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Peace Corps Goes Digital: Inside the Ambitious Plan to Deploy AI Volunteers Across the Developing World

The Peace Corps, an institution synonymous with American soft power since President John F. Kennedy established it in 1961, is making one of the most significant pivots in its six-decade history. The agency has announced the creation of a new “Tech Corps” initiative that will send volunteers trained in artificial intelligence, data science, and related technologies to developing nations — a move that signals Washington’s recognition that the global competition for AI influence extends well beyond Silicon Valley and Beijing.

The Race to Build Data Centers in Space: Why Sam Altman and Elon Musk Are Looking Beyond Earth for AI’s Power Problem

The artificial intelligence industry is consuming electricity at a pace that has stunned even its own architects. Now, two of the most prominent figures in technology — Sam Altman and Elon Musk — are independently floating the idea that the solution to AI’s insatiable energy appetite may lie not on Earth, but in orbit above it. The concept of space-based data centers, once relegated to science fiction, is entering serious conversation among industry leaders, and the timeline they’re discussing is startlingly near.

Why Anthropic Chose Electron for Claude’s Desktop App — And What It Reveals About the Future of AI Interfaces

When Anthropic released its Claude desktop application, a familiar chorus of complaints erupted across developer forums and social media. The app, built on Electron — the framework that bundles a full Chromium browser engine inside a native-looking wrapper — drew the same criticisms that have followed every Electron app since Slack and Visual Studio Code popularized the approach years ago. It’s bloated. It uses too much memory. It’s not a “real” native app.

When AI Becomes a Weapon: The ‘Hit Piece Writer’ Bot That Vanished and What It Reveals About Automated Harassment

A generative AI tool explicitly designed to produce defamatory articles about real people briefly surfaced online before being removed — but not before it exposed a growing and deeply uncomfortable frontier in artificial intelligence: the automation of reputational destruction.

SwiftForth and the Quiet Persistence of Forth: Why a 55-Year-Old Programming Language Still Powers Critical Systems

In an industry obsessed with the newest frameworks, the hottest languages, and the latest paradigm, one programming language has quietly persisted for more than half a century—powering everything from spacecraft to embedded medical devices, from telescope controllers to industrial automation systems. Forth, created by Charles “Chuck” Moore in 1970, remains a tool of choice for engineers who prize direct hardware control, minimal overhead, and absolute determinism.

Claude Code’s Hidden Cost Problem: Developers Sound the Alarm on Anthropic’s AI Coding Agent Billing Practices

When Anthropic launched Claude Code as a command-line AI coding assistant, it promised developers a powerful new way to write, debug, and manage software projects. But a growing chorus of users is now raising pointed questions about the tool’s billing transparency — or lack thereof — arguing that the costs of running Claude Code can spiral far beyond what most developers expect, with little visibility into why.

After Half a Century of Waiting, NASA’s Artemis II Crew Prepares for Humanity’s Return to Lunar Orbit

More than fifty years after the last Apollo astronauts circled the Moon, NASA is targeting March 6 for the launch of Artemis II — a mission that will send four astronauts on a roughly ten-day flight around the Moon and back. If successful, it will mark the first time humans have traveled beyond low-Earth orbit since Apollo 17 in December 1972, and it will set the stage for an eventual crewed lunar landing under the broader Artemis program.

Colorado’s Bold Bet: Pushing Age Verification From Websites Down to the Operating System Level Raises Sweeping Privacy Questions

Colorado is charting a new course in the national debate over children’s online safety, advancing legislation that would shift the burden of age verification away from individual websites and onto the operating systems and device manufacturers that power them. The approach, embodied in House Bill 1166, represents one of the most architecturally ambitious attempts by any U.S. state to restrict minors’ access to certain online content — and it is raising pointed questions about surveillance, data collection, and the fundamental relationship between citizens and their personal devices.

Turning Nuclear Waste Into Power: How U.S. Particle Accelerators Could Slash Radioactive Lifespans by 99.7%

For decades, the question of what to do with spent nuclear fuel has haunted the atomic energy industry. Mountains of highly radioactive waste sit in temporary storage pools and dry casks at reactor sites across the United States, waiting for a permanent repository that, after the political collapse of the Yucca Mountain project, may never come. Now, a set of ambitious projects backed by the U.S.

Winhance: The Free Open-Source Tool That Strips Windows 11 Down to Its Bare Essentials

For years, Windows users have complained about the growing volume of pre-installed software, telemetry services, and advertising baked into Microsoft’s flagship operating system. With Windows 11, those complaints reached a fever pitch as Copilot integrations, Recall features, and Start menu advertisements became standard fare. Now, a free, open-source tool called Winhance is offering users an unprecedented level of control over what stays and what goes — and it’s drawing serious attention from IT professionals and power users alike.