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to read (pdf)
- Neobrutalism components - Start making neobrutalism layouts today
- Debunking zswap and zram myths
- Building a Pipeline for Agentic Malware Analysis | Tim Blazytko
- Study of Binaries Created with Rust through Reverse Engineering - JPCERT/CC Eyes | JPCERT Coordination Center official Blog
- Letting AI Actively Manage Its Own Context | 明天的乌云
- April 02, 2026
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🔗 Console.dev newsletter Semiotic rss
Description: Streaming-first data visualization.
What we like: Push streaming data at 60fps or just pass an array of static data. Simple React library that gives you full access to the underlying components if the built-in ones aren’t sufficient. Supports a range of charts and frames. Customizable with themes. Also supports server-side rendering.
What we dislike: If you need basic charts with minimal customization then it’s overkill - they recommend something like Recharts in that case.
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🔗 Console.dev newsletter nono rss
Description: Runtime AI safety sandbox.
What we like: Snapshots filesystem changes so you can easily roll back. Uses Kernel-level isolations on macOS, Linux, and Windows. Immutable session logs with cryptographic verification. Native SDKs for Python, TypeScript, Rust.
What we dislike: You need to use C FFI bindings for other languages (great they exist of course, but better to have native SDKs where possible).
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- April 01, 2026
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🔗 anthropics/claude-code v2.1.90 release
What's changed
- Added
/powerup— interactive lessons teaching Claude Code features with animated demos - Added
CLAUDE_CODE_PLUGIN_KEEP_MARKETPLACE_ON_FAILUREenv var to keep the existing marketplace cache whengit pullfails, useful in offline environments - Added
.huskyto protected directories (acceptEdits mode) - Fixed an infinite loop where the rate-limit options dialog would repeatedly auto-open after hitting your usage limit, eventually crashing the session
- Fixed
--resumecausing a full prompt-cache miss on the first request for users with deferred tools, MCP servers, or custom agents (regression since v2.1.69) - Fixed
Edit/Writefailing with "File content has changed" when a PostToolUse format-on-save hook rewrites the file between consecutive edits - Fixed
PreToolUsehooks that emit JSON to stdout and exit with code 2 not correctly blocking the tool call - Fixed collapsed search/read summary badge appearing multiple times in fullscreen scrollback when a CLAUDE.md file auto-loads during a tool call
- Fixed auto mode not respecting explicit user boundaries ("don't push", "wait for X before Y") even when the action would otherwise be allowed
- Fixed click-to-expand hover text being nearly invisible on light terminal themes
- Fixed UI crash when malformed tool input reached the permission dialog
- Fixed headers disappearing when scrolling
/model,/config, and other selection screens - Hardened PowerShell tool permission checks: fixed trailing
&background job bypass,-ErrorAction Breakdebugger hang, archive-extraction TOCTOU, and parse-fail fallback deny-rule degradation - Improved performance: eliminated per-turn JSON.stringify of MCP tool schemas on cache-key lookup
- Improved performance: SSE transport now handles large streamed frames in linear time (was quadratic)
- Improved performance: SDK sessions with long conversations no longer slow down quadratically on transcript writes
- Improved
/resumeall-projects view to load project sessions in parallel, improving load times for users with many projects - Changed
--resumepicker to no longer show sessions created byclaude -por SDK invocations - Removed
Get-DnsClientCacheandipconfig /displaydnsfrom auto-allow (DNS cache privacy)
- Added
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🔗 r/reverseengineering BurnerNet v1.0.0: A Zero-Trust C++20 HTTP Client Engine rss
submitted by /u/KriXxPlay
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🔗 r/Yorkshire Yorkshire Buses folds 'with heavy heart' as costs rise rss
| submitted by /u/Kagedeah
[link] [comments]
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🔗 backnotprop/plannotator v0.16.4 release
Follow @plannotator on X for updates
Missed recent releases? Release | Highlights
---|---
v0.16.3 | Pi phase configuration, CLI help, untracked file discovery fix, review scroll reset
v0.16.2 | Draggable comment popovers, cross-file annotation visibility, custom diff fonts, OpenCode verbose log fix
v0.16.1 | SSE stream idle timeout fix for external annotations API
v0.16.0 | GitHub Copilot CLI, external annotations API, bot callback URLs, interactive checkboxes, print support, diff display options
v0.15.5 | Custom display names, GitHub viewed file sync, expand/collapse all in file tree, search performance, WSL fix
v0.15.2 | Compound Planning skill, folder annotation,/plannotator-archiveslash command, skill installation via platform installers
v0.15.0 | Live AI chat in code review, plan archive browser, folder file viewer, resizable split pane, Pi full feature parity
v0.14.5 | GitLab merge request review, login page image fix, Windows install path fix
v0.14.4 | GitHub review submission, repo identifier in tab title, nested code fence parser fix, Pi paste URL wiring
v0.14.3 | PR context panel, diff search in code review, OpenCode permission normalization, landing page redesign
v0.14.2 | OpenCode plan mode prompt replacement, Windows non-ASCII path fix, Pi link fix
What's New in v0.16.4
v0.16.4 introduces a hook mechanism for continuously improving your plans based on compound planning insights, adds GitHub Enterprise and self-hosted GitLab support for code review, restructures the review UI around a dockview workspace, and ships three new themes. 11 PRs, 3 from external contributors, 2 first-timers.
GitHub Enterprise and Self-Hosted GitLab Support
Plannotator's code review now works with GitHub Enterprise and self-hosted GitLab instances. Previously, PR review only supported github.com and gitlab.com URLs. Now any host with a
/pull/or/merge_requests/path pattern is recognized. The--hostnameflag is threaded through allghCLI calls for GitHub Enterprise, and self-hosted GitLab MR diffs use theglab apiendpoint instead ofglab mr diff(which doesn't support--hostnameon self-hosted instances).- #460, closing #348 and #457 reported by @charlozard
Compound Planning: Continuous Improvement Hook
The compound planning skill now closes the loop between analysis and action. After analyzing your plan archive and generating a report, the skill can write corrective planning instructions to
~/.plannotator/hooks/compound/enterplanmode-improve-hook.txt. APreToolUsehook onEnterPlanModethen injects these instructions into Claude's context every time plan mode starts. The result: insights from your compound planning analysis automatically shape how Claude writes future plans.This release also adds incremental reports that detect previous runs and only analyze new files since the last report, saving tokens on large projects. Extraction (Phase 2) now uses Haiku agents for speed, while reduction (Phase 3) uses Sonnet for analytical reasoning with two-stage reduce for large datasets.
For users without a Plannotator archive, a Claude Code fallback mode activates when
~/.plannotator/plans/is absent or has no denied plans. A bundled Python script (extract_exit_plan_mode_outcomes.py) extracts plan outcomes directly from Claude Code conversation logs, so the compound skill works even without Plannotator history.Review UI Improvements
The code review center area has been restructured around a Dockview workspace. PR detail views and agent panels now open as center dock tabs instead of overlaying the diff, and diff navigation is simplified to a single dedicated tab. This lays the groundwork for upcoming AI-powered review features that need flexible panel management.
New Themes
Three new color themes: Clean Contrast (dark-only), Code Fork (dark + light), and Midnight (dark-only). All three are derived from Cursor's color palettes and registered with preview swatches in the theme picker.
Additional Changes
- Pi phase configuration. Pi users can now define phase behavior (model, tools, prompt) in
plannotator.json, scoped to project or global~/.pi/agent(#446 by @stk-code) - CLI help. Running
plannotatorwith no arguments now prints a usage message instead of hanging.--helplists available subcommands (#448 by @foxytanuki, closing #447) - Untracked file discovery fix. Code review now resolves the repo root so untracked files outside the agent's CWD are included (#450 by @blimmer, closing #449)
- Review scroll reset. The diff viewport resets to the top-left when switching files (#452, closing #451 reported by @UberMouse)
Install / Update
macOS / Linux:
curl -fsSL https://plannotator.ai/install.sh | bashWindows:
irm https://plannotator.ai/install.ps1 | iexClaude Code Plugin: Run
/pluginin Claude Code, find plannotator , and click "Update now".Copilot CLI:
/plugin marketplace add backnotprop/plannotator /plugin install plannotator-copilot@plannotatorOpenCode: Clear cache and restart:
rm -rf ~/.bun/install/cache/@plannotatorThen in
opencode.json:{ "plugin": ["@plannotator/opencode@latest"] }Pi: Install or update the extension:
pi install npm:@plannotator/pi-extension
What's Changed
- feat: agentic review — background job runner with SSE streaming by @backnotprop in #443
- feat(pi): support phase config files by @stk-code in #446
- cli: clarify no-arg usage and add top-level help by @foxytanuki in #448
- fix(review): resolve repo root for untracked file discovery by @blimmer in #450
- fix(review): reset scroll on file switch by @backnotprop in #452
- feat(review): add dockview center workspace by @backnotprop in #453
- feat: add Clean Contrast, Code Fork, and Midnight themes by @backnotprop in #454
- feat(skill): compound planning — incremental reports, agent routing, improvement hook by @backnotprop in #455
- feat(hook): improvement hook context injection for planning by @backnotprop in #459
- feat(review): support GitHub Enterprise and fix self-hosted GitLab MR diffs by @backnotprop in #460
- feat(skill): add Claude Code fallback to compound planning skill by @backnotprop in #461
New Contributors
Contributors
@stk-code contributed Pi phase configuration support (#446), bringing per-project customization to the Pi extension. First contribution.
@foxytanuki returned for a second contribution with the CLI help message (#448), after the SSE timeout fix in v0.16.1.
@blimmer identified and fixed the untracked file discovery bug (#449, #450), including a regression test. First contribution.
Community members who reported issues addressed in this release:
- @charlozard: #457 (self-hosted GitLab
glab mr difffailure) - @UberMouse: #451 (scroll position persisting across file switches)
- @NaikSoftware: participated in #348 (GitHub PR integration enhancements)
Full Changelog :
v0.16.2...v0.16.4 -
🔗 @binaryninja@infosec.exchange Sludge?! In Binary Ninja? Happy April 1st! (Yes, the plugin is real though) mastodon
Sludge?! In Binary Ninja? Happy April 1st! (Yes, the plugin is real though)
https://github.com/CouleeApps/sludge_content_sidebar
Now available in the plugin manager.
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🔗 r/york Little years Acomb nursery reviews rss
TLDR looking for reviews/experiences of little years nursery in Acomb
Hello, apologies I know there have been a few nursery threads but they’re all quite old. We’ve got a place at little years Acomb for our baby to start in September when she’ll be 12 months. Looked around last year when I was pregnant and thought it seemed nice but now I am actually a mum I feel far more concerned/fussy about sending her to the right place, so would love to hear any experiences people have had
Thanks!
submitted by /u/DietUsed6570
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🔗 r/Yorkshire Spring has sprung (at Nostell) rss
| submitted by /u/ioscommenter
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🔗 r/Yorkshire I filmed a WW1 memorial site at night in Barnsley. rss
Check out my video ORAVINE
This hidden gem is a open-air chapel at Silverwood Scout Camp, built to remember local Barnsley pals that sadly lost their lives in WW1.
Does anyone have any stories about this particular memorial or know of any other sites similar in Yorkshire?
submitted by /u/9arke1
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🔗 r/Yorkshire York to Whitby rss
submitted by /u/silvergal81
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🔗 r/york Birthday recommendations! rss
Hi everyone!
I am treating a friend to a day out in York for her birthday. I'm looking for an experience/activity, then a wine/cheese based late lunch, and then any pubs/venues that have live music or maybe regular (decent) comedy. Also your best pub gardens as it's in May and I am hoping for an outside beer or two!
For an experience/activity I'm pondering the gin making at the York Distillery - anyone done this? It seems to get great reviews but I want to make sure it is worth the money! Also have seen Paint & Sip events at Plonkers - anyone been to one of these and can tell me how it was?
Anything else fun and unusual? Other things I've found on Googling are the usual Jorvik or York Dungeon but we've both done those before :)
Wine and cheese I am looking at 22 Yards or Howl - thoughts? Anywhere else?
Thank you in advance!
submitted by /u/Previous-Weird9577
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🔗 r/york Extra commuter trains announced for York-Scarborough rail route rss
| submitted by /u/Due_Ad_3200
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🔗 r/Harrogate Is visiting this weekend worth it? rss
Heya! Is visiting harro worth it this week? Weekdays or Saturday’s better? Is it getting greener by now?
Spots to try and check out will be much appreciated too!
submitted by /u/jo_bidenn
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA TurboQuant isn’t just for KV: Qwen3.5-27B at near-Q4_0 quality, about 10% smaller, and finally fitting on my 16GB 5060 Ti rss
| I bought an RTX 5060 Ti 16GB around Christmas and had one goal: get a strong model running locally on my card without paying api fees. I have been testing local ai with open claw. I did not come into this with a quantization background. I only learned about llama, lmstudio and ollama two months ago. I just wanted something better than the usual Q3-class compromise (see my first post for benchmark). Many times, I like to buy 24gb card but looking at the price, I quickly turned away. When the TurboQuant paper came out, and when some shows memory can be saved in KV, I started wondering whether the same style of idea could help on weights , not just KV/ cache.
P/S. I was nearly got the KV done with cuda support but someone beat me on it. After many long nights (until 2am) after work, that turned into allama.cppfork with a 3.5-bit weight format I’m callingTQ3_1S:- Walsh-Hadamard rotation
- 8-centroid quantization
- dual half-block scales
- CUDA runtime support in
llama.cpp
This work is inspired by the broader transform-based quantization line, especially RaBitQ-style Walsh-Hadamard rotation ideas and the recent TurboQuant result (Tom). The thing I wanted to test was whether that same geometry could help on weights, not just KV/cache.
Main Result on Qwen3.5-27B
Q4_0:7.2431 +/- 0.04822TQ3_1S:7.2570 +/- 0.04802
That is a gap of only
+0.0139PPL, about0.19%, on the fullwiki.test.rawpass (580chunks,c=512).Size
Q4_0: about14.4 GBTQ3_1S: about12.9 GB
So
TQ3_1Sis about10%smaller while staying nearQ4_0quality. The practical point for me is simple:TQ3_1Sfits fully on my 16GB RTX 5060 TiQ4_0does not fit fully on GPU in the same setup
So I’m not claiming “better than Q4_0” in general. I’m claiming something narrower and, I think, useful:
- near-
Q4_0quality - materially smaller than
Q4_0 - enough to make a 27B model practical on a 16GB card
Speed record during perplexity test:
- prompt processing pp512: 130.87 tok/s - generation tg10: 15.55 tok/sCaveats
- this is the strongest result on the 27B witness, not a blanket claim that plain TQ3 works equally well on every model size
- I am pretty new to this, so I may miss a lot of test. I only have one card to test :-)
- Be skeptical as I can't believe I publish my own model
- the speed story here is mainly a deployment/fit win on this GPU class, not a blanket claim that native TQ3 kernels are always faster than native
Q4_0
Links
I will open source the quantization steps when I have enough feedback and test. Update: Since a few saying I only compare to q4_0. Here is update. TQ3_4S will be published with faster processing speed | Format | bpw | PPL (c=2048) | Size
---|---|---|---
|
TQ3_4S | 4.00 | 6.7727 | 12.9 GB
Q3_K_S | 3.44 | 6.7970 | 11.4 GB
IQ4_XS | 4.25 | 6.8334 | 13.9 GB
TQ3_1S | 4.00 | 6.9186 | 12.9 GB
UD-Q2_K_XL | 3.30 | 7.5294 | 11.0 GBsubmitted by /u/pmttyji
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🔗 r/wiesbaden Where can I go to get a couple holes in a belt? rss
I have a couple of belts that need extra holes. In my home country, I'd take it to a shoe repair shop. Where can I do this here in Wiesbaden?
submitted by /u/ExistentialRacoon
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🔗 r/wiesbaden Friseur gesucht rss
Gibt es in Wiesbaden einen Friseur, der/die Strähnchen macht, die nicht 150 Euro + kosten? 😅
Ich hätte es echt nötig, aber kann mir das echt grad nicht leisten…
Vielleicht kennt jemand jemanden?
Danke euch schon mal! 🙂
submitted by /u/Haunting-Ad2182
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🔗 r/Yorkshire Countering the Sheffield Flags-On-Lamposts Group Protest on Saturday 4th April rss
| submitted by /u/EchidnaMaleficent588
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🔗 huggingface/candle 0.10.1 release
v0.10.1
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🔗 r/Yorkshire Another Yorkshire innovation - keeping the tradition alive! rss
Never let it be said that Yorkshire doesn't innovate!
submitted by /u/snakeoildriller
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🔗 r/Leeds Anyone know/guess where in LS28 the new iteration of Silver’s Deli is opening? rss
I’m basically just nosey and impatient. Been teased on insta this week.
submitted by /u/peachy4321
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🔗 Luke Muehlhauser Media diet for Q1 2026 rss
Music
Music I most enjoyed discovering this quarter:
- Marc Mellits: "Eclipse" (2022)
- Ronan Hardiman: "Victory" (1995)
- Rene Aubry: some of Signes (1997), some of Plaisirs d 'amour (1998), "Steppe" & "Faceties" (acoustic versions) (2008), "The Snail and the Whale (2019), some of Maria reve (2022)
- London Grammar: "Wicked Game" (2013), "Nightcall" (2013)
- Florence & the Machine: "Stand By Me" (2016)
- Seinabo Sey: "Pistols At Dawn" (2014)
- Anna Meredith: "Orca" (2012), "Unicron" & "Orlock" (2013), "Paramour" (2019)
- Nik Bartsch: some of Spin (2024)
- Maybeshewill: I Was Here for a Moment, Then I Was Gone (2011)
- Ferry Corsten: "Adagio for Strings" (1999)
- Rank 1: "Sensation Anthem 2003" (2003)1
- Yndi Halda: Under Summer (2016)
- Carla Bley: Blue Palestine mvts 1, 2, 4 (2018)
- Red Snapper: "Ban-Di-To" (2025)
- Bobby Previte: most of Set the Alarm for Monday (2008)
- Present: "Contre" (2024)
- Shibusashirazu: some of Dettaramen (1993), some of Something Difference (1994), some of Shibuzen (2006), Sakuraza Mon (2025)
- Daisuke Fuwa: some of Chitei Records Works (2012)
- With these new listens, Shibusashirazu / Daisuke Fuwa have crossed the 5-hour mark as one of my favorite musical artists!
- The Physics House Band: Horizons / Rapture (2013), Mercury Fountain (2017), Death Sequence (2019)
- Jeremy Dutcher: Wolastoqiyik Lintuwakonawa (2018)
- Tina Guo: some of Game On! (2017)
- The 8-Bit Big Band: some of Press Start! (2018), some of Choose Your Character! (2019), some of Backwards Compatible (2021), "Song of Storms" (2023), some of Orchestrator Emulator (2025)
- Sheena Ringo: Shouso Strip (2000), Kalk (Bleach), Semen, Chestnut Blossoms (2003)
- Wim Mertens: some of Music and Film (2006)
- Turtle Island String Quartet: "Street Stuff" (1989), "Near Northern" (1995)
- David Balakrishnan: "Syzygy" (2018)
- Desmond Earley: "Dulaman" (2019)
- Andries van Tonder: "Siyahamba" (1950)
- Michael Barrett: "Thixo Onothando" (2016)
- Brad Richmond: "Ipharadisi" (2002)
- Ishmael Morabe: "Avulekile Amasango" (2001)
- Theresa Clements & Thomas Shadrach James: "Bura Fera" (1886)
- Lebo M: "One by One" (1995)
- Ladysmith Black Mambazo: "Awu Wemadoda" (1973)
- Brian Tate: "Gate Gate" (1998)
- James Horner: "Sacred Guardian of the Mountain" & "Dedication and Windsong" (1998)
- Audiomachine: some of The Platinum Series I (2007), "The Dark Knight" & "The Illusionist" (2008), some of The Platinum Series III (2009), "Ad Suprema" (2009), some of The Platinum Series IV (2010), some of Chronicles (2012), some of Tree of Life (2013), some of Decimus (2015), some of Life (2017), some of Worlds of Wonder (2017), some of La Belle Époque (2018), some of Another Sky (2020), "Unrelenting Desires" (2024), some of Even Poets Go to War (2024)
I also listened to a significant portion of the recorded works by each of the (new-to-me) composers listed below.2 My favorites pieces from them (names linked to playlists) were:
- Oliver Davis (b. 1972): most of Flight (2015), most of Dance (2016), most of Liberty (2018), most of Arcadia (2019), most of Solace (2021), some of Air (2022), most of Blue (2023), most of Life (2025)
- With these new listens, Davis has crossed the 5-hour mark as one of my favorite musical artists!
- Marcus Paus (b. 1979): Decameron mvt 10 (2020), Tuba Mirum (2021), The War Cross mvt 15 (2023)
- Federico Jusid (b. 1973): Tango Rhapsody mvt 3 (2010), Isabel "A Todo Galope" (2013), The English "Opening Credits" (2022)
- Vladimir Martynov (b. 1946): Requiem "Sequentia" (1998), Passionslieder "Kommunionsgesange" (1977)
- Aleksey Igudesman (b. 1973): Koberia Fantasy (2018), Joyful Variations (2020), Peace-acaglia (2024)
- Russell Peck (b. 1945): some of Signs of Life II (1986)
- Giancarlo Castro D'Addona (b. 1980): Concerto for Clarinet & Big Band (2005?), Tuba Concerto (2007), "Walking Faster" (2009), Concierto Sureño (2010), "Rhapsody for Talents" (2013), "Melk Abbey" (2017?)
