Rotterdam wisselt van koers: minder ruimte voor de auto, meer betaalbare woningen

Honderd dagen na de gemeenteraadsverkiezingen presenteren Pro, D66, VVD, CDA en Volt een coalitieakkoord in Rotterdam. Na vier jaar rechts college krijgt de stad weer een middencoalitie, met vergezichten voor hoe de stad er in 2050 dient uit te zien. „Deze stad moet niet vier jaar dan weer links optrekken en dan weer rechts.”


Politie, postbodes, de brandweer – wat doen zij met de hitte? ‘Alles wat je aanhebt is natuurlijk te veel op dit moment’

Vakbond FNV roept de politiek vrijdag op om duidelijkere regels te maken „voor alle werkenden in extreme hitte”.

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celery is only for elites

A History of Menus is a Menu of History What do America's earliest restaurant menus teach us about America?

June 2026. Nukunu Country, South Australia.

by_no_means_a_photographer has added a photo to the pool:

June 2026. Nukunu Country, South Australia.

Just after sunset on the outskirts of Port Pirie.

I am rostered to finish my weekday job at 4pm, but even after getting the truck back to the shop at 5pm, I still had several more after-hours jobs to do. While driving between a couple of them I noticed a beautiful hue developing in the sky, so I quickly ducked home to get the camera. My next job was on the outskirts of town but before doing it I stopped and got a few shots before the light completely faded.

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Notion Mail Is Shutting Down

Notion announced that it will shut down its email client on September 22. The company says more than half of users already manage email through Notion's AI agents without opening their inbox, so it is shifting its focus from a traditional email client to agent-run workflows. Engadget reports: It has published an FAQ for users to make sure that they don't lose any messages or data in the transition. Most emails will still exist in a Gmail inbox, but customers will need to manually export their drafts, scheduled emails, snippets and auto label instructions. Notion first began offering Notion Mail after acquiring startup Skiff in 2024.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Moscow Times - Independent News From Russia

The Moscow Times offers everything you need to know about Russia: Breaking news, top stories, business, analysis, opinion, multimedia

Kremlin Aware of Viral Video Threatening Armed Uprising Over Alleged Abuses in Army

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said he had heard about the video but that neither Putin nor the presidential administration “had a chance” to watch it yet.

