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Ollama's MLX support speeds up running local models on Macs
Tech/AI

Ollama’s MLX support speeds up running local models on Macs

by admin March 31, 2026
written by admin

Ollama, a runtime for running large language models on a local machine, has added compatibility with Apple’s open-source MLX machine-learning framework. Ollama also reports better caching performance and now supports Nvidia’s NVFP4 model-compression format, which can considerably reduce memory use for certain models.

Taken together, these changes should deliver noticeably improved performance on Macs with Apple Silicon (M1 or later)—and the timing is apt, since local models are starting to gain momentum beyond the research and hobbyist spheres.

OpenClaw’s recent breakout—which surged past 300,000 stars on GitHub, grabbed attention with experiments like Moltbook, and became a particular phenomenon in China in particular—has pushed many people to try running models locally.

As developers grow frustrated with rate limits and the high prices of premium plans for services such as Claude Code or ChatGPT Codex, experimentation with local coding models has intensified. (Ollama has also recently expanded its Visual Studio Code integration.)

The new capability is available in preview (Ollama 0.19) and currently supports only one model—the 35 billion-parameter variant of Alibaba’s Qwen3.5. The hardware requirements are steep for typical users: besides an Apple Silicon Mac, you need at least 32GB of RAM, according to Ollama’s announcement.

March 31, 2026 0 comments
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RFK Jr. is urging Americans to use peptides that were banned for safety reasons
Tech/AI

RFK Jr. is urging Americans to use peptides that were banned for safety reasons

by admin March 31, 2026
written by admin

Safety concerns

On March 22, The Wall Street Journal said Kennedy was “poised” to carry out his proposal to remove FDA limits on peptides. Two days later, The Washington Post’s editorial board denounced Kennedy’s proposal as “hypocritical quackery.” Today, The New York Times reported that the FDA is moving toward permitting compounding pharmacies to produce 14 peptides that are now restricted. The Times added that senior FDA officials have “reservations” about the shift and worry the agency could be accused of deciding on political grounds rather than on scientific evidence.

Which 14 peptides might be included hasn’t been made public. Observers expect several well-known compounds to appear on the list, such as BPC-157 (Body Protection Compound-157), originally isolated from gastric secretions and promoted for tissue repair. Growth-hormone–releasing peptides like CJC-1295 and Ipamorelin are also likely candidates.

Specialists point out there are no randomized controlled trials proving the effectiveness of these peptides. Furthermore, experts warn of a range of safety issues, including contaminants from gray- or black-market sources, inconsistent dosing, and mixtures of unproven peptides known as “stacks.” Some peptides that stimulate growth could increase cancer risk, and others may disrupt hormonal balance. Last year, two women fell critically ill after receiving peptide injections at an anti-aging event in Las Vegas.

The evidence for these peptides is “just woefully minuscule,” Eric Topol, director of the Scripps Research Translational Institute, told the Times. “It’s a mess, because we don’t have any data that these work,” he added. “Maybe one of them actually does something good. But right now, we just know that they’re a liability.”

March 31, 2026 0 comments
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Autonomous vessel startup Saronic secures $1.75 billion in competition to upgrade U.S. armed forces.
Economy

Autonomous vessel startup Saronic secures $1.75 billion in competition to upgrade U.S. armed forces.

by admin March 31, 2026
written by admin

The autonomous shipping firm Saronic announced on Tuesday that it has secured $1.75 billion in funding as it accelerates production to satisfy the increasing demand from the U.S. military for more advanced and cost-effective defense solutions.

This funding round, spearheaded by Kleiner Perkins, more than doubles Saronic’s valuation to $9.25 billion, up from $4 billion following a $600 million fundraising last year.

Saronic intends to utilize the investment to enhance its supply chain and shipyards, aiming to produce over 20 ships annually by 2027, which includes its new facility, named Port Alpha, located in Texas.

“We’re witnessing a genuine shift in demand towards unmanned systems that can be produced at scale and at a considerably lower cost compared to traditional vessels,” CEO Dino Mavrookas informed CNBC’s Morgan Brennan during an interview.

The U.S. is pushing to catch up with China’s extensive shipbuilding capacities and regain maritime dominance under President Donald Trump’s defense modernization initiatives. The conflict in Iran and the congestion in the Strait of Hormuz further underscore the necessity of incorporating newer technologies into modern warfare.

Saronic’s Spyglass and Cutlass autonomous surface vessels.
Courtesy: Saronic

Mavrookas stated that Saronic’s vessels could minimize risks to military personnel in hazardous environments and assist the U.S. in diminishing China’s predominance. The company aims to help the U.S. achieve production figures not seen since World War II.

“It’s a complete reimagining of the ship,” he remarked, focusing on redesigning vessel structures for autonomy.

For several years, Silicon Valley has invested billions into defense technology firms trying to gain market share from established defense contractors like Lockheed Martin, RTX and Northrop Grumman.