- Alexis Aranda (b. 1974): Concierto de Fuego para Violonchelo y Orquesta (2009), Piano Concerto No. 2 mvt 3 (2012), Flute Concerto “Acqua” mvts 2, 3 (2013), Double Concerto for Flute & Guitar mvts 1, 3 (2017)
- Andrew Pearce (b. 1975): some of Maison Yves Rocher (2018)
- Peter Breiner (b. 1957): some of Songs and Dances from the Silk Road (2003), Beatles Concerti Grossi Nos. 1-4 (1986), Beatles Concerti Grossi 5-9 (2018)
- Tarquinio Merula (b. 1595): "Ciaccona" (1637)
- Stuart Hancock (b. 1975): Violin Concerto mvt 3 (2005), "Variations on a Heroic Theme" (2007)
- Daniel Freiberg (b. 1957): Latin American Chronicles mvt 3 (2015), Northern Journey (2017)
- Loris Tjeknavorian (b. 1937): Dances Fantastic mvt 7 (1993), Ararat Suite mvts 3, 5, 7 (1998)
- Srul Irving Glick (b. 1934): Old Toronto Klezmer Suite mvt 1 (1998)
- José Alberto Pina (b. 1984): "A Mi Banda" (2003), "Himne a la Festa" (2006), "Crucifixus" (2008), The Bermuda Triangle (2009/2013), "Es Vedra" (2010), "The Legend of Maracaibo" (2011), The Island of Light (2013), The Ghost Ship (2017), Pompeii (2019), Dunkirk (2020), Sajelbon (2021), "Steel Overture" (2022), "Excalibur" (2023), "The Ambitious Plan" (2023), "The Scary Mountains" (2024), "Promesa" (2025), Cleopatra (2025)
- Takashi Kako (b. 1947): "Medina" (1990), "The Wind of Gibraltar" (1992), Passage of the Gods mvts 1, 3 (2006)
- Gediminas Gelgotas (b. 1986): "Extracadenza" (2015)
- Krzesimir Debski (b. 1953): some of With Fire and Sword (1999), some of Ancient Tale (2003)
- Kirill Richter (b. 1989): some of Chronos (2019), "In Memoriam" (2019), "Waltz No. 1" & "Waltz No. 3" (2025)
- Saul Gomez Soler (b. 1982): some of Suite Al’Ariba (2018), "Gioia" (2020)
- Alex Poelman (b. 1981): "1944" (2021)
- Matej Mestrovic (b. 1969): some of Eat Suite (2014), Danube Rhapsody mvts 1, 2, 4 (2015), Chinese Rhapsody (2015), New England Rhapsody (2015), "Pleter" (2022)
- Vaja Azarashvili (b. 1936): Piano Concerto No. 2 (2023)
- Murat Kabardokov (b. 1986): "Baso Ostinato" (2015?), "Alla Barocco" (2015), Above the Mountains "Main Theme" (2017), "Hunderkuakua" (2021)
- Masamichi Amano (b. 1957): "Tragedy Occurs Again" (1993), "Spy Swordsman Jubei and the Fivefold Group" (1998), "New Departure" (2000)
- Can Atilla (b. 1969): "Yine Gel Ne Olursan Ol" (2008), Symphony of Love (2024)
- Kim Andre Arnesen (b. 1980): "Cry of the Sea" & "The Strangers" (2016), Holy Spirit Mass "Amen" (2017)
- Alexey Rybnikov (b. 1945): "Adagio for Cello & Strings in D Minor" (1981), Concerto Grosso No. 2 (2006)
- Olli Mustonen (b. 1967): Concerto for 3 Violins mvts 1, 2, 4 (1998)
- Vladimir Cosma (b. 1940): "Danse roumaine" (1972)
- Harry Stafylakis (b. 1982): "Brittle Fracture" (2013), Arc of Horizon (2015), "Sun Exhaling Light" (2017), Symphony No. 1 "Holocene Extinction" (2017), "Atlas" (2018), Weighted (2019), "Source Code" (2019), "Focus" (2019), "To Wake and Find the World Still Burning" (2022), "Incinerate" (2022), Calibrating Frictions [album] (2023), Piano Concerto No. 1 "Mythos" (2023), Violin Concerto "On a Path to Singularity" (2024)
- Joey Roukens (b. 1982): In Unison mvt 1 (2017)
- Lee Che-Yi (b. 1970): Dancing Strings mvts 1 & 2 (2011), Lukang Impression (2017), Four Seasons in the Peach Garden mvt 4 (2018)
- Jim Bonney (b. 1971): Chaos Theory (2000)
- Chiel Meijering (b. 1954): "Slash" (1995), "The truth requires a hairier buck" (1996), "Rip Off" & "Joe Montana" (2001), "Joke" & "The Roof of Blue Glass" & "Rondo" (2007), The Pied Piper mvt 4 (2012)
- Andy Scott (b. 1966): Dark Rain (2005), "Three Letter Word" (2010), Spirit of Mingus (2012)
- Sergei Akhunov (b. 1967): Le quattro stagioni (2011)
- Anton Batagov (b. 1965): Bodhicharyavatara "Adopting the Spirit of Awakening" (2009), The One Thus Gone mvt 4 (2016)
- Howard Blake (b. 1938): Four Miniatures (orchestral) (1964), Concert Dances mvt 5 (1992)
- Alexandre Rabinovitch-Barakovsky (b. 1945): La belle musique No. 3 (1977), Musique populaire (1980), "Liebliches Lied" (1980), Discours sur la delivrance (1982), La belle musique No. 4 (1987), Das tibetanische gebet (1987), 3 Invocations (1996), Incantations (1996), Schwanengesang an Apollo (1996), La triade (1998), Les six etats intermediaires (1998), Die Zeit (2000), Jiao (2004), Maithuna (2005)
- With these new listens, Rabinovitch-Barakovsky has crossed the 5-hour mark as one of my favorite musical artists!
- Sven Helbig (b. 1968): some of Pocket Symphonies (2013)
- Yasushi Akutagawa (b. 1925): some of Village of Eight Gravestones (1977), Village of Eight Gravestones Suite (1977), Mt. Hakkoda Suite (1977)
- Arash Safaian (b. 1981): UberBach (2016), This Is (Not) Beethoven (2019), "Lara" (2019), "Marie's Piece" (2023)
- Michael Kurth (b. 1971): "May Cause Dizziness" (2010), Everything Lasts Forever mvt 3 (2012), A Thousand Words mvts 2, 3, 4 (2015), some of Miserere (2017), Origin Story (2023), "All Will Be Revealed" (2023), "Suspectivish" (2025)
- Alexey Kurbatov (b. 1983): Sextet "Train" (2016)
- Polina Nazaykinskaya (b. 1987): Nostalghia (2018), "A Summer Rain" & "Remembrance" (2020), "Songs for Tasya" (2021), Emily mvt 1 (2023)
- Victoriano Valencia (b. 1970): "Siete Colores" (2003), "Sanjuanito" (2003), "Fandanguillo" (2003), Suite No. 1 (2003), "Gualajo y Candelo" (2004), "Leon Bambuco" (2004), "San Pelayo" (2005), "La gaïta de Arlington" (2006), Suite No. 2 (2007), "Fandanguería" (2007), "Mayito" (2007), "Juana Jacinta" (2008), "Espiritu" (2009), "El Mono" (2011), "Balin" (2012), Ritmos de la Tierra (2013), Suite de los Juegos (2013), "Macondo" (2015), "Puyax" (2017), Concerto for Clarinet & Band (2018), Concerto for Saxophone & Band (2019), Fandango! Secretos de La Rueda Oscura (2022)
- Fahir Atakoglu (b. 1963): "Med Cezir" (1993), "12 + Lai" & "Yesilada" & "Demirkirat" & "Vals" (1994), some of East Side Story (2005), 15 Temmuz Destani (2020)
- Roland Szentpali (b. 1977): "Blow on Fire" & "Cinder Dance" (2007), "Carmen Fantasy" (2007)
- Giovanni Allevi (b. 1969): "Angelo Ribelle" (2006), "Mandella" (2012), Violin Concerto "La danza della strega" (2012), Piano Concerto No. 1 mvts 1, 3 (2017)
- Kinan Azmeh (b. 1976): "Love on 139th Street in D" (2005), Ibn Arabi Suite mvt 3 (2013), In the Element mvt 3 (2018)
- Pacho Flores (b. 1981): Cantos y Revueltas (2018), Albares (2022)
- Masanori Taruya (b. 1978): "A Picture Book Without a Picture" & "Liberty Guiding the People" & "Magellan's Voyage to Unknown Continent" (2004), "Tears of the Princess Kushinada Flowing in Hii" (2012)
- Li Bochan (b. 1992): "Ode to Chu" (2014), "Late Autumn" (2014), "Chant on Strings" (2016), "Bamboo Stone" (2017)
- Cristian Carrara (b. 1977): Destinazione del Sangue mvt 3 (2008), "East West Romance" (2009), "A Little Tango to My Wife" (2011), "Liber Mundi" (2012), Slot Machine mvt 3 (2014), Machpelah mvt 2 (2015)
- Andrew Staniland (b. 1977): The Laws of Nature mvts 1, 2 (2025)
- Ilari Hylkila (b. 1978): "Return to the Indian Valley" (2002), "Reflection of Destiny" (2002), "Force" (2003), "Honor March" (2003), "Tristesse" (2003), "Dance of Giants" (2004), "Unknown Legend" (2005), "The Zest" (2007), "Hero Tale" (2008), "Sinia" (2008), "Cinclus Arctica" (2010), "Magical Forest" (2010), "Metalflare" (2010), "Nimia" (2012), "Sankar" (2012), "Waltz Unforgettable" (2014), "Wonderworld" (2014), Into the Wind (2015), "My Christmas Dream" (2016), "Taiga" (2018), "Dark" (2018), "Adorable Creatures" (2018), Saga (2018), "Yet" (2018), Lapland Imagery mvts 1, 5 (2020), "Echoes from Central Finland" (2025)
- Kristjan Jarvi (b. 1972): "Aurora" (2016), "Kritical Mass" (2017), "Midnight Sun" (2019)
- Mily Balakirev (b. 1837): Symphony No. 1 mvt 2 (1898)
- Marcus Warner (b. 1996): "Africa" (2014), some of Oceans (2016), "Wintersong" (2017), "Tokyo Rain" & "Helsinki" (2018)
- Efrain Oscher (b. 1974): some of Barroqueana Venezolanas 1-4 (2017), Barroqueana Sudamericana No. 1 (2018), Danzas Latinas (2019)
- Wang Jianmin (b. 1956): Erhu Rhapsody No. 6 (2023)
- Aldo Lopez-Gavilan (b. 1979): "Pan Con Timba" (2005), "La Jutia Preguntona" (2009), "Oddudua" (2011), "Epilogo" (2012)
- Tuluyhan Ugurlu (b. 1968): "Yaşamımız Bu Toprakta" & "Allaturca" (2002), "A World Capital Istanbul" (2006)
- Fang Dongqing (b. 1981): "A Dance of Fire" (2016)
- Francisco Valor Llorens (b. 1979): most of Creu Daura (2006), Llegenda (2014), Dolca Mareta, les Llagrimes de Maria (2021), most of Francisco Valor in Live (2021), Mazon (2023), some of Suite Alcodianima (2023), some of Crucis Petra (2023), plus dozens of other short compositions
- With these new listens, Valor Llorens has crossed the 5-hour mark as one of my favorite musical artists!
- Hayato Hirose (b. 1974): "Marching Blues" (2005), "Norman Rockwell Suite" (2006), "The Bell of Hope" (2010)
- M.M. Keeravani (b. 1961): Baahubali "Wkkb" (2015), RRR "The Water" (2022)
- Rafael Mullor Grau (b. 1962): "Un moro mudejar" (1981)
- Jose Rafael Pascual Vilaplana (b. 1971): "Cavall de Foc" (1996), "Jessica" (2000), "Falhanis" (2015), Out of Earth mvt 3 (2015), "Hernandiana" (2017)
- Florian Christl (b. 1990): some of Inspiration (2018), "Glass" & "Timelapse" (2022), "Vienna" (2024)
- Michele Mangani (b. 1966): "Clarinettomania" (2015), Clarinet Concerto mvts 1, 3 (2018)
- Nancy Galbraith (b. 1951): "Danza de los Duendes" (1991), "Febris Ver" (2011), "Euphonic Blues" (2012), Effervescent Air (2012), Strange Travels (2013), Violin Concerto No. 1 mvts 1, 3 (2016), Everything Flows (2019)
- Jose Maria Vitier (b. 1954): Mediopunto mvts 1, 3 (1977), Vitral mvts 1, 3 (1982), "Contradanza festiva" (1991), "Epílogo" (1993), "Rítmico" (2012)
- José Suñer-Oriola (b. 1964): Vasa mvts 1, 3 (1999), El Jardín de las Hespérides mvt 4 (2014)
- Ramón García i Soler (b. 1971): Oryza (2015)
- Armand Amar (b. 1953): "To amo" & "La terre vue du ciel" (2004), "Mere et enfant" (2005), some of Home (2009), "La vallee de la solitude" (2014), some of Human (2015), some of L 'histoire de l'amour (2016), "Arrivee a Nice" & "La traversee" (2017)
- Christopher Stark (b. 1980): "Velocity Meadows" (2015)
- Hardy Mertens (b. 1960): "Viva El Litro" (2008)
- Marek Bednar (Marc Cooper) (b. 1985): "Violin Sonata in E Minor" & "Flash Flood" & "Violin Concerto in D Minor" (2025), "The Awakening of Spring" & "The Weimar Punk-Opera" (2026)
- George Deac (b. 1970): "Modul X-01" & "Polonaise: The Emperor's Entrance" & "Metamorphosis" & "Neon Shadows" & "The Hero's Return" & "Midnight in Andalusia" & "The Clockwork Machine" & "Elegy for a Forgotten Princess" & "The Broken Waltz" & "St. Petersburg Nocturne" & "Clarinet Dance in Central Park" & "Starlight Farewell" & "Oracle of the Cold Moon" (2026)
- Mario Burki (b. 1977): "Napoleon" (2009), "Milestone" (2013), La Corrida de Toros (2016), Utinam (2021)
- Roland Batik (b. 1951): Piano Concerto No. 1 mvt 3 (1993)
- Gordon Hamilton (b. 1982): "Baby Steps First" (2014), Thum Prints (2015), "482 Variations on a Very Short Theme" (2016)
- Simon Dobson (b. 1981): "Firefly" (2015), "Clash" (2016)
- Hugo Chinesta (b. 1977): The Gates of the Alhambra mvt 4 (2007), The Angel of the Apocalypse (2019)
- Valgeir Sigurosson (b. 1971): "Past Tundra" (2011), "Ancor che col partire" (2013)
- MAias Alyamani (b. 1981): "Dance" & "Zainno el Marje" (2010), most of White (2011), "Al Ad'am" (2012), most of Offstage (2014), most of A Decade of MAqam Ensemble (2018), "Najaz" (2019), "Reborn" (2020)
- Dimitri Cervo (b. 1968): "Uguabe" (1999), "Toronuba" (2000), "Brasil Amazonico" (2005), "Toro-Lobiana" (2007), Flute Concerto mvts 1, 3 (2008), "Abertura Brasil 2012" (2012), "Abertura 2014" (2014), Suite Concertante (2017), "Abertura Brasil 2018" (2018), Trombone Concerto (2018)
- Nuno Corte-Real (b. 1971): Folias (2024)
- Juan J. Colomer (b. 1966): some of Sorolla: Vision of Spain (2013), Sorolla Breve Suite (2022)
- Vakhtang Kakhidze (b. 1959): "Satyr's Dance" (1989), Blitz Fantasy mvt 4 (2000)
- Abraham Cupeiro (b. 1980): some of Os Sons Esquecidos (2017), Pangea (2020), some of Mythos (2024)
- Tielman Susato (b. ~1510): some of Danseyre (1551)
- Chen Gang (b. 1935): "Golden Hearth" (1972), "Deep Gratitude" (1974), "Drum and Song" (1976)
- Gauthier Dupertuis (b. 1997): "Terminal" (2025)
- Katahj Copley (b. 1998): "Grosso Blue" (2018), "HayWire" (2018), "Infinity" (2020), "Halcyon Hearts" (2021), "In Living Color" (2021), "Uptilt" (2021), "Equinox" (2021), "Havens" (2022), "Iridessi" (2023)
- Jeff Tyzik (b. 1951): "Fire Dance" (1978), "Blues Suite for String Orchestra" (1985), "Skater's Overture" (1996), New York Cityscape (2008), "Riffs" (2009), Images (2012), "Dream Sequence for Flute and Orchestra" (2015), "Three Latin Dances" (2018), "Give My Regards to George" (2020), Dance Suite for Oboe, String Orchestra, and Piano (2021), Jazz Concerto for Soprano Saxophone (2023)
- Ricardo Molla Albero (b. 1992): Finisterrai (2022)
- Nunzio Ortolano (b. 1967): "Russian Melodies" (1999), "Texas" (2000), "Event" (2001), "Giuditta" (2001), "Preludio e Marcia" (2001), "I Tre Puntini" (2005), "Prelude for Concert" (2007), "Manola" (2008), "Tano Tano" (2014)
- Alexander Litvinovsky (b. 1962): some of Consort Lessons (1999), "Steps Upward" (2001), "Theatre" & "L'incendie" & "La fin de la guerre" (2015), "Procession du crepuscule" & "Melisande au rouet" (2021), "In fuga dai briganti" & "Volare sul Colombo" (2022), "Morning Jogging" & "Playful Goatlings" (2023), "Games and Fun (2024)
- Soon Hee Newbold (b. 1974): "American Landscape" (2006), "Angel City" (2025), "The Iliad" (2025)
- Greg Dombrowski (b. 1983): "Birth of a Hero" (2018), some of Heart of Darkness (2019), "Manifesto" & "Past in Flames" & "The Immortalist" (2020), "Reprise" (2020), "Born a Legend" & "To Boldly Go" (2021),
- Anthony Fiumara (b. 1968): "As I Opened Fire" (2014), "Here Comes Everybody" (2017)
- Jaz Coleman (b. 1960): Magna Invocatio (2018)
- Lino Guerreiro (b. 1977): "Maud'Adib" (2008), "Fanfare Overture" (2013), "Mazurkax" (2014), "al-Uqsur" (2015), Balkan (2019)
- Carlos Marques (b. 1973): "Artis Calambria" (2011)
- Carl Wittrock (b. 1966): "Lord Tullamore" (2001), "Journey of the Half Moon" (2017)
- Filippo Ledda (b. 1975): "Argon" (2018)
- Marcel Khalife (b. 1950): "Mare" (1998), Andalusian Suite for Oud and Orchestra (2002), Sharq (2007), Arabian Concerto (2008), "Achikain" (2016)
- Francois Rousselot (b. 1984): "New World Coming" & "The Lost World" & "World of Wonders" (2015), Live Epic Orchestra (2021), "Hope Is Reborn" & "Strat of Adventure" (2022), "Bird Flight" (2023), "Weigh Anchor" & "Raising the Sails" & "The Final Treasure" (2026)
- David Fanshawe (b. 1942): "Trafalgar" (2005), Pacific Song mvts 2, 3 (2007)
- Jim Papoulis (b. 1961): "Sing for Peace" (2004), "Can You Hear" (2005), "Oye" (2006), "Stand Together" (2008), "Kusimama" (2011), "Sililiza" (2012), "Juntos" (2013), "There Is Peace" (2015), "We Are the Voices" (2015), "Regalando Belleza" (2017), "Sing to Bring Us Together" (2018), "I Will Raise My Voice" (2019)
- Gu Guanren (b. 1942): Spring Suite mvts 2, 3, 5 (1979)
- Robert Davidson (b. 1965): From to Here (2020)
- Guido Lopez-Gavilan (b. 1944): "Camerata en Guaguanco" (1983), Por el Mar de las Antillas Anda un Violin mvt 3 (2003), "Ritmotiv" (2006)
- Lukas Hurnik (b. 1967): Variations on the Theme by Frank Zappa (2003)
- Conni Ellisor (b. 1953): Blackberry Winter mvts 1, 3 (1995), "The Littlest Star" (2000), Broad Band of Light (2012), Tres Danzas de Vida mvt 3 (2013), "The Bell Witch Dances" (2014)
- Iiro Rantala (b. 1970): "Pizzitaxi" (1990), "Topi" & "Final Fantasy" & "Tango Ouh" (1993), "Tango Dada" (1995), some of Sisu (1997), "Proko-type of Polka" & "Another Ragtime" (1998), Piano Concerto in G-Sharp Major / A-Flat Major mvt 3 (2002), "A Concert Tango" (2002), "Beba" & "Third Ball" (2005), Jouluoratorio "Intro" (2012), Veneziana (2023)
- Azael Tormo Munoz (b. 1966): "Malaguenya de Barxeta" (2018), "Escenas de Carnaval" (2024)
- Christiaan Janssen (b. 1974): "Impresiones de Estepona" (2024)
- Randall Standridge (b. 1976): "Choose Joy" (2022), "Groovitude" (2025)
- Timothy Shortell (b. 2002): "Onward" (2019), "Convergence" & "Shattered Destiny" (2020)
- Law Wai Lun (b. 1944): Prince Sang Nila Utama and Singa (2003), The Celestial Web (2003), Journey Through Taoyuan mvts 1,3 (2021)
- Philippe Geiss (b. 1961): "Medina" (2004), United Colors of Saxophones (2009), "Foxy Music" (by 2011), "Sax Heroes" (2011), "Sir Patrick" (2012), "Klezmer Salsa" (by 2012), "Zerbace" (2016), several other short pieces (years unknown)
- Francois Dompierre (b. 1943): Piano Concerto in A Major (1978), Les Diableries mvts 3, 5 (1979), "Celeste" (1988), "Maxime Theme" (1994), "Frenetique" (2012), "Partance" (2022)
- Wlodek Pawlik (b. 1958): "Let's All Go to Heaven" & "Magic Seven" (2009), some of Night in Calisia (2013), some of America (2015)
- Clint Needham (b. 1981): "Urban Sprawl" (2011), "Free Radicals" (2017)
