I follow a lot of RSS feeds which makes it easier for me to discover interesting web pages without having to visit my list of interesting blogs which aren't updated often. I hate to send these interesting links via email since it feels too much like a teacher giving homework... here, go read all of these web pages and report back to me. Instead I think collecting them in a blog post is a friendlier way to pass links along.
In case you're curious about why I'm posting on my blog more often recently, it's because I'm counting down to starting my retirement. According to my spreadsheet, today I'm down to 158 more days of work.
I have fond memories of playing some of the old Infocom games. There's a new web based version of Zork which actually shows you the code which is running as you play the game. That appeals to both the techie and gamer in me.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infocom
NASA has shut down an instrument on the 49 year old Voyager 1 probe to extend its mission even longer. This adds more evidence for my opinion that NASA does some of the finest engineering ever done.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/05/260504023835.htm
There's a new theory about a possible way to cut travel time to Mars. This will be critical for continued missions.
https://www.livescience.com/space/mars/i-was-not-looking-for-this-scientist-accidentally-finds-shortcut-to-mars-that-could-slash-travel-time-in-half
This new brake by wire system sounds interesting but I'll avoid cars which feature it until it has much more testing.
https://www.thedrive.com/news/the-first-modern-car-without-hydraulic-brakes-is-headed-to-production
Richard Dawkins is being mocked for his questioning of whether LLM systems such as Claude pass all current tests for consciousness. Since a few people working on AI systems have made similar claims, it seems ridiculous to mock a well respected scientist who has no special expertise in the subject. Since these systems have been trained on massive amounts of output from talented authors, it doesn't surprise me that they can string together sentences which sound convincing.
https://garymarcus.substack.com/p/richard-dawkins-and-the-claude-delusion
If you got the idea that I'm an AI skeptic, you'd be right. Here's one of the many reasons I avoid them at every opportunity. I wonder whether the engineer who was working with the AI agent which did this got reprimanded or fired.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/ai-agent-deletes-company-s-entire-database-in-seconds/ar-AA21UbLU
Even though I have strong doubts about whether we'll create actual conscious machine models anytime soon, I do believe that octopuses are intelligent despite having brains which are very different from ours.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01302-4
Denis Leary has long been one of my favorite comedians and he seems to be a great human being as well. I know he's been doing fund raising for firefighters since he starred in Rescue Me and he's managed to step up the support through this innovative plan.
https://abcnews.com/Business/wireStory/denis-learys-crazy-idea-puts-civilians-fdny-training-132625577
I'm happy to hear that there are more bookstores now than there were six years ago. Literate people would probably help prevent many of the problems we currently have.
https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/04/27/052242/america-now-has-70-more-bookstores-than-in-2020-says-bookshoporg-founder
The mention of Kurt Vonnegut's novel Cat's Cradle is initially what caught my eye about this story but it's interesting on its own merit. Who knew there were 20 crystalline forms of ice?
https://boingboing.net/2026/04/29/scientists-found-ice-with-a-304-molecule-repeating-pattern.html
Hopefully you don't drive one of these cars with soy-based wiring since they attract rodents which can lead to expensive repairs.
https://www.box-kat.com/blogs/box-kat-blog/full-list-of-cars-with-soy-based-wiring-2025-update
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