Science and Technology (old posts, page 189)

Kernel prepatch 6.16-rc2

Linus Torvalds has released 6.16-rc2, which is "admittedly even smaller than usual", though rc2 is not uncommonly one of the smaller release candidates.
It may be that people are taking a breather after a fairly sizable merge window, but it might also be seasonal, with Europe starting to see summer vacations... We'll see how this goes.

The diffstat looks somewhat unusual, with a lot of one-liners with both ARC and pincontrol having (presumably independently) ended up doing some unrelated trivial cleanups.

But even that is probably noticeable only because everything else is pretty small. That "everything else" is mostly network drivers (and bluetooth) and bcachefs, with some rust infrastructure and core networking changes thrown in.

AI and ML for mission systems: How AWS, Anthropic, and Elastic can drive resilience for national security

Within the US government defense and intelligence space, there is an increasing need to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) into monitoring and IT resilience for complex mission systems. However, teams must first overcome substantial data challenges, such as silos, security gaps, and legacy IT. To do so, many national security organizations rely on developers stepping into site reliability engineering (SRE) roles, who then need to balance performance optimization, cost-efficiency, and system reliability amid exponential data growth. 

The strategic collaboration between Anthropic, Amazon, and Elastic provides advanced AI capabilities for enhanced observability, anomaly detection, and root cause analysis for our joint Top Secret missions. The partnership brings AI and ML together to overcome data challenges through automation, faster problem resolution, and contextual insights. As a result, SREs can better manage performance across distributed systems and ensure system reliability.

Elastic's Search AI Platform, with its unified approach, affordable data tiering, and AI-driven automation, significantly improves user satisfaction (by 69%) and developer productivity (by 75%).1 This integration of AI and ML in observability is crucial for organizations to achieve operational resilience, security risk mitigation, and enhanced customer experience in today's complex IT landscapes.

Breaking cybersecurity silos: Enabling defence data collaboration

The modern cyber battlefield doesn't respect organisational boundaries. Across defence networks, critical structured, unstructured, and semi-structured data sits distributed and siloed in specialised environments — from classified intelligence systems to operational command platforms and tactical edge devices to headquarters. In the public sector, for example, 65% of leaders struggle to use data continuously in real time and at scale, according to a recent Elastic study.

The defence establishment faces just such challenges, and the growth in the volume of security data generated across multi-domain operations isn’t slowing. When
threats move at machine speed across networks, human analysts need to collaborate effectively across interoperable, if disparate, systems. The need is to improve visibility into individual domains and enable genuine collaboration across them, without compromising security or operational control.

Rather than centralising data — and wrestling with all the challenges of that approach — a data mesh instead embraces a distributed model built on four principles:

  • Domain ownership ensures that the teams most familiar with the data maintain responsibility for it.

  • Data as a product means information is well documented and accessible to authorised users.

  • Self-service platforms enable teams to discover and use data without IT bottlenecks.

  • Federated governance ensures security and compliance across the entire ecosystem.

Cross-cluster search is a key feature in Elastic’s data mesh approach, allowing teams to search across distributed environments without moving data. Analysts can execute a single query that securely retrieves results from multiple sources while respecting data access controls. This approach eliminates expensive data duplication across systems and offers up to 90% productivity improvements in IT operations. Unlike traditional approaches that simply forward queries to disparate systems, cross-cluster search provides a unified indexing layer: Data is indexed once and then available to any authorised user. This eliminates performance bottlenecks and inconsistent security models that plague other approaches, creating faster collaboration with stronger security. Data owners maintain control of their assets.

Shared awareness accelerates threat response

For organisations like the MOD, a global data mesh approach offers significant advantages, allowing data to remain at its source while being searchable. Cross-cluster search excels in these challenging environments. It enables interoperability between previously disconnected systems, making it a technical enabler of the broader interoperability goal. 

Queries can span geographical and organisational boundaries so that when an analyst needs to correlate threat intelligence across multiple domains, they can run a single search that returns unified results. This dramatically reduces response times during critical incidents. The data itself never moves, limiting or removing the requirement for duplication. Only the query and its matching results traverse the network, significantly reducing bandwidth requirements and maintaining data sovereignty. 

For defence teams facing constrained network environments, this efficient approach to data management delivers both operational and cost benefits through a unified platform approach instead of multiple disconnected tools.

The big idea: should we embrace boredom?