- Plus the following composers for which I didn't "strongly like" any of their pieces I listened to: Leo Brouwer (b. 1939), Soren Hyldgaard (b. 1962), Efrem Podgaits (b. 1949), Karol Beffa (b. 1973), Fabien Waksman (b. 1980), Eric Tanguy (b. 1968), Robin Holloway (b. 1943), Peter Seabourne (b. 1950), Rick Sowash (b. 1950), Fabian Muller (b. 1964), Jerome Ducros (b. 1974), Kareem Roustom (b. 1971), John Estacio (b. 1966), Joep Franssens (b. 1955), Richard Galliano (b. 1950), Herman Beeftink (b. 1953), Lorenzo Palomo (b. 1938), Ian Clarke (b. 1964), Stephen Lias (b. 1966), Jeff Manookian (b. 1953), Gabriela Montero (b. 1970), Jukka Linkola (b. 1955), Ney Rosauro (b. 1952), Boris Pigovat (b. 1953), Bert Appermont (b. 1973), Ilya Demutsky (b. 1983), Paul Desenne (b. 1959), Gonzalo Grau (b. 1972), Franco Cesarini (b. 1961), Kassia (b. ~810), Alexander Comitas [Eduard de Boer] (b. 1957), Yared (b. 505), Kevin Lau (b. 1982), Jiang Kui (b. 1155), Wlad Marhulets (b. 1986), Ofer Ben-Amots (b. 1955), Paul Dresher (b. 1951), Valery Gavrilin (b. 1939), Ugis Praulins (b. 1957), Alla Pavlova (b. 1952), Esteban Benzecry (b. 1970), Kaoru Wada (b. 1962), Jose Elizondo (b. 1972), Jerod Impichchaachaaha' Tate (b. 1968), Paul Hart (b. 1945), Julian Cochran (b. 1974), Juan Pablo Contreras (b. 1987), Kalevi Aho (b. 1949), Joel Puckett (b. 1977), Tania Leon (b. 1943), Stamatis Spanoudakis (b. 1948), Thierry Deleruyelle (b. 1983), Fernando Velazquez (b. 1976), Arturo Rodriguez (b. 1976), Anton García Abril (b. 1933), Luis Serrano Alarcon (b. 1972), Enjott Schneider (b. 1950), Paul Carr (b. 1961), Kevin Houben (b. 1977), Addie Muljadi Sumaatmadja (b. 1959), Ryan Cayabyab (b. 1954), Ashenafi Kebede (b. 1938), Ahmad Pejman (b. 1935), Adil Bestybayev (b. 1959), Fred Onovwerosuoke (b. 1960), Narongrit Dhamabutra (b. 1962), Nkeiru Okoye (b. 1972), Justinian Tamusuza (b. 1951), Christian Onyeji (b. 1967), Vu Viet Anh (b. 1978), Nguyen Van Nam (b. 1932), Majid Entezami (b. 1948), Muammer Sun (b. 1932), Cetin Isikozlu (b. 1939), Dnu Huntrakul (b. 1950), Josefino "Chino" Toledo (b. 1959), Njane Mugambi (b. 197?), Shaka Marko (b. 2000), Francisco Zumaque (b. 1945), Jorge Pinzon (b. 1968), Victor Agudelo (b. 1979), Ali Osman (b. 1958), Salim Dada (b. 1975), Steve Dobrogosz (b. 1956), Luke Howard (b. 1978), Ante Grgin (b. 1945), Eleni Karaindrou (b. 1939), Ara Gevorgyan (b. 1960), Francesco Tristano (b. 1981), Leonid Desyatnikov (b. 1955), Osama Abdulrasol (b. 1968), Rahim AlHaj (b. 1967), Taro Iwashiro (b. 1965), Stacy Garrop (b. 1969), Marc-Andre Hamelin (b. 1961), Fernando Otero (b. 1972), Koichi Sugiyama (b. 1931), Robert Jager (b. 1939), Peeter Vahi (b. 1955), Bill Douglas (b. 1944), Alexander Peskanov (b. 1955), Paul Reade (b. 1943), Ma Shui-long (b. 1939), Aldemaro Romero (b. 1928), Murad Kazhlayev (b. 1931), Albert Schnelzer (b. 1972), Mike Mower (b. 1958), Tobias Brostrom (b. 1978), Eugen Doga (b. 1937), Erkki-Sven Tuur (b. 1959), Vincent Ho (b. 1975), Yasuhide Ito (b. 1960), Valerie Coleman (b. 1970), Enrico Chapela (b. 1974), Dan Visconti (b. 1982), Bernhard Gander (b. 1969), Gian Piero Reverberi (b. 1939), Stewart Copeland (b. 1952), Holly Harrison (b. 1988), Earl Maneein (b. 1976), David Wallace (b. 1970), Christian Kolonovits (b. 1952), Regis Campo (b. 1968), Richard Dubugnon (b. 1968), Gene Pritsker (b. 1971), B. Tommy Andersson (b. 1964), Go Shiina (b. 1974), Pierre Jalbert (b. 1925), Robert Paterson (b. 1970), Paul Stanhope (b. 1969), Rene Eespere (b. 1953), Hanna Kulenty (b. 1961), Mieczyslaw Weinberg (b. 1919), Arno Babajanian (b. 1921), Andrei Eshpai (b. 1925), Sulkhan Tsintsadze (b. 1925), Igor Frolov (b. 1937), Tikhon Khrennikov (b. 1913), Anatoly Lyadov (b. 1855), Blas Galindo (b. 1910), Boris Papandopulo (b. 1906), John White (b. 1936), York Bowen (b. 1884), Lars-Erik Larsson (b. 1908), Doreen Carwithen (b. 1922), Dag Wiren (b. 1905), Walter Piston (b. 1894), Radames Gnattali (b. 1906), Coleridge-Taylor Perkinson (b. 1932), Lera Auerbach (b. 1973), Dani Howard (b. 1993), Cheryl Frances-Hoad (b. 1980), Helen Grime (b. 1981), Caio Faco (b. 1992), Edward W. Hardy (b. 1992), Karin Rehnqvist (b. 1957), Kuzma Bodrov (b. 1980), Outi Tarkiainen (b. 1985), Augusta Read Thomas (b. 1964), George Benjamin (b. 1960), Mischa Zupko (b. 1971), Heather Schmidt (b. 1974), Uljas Pulkkis (b. 1975), Richard Prior (b. 1966), Wouter Lenaerts (b. 1981), Kevin Day (b. 1996), Bechara El-Khoury (b. 1957), Francisco Jose Martinez Gallego (b. 1969), Leszek Mozdzer (b. 1970), Chang Su Koh (b. 1970), Alexander Tchaikovsky (b. 1946), Christian Lindberg (b. 1958), Mikhail Bronner (b. 1952), Yo Goto (b. 1958), Andres Valero-Castells (b. 1973), Martin Romberg (b. 1978), Bob Chilcott (b. 1955), Krzysztof Herdzin (b. 1970), James Swearingen (b. 1947), Martin Bresnick (b. 1946), Torstein Aagaard-Nilsen (b. 1964), Ian Cusson (b. 1981), Ronaldo Miranda (b. 1948), Odaline de la Martinez (b. 1949), Jack Stamp (b. 1954), Anthony DiLorenzo (b. 1967), Andres Martin (b. 1981), Kow Otani (b. 1957), Tracy Silverman (b. 1960), Wang I-Yu (b. 1981), Peter Eotvos (b. 1944), Chris Thile (b. 1981), Jose Evangelista (b. 1943), Maxime Goulet (b. 1980), David Heath (b. 1958), Yosuke Fukuda (b. 1982), Gil Shohat (b. 1973), James Lee III (b. 1975), Ricardo Lorenz (b. 1961), Thierry Huillet (b. 1965), Sean O'Loughlin (b. 1972), Jake Runestad (b. 1986), Naji Hakim (b. 1955), David Rivas Domínguez (b. 1980), Nicola Campogrande (b. 1969), Eduardo Alonso-Crespo (b. 1956), Andrea Tarrodi (b.1981), Joe Cutler (b. 1968), Gordon Chin (b. 1957), Martín Palmeri (b. 1965), Thomas Hewitt Jones (b. 1984), Itaru Sakai (b. 1970), Elena Ruehr (b. 1963), Lorenzo Pusceddu (b. 1964), Joe Chindamo (b. 1961), Patrick Cassidy (b. 1956), Yasuharu Takanashi (b. 1963), Maximo Diego Pujol (b. 1957), Rihards Dubra (b. 1964), Stella Sung (b. 1959), Teo Aparicio-Barberán (b. 1967), John Harle (b. 1956), Gavin Higgins (b. 1983), Victoria Borisova-Ollas (b. 1969), Lev "Ljova" Zhurbin (b. 1978), Claudia Montero (b. 1962), Mikolaj Majkusiak (b. 1983), Rob Smith (b. 1968), Roshanne Etezady (b. 1973), Noizgenie (b. ????), Wings of Fates (b. 19??), Ruben Dario Gomez (b. 1973), Fritz Kreisler (b. 1875), Roberto Di Marino (b. 1956), Alexander L'Estrange (b. 1974), Nicholas Lens (b. 1957), Guillermo Lago (Willem van Merwijk) (b. 1960), Richard Einhorn (b. 1952), Dave Maric (b. 1970), Robert Honstein (b. 1980), Mikael Karlsson (b. 1975), Paul Halley (b. 1952), Hirokazu Fukushima (b. 1971), Carlos Pellicer (b. 1981), Ryan George (b. 1978), Armando Ghidoni (b. 1959), Eiji Suzuki (b. 1965), Richard Saucedo (b. 1957), Vivian Fung (b. 1975), Patrick Zimmerli (b. 1968), Gareth Glyn (b. 1951), Christopher Tyler Nickel (b. 1978), Aleksandar Simic (b. 1973), Wang Chenwei (b. 1988), Efrain Amaya (b. 1959), Veljo Tormis (b. 1930), Nikita Koshkin (B. 1956), Eduardo Gamboa (b. 1960), Hasan Niyazi Tura (b. 1982), Evencio Castellanos (b. 1915), Chung Yiu-Kwong (b. 1956), Anatoly Kalvarsky (b. 1934), John Carmichael (b. 1930), Vadim Bibergan (b. 1937), Charles Camilleri (b. 1931), Igor Andric (b. 1996), Qasim Naqvi (b. 1977), Milos Bok (b. 1968), Oguzhan Balci (b. 1977), Eduardo Angulo (b. 1954), Toshio Mashima (b. 1949), Tolibkhon Shakhidi (b. 1946), Andrey Rubtsov (b. 1982), Niels Marthinsen (b. 1963), Carlos Franzetti (b. 1948), Antti Martikainen (b. 1985), Jo Blankenburg (b. 1972), Jeroen D'hoe (b. 1968), Michael John Trotta (b. 1978), Hilarion Alfeyev (b. 1966), Filip Ceunen (b. 1983), Jesus Orielso Santiago Jacome (b. 1968), Juan Jose Ramírez Gomez (b. 196?), Nikola Resanovic (b. 1955), Yalil Guerra (b. 1973), Jaan Raats (b. 1932), Lior Navok (b. 1971), Alejandro Vinao (b. 1951), Gernot Wolfgang (b. 1957), Chris Pilsner (b. 1986), Jose Ignacio Blesa Lull (b. 1982), Mzilikazi Khumalo (b. 1932), Peter Louis van Dijk (b. 1953), Qinisela Sibisi (b. 1963), Santiago Quinto Serna (b. 1971), Jean-Pascal Beintus (b. 1966), Nicola Vicentino (b. 1511), Anthony Philip Heinrich (b. 1781), Claude T. Smith (b. 1932), Valery Saparov (b. 1947), Peng-Peng Gong (b. 1992), Thomas Enhco (b. 1988), Carlo Boccadoro (b. 1963), Eino Tamberg (b. 1930), He Zhanhao (b. 1933), Nikolai Rakov (b. 1908), William Mathias (b. 1934), Jesus Guridi (b. 1886), Edmundo Villani-Cortes (b. 1930), Alexei Machavariani (b. 1913), Yuzo Toyama (b. 1931), Jeno Hubay (b. 1858), Selim Palmgren (b. 1878), Charles de Beriot (b. 1802), Federico Moreno Torroba (b. 1891), Arthur Benjamin (b. 1893), Mark Isaacs (b. 1958), Ivan Torrent (b. 1978), Ryan Amon (b. 1978), Gerrit Wunder (b. 1978), Piet Swerts (b. 1960), Philip Harper (b. 1973), Ken Steven (b. 1993), Katerina Gimon (b. 1993), Paolo Ugoletti (b. 1956), Michael Schelle (b. 1950), Baptiste Trotignon (b. 1974), Penka Kouneva (b. 1967), Miguel Kertsman (b. 1965), Maciej Zielinski (b. 1971)
Rediscovered or revisited, and really liked:
- Yngwie Malmsteen: Rising Force (1984), "Trilogy Suite" (1986), "Leviathan" (1992), "Overture 1622" (1995), Concerto Suite for Electric Guitar and Orchestra (1998), some of Spellbound (2012), some of World on Fire (2016)
I also listened to a significant portion of the recorded works by each of the (not new-to-me) composers listed below.3 My favorites pieces from them (names linked to playlists) were:
- Richard Harvey (b. 1953): most of Concerto Antico (1995)
- Toshiyuki Honda (b. 1957): Metropolis "Metropolis" & "Run" (2001)
- Nicholas Britell (b. 1980): "Billie Jean King" & "Bobby Riggs" (2017), "The War in Afghanistan" & "The Iraq War Symphony" (2018), "Succession Main Theme" & "Strings con Fuoco" (2019), Don 't Look Up (2021)
- Tony Banks (b. 1950): "Blade" (2011)
- Volker Bertelmann (b. 1966): Drowning (2015), some of All Quiet on the Western Front (2022)
- Abel Korzeniowski (b. 1972): W.E. (2012), Romeo & Juliet (2013), some of Penny Dreadful (2014), "Wayward Sisters" (2016), "Ghost Waltz" (2016), "Maybe We Are Only Two People" (2021), some of Emily (2022)
- Ibrahim Maalouf (b. 1980): some of Diagnostic (2011), Levantine Symphony No. 1 (2018)
- Richard Addinsell (b. 1904): "Warsaw Concerto" (1941)
- Florent Ghys (b. 1979): "Hommage a Kevin Volans" (2007), "Phase parisienne" (2011), "Friday 3PM" & "Thursday Afternoon" (2016)
- Thomas Ades (b. 1971): Asyla mvt 3 (1997), Dante "The Thieves" & "The Ascent" (2020)
- Brian Tyler (b. 1972): "Iron Man 3" (2013), "Thor: The Dark World" & "Thor, Son of Odin" (2013), "Formula 1 Theme" (2018)
- Jean-Michel Blais (b. 1984): "Nostos" (2016), some of Aubades (2022)
- Poppy Ackroyd (b. 1982): "Light" (2018)
- Motoi Sakuraba (b. 1965): "Gwynevere, Princess of Sunlight" (2011), "Sinh, the Slumbering Dragon" (2014)
- Giacomo Puccini (b. 1858): "O mio babbino caro" (1918), "Nessun dorma" (1926)
- Tyondai Braxton (b. 1978): "The Violent Light Through Falling Shards" (2005), Central Market (2009)
- Basil Poledouris (b. 1945): some of Conan the Barbarian (1982), Sword and Sorcery Spectacular (1983), "Hymn to Red October" (1990), Quigley Down Under "Main Title" & "The Fight" (1990), "The Tradition of the Games" (1996)
- Plus the following composers for which I didn't "strongly like" any of their pieces I listened to: John Luther Adams (b. 1953), Somei Satoh (b. 1947), Jeroen van Veen (b. 1969), Lepo Sumera (b. 1950), Urmas Sisask (b. 1960), Orlando Gough (b. 1953), Tarik O'Regan (b. 1978), Sebastian Fagerlund (b. 1972), Christopher Cerrone (b. 1984), Jorg Widmann (b. 1973), Rick Wakeman (b. 1949), Laurie Anderson (b. 1947), Kelly-Marie Murphy (b. 1964), Esa-Pekka Salonen (b. 1958), Goran Bregovic (b. 1950), Steven Mackey (b. 1956), Krzysztof Penderecki (b. 1933), Michael Thomas Foumai (b. 1987), Jon Gibson (b. 1940), Charles Ives (b. 1874), Arthur Honegger (b. 1892), Frederick Delius (b. 1862), Fredrik Hogberg (b. 1971)
Movies/TV
Ones I "really liked" (no star), or "loved" (star):
- Various: It 's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, season 15 (2021)
- Various: The Great , season 1 (2020) ★
- Various: The Great , seasons 2-3 (2021-2023)
- Nash Edgerton: Mr. Inbetween , seasons 1-3 (2018-2021)
- Yorgos Lanthimos: Bugonia (2025) ★
- Drew Hancock: Companion (2025)
- Josh Safdie: Marty Supreme (2025) ★
- George Miller: Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024) ★
- Weronika Tofilska & Josephine Bornebusch: Baby Reindeer (2024)
- Tim Kirkby & Harry Bradbeer: Fleabag , seasons 1-2 (2016-2019)
- Nathan Fielder: The Rehearsal , seasons 1-2 (2022-2025) ★
- David Zellner & Nathan Zellner: The Curse (2024) ★
- John Wilson: How To with John Wilson , seasons 1-2 (2020-2021)
Games
All games I finished or decided to stop playing:
- [none]
Standup comedy
- Ricky Gervais: Humanity (2018), SuperNature (2022)
- Ronny Chieng: Asian Comedian Destroys America (2019)
- Tom Papa: You 're Doing Great (2020)
- Julia Sweeney: God Said Ha! (1995)
- Doug Stanhope: The Great White Stanhope (1998), Oslo: Burning the Bridge to Nowhere (2011)
- Joe List: This Year 's Material (2022)
- Romesh Ranganathan: Irrational (2016), The Cynic (2025)
- Ray Romano: Live at Carnegie Hall (2001)
- Ari Shaffir: America 's Sweetheart (2025)
- Dustin Nickerson: 30 Isn 't Old, But It Is Almost Old (2024)
- Michelle Wolf: Joke Show (2019)
- Phoebe Waller-Bridge: Fleabag (2019)
- Mike Birbiglia: My Girlfriend 's Boyfriend (2013)
- Louis CK: Oh My God (2013), Live at the Comedy Store (2015), Back to the Garden (2023)
- Nate Bargatze: The Greatest Average American (2021)
- Elon Gold: Chosen and Taken (2014)
- Ken Kirkman: Just Keep Livin? (2017)
- Patton Oswalt: No Reason to Complain (2004)
- Dan Soder: On the Road (2024)
- Dylan Moran: Monster (2004)
- Mark Normand: Still Got It (2014), Soup to Nuts (2023)
- Phil Hanley: Ooh La La (2022)
- Rachel Feinstein: Big Guy (2024)
- Nick Mullen: The Year of the Dragon (2023)
- Simon Amstell: Numb (2012)
- Ismo: Hello (2026)
Books
I post book ratings and reviews to my Goodreads account instead of here.
- A remix of Mozart's "Lacrimosa" from K. 626.
- The pieces I listened to for each composer were: Davis, Brouwer, Paus (plus a few film scores), Jusid (plus a few film scores), Martynov, Podgaits, Beffa, Waksman, Tanguy, Holloway, Seabourne, Sowash, Muller, Ducros, Roustom, Estacio, Franssens, Galliano, Beeftink, Palomo, Igudesman, Clarke, Peck, D'Addona, Aranda, Lias, Pearce, Manookian, Montero, Linkola, Rosauro, Pigovat, Breiner, Appermont, Merula, Demutsky, Hancock (plus several film/TV scores), Desenne, Freiberg, Grau, Cesarini, Kassia, Comitas, Yared, Lau, Jiang, Tjeknavorian, Marhulets, Glick, Ben-Amots, Dresher, Pina, Gavrilin, Kako (plus some TV/film scores and jazz albums), Praulins, Pavlova, Gelgotas, Benzecry, Wada (plus a few film/TV scores), Elizondo, Tate, Hart, Cochran, Contreras, Aho, Puckett, Leon, Debski (plus some film scores), Richter, Soler, Poelman, Mestrovic, Azarashvili, Spanoudakis, Kabardokov, Deleruyelle, Amano (plus several film/TV scores), Velazquez, Rodriguez, Abril (plus several film/TV scores), Alarcon, Schneider, Carr, Houben, Sumaatmadja, Cayabyab, Kebede, Pejman, Atilla, Bestybayev, Onovwerosuoke, Dhamabutra, Okoye, Tamusuza, Onyeji, Vu, Nguyen, Entezami (plus a few film scores), Sun, Isikozlu, Huntrakul, Toledo, Mugambi, Marko, Zumaque, Pinzon, Agudelo, Osman, Dada, Dobrogosz, Howard, Grgin, Karaindrou (plus lots more music for films and plays), Gevorgyan, Tristano, Arnesen, Desyatnikov, Abdulrasol, AlHaj, several film/TV/videogame scores by Iwashiro, Garrop, Hamelin, Otero, Rybnikov, all the Dragon Quest symphonic suites by Sugiyama, Jager, Vahi, Douglas, Mustonen, Peskanov, Reade, Ma, Romero, Kazhlayev, Cosma (plus several film/TV scores), Stafylakis, Roukens, Schnelzer, Mower, Lee, Bonney, Meijering, Brostrom, Scott, Doga (plus several film scores and Film Music Vols. 1-4), Tuur, Ho, Ito, Coleman, Chapela, Visconti, Gander, Reverberi, Copeland (plus a few film scores), Harrison, Maneein (plus a few metal albums), Wallace, Kolonovits, Campo, Dubugnon, Pritsker, Akhunov, Andersson, Batagov, Blake (plus several film scores), several film/TV/videogame scores by Shiina, Rabinovitch-Barakovsky, Jalbert, Helbig, Paterson, Stanhope, Kulenty, Weinberg, Babajanian, Eshpai, Tsintsadze, Akutagawa (plus several film scores), Frolov, Khrennikov, Lyadov, Galindo, Papandopulo, White, Bowen, Larsson, Carwithen (plus Film Music), Wiren, Piston, Gnattali, Perkinson, Auerbach, Howard, Frances-Hoad, Safaian, Grime, Faco, Hardy, Rehnqvist, Bodrov, Tarkiainen, Thomas, Benjamin, Kurth, Zupko, Schmidt, Pulkkis, Prior, Lenaerts, Kurbatov, Nazaykinskaya, Day, El-Khoury, Valencia, Martinez Gallego, Atakoglu, Szentpali, Mozdzer, Koh, A. Tchaikovsky, Lindberg, Bronner, Goto, Valero-Castells, Romberg, Chilcott, Allevi (plus a few albums of piano music), Herdzin, Swearingen, Azmeh, Bresnick, Aagaard-Nilsen, Flores, Cusson, Miranda, O. Martinez, Stamp, Taruya, DiLorenzo, Martin, Li, Silverman, several film/game soundtracks by Otani, Wang I-Yu, Eotvos, Thile, Carrara, Staniland, Evangelista, Goulet, Hylkila, Heath, Jarvi, Fukuda, Balakirev, Shohat, several albums by Warner, Lee, Lorenz, Huillet, O'Loughlin, Runestad, Hakim, Rivas Dominguez, Campogrande, Alonso-Crespo, Tarrodi, Cutler, Chin, Oscher, Wang Jianmin, Lopez-Gavilan, Palmeri, Jones, Ugurlu, Fang, Valor Llorens, Ruehr, Hirose, Mullor Grau, Pusceddu, several film scores by Keeravani, Pascual Vilaplana, Chindamo, Christl, Cassidy, Mangani, various soundtracks by Takanashi, Pujol, Galbraith, Dubra, Sung, Vitier, Aparicio-Barberán, Harle, Suñer-Oriola, Higgins, García i Soler, Borisova-Ollas, Amar (plus several film/TV scores), Stark, Deac, Zhurbin, Mertens, Montero, Majkusiak, Rob Smith, Etezady, Bednar, Noizgenie, Wings of Fates, Gomez, Kreisler, Marino, L'Estrange, Lens, Lago, Einhorn (plus a few film scores), Burki, Maric, Honstein, Karlsson, Halley, Fukushima, Batik, George, Ghidoni, Hamilton, Dobson, Suzuki, Saucedo, Chinesta, Fung, Zimmerli, Sigurosson (plus a few film scores and non-classical albums), Glyn, Nickel, Alyamani, Simic, Wang Chenwei, Amaya, Cervo, Corte-Real, Colomer, Kakhidze, Cupeiro, Tormis, Koshkin, Gamboa, Tura, Castellanos, Chung, Kalvarsky, Chen Gang, Carmichael, Bibergan, Camilleri, Dupertuis, Copley, Andric, Naqvi, Bok, Balci, Angulo, Tyzik, Mashima, Shakhidi, Molla Albero, Rubtsov, Ortolano, Marthinsen, Litvinovsky, Newbold, Franzetti, various albums by Martikainen, Blankenburg, Dombrowski, Fiumara, D'hoe, Trotta, Coleman, Alfeyev, Guerreiro, Marques, Wittrock, Ceunen, Santiago Jacome, Ramírez Gomez, Ledda, Resanovic, Guerra, Raats, Rousselot, Navok, Vinao, Wolfgang, Pilsner, Blesa Lull, Fanshawe, Papoulis, Gu, Khumalo, van Dijk, Sibisi, Quinto Serna, Beintus, Vicentino, Heinrich, Claude T. Smith, Davidson, Saparov, Lopez-Gavilan, Hurnik, Ellisor, Gong, Enhco, Boccadoro, Tamberg, Rantala (plus several jazz albums), He, Rakov, Mathias, Guridi, Villani-Cortes, Machavariani, Toyama, Hubay, Palmgren, Beriot, Moreno Torroba, Benjamin, Tormo Munoz, Isaacs, Janssen, Standridge, a few albums by Torrent, a few albums and film/videogame scores by Amon, Wunder, Shortell, Swerts, Harper, Steven, Gimon, Law, Ugoletti, Geiss, Schelle, Trotignon, Kouneva (plus some film/TV/videogame scores), Kertsman, Zielinski, Dompierre, Pawlik (plus a few jazz albums), Needham.
