東海道新幹線 大井車両基地

K_Okawa_ has added a photo to the pool:

東海道新幹線 大井車両基地

東海道新幹線 大井車両基地

K_Okawa_ has added a photo to the pool:

東海道新幹線 大井車両基地

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

In een interview vragen naar erogene zones, ooit kón dat niet. Waarom nu wel? ‘We willen echte gesprekken’

Lach autoritaire types uit. Eis schoonheid en troost. Aai je kat of je geliefde, maar verzet je!

Steeds moeilijker om huisarts te vinden: patiëntenstop in bijna kwart praktijken

Mijn grootste wens voor het nieuwe jaar is dat ik mijn zoon Maks weer kan vasthouden

Alles gezegd en geschreven, wat bleef van dit jaar plakken bij onze opiniemakers?

Milo Schoenmaker bestier­de misschien wel het meest beladen dossier in de Nederlandse politiek

In 2026 nog vuurwerk afsteken? Alleen met een supervisor en een paar nuchtere ‘ontbranders’

Oliebollen bakken in de schuur? Zo voorkom je koolmonoxide­vergiftiging

Aleid Truijens stopt als columnist en blikt terug hoe Nederlands op scho­len een gehaat vak werd

Nederland krijgt een meldpunt voor gezondheidsschade door vapen: ‘Alles, echt alles, gaat moeizamer’

Nederland krijgt een meldpunt voor gezondheidsschade door vapen: ‘Uniek in de wereld’

De winterselectie: Er zit veel meer AI in je muziek dan je denkt

NRC Vandaag is met vakantie, maar we zijn niet helemaal weg. Deze week hoor je de winterselectie: zes van onze beste afleveringen van afgelopen jaar.

The Register

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

Korean telco failed at femtocell security, exposed customers to snooping and fraud

One cert, in plaintext, on thousands of devices, led to what looks like years of crime

South Korea’s Ministry of Science and ICT has found that local carrier Korea Telecom (KT) deployed thousands of badly secured femtocells, leading to an attack that enabled micropayments fraud and snooping on customers’ communications – maybe for years.…

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Fedora Continued At The Forefront Of Upstream Linux Innovations In 2025

Phoronix's Michael Larabel is "reliving some of the best moments for Fedora Linux in 2025" by highlighting the year's most popular news around the distro. Throughout 2025, Fedora continued to lead upstream Linux innovation with bold changes like Wayland-only GNOME, newer kernels, architecture cleanups, and experimental features -- while openly grappling with controversial shifts such as dropping 32-bit support and modernizing long-standing subsystems.

"Fedora Linux this year continued in punctually shipping the very latest upstream Linux innovations from the freshest Wayland components to Linux kernel features and continuing to leverage other improvements in the open-source world," writes Larabel. "Fedora enjoyed the successful Fedora 42 and Fedora 43 releases this year, including going with Wayland-noly GNOME and further phasing of 32-bit packages. Fedora's KDE spin continued improving too and the Red Hat sponsored Linux distribution enjoyed a wealth of other improvements this year."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Russian Enthusiasts Planning DIY DDR5 Memory Amidst Worldwide Shortage

Amid a global DDR5 shortage and soaring prices, Russian hardware enthusiasts are experimenting with do-it-yourself DDR5 RAM by sourcing empty PCBs and soldering memory chips by hand. Tom's Hardware reports: The idea comes from Russian YouTuber PRO Hi-Tech's Telegram channel, where a local enthusiast known as "Vik-on" already performs VRAM upgrades for GPUs, so this is a relatively safe operation for him. According to Vik-on, empty RAM PCBs can be sourced from China for as little as $6.40 per DIMM. The memory chips themselves, though, that's a different challenge.

The so-called spot market for memory doesn't really exist at the moment, since no manufacturer has the production capacity to make more RAM, and even if they did, they'd sell to better-paying AI clients instead. Still, you can find SK Hynix and Samsung chips across Chinese marketplaces if you search for the correct part number, as shown in the attached screenshots.

Moreover, the Telegram thread says it would cost roughly 12,000 Russian Rubles ($152) to build a 16 GB stick with "average" specs, which is about the same as a retail 16 GB kit. There's also a ZenTimings snapshot showing CL28 timings, claiming that even relatively high-end DDR5 RAM can be built using this method, but it won't be cost-effective. Therefore, it doesn't make too much sense just yet to get the BGA rework station out and assemble your own DDR5. Things are expected to get worse, though, so maybe these Russians are on to something.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Ritz Motel

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Ritz Motel

Holiday Liquor Drive In

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Holiday Liquor Drive In

Found Kodachrome Slide -- The Gordon Holler Collection

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Kodachrome Slide -- The Gordon Holler Collection

date stamped on slide, September 1971, handwritten on slide, "Steel Market, Les Halles, Paris"