The Register

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

One man, two kernels, and a lot of RISC-V

Yuri Zaporozhets of QRV Systems is a busy chap. He's built a new RISC-V-based personal computer, a mainframe on an FPGA, and rewritten QNX – twice. Seemingly every month or two, The Reg FOSS desk gets an email telling us about some astonishing project that he has just got working. We're delighted to see that his most recent one, a new OS called QSOE, is winning some attention in the FOSS world at present. But first, we thought we could tell a more complete story of how he got here by describing some of his previous projects. (By way of a disclaimer, we feel that we should say up front that he does use Anthropic's Claude LLM to help. To his credit, he does clearly state this.) GateMate Personal Computer At the end of 2025, Zaporozhets wrote to tell us about his GateMate Personal Computer. The GateMate PC is something similar to a fairly high-end late-1980s IBM PC-compatible, but instead of a 286 or 386 CPU, it has a 25 MHz RISC-V core. He told us the main inspiration for the GateMate PC: "The very first computer I saw in my life: an IBM PS/2 Model 30, in 1992. It also started in text mode." We worked on a few of those, and they were not great machines. The GateMate machine should easily outperform the later, faster Model 30-286. He also acknowledges another project: "the NeoRV32 softCPU by Stefan Nolting is great." It has a VGA port that can output 80x30-character text in what back then we used to call Hi-Color, 8 KB of ROM containing a BIOS, and – although it's still in the early stages – its own OS, which he calls GMDOS. The characters are double-byte ones using UCS-2 Unicode. The GateMate gets its name from the host hardware because the design is mostly software: it's implemented on an inexpensive FPGA board, the €50 Olimex GateMate A1-EVB (that's about £42 or $57). Its video controller is an original design, and he has added extra RAM: the machine has 8 MB of additional PSRAM on two chips, via a QSPI interface. He blogged about the project, from receiving the board last August to getting a PLL working, to getting video out of it. The Olimex GateMate board can do a lot more, though – which leads us to his next project. GateMate System/359 Also implemented on the same FPGA board is Zaporozhets' miniature mainframe, the System/359. This isn't a clone of the IBM System/360 mainframe series, the machines that introduced the idea of different computers being software compatible – it’s more of a tribute to it. For starters, the S/359 is a little-endian machine, while the S/390 is big-endian. So it's not binary-compatible with the mainframe architecture, but it's similar. He started the project in January, and later that month, writing about its assembler, said: "GMS/359 keeps what's beautiful about S/360 – the channel I/O model, the clean instruction formats, the PSW concept – while quietly modernizing the rest. Little-endian bytes. Opcode-first encoding. PC-relative addressing. No more base register juggling. The '/359' isn't a typo. It's a declaration: inspired by, not compatible with." Zaporozhets told The Register: "There is a working assembler with the POWERFUL macroprocessor – from NASM. I was a NASM contributor from 1999 to 2004 and maintained its RDOFF2 part. Now RDOFF2 is removed from NASM 3.0, but it continues to live in my asm359 project. "Currently the processor can execute the simple IPL; channel I/O controller works (PS/2 kbd, UART, SYSINFO, even crypto processor (!)). Once I finish the PSRAM module, I will start working with SYS1.NUCLEUS." So we can take it that as well as RISC-V and FPGAs, he has some familiarity with low-level systems design. His next project was with an OS that a lot of folks admire: QNX. Porting QNX 6.4 to RISC-V Although Zaporozhets wrote to us about this back in March, he also went public with it in a Reddit post: QNX 6.4 kernel ported to RISC-V; petition to BlackBerry to relicense old QNX sources under Apache 2.0. QNX has an on-again-off-again relationship with FOSS. QNX has been around since the 1980s, as we reported when the company made QNX 8 non-commercial freeware in 2024. In that article, we mentioned that QNX published the source code of an earlier version back in 2007. Back then, QNX was self-hosting and had its own desktop environment – we showed a screenshot of its Neutrino GUI in our roundup of non-Linux PC OSes back in 2013, and GUIdebook has a whole screenshot gallery. The next year, that QNX 6.4 source code was mirrored from SourceForge over to GitHub, and it's still there. Zaporozhets took this long-obsolete codebase and ported it to RISC-V, targeting his own FU740 "workstation." It's not the whole OS, just "the kernel, the process manager, the C library, the runtime linker." And the license is very restrictive: you can study it and compile it, but not redistribute it. He started this effort over Christmas 2020. "The timing made sense in a particular way. RISC-V had matured. The toolchains were stable. The original QNX sources were 32-bit ILP32, targeting x86, ARM, MIPS, SH, and PPC – no 64-bit port existed, let alone RISC-V. Doing the LP64 transition and the architecture port in a single effort seemed like exactly the kind of large, difficult, satisfying project that a long holiday lockdown invites." But after the initial effort, it languished for five years. When he came back to it, he ended up with a substantial rewrite. He calls the result QRV. In March, he described this in a blog post, QRV Operating System: First Publication. As he puts it: "For clarity: QRV is not a patch on the original QNX sources. It is a ground-up reworking of the 32-bit ILP32 codebase into a 64-bit LP64 system for RISC-V, with deliberate simplifications." By the end of April, QRV v0.27 could boot to multi-user login. A month later, he declared the project finished with version 0.43: "This is the last development post for QRV. The project set out to port QNX Neutrino 6.4 to RISC-V 64-bit, run it on real hardware, and explore what it would take to bring a clean microkernel architecture to a modern open ISA. Those goals are met. v0.43 is the final release." Where next? Well, as the QNX kernel is not truly open source, then the only path forward is to switch to another kernel, one that is truly FOSS. Well, we say "one"… ¿Por qué no los dos? QSOE – Quick and Secure Operating Environment The result is QSOE: "QSOE ships in two variants that share one userspace and one build system. QSOE/N runs on Skimmer, a microkernel written from scratch for this project (SMP by design); QSOE/L runs on seL4 as its kernel." As The Register covered back in 2014, Secure Embedded L4 is a formally verified microkernel OS. We have written about other OSes that use it before: in 2022, we described the new Neptune OS project, which is a combination of seL4, ReactOS, and Wine. Then, in 2025, we looked at Ironclad, which combines seL4 with the C-based Gloire and an Ada layer. There are some very serious precedents for building around seL4, but QSOE doesn't stop there: it also has its own homegrown kernel, called Skimmer, that’s designed for multiprocessor machines. Zaporozhets has been working in this area for a long time. On the QSOE site, he mentions his effort to build a free QNX-like operating system back in 2003. It's still online – it is called RadiOS. In How QSOE started, he describes the inspiration: as a fallback option, a Plan B, if his petition to BlackBerry did not succeed. We sympathize. When we wrote about QNX 8, we got nothing useful back from the company either. Instead, he took all he learned from writing RadiOS and building QRV – via the GateMate PC and mini-mainframe – and did it himself instead. Now he has released QSOE version 0.1. It's under the Apache 2.0 license, and its source code is on GitLab. He also has a new development blog. Yes, Claude may be involved, but he was already developing these ideas 20 years before ChatGPT launched. ®

The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

Serena Williams sprinkles stardust at Wimbledon with top female players toiling

Her motivations for returning may be hard to gauge but there is no doubt the returning former champion will steal the early spotlight at SW19

At the southernmost point of the All England Lawn Tennis Club’s vast grounds, Serena Williams was starting another day of training as the clock ticked down to her first singles match after four years of retirement. Her training partner for the morning, Marta Kostyuk, soon joined her on court 10 in Aorangi Park, the quaint practice area reserved only for players.

Kostyuk is one of the more extroverted players on the tour and she is widely known for speaking her mind under all circumstances, but when Williams greeted Kostyuk and thanked her for the training session, for once the Ukrainian looked at a loss for words: “No, thank you for playing with me,” she responded.

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Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Ontsnapte koningspython kruipt door de straten van Dordrecht

Het is geen alledaags gezicht: een kronkelende slang van zeker een meter lang. Toch zag een omstander er eentje in de nacht van donderdag op vrijdag in de Schipbeekstraat in Dordrecht. De koningspython is vermoedelijk ontsnapt uit een terrarium.

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Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Brits koningspaar gaat niet meer in Buckingham Palace wonen