- The pieces I listened to for each composer were: Harvey (plus a few film/TV scores), Honda, Adams, several film/TV scores by Britell, Banks, Bertelmann (plus several film/TV scores and Hauschka albums), Satoh, Veen, several film/TV scores by Korzeniowski, Maalouf (plus several jazz and soundtrack albums), Sumera, Sisask, Addinsell (plus some film music), Gough, Ghys, O'Regan, Fagerlund, Cerrone, Widmann, Wakeman, Anderson, Murphy, Tyler, Salonen, Bregovic (plus several film scores and a few other albums), Blais, Ackroyd, several videogame soundtracks by Sakuraba, Mackey, Puccini, Penderecki, Foumai, Gibson, Ives, Braxton, Honegger, Delius, Hogberg.
-
🔗 r/Yorkshire I took many photos on my trip there last year but this is the one I find myself returning to the most rss
| Take a guess where! Also thought I’d add a photo of a rather charming fellow I encountered submitted by /u/one-tea27
[link] [comments]
---|--- -
🔗 r/reverseengineering I wrote a custom decompiler for the bytecode used by Naughty Dog in the The Last of Us & Uncharted games rss
submitted by /u/CMDR_DeepQuantum
[link] [comments] -
🔗 backnotprop/plannotator v0.16.3 release
Follow @plannotator on X for updates
Missed recent releases? Release | Highlights
---|---
v0.16.2 | Draggable comment popovers, cross-file annotation visibility, custom diff fonts, OpenCode verbose log fix
v0.16.1 | SSE stream idle timeout fix for external annotations API
v0.16.0 | GitHub Copilot CLI, external annotations API, bot callback URLs, interactive checkboxes, print support, diff display options
v0.15.5 | Custom display names, GitHub viewed file sync, expand/collapse all in file tree, search performance, WSL fix
v0.15.2 | Compound Planning skill, folder annotation,/plannotator-archiveslash command, skill installation via platform installers
v0.15.0 | Live AI chat in code review, plan archive browser, folder file viewer, resizable split pane, Pi full feature parity
v0.14.5 | GitLab merge request review, login page image fix, Windows install path fix
v0.14.4 | GitHub review submission, repo identifier in tab title, nested code fence parser fix, Pi paste URL wiring
v0.14.3 | PR context panel, diff search in code review, OpenCode permission normalization, landing page redesign
v0.14.2 | OpenCode plan mode prompt replacement, Windows non-ASCII path fix, Pi link fix
v0.14.1 | Single submit_plan with auto-detect, viewed-file draft persistence, Bear nested tag fix
What's New in v0.16.3
v0.16.3 brings Pi phase configuration, a CLI help message, and two code review fixes that address missing untracked files when the agent runs from a subdirectory and scroll position persisting across file switches. 4 PRs, 3 from external contributors, 2 first-timers.
Pi Phase Configuration
Pi users can now customize Plannotator's phase behavior (model, tools, prompt) through configuration files. Phase settings can be defined in a project-level
plannotator.json, in.pi/agent, or globally in~/.pi/agent. This lets you tailor Plannotator's planning workflow per project or globally without modifying the extension itself.CLI Help and No-Arg Usage
Running
plannotatordirectly in a terminal with no arguments previously hung waiting for stdin, giving no indication of what it expected. Now it prints a short clarification message and exits.plannotator --helpshows a top-level usage message listing available subcommands. The existing hook contract (stdin-fed JSON from Claude Code) is unchanged.- Authored by @foxytanuki in #448, closing #447
Untracked File Discovery Fix
When an agent's working directory was a subdirectory of the repo (e.g., after
cd packages/foo/),git ls-files --otherswould only find untracked files within that subtree, silently dropping files elsewhere in the repo. Paths in the diff output were also CWD-relative instead of root-relative, causing mismatches with tracked file diffs. The fix resolves the repo root and uses it as the CWD for bothgit ls-filesandgit diff --no-index. A regression test verifies the fix from a subdirectory.Additional Changes
- Review scroll reset. The code review diff viewport now resets to the top-left when switching files, instead of preserving the scroll position from the previous file (#452, closing #451 reported by @UberMouse)
Install / Update
macOS / Linux:
curl -fsSL https://plannotator.ai/install.sh | bashWindows:
irm https://plannotator.ai/install.ps1 | iexClaude Code Plugin: Run
/pluginin Claude Code, find plannotator , and click "Update now".Copilot CLI:
/plugin marketplace add backnotprop/plannotator /plugin install plannotator-copilot@plannotatorOpenCode: Clear cache and restart:
rm -rf ~/.bun/install/cache/@plannotatorThen in
opencode.json:{ "plugin": ["@plannotator/opencode@latest"] }Pi: Install or update the extension:
pi install npm:@plannotator/pi-extension
What's Changed
- feat(pi): support phase config files by @stk-code in #446
- cli: clarify no-arg usage and add top-level help by @foxytanuki in #448
- fix(review): resolve repo root for untracked file discovery by @blimmer in #450
- fix(review): reset scroll on file switch by @backnotprop in #452
New Contributors
Contributors
@stk-code contributed Pi phase configuration support (#446), bringing per-project customization to the Pi extension.
@foxytanuki returned for a second contribution with the CLI help message (#448), after the SSE timeout fix in v0.16.1.
@blimmer identified and fixed the untracked file discovery bug (#449, #450), including a regression test. First contribution.
@UberMouse reported the scroll position issue in code review (#451).
Full Changelog :
v0.16.2...v0.16.3 -
🔗 r/reverseengineering Chinese Security Reverse Engineered - Trust Decision Solver (Popmart) rss
submitted by /u/Electrical-Flight570
[link] [comments] -
🔗 r/Yorkshire Inspiration exhibition train’s final tour dates announced. With Hull & Scarborough dates. The latter would be the final one rss
| submitted by /u/CaptainYorkie1
[link] [comments]
---|--- -
🔗 anthropics/claude-code v2.1.89 release
What's changed
- Added
"defer"permission decision toPreToolUsehooks — headless sessions can pause at a tool call and resume with-p --resumeto have the hook re-evaluate - Added
CLAUDE_CODE_NO_FLICKER=1environment variable to opt into flicker-free alt-screen rendering with virtualized scrollback - Added
PermissionDeniedhook that fires after auto mode classifier denials — return{retry: true}to tell the model it can retry - Added named subagents to
@mention typeahead suggestions - Added
MCP_CONNECTION_NONBLOCKING=truefor-pmode to skip the MCP connection wait entirely, and bounded--mcp-configserver connections at 5s instead of blocking on the slowest server - Auto mode: denied commands now show a notification and appear in
/permissions→ Recent tab where you can retry withr - Fixed
Edit(//path/**)andRead(//path/**)allow rules to check the resolved symlink target, not just the requested path - Fixed voice push-to-talk not activating for some modifier-combo bindings, and voice mode on Windows failing with "WebSocket upgrade rejected with HTTP 101"
- Fixed Edit/Write tools doubling CRLF on Windows and stripping Markdown hard line breaks (two trailing spaces)
- Fixed
StructuredOutputschema cache bug causing ~50% failure rate when using multiple schemas - Fixed memory leak where large JSON inputs were retained as LRU cache keys in long-running sessions
- Fixed a crash when removing a message from very large session files (over 50MB)
- Fixed LSP server zombie state after crash — server now restarts on next request instead of failing until session restart
- Fixed prompt history entries containing CJK or emoji being silently dropped when they fall on a 4KB boundary in
~/.claude/history.jsonl - Fixed
/statsundercounting tokens by excluding subagent usage, and losing historical data beyond 30 days when the stats cache format changes - Fixed
-p --resumehangs when the deferred tool input exceeds 64KB or no deferred marker exists, and-p --continuenot resuming deferred tools - Fixed
claude-cli://deep links not opening on macOS - Fixed MCP tool errors truncating to only the first content block when the server returns multi-element error content
- Fixed skill reminders and other system context being dropped when sending messages with images via the SDK
- Fixed PreToolUse/PostToolUse hooks to receive
file_pathas an absolute path for Write/Edit/Read tools, matching the documented behavior - Fixed autocompact thrash loop — now detects when context refills to the limit immediately after compacting three times in a row and stops with an actionable error instead of burning API calls
- Fixed prompt cache misses in long sessions caused by tool schema bytes changing mid-session
- Fixed nested CLAUDE.md files being re-injected dozens of times in long sessions that read many files
- Fixed
--resumecrash when transcript contains a tool result from an older CLI version or interrupted write - Fixed misleading "Rate limit reached" message when the API returned an entitlement error — now shows the actual error with actionable hints
- Fixed hooks
ifcondition filtering not matching compound commands (ls && git push) or commands with env-var prefixes (FOO=bar git push) - Fixed collapsed search/read group badges duplicating in terminal scrollback during heavy parallel tool use
- Fixed notification
invalidatesnot clearing the currently-displayed notification immediately - Fixed prompt briefly disappearing after submit when background messages arrived during processing
- Fixed Devanagari and other combining-mark text being truncated in assistant output
- Fixed rendering artifacts on main-screen terminals after layout shifts
- Fixed voice mode failing to request microphone permission on macOS Apple Silicon
- Fixed Shift+Enter submitting instead of inserting a newline on Windows Terminal Preview 1.25
- Fixed periodic UI jitter during streaming in iTerm2 when running inside tmux
- Fixed PowerShell tool incorrectly reporting failures when commands like
git pushwrote progress to stderr on Windows PowerShell 5.1 - Fixed a potential out-of-memory crash when the Edit tool was used on very large files (>1 GiB)
- Improved collapsed tool summary to show "Listed N directories" for
ls/tree/duinstead of "Read N files" - Improved Bash tool to warn when a formatter/linter command modifies files you have previously read, preventing stale-edit errors
- Improved
@-mention typeahead to rank source files above MCP resources with similar names - Improved PowerShell tool prompt with version-appropriate syntax guidance (5.1 vs 7+)
- Changed
Editto work on files viewed viaBashwithsed -norcat, without requiring a separateReadcall first - Changed hook output over 50K characters to be saved to disk with a file path + preview instead of being injected directly into context
- Changed
cleanupPeriodDays: 0in settings.json to be rejected with a validation error — it previously silently disabled transcript persistence - Changed thinking summaries to no longer be generated by default in interactive sessions — set
showThinkingSummaries: truein settings.json to restore - Documented
TaskCreatedhook event and its blocking behavior - Preserved task notifications when backgrounding a running command with Ctrl+B
- PowerShell tool on Windows: external-command arguments containing both a double-quote and whitespace now prompt instead of auto-allowing (PS 5.1 argument-splitting hardening)
/envnow applies to PowerShell tool commands (previously only affected Bash)/usagenow hides redundant "Current week (Sonnet only)" bar for Pro and Enterprise plans- Image paste no longer inserts a trailing space
- Pasting
!commandinto an empty prompt now enters bash mode, matching typed!behavior /buddyis here for April 1st — hatch a small creature that watches you code
- Added
-
🔗 jellyfin/jellyfin 10.11.7 release
🚀 Jellyfin Server 10.11.7
We are pleased to announce the latest stable release of Jellyfin, version 10.11.7! This minor release brings several bugfixes to improve your Jellyfin experience. As always, please ensure you take a full backup before upgrading!
WARNING : This release contains several extremely important security fixes. These vulnerabilities will be disclosed in 14 days as per our security policy. Users of all versions prior to 10.11.7 are advised to upgrade immediately.
You can find more details about and discuss this release on our forums.
Changelog (29)
🔒 Security
- Fix for GHSA-j2hf-x4q5-47j3, by @Shadowghost
- Fix for GHSA-8fw7-f233-ffr8, by @Shadowghost
- Fix for GHSA-v2jv-54xj-h76w, by @Shadowghost
- Fix for GHSA-jh22-fw8w-2v9x, by @Shadowghost
📈 General Changes
- Fix CA1810 build error [PR #16522], by @Bond-009
- Fix Null was not checked before using the H264 profile [PR #16519], by @nyanmisaka
- Remove -copyts and add -flush_packets 1 to subtitle extraction [PR #16440], by @Molier
- Fix lint issue [PR #16514], by @theguymadmax
- Fix nullref ex in font handling [PR #16369], by @Bond-009
- Fix restore backup metadata location [PR #16425], by @theguymadmax
- Fix NFO saver using wrong provider ID for collectionnumber [PR #16449], by @theguymadmax
- Fix readrate options in FFmpeg 8.1 [PR #16423], by @nyanmisaka
- Apply analyzeduration and probesize for subtitle streams to improve codec parameter detection [PR #16293], by @IceStormNG
- Fix filter detection in FFmpeg 8.1 [PR #16392], by @nyanmisaka
- Fix subtitle extraction caching empty files [PR #16257], by @lowbit
- Fix hls segment length adjustment for remuxed content [PR #16341], by @crimsonspecter
- Fix broken library subtitle download settings [PR #16204], by @MBR-0001
- Checkpoint WAL before moving library.db in migration [PR #16253], by @theguymadmax
- Fix nullref in Season.GetEpisodes when the season is detached from a series [PR #16150], by @dfederm
- Reattach user data after item removal during library scan [PR #16227], by @dfederm
- Deduplicate provider IDs during MigrateLibraryDb migration [PR #16226], by @dfederm
- Skip image checks for empty folders [PR #16231], by @theguymadmax
- Fix TMDB image URLs missing size parameter [PR #16116], by @saltpi
- Fix random sort returning duplicate items [PR #16098], by @theguymadmax
- Fix SessionInfoWebSocketListener not using SessionInfoDto [PR #16109], by @nielsvanvelzen
- Fix HLS playlist generation for transcodes with fractional framerate [PR #16053], by @IceStormNG
- Rehydrate cached UserData after reattachment [PR #16071], by @MarcoCoreDuo
- Fix TMDB crew department mapping [PR #16066], by @theguymadmax
- Revert hidden directory ignore pattern [PR #16077], by @theguymadmax
-
🔗 r/reverseengineering Community RecRoom server emulation project rss
submitted by /u/CamelSmall7104
[link] [comments]
-
- March 31, 2026
-
🔗 IDA Plugin Updates IDA Plugin Updates on 2026-03-31 rss
IDA Plugin Updates on 2026-03-31
Activity:
- capa
- d9b05ed5: Sync capa rules submodule
- chernobog
- d0f2b306: docs: Add proper credits and LICENSE for ida-cmake
- DeepExtractIDA
- 20f87f03: Fix decompilation failure sentinel filtering and add ASM output gener…
- Greffe
- 032bd1da: Merge pull request #49 from Lixhr/46-patch-replace-the-target-with-a-…
- e325fa88: Patched target instrs
- 64713e21: Merge pull request #45 from Lixhr/44-core-compute-the-patched-branchs…
- 5b7141de: Add and check the overwriting branch
- 73ac97cf: Modify context to keep raw bytes instead of ascii hex
- bfdf7236: Set trampolines adresses
- 23fccfda: Set trampolines adresses
- 958e5258: Create the StubFactory related to its target
- 492b0bb6: Delete the target if an error occurs
- 3415b846: Clean add mechanism, add subfactory to each target
- 33df9056: Use shared_ptr on StubsFactory::create
- af93f7b6: Set patch_base on program's start
- a80df7c2: Set patch_base at start
- 1ef8682c: Delete old patch logic
- 6e7c6246: Use the same helper on add and add_direct
- f1c89029: Deleted old logic
- aaf96d00: Save before breaking change
- 9e68e300: Update readme
- f4b13803: TEST: Support multiple tests batch
- IDAPluginList
- 3670d1b7: chore: Auto update IDA plugins (Updated: 19, Cloned: 0, Failed: 0)
- capa
-
🔗 jellyfin/jellyfin 10.11.1 release
🚀 Jellyfin Server 10.11.1
We are pleased to announce the latest stable release of Jellyfin, version 10.11.1!
This minor release brings several bugfixes to improve your Jellyfin experience.
As always, please ensure you stop your Jellyfin server and take a full backup before upgrading!
You can find more details about and discuss this release on our forums.
Changelog (26)
📈 General Changes
- Improve symlink handling [PR #15209], by @Shadowghost
- Fix pagination and sorting for folders [PR #15187], by @Shadowghost
- Update dependency z440.atl.core to 7.6.0 [PR #15225], by @Bond-009
- Add season number fallback for OMDB and TMDB plugins [PR #15113], by @ivanjx
- Skip invalid database migration [PR #15212], by @crobibero
- Skip directory entry when restoring from backup [PR #15196], by @crobibero
- Skip extracted files in migration if bad timestamp or no access [PR #15220], by @JJBlue
- Normalize paths in database queries [PR #15217], by @theguymadmax
- Only save chapters that are within the runtime of the video file [PR #15176], by @CeruleanRed
- Filter plugins by id instead of name [PR #15197], by @crobibero
- Play selected song first with instant mix [PR #15133], by @theguymadmax
- Fix Has(Imdb/Tmdb/Tvdb)Id checks [PR #15126], by @MBR-0001
- Skip extracted files in migration if bad timestamp or no access [PR #15112], by @Shadowghost
- Clean up BackupService [PR #15170], by @crobibero
- Initialize transcode marker during startup [PR #15194], by @crobibero
- Make priority class setting more robust [PR #15177], by @gnattu
- Lower required tmp dir size to 512MiB [PR #15098], by @Bond-009
- Fix XmlOutputFormatter [PR #15164], by @crobibero
- Make season paths case-insensitive [PR #15102], by @theguymadmax
- Fix LiveTV images not saving to database [PR #15083], by @theguymadmax
- Speed-up trickplay migration [PR #15054], by @Shadowghost
- Optimize WhereReferencedItemMultipleTypes filtering [PR #15087], by @theguymadmax
- Fix videos with cropping metadata are probed as anamorphic [PR #15144], by @nyanmisaka
- Reject stream copy of HDR10+ video if the client does not support HDR10 [PR #15072], by @nyanmisaka
- Log the message more clear when network manager is not ready [PR #15055], by @gnattu
- Skip invalid keyframe cache data [PR #15032], by @Shadowghost
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🔗 navidrome/navidrome v0.61.0 release
This version brings a comprehensive Artwork overhaul , with per-disc cover art, artist image uploads, animated image preservation, and a faster image pipeline powered by WebP encoding. You can now upload custom artwork for playlists, artists, and internet radios directly from the UI, and multi-disc albums will automatically pick up disc-specific cover images.
Search has been completely rebuilt on top of SQLite FTS5 with two-phase BM25 ranking, delivering faster and more accurate results across your entire library.
Transcoding is now fully server-managed: Navidrome detects client codecs, applies format-aware bitrate defaults, and implements the OpenSubsonic Transcoding extension, so clients no longer need to guess what format to request.
