material and how its atoms behave, particularly how strongly they bind tritium at the fundamental molecular level.” By combining CPUs, GPUs, and QPUs, the researchers say they were able to identify nine potential cluster configurations for producing the tritium fuel needed by fusion reactor designs. “These results add to mounting evidence that quantum-centric supercomputing is now a practical scientific tool for problems that have long challenged chemists, engineers, and materials scientists,” Jerry Chow, CTO of quantum-centric supercomputing at IBM, said in a statement. While quantum computing may show promise, this isn’t a silver bullet to realizing the potential of fusion power. Despite the progress made in recent years toward the development of a self-sustaining fusion reactor, it seems we’ve still got a ways to go. ®

Friends of the Library Sale - ART BOOKS

dumpsterdiversanonymous has added a photo to the pool:

Friends of the Library Sale - ART BOOKS

Very nice haul of three for $5. Super sized Art of the Print book by Fritz Eichenberg. He's famous for relief prints in book illustrations, and editing Artist's Proof magazine for Pratt art school in the 1960's. Johannes Lebek is German block print artist from after WWII.


Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Chiprally stuwt Wall Street omhoog na lang weekend

NEW YORK (ANP) - De beursgraadmeters in New York gingen maandag verder omhoog, vooral door flinke koerswinsten van chipbedrijven en andere techconcerns. Beleggers stapten na het lange weekend in de Verenigde Staten weer in deze aandelen, na de recente koersverliezen in de techsector. Dat had te maken met zorgen bij beleggers over de winstgevendheid van de enorme AI-investeringen op de langere termijn door veel technologiebedrijven. Die zorgen verdwenen maandag verder naar de achtergrond.

Techbeurs Nasdaq sloot met een winst van 1,1 procent op 26.121,16 punten. De S&P 500-index ging 0,7 procent omhoog tot 7537,43 punten. De Dow-Jonesindex won 0,3 procent op 53.055,91 punten, een nieuw slotrecord. De Amerikaanse beurzen waren vrijdag dicht vanwege de viering van Onafhankelijkheidsdag op 4 juli.

De Dow steeg donderdag al ruim 1 procent tot een nieuw record en wist maandag de historische grens van 53.000 punten te passeren.


Colossal

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Nebulae, Comets, and Aurorae, Oh My! See the ZWO Astronomy Photographer of the Year Shortlist

Nebulae, Comets, and Aurorae, Oh My! See the ZWO Astronomy Photographer of the Year Shortlist

769 photographers and astronomers around the world, representing 66 countries, submitted more than 4,000 images to this year’s ZWO Astronomy Photographer of the Year competition. The shortlisted photos represent a range of phenomena from aurorae and stars to planets and the moon, captured around the globe. Some photographers focus on the juxtaposition of space and the human environment while others take telescopically captured snapshots of distant galaxies and nebulae, creating striking composite images.

Winners will be announced on September 17, the day after which the public exhibition will open at London’s National Maritime Museum. The show is also accompanied by the book Astronomy Photographer of the Year, Collection 15.

an astronomy photo of nebula over rock formations in New Zealand
© Evan McKay, “Te Hoho Rock Moonrise.” Cathedral Cove, Waikato, North Island, Aotearoa New Zealand
an astronomy photo of a nebula called the "teapot"
© Ani Shastry, “Gum 37: The Southern Tadpoles (or ‘Teapot Nebula’).” El Sauce Observatory, Río Hurtado, Chile
a photo of a comet over the Swiss Alps
© Jakob Sahner, “Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon) Over the Swiss Alps.” Tujetsch, Graubünden, Switzerland
an up-close photo of the sun with flares and dark spots
© 与晨 林 (aged 14), “Dancing Flames.” Xiamen, Fujian Province, China
an astronomy photo of aurora borealis over a remote Norway landscape
© Jennifer Rogers, “Eagle Aurora.” Flakstad, Lofoten, Norway
a dramatic photo of a part of the Milky Way galaxy
© Jakob Sahner, “A Deep Look Into the Milky Way’s Core.” Koireb, Windhoek Rural, Namibia
a photograph of aurora borealis over a waterfall in Iceland
© Yifan Cao, “Colourful Aurora and Waterfall.” Goðafoss Waterfall, Þingeyjarsveit, Iceland
an astronomy photo of the moon phases as it rises behind the Eiffel Tower
© Martin Giraud, “Supermoon Path Over Paris at Sunset.” Meudon, Île-de-France, France
an astronomy photo of a nebula called NGC 7293, the "Helix Nebula"
© Humbert Cédric, “NGC 7293: The Helix Nebula.” Elqui Province, Coquimbo, Chile

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 Nebulae, Comets, and Aurorae, Oh My! See the ZWO Astronomy Photographer of the Year Shortlist appeared first on Colossal.

Hong Kong, once a great place to raise and spend money, is halfway back

Tighter ties with the mainland have not always helped.