Smartphones offer instant stimulation, but do they silence a deeper message?

In 2014, a group of researchers from Harvard University and the University of Virginia asked people to sit alone with their thoughts for 15 minutes. The only available diversion was a button that delivered a painful electric shock. Almost half of the participants pressed it. One man pressed the button 190 times – even though he, like everyone else in the study, had earlier indicated that he found the shock unpleasant enough that he would pay to avoid being shocked again. The study’s authors concluded that “people prefer doing to thinking”, even if the only thing available to do is painful – perhaps because, if left to their own devices, our minds tend to wander in unwanted directions.

Since the mass adoption of smartphones, most people have been walking around with the psychological equivalent of a shock button in their pocket: a device that can neutralise boredom in an instant, even if it’s not all that good for us. We often reach for our phones for something to do during moments of quiet or solitude, or to distract us late at night when anxious thoughts creep in. This isn’t always a bad thing – too much rumination is unhealthy – but it’s worth reflecting on the fact that avoiding unwanted mind-wandering is easier than it’s ever been, and that most people distract themselves in very similar, screen-based ways.

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‘We’re being attacked all the time’: how UK banks stop hackers

Devastating attacks at M&S, the Co-op and Harrods highlight risks as lenders say cybersecurity is biggest expense

It is every bank boss’s worst nightmare: a panicked phone call informs them a cyber-attack has crippled the IT system, rapidly unleashing chaos across the entire UK financial industry.

As household names in other industries, including Marks & Spencer, grapple with the fallout from such hacks, banking executives will be acutely aware that, for them, the stakes are even higher.

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Revealed: Thousands of UK university students caught cheating using AI

Guardian investigation finds almost 7,000 proven cases of cheating – and experts says these are tip of the iceberg

Thousands of university students in the UK have been caught misusing ChatGPT and other artificial intelligence tools in recent years, while traditional forms of plagiarism show a marked decline, a Guardian investigation can reveal.

A survey of academic integrity violations found almost 7,000 proven cases of cheating using AI tools in 2023-24, equivalent to 5.1 for every 1,000 students. That was up from 1.6 cases per 1,000 in 2022-23.

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‘Earn up to £800 a day’: job scammers using calls or texts to lure victims

Fraudsters offer great pay for liking and sharing TikTok content – but then demand a fee to unlock higher earnings

Out of the blue you receive a call or a text offering you a job. It sounds great – it’s remote working and you could earn up to £800 a day. If you’re interested, you just need to contact the sender via the WhatsApp number provided.

The job is pretty easy: you are asked to like and share content – usually on TikTok.

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315: Ubuntu / GNOME drop X11, macOS Linux Containers, Fingerprints in Linux Mint & more Linux news

video: https://youtu.be/c-PWqlJCB9M

This week in Linux, there's a lot of news to talk about from new desktop updates to new apps and even a bit of drama. We'll start things off this week with the news that Ubuntu 25.10 is dropping X11 on GNOME sessions. There's a lot of chatter around this one and even some yelling about it... we're going to go over what's really happening, why it matters, who's really behind it, touch on a new fork of X11 and more. That's just the first topic... we also got some crazy news from Apple about running Linux Containers on Macs. Then we'll take a look at a new release of the Sway tiling window manager and then we have news from Linux Mint about their next release and some infrastructure changes happening at GNOME. All of this and more on This Week in Linux, the weekly news show that keeps you up to date with what’s going on in the Linux and Open Source world. Now let's jump right into Your Source for Linux GNews!

Forum Discussion Thread

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Hosted by:

Ryan (DasGeek) = dasgeek.net
Jill Bryant = jilllinuxgirl.com
Michael Tunnell = michaeltunnell.com

Chapters:

00:00 Intro
01:02 Ubuntu 25.10 drops X11 on GNOME
08:50 Apple Release New Tools for Running Linux Containers on Mac
13:42 Sway 1.11 Tiling Wayland Compositor
16:21 Sandfly Security, agentless Linux security [ad]
18:26 Linux Mint 22.2 Adds Native Fingerprint Login Support
23:07 2025 AlmaLinux Community Survey
26:25 GNOME Has a New Infrastructure Partner: Welcome AWS!
30:27 Kapitano is a New GTK ClamAV Frontend
33:55 ROG Xbox Ally Handhelds Announced
38:00 Outro

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