The Plugin System continues to mature with new host services for HTTP requests, persistent task queues, lyrics providers, and key-value storage with TTL support, giving plugin developers more tools to build powerful integrations.
Security
- Bump
golang.org/x/imageto v0.38.0 to address CVE-2026-33809. (#5268) - Add ownership checks to share Delete and Update operations, preventing unauthorized access to other users' shares. (#5189 by @deluan)
- Clear server-managed fields in savePlaylist to prevent field injection via REST API. (f102036dc by @deluan)
⚠️ Breaking Changes
- Remove built-in Spotify integration. The
Spotify.IDandSpotify.Secretconfiguration options are no longer supported. Use the Last.fm or Deezer agents, or a plugin for similar functionality, like the new Apple Music Plugin. (#5197 by @deluan)
Configuration Changes
Status | Option | Description | Default
---|---|---|---
New |EnableArtworkUpload| Enable uploading custom artwork for playlists and artists. (#5110, #5198) |true
New |EnableM3UExternalAlbumArt| Enable fetching album art URLs from#EXTALBUMARTURLdirectives in M3U playlists. (#5131) |false
New |DiscArtPriority| Priority list for disc-level cover art sources. (#5182) |disc*.*, cd*.*, cover.*, folder.*, front.*, discsubtitle, embedded
New |ArtistImageFolder| Folder name to search for artist images within the library. (#5198) | —
New |Search.Backend| Search backend to use (ftsfor FTS5 full-text search). (#5079) |fts
New |ExtAuth.LogoutURL| URL to redirect to when logging out with external authentication. (#5074) |""
New |Subsonic.AppendAlbumVersion| Append album version/edition to album names in Subsonic API responses. (#5111) |true
New |UISearchDebounceMs| Debounce delay for the UI search field. (#5079) | —
Changed |CoverJpegQuality→CoverArtQuality| Renamed for clarity. Old name still works. (#5181) |75
CHanged |SearchFullString| UseSearch.FullStringinstead. (#5079) | —
Removed |Spotify.ID,Spotify.Secret| Spotify integration has been removed. (#5197) | —For a complete list of all configuration options, see the Configuration Options documentation.
Artwork
- Add per-disc cover art support, with configurable
DiscArtPriority. (#5182 by @deluan) - Add artist image uploads and image-folder artwork source. (#5198 by @deluan)
- Preserve animated image artwork (GIF, APNG, animated WebP) during resize. (#5184 by @deluan)
- Improve image serving performance with WebP encoding and optimized pipeline. (#5181 by @deluan)
- Increase cover art size to 600px and use CatmullRom scaling for sharper images. (cb396f3db by @deluan)
- Fallback mediafile cover art to disc artwork before album. (#5216 by @deluan)
- Refresh stale artist image URLs on expiry. (#5267 by @deluan)
- Validate ffmpeg pipe before returning in cover art fallback. (420d2c8e5 by @deluan)
- Search parent folders for album cover art in multi-disc layouts. (#5157 by @deluan)
UI
- Add custom playlist cover art upload. (#5110 by @adrbn)
- Add cover art support for internet radio stations. (#5229 by @deluan)
- Add Dracula theme. (#5023 by @Saulimedes)
- Add Nutball theme. (#4544 by @cafecitopuro)
- Add tooltips for long playlist and album names. (#5070 by @sfredo)
- Add download link for config TOML and disable clipboard copy when unavailable. (#5035 by @kgarner7)
- Add
pathfield as optional column in library list for desktop view. (4e34d3ac1 by @deluan) - Integrate server-managed transcoding decisions into web player. (#5155 by @deluan)
- Improve browser codec detection. (#5171 by @deluan)
- Allow
DefaultTheme="Auto"from config. (#5190 by @trek-e) - Fix search focus after clearing search field. (#4932 by @borisrorsvort)
- Fix "Play Next" from restarting playback at top of queue. (#5049 by @alannnna)
- Fix toggle switches not visible in Gruvbox Dark theme. (#5064 by @deluan)
- Fix delete button contrast in AMusic theme. (51c48bcac by @deluan)
- Cancel in-flight image requests on pagination, cache across remounts. (#5249 by @deluan)
- Prevent mobile touch events from triggering playback after lightbox close. (197d357f0 by @deluan)
- Prevent duplicate getCoverArt requests on artist page. (549b81263 by @deluan)
Search
- Implement FTS5-based full-text search for faster and more accurate results. (#5079 by @deluan)
- Improve FTS queries with two-phase BM25 ranking for Subsonic's
search3endpoint. (#5086 by @deluan)
Transcoding
- Implement server-managed transcoding. (#4990 by @deluan)
- Add player MaxBitRate cap, format-aware defaults, and browser profile filtering. (#5165 by @deluan)
- Improve transcoding failure diagnostics and error responses. (#5227 by @deluan)
- Use ADTS for AAC transcoding. (#5167 by @deluan)
- Implement fallback to DefaultDownsamplingFormat for unknown formats. (5ecbe31a0 by @deluan)
- Prevent raw file being returned when explicit transcode format is requested. (053a0fd6c by @deluan)
Subsonic API
- Implement OpenSubsonic
transcodingextension. (#4990 by @deluan) - Append album version to names in Subsonic API responses. (#5111 by @deluan)
- Add coverArt to internetRadioStation response. (03608d3ee by @deluan)
- Add per-disc cover art support. (#5182 by @deluan)
- Never omit duration for AlbumID3. (#5217 by @kgarner7)
- Always return required playqueue fields. (#5172 by @kgarner7)
- Always include mandatory title field in Child responses. (a887521d7 by @deluan)
- Restore
publicattribute for playlists in XML responses. (0c3cc8653 by @deluan)
Scanner
- Add MKA/Matroska audio file support via TagLib 2.2. (#5071 by @deluan)
- Exclude Vorbis VERSION from albumversion tag mapping. (#5194 by @trek-e)
- Widen WASM panic recovery to cover tag/property reading. (#5223 by @deluan)
- Prevent duplicate tracks when multiple missing files match same target. (#5183 by @deluan)
- Prevent ScanOnStartup when scanner is disabled. (1cf3fd916 by @deluan)
- Increase watcher channel buffers to prevent dropped filesystem events. (0790f6662 by @deluan)
Playlists / Smart Playlists
- Support
#EXTALBUMARTURLdirective and sidecar images for playlist cover art. (#5131 by @deluan) - Add percentage-based limits to smart playlists. (#5144 by @deluan)
- Make album and artist fields available to smart playlist queries. (#4927 by @ulfurinn)
- Add
averageRatingas a smart playlist field. (#5092 by @Lokke)
Server
- Add ExtAuth logout URL configuration. (#5074 by @deluan)
- Accept
ND_-prefixed environment variable names in config files. (#5258 by @deluan) - Add syslog priority prefixes for systemd-journald. (#5192 by @trek-e)
- Require additional variable to enable systemd logging. (#5222 by @kgarner7)
- Add crontab(5) random
~syntax support for schedule expressions. (#5233 by @deluan) - Preserve
created_atwhen moving songs between libraries. (#5055 by @deluan) - Increase SSE writeTimeout to exceed keepAlive period. (#5054 by @rcatolino)
- Use
http.TimeFormatfor Last-Modified header. (#5219 by @SimonTeixidor) - Return correct scanType in startScan response. (#5159 by @deluan)
- Return 404 instead of 500 for non-existent playlists. (b64d8ad33 by @deluan)
- Normalize timestamps and fix recently added album sorting. (#5176 by @deluan)
Plugins
- Add HTTP host service for plugin HTTP requests. (#5095 by @deluan)
- Add TaskQueue host service for persistent background task queues. (#5116 by @deluan)
- Add lyrics provider plugin capability. (#5126 by @deluan)
- Add TTL support, batch operations, and hardening to kvstore. (#5127 by @deluan)
- Allow mounting library directories as read-write. (#5122 by @deluan)
- Change websockets Data field type to
[]bytefor binary support. (6fd044fb0 by @deluan) - Clear plugin errors on startup to allow retrying. (27a83547f by @deluan)
Translations
- Add Slovak language translation. (#5231 by @JRoshthen1)
- Update Chinese Simplified translation. (#5025 by @fxj368)
- Update Basque translation. (#5038 by @xabirequejo)
- Update Hungarian translation. (#5041, #5263 by @ChekeredList71)
- Update Bulgarian, Catalan, Danish, German, Greek, Spanish, Finnish, French, Galician, Portuguese (BR), Russian, Slovenian, Swedish, Thai, Ukrainian, Chinese (Traditional) translations. (#5044, #5039, #5218, #5260)
New Contributors
- @cafecitopuro made their first contribution in #4544
- @Saulimedes made their first contribution in #5023
- @fxj368 made their first contribution in #5025
- @rcatolino made their first contribution in #5054
- @sfredo made their first contribution in #5070
- @adrbn made their first contribution in #5110
- @trek-e made their first contribution in #5190
- @SimonTeixidor made their first contribution in #5219
- @JRoshthen1 made their first contribution in #5231
Full Changelog :
v0.60.3...v0.61.0Helping out
This release is only possible thanks to the support of some awesome people!
Want to be one of them?
You can sponsor, pay me a Ko- fi, or contribute with code.Where to go next?
- Bump
-
🔗 r/Leeds Geese on the canal near kirkstall rss
There are these two beautiful geese on the canal at the moment, Greylag goose - the ones with the orange peaks.
I always tend to pass them round the kirkstall/start of town area of the canal
One of them seems to hate me and keeps hissing at me and chasing me on my bike, is this happening to anyone else? or does this goose just hate me 🥲
I don't know what I've done to piss this goose off but I love him and I didn't know that my 30s would be me being scared of cycling on the canal because of geese 😂
submitted by /u/CommunicationOdd3471
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🔗 r/york Beautiful sunset today rss
| submitted by /u/silvergal81
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🔗 r/york I want to visit York and can anyone tell me where can I park my motorcycle safely? rss
submitted by /u/Odd_Consequence_3574
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Claude Code's source just leaked — I extracted its multi-agent orchestration system into an open-source framework that works with any LLM rss
By now you've probably seen the news: Claude Code's full source code was exposed via source maps. 500K+ lines of TypeScript — the query engine, tool system, coordinator mode, team management, all of it.
I studied the architecture, focused on the multi-agent orchestration layer — the coordinator that breaks goals into tasks, the team system, the message bus, the task scheduler with dependency resolution — and re-implemented these patterns from scratch as a standalone open-source framework.
The result is open-multi-agent. No code was copied — it's a clean re- implementation of the design patterns. Model-agnostic — works with Claude and OpenAI in the same team.
What the architecture reveals → what open-multi-agent implements:
- Coordinator pattern → auto-decompose a goal into tasks and assign to agents
- Team / sub-agent pattern → MessageBus + SharedMemory for inter-agent communication
- Task scheduling → TaskQueue with topological dependency resolution
- Conversation loop → AgentRunner (the model → tool → model turn cycle)
- Tool definition → defineTool() with Zod schema validation
Unlike claude-agent-sdk which spawns a CLI process per agent, this runs entirely in-process. Deploy anywhere — serverless, Docker, CI/CD.
MIT licensed, TypeScript, ~8000 lines.
GitHub: https://github.com/JackChen-me/open-multi-agent
submitted by /u/JackChen02
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🔗 r/Yorkshire East coast residents encouraged to get involved in £20m regeneration efforts rss
| submitted by /u/willfiresoon
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🔗 sacha chua :: living an awesome life Thinking about Emacs coaching goals with Prot rss
I want to get better at learning with other people's help, so I'm going to experiment with engaging Prot as an Emacs coach. Our first session is this week. Time to lay the groundwork!
If I meet with Prot twice a month for three months, that's a budget of €60 (~CAD 100), which is a reasonable size for an experiment especially since I still have the budget set aside from the Google Open Source Peer Bonus and lovely folks already donated to cover the costs for EmacsConf. When I schedule something with someone, the accountability makes it easier to get stuff done and out the door. For this, a real person is much better than AI because:
- I get to take advantage of Prot's very large context window, and he knows stuff about the Emacs, the community, and me that I might not remember to mention
- He can ask real questions and prod at things that are unclear or contradictory, unlike the confirmation bias of LLMs
- He might point out things that wouldn't occur to me to ask about
- It triggers my "I promised someone I'd do this" thing
- I get to support an individual worth supporting rather than contributing to the concentration of wealth and information in for-profit entities
My motivations:
I want to make better use of my focused time during the rest of the schoolyear. For the next three months, my schedule will be fairly predictable and I'll have regular chunks of focused time. Over the past two months, I've averaged around 10 hours of Emacs-related stuff per week (including 1.5 hours or so for Emacs News). I'm currently thinking about language learning and speech input. EmacsConf is on the horizon and will probably ramp up after September, but I can also think ahead of workflow improvements or ways to collaborate with other people. I might put together an Emacs News Highlights presentation. Also, I'm always looking out for ways to build the community.
Summer break during July and August will shake things up again, but I might be able to find some focused time early morning or evening. I'd like to be in a good position to make the most of those time fragments.
- I want to improve my Emacs Lisp development workflow and learn more about libraries and techniques that might be useful. I'm beginning to have more time to sharpen the saw and I'm curious about all the cool stuff that I missed or skimmed over the past ten years. What are some useful setups for completion, debugging, navigation, etc.?
- Current: I sporadically use the extra awesomeness in seq, pcase, lispy, erefactor, ert, buttercup, and undercover, but not consistently. I'd like to reduce the friction and make these habitual.
- Areas of friction / improvement:
- writing tests, especially for things that are more interactive
- navigating code that might be scattered in literate config files or in Emacs Lisp files
- forgetting to restart or to make sure all code is saved; running tests via Emacs batch mode will help, as will
package-isolateandrestart-emacs
- I want to improve my workflows for writing, making videos, and streaming. If I get better at sharing what I'm working on, I might be able to connect with more people and bounce ideas around. Also, accountability might help me nudge this over the threshold. I probably still need to work in stops and starts, so I want to reduce the friction. I'm curious about other people's workflows for sharing. I like joining meetups, but I tend to share stuff only if no one else has anything planned, because I have my blog and my YouTube channel in case I want to share anything with a wider group of people. I just have to actually post things.
Current: ~1.5 Emacs posts a week aside from Emacs News, attending meetups, sporadically adding short video demos to posts
Average number of Emacs-related posts that aren't Emacs News(let* ((start "2026-02-01") (end "2026-03-31") (posts (my-blog-posts start end (lambda (o) (and (member "emacs" (alist-get 'categories o)) (not (member "emacs-news" (alist-get 'categories o))))))) (count (length posts))) (my-weekly-average count start end))- Goal: 2-3 non-News posts a week, one video a month, one stream or meetup a month; maybe also beyond looking at the numbers, it might be interesting to build more momentum around a topic, set up trails/navigation, cultivate more of a digital garden
- Areas of friction / improvement:
- Resisting "one more tweak"
- Streaming: Still need to get the hang of talking to myself or having half-conversations with chat: can be worked around by scheduling a session with Prot and opening it to the public
- Hiding private information or setting up a separate Emacs for demonstration
- Harvesting videos/clips/notes afterwards
- I want to move more of my configuration into files and libraries that other people can reuse, like sachac/learn-lang and sachac/speech-input. I can also separate the function definitions from the configuration in my code so that people can reuse the functions if they want.
- Areas of friction / improvement
- renaming things when I want to move them to a library
- duplicating small functions (ex: simplify string)
- figuring out how to make it possible for someone else to start using my stuff
- Areas of friction / improvement
Starting questions for Prot:
- Meta: what are people finding useful for coaching and behaviour change, like learning new keyboard shortcuts or workflows?
- Your literate config exports to individual .el files. I could probably do something similar to separate my functions from my personal config in order to make it easier for people to reuse parts of my config. Is it worth doing so? Do people tell you that they use those private Emacs Lisp files by loading them, or do they mostly rely on your published packages?
- Do you have some tweaks to make it easier to jump to function definitions considering a literate configuration?
- What's your general process for migrating things from your config to a repository or package?
Could be fun. Let's experiment!
You can e-mail me at sacha@sachachua.com.
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🔗 r/reverseengineering I reverse engineered the Govee H8630 smart display: UART shell, hardcoded AES keys, and MQTT control. rss
submitted by /u/Dr-Shataaz
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🔗 r/Leeds Dog friends rss
Hi guys! Me and my partner have a dog called Nyla she’s a malanois Doberman lurcher cross and she’s very barkey…she’s made a few friends in the apartments we stay in but she doesn’t see them too much…we are trying to control her barking but it’s working very slowly…I want her to have more doggy friends and maybe make friends myself with the owners… she’s genuinely such a loving dog and she doesn’t great with mainly boys we’ve only tried her with one girl and the girl didn’t like her…the problem is just that people seem to be scared of her or scared she’s aggressive because of her bark..she’s never bit anyone or another dog :) anyone with a dog who is friendly wanna make doggy friends?
submitted by /u/ReplyDeep9863
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Analyzing Claude Code Source Code. Write "WTF" and Anthropic knows. rss
So I spent some time going through the Claude Code source, expecting a smarter terminal assistant.
What I found instead feels closer to a fully instrumented system that observes how you behave while using it.
Not saying anything shady is going on. But the level of tracking and classification is much deeper than most people probably assume.
Here are the things that stood out.
1. It classifies your language using simple keyword detection
This part surprised me because it’s not “deep AI understanding.”
There are literal keyword lists. Words like:
- wtf
- this sucks
- frustrating
- shit / fuck / pissed off
These trigger negative sentiment flags.
Even phrases like “continue”, “go on”, “keep going” are tracked.
It’s basically regex-level classification happening before the model responds.
2. It tracks hesitation during permission prompts
This is where it gets interesting.
When a permission dialog shows up, it doesn’t just log your final decision.
It tracks how you behave:
- Did you open the feedback box?
- Did you close it?
- Did you hit escape without typing anything?
- Did you type something and then cancel?
Internal events have names like:
- tengu_accept_feedback_mode_entered
- tengu_reject_feedback_mode_entered
- tengu_permission_request_escape
It even counts how many times you try to escape.
So it can tell the difference between:
“I clicked no quickly” vs
“I hesitated, typed something, then rejected”3. Feedback flow is designed to capture bad experiences
The feedback system is not random.
It triggers based on pacing rules, cooldowns, and probability.
If you mark something as bad:
- It can prompt you to run
/issue - It nudges you to share your session transcript
And if you agree, it can include:
- main transcript
- sub-agent transcripts
- sometimes raw JSONL logs (with redaction, supposedly)
4. There are hidden trigger words that change behavior
Some commands aren’t obvious unless you read the code.
Examples:
ultrathink→ increases effort level and changes UI stylingultraplan→ kicks off a remote planning modeultrareview→ similar idea for review workflows/btw→ spins up a side agent so the main flow continues
The input box is parsing these live while you type.
5. Telemetry captures a full environment profile
Each session logs quite a lot:
- session IDs
- container IDs
- workspace paths
- repo hashes
- runtime/platform details
- GitHub Actions context
- remote session IDs
If certain flags are enabled, it can also log:
- user prompts
- tool outputs
This is way beyond basic usage analytics. It’s a pretty detailed environment fingerprint.
6. MCP command can expose environment data
Running:
claude mcp get <name>can return:
- server URLs
- headers
- OAuth hints
- full environment blocks (for stdio servers)
If your env variables include secrets, they can show up in your terminal output.
That’s more of a “be careful” moment than anything else.
7. Internal builds go even deeper
There’s a mode (
USER_TYPE=ant) where it collects even more:- Kubernetes namespace
- exact container ID
- full permission context (paths, sandbox rules, bypasses)
All of this gets logged under internal telemetry events.
Meaning behavior can be tied back to a very specific deployment environment.
8. Overall takeaway
Putting it all together:
- Language is classified in real time
- UI interactions and hesitation are tracked
- Feedback is actively funneled into reports
- Hidden commands change behavior
- Runtime environment is fingerprinted
It’s not “just a chatbot.”
It’s a highly instrumented system observing how you interact with it.
I’m not claiming anything malicious here.
But once you read the source, it’s clear this is much more observable and measurable than most users would expect.
Most people will never look at this layer.
If you’re using Claude Code regularly, it’s worth knowing what’s happening under the hood.
Curious what others think.
Is this just normal product telemetry at scale, or does it feel like over- instrumentation?
If anyone wants, I can share the cleaned source references I used.
X article for share in case: https://x.com/UsmanReads/status/2039036207431344140?s=20
submitted by /u/QuantumSeeds
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🔗 r/reverseengineering dexfinder: A Lightning-fast, Pure-Go Alternative to Android's veridex with N-level Call Tracing & ProGuard Deobfuscation rss
submitted by /u/Designer_Engine7577
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🔗 r/reverseengineering I reverse-engineered the WHOOP 4.0 Bluetooth protocol and built a PoC Flutter app. Read /research first! rss
submitted by /u/Abdul_Saheel
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🔗 r/reverseengineering your hex editor should color-code bytes rss
submitted by /u/S1monom1
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🔗 r/Leeds Breaking News, Yorkshire Buses closing up shop at 8pm tonight rss
Yorkshire Buses who run the following routes:
1 (Leeds BS to Wakefield Power Par)
30 (Horsfroth to Pudsey)
51 (Doncaster to Norton on Sundays/BH)
61 (St James Hospital to South Leeds Stadium)
61A (St James Hospital to Cross Green/Hunslet)
116 (Leeds to Wakefield via Osset)
118 (White Rose Centre to Wakefield, limited service)
212 (Dewsbury to Wakefield)
https://bustimes.org/operators/yorkshire-travel-group
Will be closing up shop at 8pm tonight
submitted by /u/CaptainYorkie1
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🔗 r/Yorkshire What things are iconically yorkshire? rss
For my scout unit (going to the world scout jamboree) we are collaborating with the other Yorkshire groups to make our badges a Yorkshire rose, and there is 4 groups and a competition for the 5th petals design, so what should i put on that is iconically yorkshire?
submitted by /u/Alarmed_Leg9757
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Just a helpful open-source contributor rss
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA How it started vs How it's going rss
| Unrelated, simple command to download a specific version archive of npm package: npm pack @anthropic-ai/claude-code@2.1.88submitted by /u/HornyGooner4401
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🔗 r/Yorkshire The March Hare rss
submitted by /u/aspiranthighlander
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🔗 @binaryninja@infosec.exchange Join [@mr_phrazer](https://infosec.exchange/@mr_phrazer) with us on Thursday mastodon
Join @mr_phrazer with us on Thursday @4pm ET to pit machine versus machine!
We'll be comparing LLM options for both assisted and fully-automatic reverse engineering, including different CLI interfaces, MCP servers, plugins, and agents.
Get notified so you don't miss who comes out on top of reversing's biggest battle yet: https://www.youtube.com/live/TBqBpaqecMA
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🔗 r/reverseengineering [Challenge] Ropper and ROPgadget are blind to this standard binary. Can you build a 48-byte ROP chain without using my tool, LCSAJdump? rss
submitted by /u/LCSAJdump
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🔗 r/reverseengineering Quick write-up: TLS callbacks in a real malware sample (Rust runtime initialization) rss
submitted by /u/MalRE429
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🔗 r/Yorkshire North Yorkshire doing what it does best. Is there a better harbor view in the UK? rss
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🔗 r/Harrogate Light bulbs recycling rss
Does anyone know of any stores that have a bin for recycling light bulbs? I don't drive so going all the way to the household waste recycling centre isn't the most convenient for me.
thanks!
submitted by /u/jaf_1987
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🔗 r/wiesbaden Moved to Wiesbaden rss
Hi all, my Family just moved here a week ago and I was curious on what we could do with our 1 year old, best restaurants, bakeries, etc. if anyone has any in mind :)
submitted by /u/daddyciwa
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🔗 r/york Driving instructor recommendations? rss
Does anyone know of any good driving instructors in York with availability in the next few months? Nobody I've contacted even has room on a waiting list!
I'd be fine with manual or automatic, I can't afford to be picky at this point. Bonus points if they're able to be flexible with lesson times too as my work pattern makes it hard to commit to the same time slot every week.
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🔗 r/Yorkshire The Tiled Hall Cafe, Leeds Art Gallery rss
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🔗 r/Leeds The Tiled Hall Cafe rss
Surely one of the prettiest places to enjoy a coffee and a cake in Leeds – the mosaic ceiling is stunning!
You'll find it inside Leeds Art Gallery if you haven't been already.
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🔗 huggingface/candle 0.10.0 release
v0.10.0
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🔗 r/Leeds Potential Money Saving Trick (Leeds to London Commute) rss
I have been commuting between Leeds and London for the past 8-9 months, ever since I relocated. However, every time I commuted, the cost of a return ticket with a railcard was a staggering £60 to £70.
This is where I applied a bit of Logic and Maths to determine whether there is a way to get to London at a lower cost. Below is what I do nowadays:
- Purchase Norther Line or LNER ticket from Leeds to Doncaster with railcard which costs me around £5 - £6
- Purchase Hull Trains or Grand Central line tickets from Doncaster to Kings Cross for a price between £18 - £21
This has effectively brought down my cost by almost 50% although I must admit that there is an increase in journey time by approx 35 - 40 minutes.
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🔗 r/york York > Whitby - stop along the way? rss
Hello all!
My partner and I live in York and we're driving to Whitby on Friday for the weekend
We've done the trip loads of times but always on public transport (shout out coastliner my fave bus route ever) and we're only recently on the road in a car.
We realised we don't actually know the area that well outside of York & Whitby, and want to break the drive up and explore a bit, does anyone have any recommendations of places we could stop for lunch/a wander/something fun to see on the drive over? Not bothered if it's a bit off the beaten track or a slight detour, any suggestions welcome :)
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🔗 r/york Housing rss
where can we look for housing in York? it seems so so limited in the centre or even up clifton way. I'd be ideally after a houseshare as I think living alone would be bad for me but I can't find anything or anyone to hunt with and every lead I have falls apart.
I'd be moving in aug/September (starting a Master's; placement-heavy so happy to live with professionals) and getting genuinely really downtrodden by the whole thing. I've had really bad housemate situations before so I'm careful as is but options are really very limited...
spareroom/rightmove/zoopla/the usual private lettings agents have the odd option but they're HMOs and I don't know anyone in York yet and I'm not rich lol
ETA not against hmos in thr slightest genuinely just don't know anybody and had always been told to sign up to them With people in case other rooms don't get filled. Landlords in ny undergrad city would often ask tenants to make up the missing rent themselves
submitted by /u/4rami4
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🔗 r/york Placement accommodation rss
Hello, so i currently live in Carlisle and I might be getting a 12 month placement in York. Does anyone know where i could possibly stay for the 12 months? House shares or even if there are locations that are designed for adult placements/ temp living?
Even cities / areas close would also work!
Also any advice on the good areas and the bad areas of York!
submitted by /u/Nearby_Gift_5994
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🔗 r/Harrogate Hoxton North Closure? rss
I’m sorry…what?!?
This place is always packed, I always have to wait for a table to eat, how is this place not a viable business anymore? This makes no sense to me and I’m sad to see them go…
submitted by /u/CyclePrevious9043
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Claude code source code has been leaked via a map file in their npm registry rss
| From Chaofan Shou on 𝕏 (files): https://x.com/Fried_rice/status/2038894956459290963 submitted by /u/Nunki08
[link] [comments]
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🔗 MetaBrainz MerchBrainz rss
We have added a range of great new MetaBrainz designs to our merch store: https://www.redbubble.com/people/metabrainz/shop
These designs by Monkey, previously only available to MetaBrainz summit attendees, have been lightly modified (summit-specific text removed) for everyday wear. Are many people going to know what you're repping? No. Are the ones that do going to go " DAAAAAAAAAAAAMN IT'S THE BRAINZ YO"? Most definitely!

Note: We don 't print 'em, so these mockups may differ from the final product.
Choose your fighter: synth, bollywood, psychedelic, vaporwave or black metal, as well as the classic logo and unicorn designs. We also dropped a couple of additional designs today. As well as a 'new notes!?' sticker/magnet there is a new "I made 1,ooo edits and all I got was this lousy T-shirt" design, and a 100,000 edit version. Rumour has it there are secret versions of this shirt available for super high-scorers…
Do you have great/fun/stupid ideas for MetaBrainz-themed shirts or other merch? Let us know!
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🔗 r/reverseengineering Introducing the Rootkit Techniques Matrix and updates to the Guide rss
submitted by /u/rkhunter_
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🔗 Cryptography & Security Newsletter Web PKI Reimagined with Merkle Tree Certificates rss
In the past several years, the world has been busy with the migration to post-quantum cryptography, but you couldn’t hear much of Google's plans when it comes to Web PKI. However, work has been in progress for several years, going back to at least early 2023. In late 2025, joining with other interested parties, Google migrated its work to an IETF working group called PLANTS. Work is now ongoing to refine the design and validate it in collaboration with Cloudflare. Recently, Google published a blog post to officially announce this work and provide further details about its future steps. In short, the core design is baked, and the remainder of 2026 will be spent on validating the core technology. In 2027, Google will bootstrap the next-generation Web PKI.
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🔗 r/york Queuing up at the monks cross leisure centre? rss
Saw a massive line of people in line for something. Someone said people had been there since 5am. Anyone know why?
submitted by /u/Valuable_Victory_948
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🔗 r/reverseengineering hCAPTCHA Reverse Engineered rss
submitted by /u/Electrical-Flight570
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🔗 r/reverseengineering hCAPTCHA Reverse Engineered rss
submitted by /u/Electrical-Flight570
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🔗 backnotprop/plannotator v0.16.2 release
Follow @plannotator on X for updates
Missed recent releases? Release | Highlights
---|---
v0.16.1 | SSE stream idle timeout fix for external annotations API
v0.16.0 | GitHub Copilot CLI, external annotations API, bot callback URLs, interactive checkboxes, print support, diff display options
v0.15.5 | Custom display names, GitHub viewed file sync, expand/collapse all in file tree, search performance, WSL fix
v0.15.2 | Compound Planning skill, folder annotation,/plannotator-archiveslash command, skill installation via platform installers
v0.15.0 | Live AI chat in code review, plan archive browser, folder file viewer, resizable split pane, Pi full feature parity
v0.14.5 | GitLab merge request review, login page image fix, Windows install path fix
v0.14.4 | GitHub review submission, repo identifier in tab title, nested code fence parser fix, Pi paste URL wiring
v0.14.3 | PR context panel, diff search in code review, OpenCode permission normalization, landing page redesign
v0.14.2 | OpenCode plan mode prompt replacement, Windows non-ASCII path fix, Pi link fix
v0.14.1 | Single submit_plan with auto-detect, viewed-file draft persistence, Bear nested tag fix
v0.14.0 | PR review via GitHub URL,/plannotator-lastfor annotating agent messages, OpenCode plan mode permissions fix, VS Code SSH proxy fix
What's New in v0.16.2
v0.16.2 focuses on annotation UX. Comment popovers are now draggable, annotation counts surface across sidebar tabs, and the code review diff viewer supports custom fonts. 4 PRs.
Draggable Comment Popovers
Comment popovers in both plan review and code review can now be repositioned by dragging their header bar. Previously, popovers near viewport edges or at the bottom of long documents would clip or overlap content, forcing users to scroll to work around them. A shared
useDraggablehook handles the drag mechanics with a 3px movement threshold that prevents interfering with header button clicks. Once dragged, auto-positioning pauses so the popover stays where you put it. Position resets when a new annotation is selected.The same drag behavior applies to the annotation toolbar in code review line comments.
Cross-File Annotation Visibility
Annotations are now visible across sidebar tabs. The Files and Vault browsers show per-file annotation count badges, with folders displaying aggregate counts from descendants. A summary header reports "N annotations in M files" when any file has annotations. Dot indicators appear on the Files and Vault tab icons when annotated files exist, even when the sidebar is collapsed.
The table of contents badge was redesigned from a heavy accent circle to a lighter muted rounded badge, and the same component is reused across all sidebar trees. Navigation back buttons now adapt based on context, returning to the correct sidebar tab when navigating between files.
Custom Diff Fonts
The code review diff viewer now supports custom monospace fonts and font size adjustments. A Code Font dropdown and font size slider appear in the Display settings tab. Nine fonts are available: Fira Code, Hack, IBM Plex Mono, Inconsolata, JetBrains Mono, Red Hat Mono, Roboto Mono, Source Code Pro, and Atkinson Hyperlegible Mono. Fonts load on demand from Google Fonts and jsDelivr CDN. The overrides apply to the diff shadow DOM, annotations, suggestions, and AI chat code blocks. Settings persist via the ConfigStore system.
Additional Changes
- OpenCode verbose log fix. Removed
writeRemoteShareLinkstderr output that flooded the TUI on remote sessions, and stripped leftover debug logs from the PR viewed files feature (#440, closing #435 reported by @h4rvey-g)
Install / Update
macOS / Linux:
curl -fsSL https://plannotator.ai/install.sh | bashWindows:
irm https://plannotator.ai/install.ps1 | iexClaude Code Plugin: Run
/pluginin Claude Code, find plannotator , and click "Update now".Copilot CLI:
/plugin marketplace add backnotprop/plannotator /plugin install plannotator-copilot@plannotatorOpenCode: Clear cache and restart:
rm -rf ~/.bun/install/cache/@plannotatorThen in
opencode.json:{ "plugin": ["@plannotator/opencode@latest"] }Pi: Install or update the extension:
pi install npm:@plannotator/pi-extension
What's Changed
- fix(opencode): remove verbose logs that flood the TUI by @backnotprop in #440
- feat(review): custom diff font family and size overrides by @backnotprop in #441
- feat(ui): draggable comment popover and annotation toolbar by @backnotprop in #442
- feat(ui): cross-file annotation visibility and adaptive navigation by @backnotprop in #444
Community
@h4rvey-g reported the OpenCode TUI flooding issue in #435, which led to the verbose log cleanup in #440.
Full Changelog :
v0.16.1...v0.16.2 - OpenCode verbose log fix. Removed
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🔗 r/Yorkshire Gresley Society announces major exhibition celebrating Sir Nigel Gresley’s 150th anniversary at The Danum Gallery in Doncaster. 04/04/2026 to 30/05/2026 rss
| submitted by /u/CaptainYorkie1
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Qwen3.5-Omni results have been published by Alibaba rss
| submitted by /u/Fear_ltself
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA I just want to catch up on local LLM's after work.. rss
| submitted by /u/ForsookComparison
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🔗 Servo Blog February in Servo: faster layout, pause and resume scripts, and more! rss
Servo 0.0.6 includes some exciting new features:
- < button command> and < button commandfor> (@lukewarlow, #41237)
- ‘:modal’ selectors on < dialog> (@lukewarlow, #42201)
- ‘@property’ rules (@yezhizhen, @Loirooriol, #42136, #42858)
- ‘alignment-baseline’ and ‘baseline-shift’ (@Loirooriol, #42361)
- ‘Content-Security-Policy: base-uri’ (@WaterWhisperer, #42272)
- partial support for < iframe loading=lazy> (@TimvdLippe, #41959)
- partial support for ‘transform-style: preserve-3d’ (@simonwuelker, #42755)
Plus a bunch of new DOM APIs:
- most of the Pointer Events API (@webbeef, #41290)
- the UserActivation API (@stevennovaryo, #42060)
- import.meta.resolve() (@Gae24, #42506)
- integrity in < script type=importmap> (@Gae24, #42604)
- the formData() method on Request (@Taym95, #42041)
- the alpha property on HTMLInputElement (@simonwuelker, #42293)
- tabIndex on HTMLElement and SVGElement (@mrobinson, @Loirooriol, #42913)
- fullscreenElement on Document and ShadowRoot (@onsah, #42401)
- toJSON() on PerformancePaintTiming (@shubhamg13, #42396)
- navigator.pdfViewerEnabled (@simonwuelker, #42277)
- keyPath on IDBIndex (@arihant2math, #42431)
- createIndex() , deleteIndex() , and index() on IDBObjectStore (@arihant2math, @bulltickr, #38840, #42440, #42443)
This is a big update, so here’s an outline:
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Work in progress
– accessibility, execCommand() -
Developer tools
– localhost only by default, Inspector, Console, Debugger -
servoshell
– servo:config, F5 to reload -
Embedding API
– offline builds, user stylesheets, context menus, gamepad API -
More on the web platform
– font fallback, cookies, IndexedDB, First and Largest Contentful Paint -
Performance and stability
– about:memory, incremental layout, shared memory -
Bug fixes
– Windows arm64, layout, DOM events, shadow DOM -
Donations
– how you can help Servo flourish
Work in progress We’ve started working on accessibility support for web content (@alice, @delan, #42333, #42402), gated by a pref (--pref accessibility_enabled). Each webview will be able to expose its own accessibility tree, which the embedder can then integrate into its own accessibility tree. As part of this work: AccessKit now supports combining accessibility trees with its new “subtree” feature (@DataTriny, @delan, @lukewarlow, @alice, AccessKit/accesskit#655, AccessKit/accesskit#641) egui has been migrated to the new AccessKit API (@delan, @lukewarlow, @lucasmerlin, @DataTriny, emilk/egui#7850) we added a Servo API for activating accessibility features (@delan, @alice, #42336), although this has since become a WebView API We’ve started implementing document.execCommand() (@TimvdLippe, #42621, #42626, #42750), gated by a pref (--pref dom_exec_command_enabled). This feature is also enabled in experimental mode , and together with contenteditable , it’s critical for rich text editing on the web. The work done in February includes: document.queryCommandEnabled() (@TimvdLippe, #42634) document.queryCommandSupported() (@TimvdLippe, #42731) document.queryCommandIndeterm() , queryCommandState() , and queryCommandValue() (@TimvdLippe, #42748) the canonicalize whitespace algorithm – this is used by the ‘delete’, ‘forwardDelete’, and ‘insertText’ commands (@TimvdLippe, #42704) contentEditable on HTMLElement – for execCommand() only, excluding any support for interactive editing (@TimvdLippe, #42633, #42734) Developer tools
DevTools has seen some big improvements in February!
When enabled in servoshell, the DevTools server is more secure by default, listening only on localhost when only a port number is specified (@Narfinger, #42502). You can open the port for remote debugging by passing a full SocketAddr, such as
--devtools=[::]:6080or--devtools=0.0.0.0:6080.In the Inspector tab, you can now edit DOM attributes , and the DOM tree updates when attributes change (@simonwuelker, #42601, #42785). You can now list the event type and phase of event listeners attached to a DOM node as well (@simonwuelker, #42355).
In the Console tab, objects can now be previewed when passed to console.log() and friends (@simonwuelker, #42296, #42510, #42752), and boolean values are now syntax highlighted (@pralkarz, #42513).
In the Debugger tab, you can now pause and resume script execution, both manually and when breakpoints are hit (@eerii, @atbrakhi, #42599, #42580, #42874). We’ve also started working on other debugger features (@atbrakhi, @eerii, #42306), including stepping execution (@eerii, @atbrakhi, #42844, #42878, #42906), so once again stay tuned!
Servo 0.0.6 showing DevTools debugger setting breakpoints, pausing on those breakpoints, and resuming script execution
servoshell Back in August, we added a servo:preferences page to servoshell that allows you to set some of Servo’s most common preferences at runtime (@jdm, #38159). servoshell now has a servo:config page (@arihant2math, #40324), allowing you to set any preference, even internal ones. Note that preference changes are not yet persistent, and not all prefs take effect when changed at runtime. You can now press F5 to reload the page in servoshell (@Narfinger, #42538), in addition to pressing Ctrl+R or ⌘R. We’ve fixed a regression where the caret stopped being visible in the location bar (@mrobinson, #42470). Embedding API
Servo is now easier to build offline , using the complete source tarball included in each release (@jschwe, #42852). Go to a release on GitHub, then download
servo-[version]-src-vendored.tar.gzto get started.You can now add and remove user stylesheets with
UserContentManager::add_stylesheetandremove_stylesheet, and remove user scripts withUserContentManager::remove_script(@mukilan, #42288). Previously user stylesheets were only configurable via servoshell’s--user-stylesheetoption.User stylesheets work a bit differently to userstyles , since they cascade via the user origin, not the author origin. For more details about the tradeoffs, check out Customising the web: browsers as user agents (slides).
Before opening any context menus on behalf of web content, Servo now closes any context menus that were opened by web content (@mrobinson, #42487), to avoid UI problems on some platforms. This is done by calling
WebViewDelegate::hide_embedder_controlbefore callingshow_embedder_controlin those cases.Input method events from web content now indicate whether or not the virtual keyboard should be shown (@stevennovaryo, @mrobinson, #42467), with the new
InputMethodControl::allow_virtual_keyboardmethod. Generally the virtual keyboard should only be shown when the page has sticky activation.We’re reworking our gamepad API , with
WebViewDelegate::play_gamepad_haptic_effectandstop_gamepad_haptic_effectbeing replaced by a new API that (as of the end of February at least) is known asGamepadProvider(@atbrakhi, #41568). The old methods are no longer called (#43743), and may be removed at some point.We now have better diagnostic output when we fail to create an OpenGL context (@mrobinson, #42873), including when the OpenGL versions supported by the device are too old.
Servo::constellation_senderwas removed (@jdm, #42389), since it was never useful to embedders.We’ve also made some changes to
Preferences:-
devtools_server_portis nowdevtools_server_listen_address, and can now take either a port number (as before) or a full SocketAddr (@Narfinger, #42502) -
dom_worklet_blockingsleepis nowdom_worklet_blockingsleep_enabled(@mukilan, #42897) -
Removed many unused preferences (@mukilan, #42897) –
js_asyncstack,js_discard_system_source,js_dump_stack_on_debuggee_would_run,js_ion_offthread_compilation_enabled,js_mem_gc_allocation_threshold_avoid_interrupt_factor,js_mem_gc_allocation_threshold_factor,js_mem_gc_allocation_threshold_mb,js_mem_gc_decommit_threshold_mb,js_mem_gc_dynamic_heap_growth_enabled,js_mem_gc_dynamic_mark_slice_enabled,js_shared_memory,js_throw_on_asmjs_validation_failure,js_throw_on_debuggee_would_run,js_werror_enabled, andnetwork_mime_sniff
More on the web platform If you navigate to a video file or audio file as a document , the player now has controls (@webbeef, #42488). Images now rotate according to their EXIF metadata by default (@rayguo17, #42567), like they would once we add support for ‘image-orientation: from-image’. We’re implementing system-font-aware font fallback (@mrobinson, #42466), with support for this on macOS landing this month (@mrobinson, #42776). This allows Servo to render text in scripts that are not covered by web fonts or any of the fonts on Servo’s built-in lists of fallback fonts, as long as they are covered by fonts installed on the system. Servo now supports the newer pointermove , pointerdown , pointerup , and pointercancel events (@webbeef, #41290). The older touchmove , touchstart , touchend , and touchcancel events continue to be supported. The default language in ‘Accept-Language’ and navigator.language is now taken from the $LANG environment variable if present (@webbeef, #41919), rather than always being set to en-US. < input type=color> now supports any CSS color value (@simonwuelker, #42275), including the more complex values like color-mix(). We’ve also landed the colorspace attribute (@simonwuelker, #42279), but only in the web- facing side of Servo for now, not the embedding API or in servoshell. ‘vertical-align’ is now a shorthand for ‘alignment-baseline’ and ‘baseline-shift’ (@Loirooriol, #42361), and scrollParent on HTMLElement is now a function per this recent spec update (@TimurBora, #42689). Cookies are now more conformant (@sebsebmc, #42418, #42427, #42435). ‘Expires’ and ‘Max-Age’ attributes are now handled correctly in ‘Set-Cookie’ headers, get() and getAll() on CookieStore now trim whitespace in cookie names and values, and the behaviour of set() on CookieStore has been improved. < iframe> elements are now more conformant in how load events are fired on the element and its contentWindow (@TimvdLippe, #42254), although there are still some bugs. This has long behaved incorrectly in Servo, and it has historically caused many problems in the Web Platform Tests. IndexedDB is now more conformant in our handling of transactions (@Taym95, #41508, #42732), and when opening and closing connections (@gterzian, @Taym95, #42082, #42669). We’ve started implementing Largest Contentful Paint timings (@shubhamg13, #42024), and we’ve landed a bunch of improvements to how First Contentful Paint timings work in Servo: we now include ‘background-image’ (@shubhamg13, #42569) we now include ‘border-image’ (@shubhamg13, #42581) we now ignore subtrees with ‘opacity: 0’ (@shubhamg13, #42768) we now ignore zero-sized subtrees (@shubhamg13, #42178) we now ignore <iframe> (@shubhamg13, #42498) we now ignore <video> and unless they actually have an image (@shubhamg13, #42411) we now ignore mouse moves when deciding when to stop measuring (@shubhamg13, #41999) new WebSocket() now resolves relative URLs (@webbeef, #42425). requestFullscreen() on Element now requires user activation (@stevennovaryo, #42060). performance.getEntries() now returns PerformanceResourceTiming entries for navigations in <iframe> (@muse254, #42270). When geolocation is enabled (--pref dom_geolocation_enabled), navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition() and watchPosition() now support the optional errors argument (@arihant2math, #42295). We now support the ‘-webkit-text-security’ property in CSS (@mrobinson, #42181), which is not specified anywhere but required for MotionMark. Performance and stability
Our about:memory page now knows how to report many new kinds of memory usage , including the DevTools server (@Narfinger, #42478, #42480), WebGL (@sagudev, #42570), localStorage and sessionStorage (@arihant2math, #42484), and some of the memory used by IndexedDB (@arihant2math, #42486). We’ve also started internally tracking the memory usage of the media subsystem (@Narfinger, #42504) and WebXR (@Narfinger, #42505).
Layout has seen a lot of performance work in February, with our main focus being on improving incremental layout of the box tree and fragment tree.
We now have our first truly incremental box tree layout (@mrobinson, @Loirooriol, @lukewarlow, #42700), rather than our previous “dirty roots”-based approach. Depending on how they were damaged, some boxes for floats (as above, #42816), independent formatting contexts (as above, #42783), and their descendants (as above, #42582) can now be reused, and they avoid damaging their parents (as above, #42847). We also destroy boxes with ‘display: none’ earlier in the layout process (as above, #42584).
Incremental fragment tree layout is improving too! Whereas we previously had to decide whether to run fragment tree layout in an “all or nothing” way, we can now reuse cached fragments in independent formatting contexts (@mrobinson, @Loirooriol, @lukewarlow, #42687, #42717, #42871). We can also measure how much work is being done on each layout (as above, #42817).
Servo uses shared memory for many situations where copying data over channels would be too expensive, such as for images and fonts. In multiprocess mode (
--multiprocess), we use the operating system to create the shared memory in a way that can be shared with other processes, such as shm_open(3) or CreateFileMappingW, but this consumes resources that can sometimes be exhausted. We only need to use those kinds of shared memory in multiprocess mode, so we’ve reworked Servo to useArc<Vec<u8>>in single-process mode (@Narfinger, #42083), which should avoid resource exhaustion.Parsing web pages is complicated: we want pages to render incrementally as they stream in from the network, and we want to prefetch resources, but scripts can call document.write(), which injects markup “on the spot”. This is further complicated if that markup also contains a <script>.
We’ve recently landed some fixes to Servo’s async parser (@simonwuelker, #42882, #42910), which handles these issues more efficiently. This is currently an obscure and somewhat buggy feature (
--pref dom_servoparser_async_html_tokenizer_enabled), but if we can get the feature working more reliably (#37418), it could halve the energy Servo spends on parsing, lower latency for pages that don’t use document.write(), and even improve the html5ever API for the ecosystem.We’ve also landed optimisations for ‘Content-Security-Policy’ (@Narfinger, #42716), IntersectionObserver (@Narfinger, @mrobinson, @stevennovaryo, #42366, #42390), layout queries (@webbeef, #42327), the bfcache (@Narfinger, #42703), loading images (@Narfinger, #42684), and checks for multiprocess mode (@Narfinger, #42782), as well as the interfaces between Servo and SpiderMonkey (@sagudev, #42135, #42576).
We’ve continued our long-running effort to use the Rust type system to make certain kinds of dynamic borrow failures impossible (@Gae24, @pralkarz, @BryanSmith00, @sagudev, @Narfinger, @TimvdLippe, @kkoyung, @TimurBora, @onsah, #42342, #42294, #42370, #42417, #42619, #42616, #42637, #42640, #42662, #42679, #42681, #42665, #42667, #42699, #42712, #42725, #42729, #42726, #42720, #42738, #42737, #42735, #42751, #42805, #42809, #42780, #42820, #42715, #42635, #42880, #42846).
Bug fixes We’ve landed some fixes for issues preventing Servo from being built on Windows arm64 (@dpaoliello, @npiesco, #42371, #42341). Work to enable Windows arm64 as a build platform is ongoing (@npiesco, #42312). < img height> now takes the default from the aspect ratio of the image (@Loirooriol, #42577), rather than using a width of 300px by default. < svg width=0> and < svg height=0> now take the default width and height (respectively) from the aspect ratio of the (@Loirooriol, #42545). We’ve fixed a bug in the result of layout queries , such as getBoundingClientRect(), on inline < svg> (@jdm, @Loirooriol, #42594), and we’ve fixed layout bugs related to ‘display: table-cell’ (@Loirooriol, #42778), ‘display: list-item’ (@Loirooriol, #42825, #42864), ‘inset: auto’ (@Loirooriol, #42586), ‘width: max-content’ (@mrobinson, @Loirooriol, @lukewarlow, #42574), ‘align-self: last baseline’ (@rayguo17, #42724), ‘list-style-image’ (@lukewarlow, #42332), ‘content: ’ (@lukewarlow, #42332), negative ‘margin’ (@Loirooriol, #42889), and ink overflow (@mrobinson, #42403). HTML and CSS bugs: Empty ‘url()’ values making requests when they shouldn’t (@rayguo17, #42622) < template> failing to throw HierarchyRequestError when a DOM API is used to create an invalid hierarchy (@TimvdLippe, #42276) < input> and < textarea> selection behaviour being incorrect when the text contains more than one script (@mrobinson, #42399) < script nonce> validation failing to work correctly in some cases (@dyegoaurelio, #40956) < a target> failing to work correctly after the related <iframe> is removed and a new one added with the same name (@jdm, #42344) < base> not taking effect in some cases, or taking effect when given a data: or javascript: URL (@TimvdLippe, #42255, #42339) JavaScript and DOM bugs: event.target being incorrect on touchmove , touchend , and touchcancel events (@yezhizhen, #42654) touchmove events not being fired when part of a two-finger pinch zoom (@yezhizhen, #42528) touchend events erroneously firing after touchcancel events (@yezhizhen, #42654) assignedNodes() on HTMLSlotElement returning incorrect results after the <slot> was removed from the shadow tree (@rayguo17, #42250) Largest Contentful Paint timings no longer being collected after reloading or navigating (@shubhamg13, #41169) PerformancePaintTiming being exposed to Worker globals when they shouldn’t be (@shubhamg13, #42409) JavaScript modules resolved incorrectly when there are overlapping .imports or .scopes or import maps (@Gae24, #42668, #42630, #42754, #42821) changes to how we trigger garbage collection breaking Speedometer (@sagudev, #42271) WebDriver bugs: Pointer actions and wheel actions behaving incorrectly when devicePixelRatio ≠ 1 (@yezhizhen, #42387, #42628) Wheel actions throwing incorrect exceptions when they are missing properties (@yezhizhen, #42745) pointerMove actions with non-zero duration failing to interleave with other actions (@yezhizhen, #42289) We’ve fixed crashes in DevTools , in the Inspector tab (@eerii, @mrobinson, #42330), when exiting Servo while DevTools is connected (@simonwuelker, #42543), when setting breakpoints (@atbrakhi, #42810), and after clients disconnect (@simonwuelker, #42583). We’ve fixed crashes in layout , when using ‘background-repeat: round’ (@mrobinson, #42303), when using ‘list-style- image’ or ‘content: ’ (@lukewarlow, #42332), when calling elementFromPoint() on Document (@mrobinson, @Loirooriol, @lukewarlow, #42822), and when handling layout queries like getBoundingClientRect() on inline <svg> (@jdm, @Loirooriol, #42594). We’ve fixed crashes related to stylesheets , when removing stylesheets from the DOM (@TimvdLippe, #42273), when changing the href of a (@TimvdLippe, #42481), and when loading stylesheets with --layout-threads=1 (@mrobinson, @Loirooriol, @lukewarlow, #42685). We’ve also fixed crashes when using multitouch input (@yezhizhen, #42350), when using MediaStreamAudioSourceNode (@mrobinson, #42914), when calling add() on HTMLOptionsCollection (@mrobinson, #42263), when calling elementFromPoint() on Document or ShadowRoot(), when we fail to open a database for IndexedDB (@jdm, @mrobinson, #42444), and when certain pages are run with a mozjs debug build (@Gae24, #42428). Donations
Thanks again for your generous support! We are now receiving 6985 USD/month (−0.4% from January) in recurring donations. This helps us cover the cost of our speedy CI and benchmarking servers, one of our latest Outreachy interns , and funding maintainer work that helps more people contribute to Servo.
Servo is also on thanks.dev, and already 32 GitHub users (–1 from January) that depend on Servo are sponsoring us there. If you use Servo libraries like url, html5ever, selectors, or cssparser, signing up for thanks.dev could be a good way for you (or your employer) to give back to the community.
We now have sponsorship tiers that allow you or your organisation to donate to the Servo project with public acknowlegement of your support. If you’re interested in this kind of sponsorship, please contact us at join@servo.org.
6985 USD/month
10000
Use of donations is decided transparently via the Technical Steering Committee’s public funding request process , and active proposals are tracked in servo/project#187. For more details, head to our Sponsorship page.
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🔗 exe.dev Prompt engineering is dead, but Claude still tries rss
A year ago, Claude was better at prompting than I was. Not any more.
Coding agents have gotten dramatically better. Good prompting used to require carefully calibrated instructions and harnesses. Now a good prompt includes goals, context, and maybe some preferences and operational details.
LLMs used to be lackadaisical about following rules. No longer. If you tell them exactly what to do, they will do exactly that. That can be helpful! But in the real, messy world, it's extraordinarily difficult to define in advance a good set of rules. Instead, we constantly exercise judgment. Agents are really good at on-the-fly judgment now. Delegation beats micromanagement.
Most system prompts should be deleted. Most skills should be deleted. Most AGENTS.md should be deleted. It's all getting in the way now; the bitter lesson has come for harnesses.
My personal CLAUDE.md is 3 lines long. Here it is:
- Do not git push, ever, under any circumstances.
- Do not hand-edit Go imports. Run
goimports -wafter every edit. - When writing prompts for other agents, convey intent, nuance, and operational details rather than prescriptive instructions—goals are durable, orders are brittle. Trust and delegate over command and control.
I look forward to deleting the goimports line in the near future.
I'd also love to nix the last line, which unfortunately doesn't even work completely. Claude doesn't understand yet that we don't live in 2025.
When Claude barks orders like a drill sergeant, it erases the underlying purpose. Every layer of subagents loses ever more fidelity, like a game of LLM telephone.
The thing is: agents prompt agents all the time. Agents help people write skills. Agents invoke subagents. Agents write scripts that run agents.
Shelley, the exe.dev coding agent, has an orchestrator mode. It works around this form of context collapse by giving all subagents access to a SQLite database containing the entire set of all conversations. Subagents refer back to the user's input as a primary source.
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- March 30, 2026
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🔗 IDA Plugin Updates IDA Plugin Updates on 2026-03-30 rss
IDA Plugin Updates on 2026-03-30
New Releases:
Activity:
- capa
- c5fd75f1: build(deps): bump pyasn1 from 0.5.1 to 0.6.3 (#2939)
- b82c07d8: Merge pull request #2980 from mandiant/dependabot/pip/pygments-2.20.0
- 0933594a: build(deps): bump pygments from 2.19.1 to 2.20.0
- db84b2cf: Merge pull request #2978 from mandiant/dependabot/pip/pygithub-2.9.0
- 693233e9: Merge pull request #2977 from mandiant/dependabot/pip/types-requests-…
- 66a26d02: build(deps): bump pygments from 2.18.0 to 2.20.0 in /web/rules (#2979)
- 3db27d2e: build(deps): bump pygments from 2.18.0 to 2.20.0 in /web/rules
- e548fa07: build(deps-dev): bump pygithub from 2.8.1 to 2.9.0
- 94814990: build(deps-dev): bump types-requests
- DeepExtractIDA
- 0f7d7212: Include README.md in release ZIP
- Greffe
- c89b9b60: Delete outdated arm/64 handling
- 9a1e4045: Clean unused files
- 07917093: Merge pull request #32 from Lixhr/31-detect-pc-relative-branch-overflow
- 5012ee9f: Add indirect branch when the target is too far.c
- 42a286ca: Add indirect branch when the target is too far.c
- e65265a8: Init cli test system
- IDAssist
- a5c008fc: Handle hex addresses in SymGraph push preview
- IDEA
- 68384fca: Refine dynamic headless launch and add regression test
- pdb
- python-elpida_core.py
- ce97d255: MIND evolution fixes: break consolidation loop
- suture
- 254ac413: added dynamic context menu label
- capa
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🔗 anthropics/claude-code v2.1.88 release
chore: Update CHANGELOG.md
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🔗 r/reverseengineering RE//verse 2026: Hacking the Xbox One by Markus 'doom' Gaasedelen rss
submitted by /u/scottyMo221
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🔗 r/Leeds Beryl bikes never working rss
Does anyone else have a problem with the LNER / beryl bikes never seeming to work?
I have my own bike so I don't try as often now, but they had a promotion this week giving 20 mins or so free rides. Every time I tried to get one out it said something like 'This bike is unavailable- try another one', or the lock would fail to unlock, or some other silly thing.
It seems like this has been a problem both with the old and new generation of bikes - am I just really unlucky? Again I wouldn't get them often anyway but I'm constantly put off by things like this so surely it would be in their interest to make them make reliable!
submitted by /u/gorobloso
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🔗 r/reverseengineering The Webs Digital Locks have Never had a Stronger Opponent rss
submitted by /u/Electrical_Date_8707
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🔗 r/reverseengineering Quero conseguir achar uma senha pra acessar um menu debbug de um jogo, o menu aparece qdo aperto varias vezes na logo,mais pede uma senha,ja tentei descompilar o app e procurar a senha mais nao consigo, talvez esteja criptografada,e não tenho computador,alguem poderia me ajudar? rss
submitted by /u/Neither-Cream3287
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Qwen 3.6 spotted! rss
| https://openrouter.ai/qwen/qwen3.6-plus-preview submitted by /u/Namra_7
[link] [comments]
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA llama.cpp at 100k stars rss
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🔗 r/york looking for friends! rss
I’m a 2nd year international student (f) at uni & have struggled to find people i really connect with. i’m neurodiverse and haven’t really met many other nd people as I work a lot and often can’t make it to scheduled events, but I’d particularly really like to make more ND friends!
I’m queer, love cinema, david lynch, charity shopping + vintage clothes, art, feminism, reading (esp classics), alternative music, gigs, and going to leeds gay bars lol.
send me a message if u want to chat/plan something! :)
submitted by /u/LocksmithVast8025
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🔗 r/Harrogate Rudys 3000 free pizzas - yeah right rss
A right first world grumble.
Rudys announced with some fanfare they are giving 3000 pizzas away to celebrate opening in town.
The email dropped today whilst I was in my inbox looking at something else. Within 2 mins of landing every slot to book for the next six weeks were fully booked.
My spider senses suggest there were no free pizzas.
submitted by /u/Similar-Actuator-338
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🔗 r/reverseengineering Windows x86 Stack Overflow Breakdown + Hand-Assembled Shellcode (Educational VM Lab) rss
submitted by /u/Medical-Health-9377
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🔗 HexRaysSA/plugin-repository commits sync repo: +4 releases rss
sync repo: +4 releases ## New releases - [DeepExtract](https://github.com/marcosd4h/DeepExtractIDA): 0.9.12 - [IDAssist](https://github.com/symgraph/IDAssist): 1.5.0 - [IDAssistMCP](https://github.com/symgraph/IDAssistMCP): 1.4.0 - [Suture](https://github.com/libtero/suture): 1.2.5 -
🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Stanford and Harvard just dropped the most disturbing AI paper of the year rss
https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.20021
submitted by /u/Fun-Yogurt-89
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🔗 backnotprop/plannotator v0.16.1 release
Follow @plannotator on X for updates
Missed recent releases? Release | Highlights
---|---
v0.16.0 | GitHub Copilot CLI, external annotations API, bot callback URLs, interactive checkboxes, print support, diff display options
v0.15.5 | Custom display names, GitHub viewed file sync, expand/collapse all in file tree, search performance, WSL fix
v0.15.2 | Compound Planning skill, folder annotation,/plannotator-archiveslash command, skill installation via platform installers
v0.15.0 | Live AI chat in code review, plan archive browser, folder file viewer, resizable split pane, Pi full feature parity
v0.14.5 | GitLab merge request review, login page image fix, Windows install path fix
v0.14.4 | GitHub review submission, repo identifier in tab title, nested code fence parser fix, Pi paste URL wiring
v0.14.3 | PR context panel, diff search in code review, OpenCode permission normalization, landing page redesign
v0.14.2 | OpenCode plan mode prompt replacement, Windows non-ASCII path fix, Pi link fix
v0.14.1 | Single submit_plan with auto-detect, viewed-file draft persistence, Bear nested tag fix
v0.14.0 | PR review via GitHub URL,/plannotator-lastfor annotating agent messages, OpenCode plan mode permissions fix, VS Code SSH proxy fix
v0.13.1 | OpenCode plan mode rewrite, Obsidian save fix
What's New in v0.16.1
v0.16.1 fixes SSE connection stability for the external annotations API introduced in v0.16.0. 1 PR from an external contributor, 1 first-timer.
SSE Stream Idle Timeout Fix
Bun's default idle timeout of 10 seconds was killing the external annotations SSE stream (
/api/external-annotations/stream) before the first 30-second heartbeat could fire. The browser'sEventSourceauto-reconnected, but each reconnect triggered a full snapshot resend and produced a[Bun.serve]: request timed out after 10 secondswarning in the console.The fix uses Bun's per-request
server.timeout(req, 0)to disable the idle timeout only on SSE stream requests. Normal HTTP requests keep the default 10-second safety net. The change applies to all three server types (plan, review, annotate).- Authored by @foxytanuki in #439, closing #438
Install / Update
macOS / Linux:
curl -fsSL https://plannotator.ai/install.sh | bashWindows:
irm https://plannotator.ai/install.ps1 | iexClaude Code Plugin: Run
/pluginin Claude Code, find plannotator , and click "Update now".Copilot CLI:
/plugin marketplace add backnotprop/plannotator /plugin install plannotator-copilot@plannotatorOpenCode: Clear cache and restart:
rm -rf ~/.bun/install/cache/@plannotatorThen in
opencode.json:{ "plugin": ["@plannotator/opencode@latest"] }Pi: Install or update the extension:
pi install npm:@plannotator/pi-extension
What's Changed
- fix(server): keep external annotation SSE streams alive by @foxytanuki in #439
New Contributors
- @foxytanuki made their first contribution in #439
Community
@foxytanuki filed #438 with a thorough root cause analysis identifying the mismatch between Bun's 10-second idle timeout and the 30-second heartbeat interval, then followed up with the fix in #439.
@j-huang-rj independently identified the same issue and submitted a fix in #433. The targeted per- request approach from #439 was chosen, but both contributors spotted the problem within hours of v0.16.0 shipping.
Full Changelog :
v0.16.0...v0.16.1 -
🔗 r/reverseengineering Reverse Engineering Crazy Taxi, Part 2 rss
submitted by /u/ifnspifn
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🔗 r/LocalLLaMA Semantic video search using local Qwen3-VL embedding, no API, no transcription rss
| I've been experimenting with Qwen3-VL-Embedding for native video search, embedding raw video directly into a vector space alongside text queries. No transcription, no frame captioning, no intermediate text. You just search with natural language and it matches against video clips. The surprising part: the 8B model produces genuinely usable results running fully local. Tested on Apple Silicon (MPS) and CUDA. The 8B model needs ~18GB RAM, the 2B runs on ~6GB. I built a CLI tool around this (SentrySearch) that indexes footage into ChromaDB, searches it, and auto-trims the matching clip. Originally built on Gemini's embedding API, but added the local Qwen backend after a lot of people asked for it. Has anyone else been using Qwen3-VL-Embedding for video tasks? Curious how others are finding the quality vs the cloud embedding models. (Demo video attached, note this was recorded using the Gemini backend, but the local backend works the same way with the --backend localflag) submitted by /u/Vegetable_File758
[link] [comments]
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🔗 r/reverseengineering I built pycdc-studio, a Qt desktop UI for exploring Python bytecode with pycdc/pycdas rss
submitted by /u/Commercial_Rip_1827
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🔗 r/Leeds Royal Armouries International Jousting Tournament Tickets rss
Hi, everyone!
I hope this is okay to ask on here / realise this is a long shot, but would anyone happen to have a spare ticket / or two for the upcoming jousting tournament, if you perhaps can't go for any reason, or know someone that can't?
Full disclosure, I left it too long to buy my own because my partner was deliberating whether or not they could come with me, and I didn't realise the demand. 😅 My mistake! But, I thought it was worth asking. Thank for you reading if you've come this far!
submitted by /u/FigureO9
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🔗 Simon Willison Mr. Chatterbox is a (weak) Victorian-era ethically trained model you can run on your own computer rss
Trip Venturella released Mr. Chatterbox, a language model trained entirely on out-of-copyright text from the British Library. Here's how he describes it in the model card:
Mr. Chatterbox is a language model trained entirely from scratch on a corpus of over 28,000 Victorian-era British texts published between 1837 and 1899, drawn from a dataset made available by the British Library. The model has absolutely no training inputs from after 1899 — the vocabulary and ideas are formed exclusively from nineteenth-century literature.
Mr. Chatterbox's training corpus was 28,035 books, with an estimated 2.93 billion input tokens after filtering. The model has roughly 340 million paramaters, roughly the same size as GPT-2-Medium. The difference is, of course, that unlike GPT-2, Mr. Chatterbox is trained entirely on historical data.
Given how hard it is to train a useful LLM without using vast amounts of scraped, unlicensed data I've been dreaming of a model like this for a couple of years now. What would a model trained on out-of-copyright text be like to chat with?
Thanks to Trip we can now find out for ourselves!
The model itself is tiny, at least by Large Language Model standards - just 2.05GB on disk. You can try it out using Trip's HuggingFace Spaces demo:

Honestly, it's pretty terrible. Talking with it feels more like chatting with a Markov chain than an LLM - the responses may have a delightfully Victorian flavor to them but it's hard to get a response that usefully answers a question.
The 2022 Chinchilla paper suggests a ratio of 20x the parameter count to training tokens. For a 340m model that would suggest around 7 billion tokens, more than twice the British Library corpus used here. The smallest Qwen 3.5 model is 600m parameters and that model family starts to get interesting at 2b - so my hunch is we would need 4x or more the training data to get something that starts to feel like a useful conversational partner.
But what a fun project!
Running it locally with LLM
I decided to see if I could run the model on my own machine using my LLM framework.
I got Claude Code to do most of the work - here's the transcript.
Trip trained the model using Andrej Karpathy's nanochat, so I cloned that project, pulled the model weights and told Claude to build a Python script to run the model. Once we had that working (which ended up needing some extra details from the Space demo source code) I had Claude read the LLM plugin tutorial and build the rest of the plugin.
llm-mrchatterbox is the result. Install the plugin like this:
llm install llm-mrchatterboxThe first time you run a prompt it will fetch the 2.05GB model file from Hugging Face. Try that like this:
llm -m mrchatterbox "Good day, sir"Or start an ongoing chat session like this:
llm chat -m mrchatterboxIf you don't have LLM installed you can still get a chat session started from scratch using uvx like this:
uvx --with llm-mrchatterbox llm chat -m mrchatterboxWhen you are finished with the model you can delete the cached file using:
llm mrchatterbox delete-modelThis is the first time I've had Claude Code build a full LLM model plugin from scratch and it worked really well. I expect I'll be using this method again in the future.
I continue to hope we can get a useful model from entirely public domain data. The fact that Trip was able to get this far using nanochat and 2.93 billion training tokens is a promising start.
Update 31st March 2026: I had missed this when I first published this piece but Trip has his own detailed writeup of the project which goes into much more detail about how he trained the model. Here's how the books were filtered for pre-training:
First, I downloaded the British Library dataset split of all 19th-century books. I filtered those down to books contemporaneous with the reign of Queen Victoria—which, unfortunately, cut out the novels of Jane Austen—and further filtered those down to a set of books with a optical character recognition (OCR) confidence of .65 or above, as listed in the metadata. This left me with 28,035 books, or roughly 2.93 billion tokes for pretraining data.
Getting it to behave like a conversational model was a lot harder. Trip started by trying to train on plays by Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw, but found they didn't provide enough pairs. Then he tried extracting dialogue pairs from the books themselves with poor results. The approach that worked was to have Claude Haiku and GPT-4o-mini generate synthetic conversation pairs for the supervised fine tuning, which solved the problem but sadly I think dilutes the "no training inputs from after 1899" claim from the original model card.
You are only seeing the long-form articles from my blog. Subscribe to /atom/everything/ to get all of my posts, or take a look at my other subscription options.
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🔗 sacha chua :: living an awesome life 2026-03-30 Emacs news rss
It's not too late to write about mistakes and misconceptions as part of the Emacs Carnival for March and not too early to think about the theme of "Newbies/Starter Kits" which Cena will be hosting for April. Who knows, maybe those ideas can become part of the newcomers presets. It could be fun to explore something like notes for Emacs beginners and see where you end up.
Also, I'm looking forward to seeing if these tips for reloading Emacs Lisp code can help me avoid little bugs from leftover code.
Enjoy!
- Upcoming events (iCal file, Org):
- EmacsATX: Emacs Social https://www.meetup.com/emacsatx/events/313720093/ Thu Apr 2 1600 America/Vancouver - 1800 America/Chicago - 1900 America/Toronto - 2300 Etc/GMT – Fri Apr 3 0100 Europe/Berlin - 0430 Asia/Kolkata - 0700 Asia/Singapore
- M-x Research: TBA https://m-x-research.github.io/ Fri Apr 3 0800 America/Vancouver - 1000 America/Chicago - 1100 America/Toronto - 1500 Etc/GMT - 1700 Europe/Berlin - 2030 Asia/Kolkata - 2300 Asia/Singapore
- Emacs.si (in person): Emacs.si meetup #4 2026 (v #živo) https://dogodki.kompot.si/events/c4ee8c26-c668-491e-91b3-b466578b83e2 Mon Apr 6 1900 CET
- OrgMeetup (virtual) https://orgmode.org/worg/orgmeetup.html Wed Apr 8 0900 America/Vancouver - 1100 America/Chicago - 1200 America/Toronto - 1600 Etc/GMT - 1800 Europe/Berlin - 2130 Asia/Kolkata – Thu Apr 9 0000 Asia/Singapore
- Atelier Emacs Montpellier (in person) https://lebib.org/date/atelier-emacs Fri Apr 10 1800 Europe/Paris
- Beginner:
- Emacs configuration:
- Emacs Lisp:
- Appearance:
- Navigation:
- TRAMP:
- Writing:
- Denote:
- Org Mode:
- Sacha Chua: Categorizing Emacs News items by voice in Org Mode
- Curtis McHale: Goodbye Longform Hello Emacs (YouTube 16:59, Irreal)
- Chris Maiorana: OrgFolio | Turn your scattered interests into cultivated obsessions (Irreal)
- aleksozolins/org-taube: Email-first capture pipeline for Org mode · GitHub (Reddit)
- Org development:
- Coding:
- iquiw/emacstreak: GitHub streak stats on Emacs · GitHub (@iquiw@mstdn.jp)
- Migrating from asdf and direnv to mise | Masutaka's ChangeLog Memo (@masutaka@mstdn.love) - fixing ruby-lsp not working in Emacs
- neocaml 0.6: dune major/minor mode, flymake backend (@bbatsov@hachyderm.io)
- Emacs Redux: Paredit’s Keybinding Conflicts (Irreal)
- Marcin Borkowski: Disabling Eslint in one line with Tide
- James Dyer: Simply Annotate 0.9.8: Threaded Conversations on Your Code (Github, Reddit)
- flymake-janet: A Flymake backend for the Janet language [v0.2.0]
- Bozhidar Batsov: Neocaml 0.6: Opam, Dune, and More
- Einar Mostad: Use python shell from virtual environment if there is one in Emacs
- Bozhidar Batsov: fsharp-ts-mode: A Modern Emacs Mode for F#
- Monday Live Coding with Emacs. 3/23/2026 #coding #livecoding #emacs #learnc (01:20:11)
- Shells:
- Web:
- Mail, news, and chat:
- Fun:
- Community:
- Fortnightly Tips, Tricks, and Questions — 2026-03-24 / week 12
- Emacs as a programmable workbench (Reddit)
- Emacs Carnival March 2026: Mistakes and Misconceptions
- Emacs Redux: Happy 13th Birthday, Emacs Redux!
- Prot Asks: Arkadiusz about blindness, Emacspeak, Hyperbole, Chinese and Slavic culture | Protesilaos Stavrou (YouTube 01:57:23)
- xenodium wants to know if people want to sponsor Org Mode + Google Sheets sync (@xenodium@indieweb.social)
- Other:
- Emacs development:
- New packages:
- ancient-theme: A theme about ruins (MELPA)
- anju: Mouse UX Customizations (MELPA)
- clj-doc-browse: Browse Clojure library docs from classpath JARs (MELPA)
- eglot-typescript-preset: Eglot preset for TypeScript (MELPA)
- eldoc-mouse-nov: Preview epub link for mouse hover (NonGNU ELPA)
- flywrite: Inline writing suggestions via LLM (MELPA)
- fsharp-ts-mode: Major mode for F# code (MELPA)
- llm-test: LLM-driven testing for packages (MELPA)
- ros-face: Syntax highlighting for ROS files (MELPA)
- tetris-60: Retro ASCII Tetris (MELPA)
- vterm-editor: Edit text in a buffer and send it to vterm (MELPA)
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🔗 r/york Where to find Wild Gralic in York? rss
I'm looking for wild garlic and I normally go to knavesmire woods but there isn't really any this year! If anyone knows some good spots that are within a walking/cycling distance of the city centre let me know!!
submitted by /u/FewEntrepreneur7226
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🔗 r/Leeds 3 cycling incidents on Stanningley Road in 10 minutes. I hate cycling in this city. rss
With the weather getting better, fuel getting expensive, and the trains remaining rubbish, I thought I'd get my fat arse back on my bike to work this morning, from Farsley to the LGI/university precinct. I guess that was a stupid idea.
All of these things happened while riding on the segregated bike path (Leeds- Bradford "Superhighway"), specifically the Stanningley Road stretch. I'm an experienced cyclists and I genuinely obey the rules, including stopping at all traffic lights - just to preempt any silly responses. I drive as well.
First one - the stretch just before Bramley station. Driver turns left straight across me as I'm going along the bike path. Comes from behind me so I don't see her till the last second and have to slam on the brakes. Hadn't seen me even though she had just passed me.
Second one, 5 minutes later - riding down the long downhill stretch just by the tennis club. Going quite quickly. Driver pulls into the segregated bike lane and tries to park dead in front of me. Again hasn't even bothered to check mirrors for cyclists before trying to park in the fucking bike lane.
Third one, only a couple of minutes afterwards - again a quick stretch because of the downhill, just before Armley park. A pedestrian and her young daughter , not at a crossing, have been jumping the motor traffic to get across the road. I don't see them until the very last second because they pop out from behind cars, straight into the bike lane, without looking. Full on emergency stop, thankfully I changed brake pads lately and have my wits about me, I pull up to a stop maybe a foot or two (maximum) in front of the little girl. If I had hit her and knocked her over and she'd hit her head, she could have been killed. Terrifying experience.
These all happen on quick, straight, downhill stretches of the path. I'm a strong enough cyclist but not a racer, so I'm not hooning it at all, just going at a fair clip coasting downhill. I suppose it's a reminder to expect the unexpected at any moment. And to get a helmet cam.
But JFC. First time back on the bike in months and three incidents like this straight away. Stuff like this always happens too - at least one incident per week if I'm riding every day. Insane drivers with no business anywhere on the public highway nearly killing you with their cars. Pedestrian incidents are rarer but they still happen.
Cycling here is shit. Even in places like Stanningley Road where the infrastructure is relatively good, it's just totally ignored by other road users. Because the overall state of cycle provision across the city is poor, there aren't enough cyclists for people to learn to look out for them when driving, and the vicious cycle (!) continues.
Mind you, if you don't habitually look out for cyclists when driving your car anyway, you shouldn't have a licence. The roads around here are full of psychos and maniacs.
Rant over. I think I will be back on the train for a while even though it's overcrowded and always late. Just adding to the complaints about the standard of transport provision in Leeds which is completely laughable for a city of this size and (professed) ambition. I'd also love to hear whether anybody else using this stretch of cycle lane also experiences incidents like this regularly or whether it's just me being an idiot.
EDIT: Thanks everyone, appreciate all the responses. I've calmed down now, this post was a bit of a rant. I'm sorry so many other people have had a crap time.
I don't want to discourage anyone cycling. I'll still do it, even if not every day. It can be safe and healthy if you take precautions and ride very defensively. I think I had forgotten over the last few months now careful you have to be.
Some tips on defensive riding here: https://www.edinburghbicycle.com/info/blog/what-is-defensive-cycling
And please everyone if you are cycling on the road, take your lane when you need to! Don't be intimidated into squeezing right into the side of the road, it's an invitation to bellends to try and pass you on a blind corner or smoosh you into a bus stop.
submitted by /u/Jazzlike-Machine-222
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🔗 r/Harrogate Roofer recommendations please rss
Looking for reliable roofers in or around Harrogate please as we've had a nightmare with who did our front and rear flat dormer roofs, initially replaced in October and it's almost April now and they're still not 100% sorted.
Cheers
submitted by /u/OkNeighborhood7482
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🔗 r/wiesbaden Worin unterscheiden sich Mainz und Wiesbaden am meisten? Würde es irgendwann Sinn machen die Doppelstädte in einer zusammenzuführen? rss
submitted by /u/Klarsichtbeton
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🔗 r/Yorkshire I think this might be the best garden in North Yorks I've ever seen! Love that Monty Don seems to be such a fan rss
| submitted by /u/Terrible_Passion6178
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🔗 r/reverseengineering /r/ReverseEngineering's Weekly Questions Thread rss
To reduce the amount of noise from questions, we have disabled self-posts in favor of a unified questions thread every week. Feel free to ask any question about reverse engineering here. If your question is about how to use a specific tool, or is specific to some particular target, you will have better luck on the Reverse Engineering StackExchange. See also /r/AskReverseEngineering.
submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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🔗 MetaBrainz python-discid 1.4.0 rss
A new version of python-discid, a Python wrapper library for libdiscid, is now available. Version 1.4.0 focuses on modernizing the code base and updating the documentation.
The public API is now fully type-hinted and the type hints are also used in the documentation. A Disc.pregap property was added for convenient access to the first track's pregap. For the full list of changes see the changelog in the documentation.
The new version is available on PyPI. See also the install instructions for more options. Please note that the new minimal Python version supported is now Python 3.10.
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🔗 backnotprop/plannotator v0.16.0 release
Follow @plannotator on X for updates
Missed recent releases? Release | Highlights
---|---
v0.15.5 | Custom display names, GitHub viewed file sync, expand/collapse all in file tree, search performance, WSL fix
v0.15.2 | Compound Planning skill, folder annotation,/plannotator-archiveslash command, skill installation via platform installers
v0.15.0 | Live AI chat in code review, plan archive browser, folder file viewer, resizable split pane, Pi full feature parity
v0.14.5 | GitLab merge request review, login page image fix, Windows install path fix
v0.14.4 | GitHub review submission, repo identifier in tab title, nested code fence parser fix, Pi paste URL wiring
v0.14.3 | PR context panel, diff search in code review, OpenCode permission normalization, landing page redesign
v0.14.2 | OpenCode plan mode prompt replacement, Windows non-ASCII path fix, Pi link fix
v0.14.1 | Single submit_plan with auto-detect, viewed-file draft persistence, Bear nested tag fix
v0.14.0 | PR review via GitHub URL,/plannotator-lastfor annotating agent messages, OpenCode plan mode permissions fix, VS Code SSH proxy fix
v0.13.1 | OpenCode plan mode rewrite, Obsidian save fix
v0.13.0 | Built-in themes, annotatable plan diffs, file-scoped code review comments, Octarine integration, unified review core, Pi remote sessions
What's New in v0.16.0
v0.16.0 adds GitHub Copilot CLI as Plannotator's fifth runtime, an external annotations API for integration (stay tuned...), bot callback URLs for Slack- style approval workflows, interactive plan checkboxes, print support, and configurable diff display options. 11 PRs, 3 from external contributors, 2 first-timers.
GitHub Copilot CLI Integration
Plannotator now works with GitHub Copilot CLI, contributed by @Yecats. Plan review, code review, and markdown annotation all function the same way they do in Claude Code. The Copilot plugin hooks into
exit_plan_modeto intercept plans, and the same/plannotator-review,/plannotator-annotate, and/plannotator-lastcommands are available.Install the binary, then in Copilot CLI:
/plugin marketplace add backnotprop/plannotator /plugin install plannotator-copilot@plannotatorA follow-up PR added environment-variable-based agent detection so the UI correctly identifies which agent launched Plannotator, fixing the badge display that was previously hardcoded to Claude Code.
External Annotations API
Any external program can now push annotations into a live Plannotator session. Linters, AI tools, or custom scripts send annotations via HTTP POST to
/api/external-annotations, and they appear in the browser UI in real-time through Server-Sent Events. The API supports single and batch annotation creation, field updates via PATCH, deletion by ID or source, and version-gated polling as a fallback for environments where SSE isn't practical.This is the foundation for integrating Plannotator with external toolchains. A linter could annotate code review diffs with warnings. A CI pipeline could push review comments. An AI assistant could highlight sections of a plan it has questions about.
All three server types (plan, review, annotate) expose the same endpoints, and the Pi extension has full parity.
Interactive Checkboxes
Task checkboxes in rendered plans are now clickable. Checking or unchecking a box creates a COMMENT annotation that captures the action, the section context, and the task text. Toggling back to the original state removes the override and deletes the annotation. This means your checkbox interactions become part of the feedback sent to the agent.
Print Support
Plans can now be printed directly from the review UI. An export dropdown menu in the toolbar offers a print option, and
Ctrl+P/Cmd+Pworks as a keyboard shortcut. A dedicated print stylesheet produces clean white-paper output with A4 formatting, hiding the toolbar, sidebar, and interactive elements.Diff Display Options
The code review diff viewer now exposes display settings that were previously locked to defaults. You can configure overflow behavior (scroll vs word wrap), toggle diff indicators and line numbers, control inline diff granularity, and show or hide diff backgrounds. All settings are persisted via the ConfigStore system (cookies +
~/.plannotator/config.json) and accessible from a new Display tab in the review Settings dialog.Bot Callback URL Parameters
Plannotator share URLs now support callback parameters for bot integrations. When a bot (e.g., a Slack bot) generates a plan and posts the Plannotator URL, it can embed
?cb=<callback_url>&ct=<auth_token>so the approval decision is sent back to the bot automatically. The user reviews and approves in Plannotator, and the bot receives the result without any copy-paste.- Authored by @aviadshiber in #416
Additional Changes
- OpenCode startup performance. Replaced compile-time HTML embedding with lazy
readFileSyncgetters and background preloading. Bundle size drops from 21.25 MB to 0.81 MB (96% reduction), cold-start module load from ~160ms to ~35ms (#411, closing #410 reported by @DRBragg) - Markdown parser fixes. Indented closing fences (inside list items), trailing text after fence closers, and false table detection on lines with pipes are all fixed (#429, closing #427 reported by @jhillyerd)
- PR/MR platform test coverage. Regression tests for URL parsing, labels, display helpers, and CLI selection across GitHub and GitLab, including self-hosted GitLab (#426 by @sudorest)
- Compound skill description fix. Trimmed to fit Claude Code 2.1.86's 250-character limit and added
disable-model-invocationfrontmatter (#430, closing #412 reported by @arogulin) - Copilot on marketing site. The landing page harness selector now includes a Copilot button with install instructions, in alphabetical order alongside the other five runtimes.
Install / Update
macOS / Linux:
curl -fsSL https://plannotator.ai/install.sh | bashWindows:
irm https://plannotator.ai/install.ps1 | iexClaude Code Plugin: Run
/pluginin Claude Code, find plannotator , and click "Update now".Copilot CLI:
/plugin marketplace add backnotprop/plannotator /plugin install plannotator-copilot@plannotatorOpenCode: Clear cache and restart:
rm -rf ~/.bun/install/cache/@plannotatorThen in
opencode.json:{ "plugin": ["@plannotator/opencode@latest"] }Pi: Install or update the extension:
pi install npm:@plannotator/pi-extension
What's Changed
- feat: GitHub Copilot CLI integration by @Yecats in #409
- perf(opencode): lazy-load HTML to fix plugin startup time by @backnotprop in #411
- feat: bot callback URL params for seamless plan review by @aviadshiber in #416
- fix: detect calling agent via env vars and centralize agent config by @Yecats in #418
- feat: print support with export menu integration and keyboard shortcut by @Yecats in #420
- feat: interactive checkboxes with annotation tracking by @Yecats in #423
- test: cover PR/MR platform helpers by @sudorest in #426
- feat(review): diff display options with ConfigStore integration by @backnotprop in #428
- fix(parser): indented fences, trailing text, table detection, and escaped pipes by @backnotprop in #429
- fix(skill): trim compound skill description under 250-char limit by @backnotprop in #430
- feat: external annotations API with real-time SSE by @backnotprop in #400
New Contributors
- @Yecats made their first contribution in #409
- @aviadshiber made their first contribution in #416
Contributors
@Yecats authored four PRs in this release: GitHub Copilot CLI integration (#409), agent detection fix (#418), print support (#420), and interactive checkboxes (#423). First contribution to the project, and immediately one of the most prolific single- release contributors.
@aviadshiber authored the bot callback URL system (#416), enabling Plannotator integration with external bot workflows. First contribution.
@sudorest added PR/MR platform test coverage (#426), protecting the multi-platform review routing.
Community members who reported issues that drove changes in this release:
- @DRBragg: #410 (OpenCode plugin startup time)
- @kanchev1: #421 (word wrap toggle in diff viewer)
- @jhillyerd: #427 (indented code block detection)
- @arogulin: #412 (skill description character limit)
Full Changelog :
v0.15.5...v0.16.0 -
🔗 Szymon Kaliski Q1 2026 rss
Home Server on NixOS, Sandboxing in MicroVMs, and Feedback Loops for LLMs
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🔗 Ampcode News Amp Free Is Ad-Free rss
When you use Amp Free, you won't see ads anymore.
We know many of you loved the ads, advertisers were happy, and we quickly grew ad sales to a $10M+ USD annual run rate, but the world has changed since we introduced ads in October 2025.
The launches of Gemini 3 Pro, Opus 4.5, and GPT-5.2 Codex starting in late November 2025 changed the world, and in this new world, ads don't make sense. Ads just don't pay for enough frontier tokens to make a difference, and token consumption is only going up from here.
Along with this, OpenAI now offers subscription plans with even more aggressive discounts than what Anthropic offered before. You can pay OpenAI $20/month to get (seemingly) $1000+/month in tokens. This gives you a lot more "free" usage than Amp's ad-supported free tier and is a better choice if cost is your top concern.
What about the $10 daily free usage of Amp? Most who have it will keep getting it, now without ads. We'll be pausing it for some less-active users. As we ship updates to Amp, you can expect the free daily grant to be more available and more generous for people using Amp in the recommended ways, and less so for people using older Amp versions and workflows. We'll let you know before we make that change. Think of it as a bonus for staying on the frontier with us.
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