Saronic, which was ranked 19th on the latest CNBC Disruptor 50 list, is part of a growing number of defense firms attracting government contracts with support from venture capital. Last year, it secured a $392 million contract with the Navy. Recently, autonomous drone company Shield AI raised $2 billion at a $12.7 billion valuation. Palantir and Anduril have also achieved significant success during the Trump administration.

Located in Austin, Texas, Saronic produces six different versions of autonomous surface vessels, including a six-foot-long model called Spyglass and its 40-metric-ton marauder.

Saronic’s primary shipyard in Franklin, Louisiana, is currently undergoing a $300 million expansion. Mavrookas mentioned that the company is on track to increase production fivefold there within the next year.

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March 31, 2026 0 comments
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Another Starlink satellite has mysteriously burst apart
Tech/AI

Another Starlink satellite has mysteriously burst apart

by admin March 31, 2026
written by admin

It comes on the heels of a related occurrence from December.

It comes on the heels of a related occurrence from December.

Mar 31, 2026, 8:19 AM UTC
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Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker is a deputy editor and co-founder of Verge, passionate about human-centered cities, e-bikes, and living as a digital nomad. He has spent 20 years as a technology journalist.

SpaceX has reported losing connection with a Starlink satellite following an “anomaly.” While SpaceX remains vague about the specifics, space-monitoring firm Leo Labs states it “immediately detected dozens of objects surrounding” Starlink 34343 post-incident.

“Recent findings indicate that the situation presents no additional threat to the @Space_Station, its crew, or the forthcoming launch of NASA’s Artemis II mission,” states SpaceX in a post on X. “We will keep an eye on the satellite alongside any identifiable debris and coordinate efforts with @NASA and the @USSpaceForce.”

The satellite and its debris are anticipated to disintegrate upon entering the atmosphere in a few weeks. SpaceX is currently analyzing the cause.

SpaceX experienced a comparable incident in December when it unexpectedly lost contact with a satellite that also appeared to have exploded. This event occurred merely a week following a close encounter with a Chinese satellite.

The latest incident took place at approximately 560km above Earth in a congested region referred to as low Earth orbit, where over 24,000 objects, including debris and around 10,000 Starlink satellites, are being monitored.

In January, SpaceX sought approval from the FCC for “up to one million satellites” to establish orbital data centers. “We have recently submitted a request for FCC authorization for as many as one million AI satellites,” noted SpaceX’s president and COO Gwynne Shotwell in a recent Time article. “I’m surprised that didn’t garner more attention. I thought it would definitely make headlines.”

Well, Gwynne, here we are, just as SpaceX is gearing up for a record-breaking IPO.

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March 31, 2026 0 comments
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Sexual violence is a component of 'daily life' in certain regions of Sudan, according to a charity.
Global

Sexual violence is a component of ‘daily life’ in certain regions of Sudan, according to a charity.

by admin March 31, 2026
written by admin

Numerous incidents outlined in the report occurred in last year’s conflict zone of North Darfur, following the RSF’s seizure of the displaced persons camps in Zamzam and Abu Shouk, as well as the city of el-Fasher in October, which MSF describes as “one of the most shocking episodes, revealing the most unfathomable savagery”.

March 31, 2026 0 comments
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Eurovision Song Contest debuts its inaugural Asia edition
Global

Eurovision Song Contest debuts its inaugural Asia edition

by admin March 31, 2026
written by admin

“Commemorating the 70th anniversary of the Eurovision Song Contest, it holds particular significance to embark on this new chapter with Asia, a region abundant in culture, creativity, and talent,” stated Martin Green, director of the Eurovision Song Contest at the EBU.

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After 150 million users, Roblox rival Rec Room is closing down
Tech/AI

After 150 million users, Roblox rival Rec Room is closing down

by admin March 30, 2026
written by admin

  • Entertainment

The organization claims it ‘never fully understood how to turn Rec Room into a consistently profitable venture.’

The organization claims it ‘never fully understood how to turn Rec Room into a consistently profitable venture.’

Mar 31, 2026, 12:29 AM UTC
RecRoom_Creator.png
RecRoom_Creator.png
Jay Peters
Jay Peters is a senior journalist focused on technology, gaming, and other areas. He began his journey with The Verge in 2019 following nearly two years at Techmeme.

Rec Room, a social gaming platform similar to Roblox that allows users to craft games and experiences for others to engage with, is set to close on June 1st. Although it has attracted over 150 million players and creators and, at its peak, was valued at $3.5 billion, the organization states in a blog update that “we never fully understood how to turn Rec Room into a consistently profitable venture” and that “our expenses consistently outpaced the income we generated.”

The organization further mentions that “given the recent changes in the VR landscape, coupled with broader challenges in gaming, the journey towards profitability has become sufficiently difficult that we’ve made the tough choice to cease operations.” Rec Room cut its workforce by 50% in August, and shortly after those layoffs were made public, Rec Room CEO and co-founder Nick Fajt stated that conducting the layoffs at that time “allowed us to support individuals while positioning Rec Room for years rather than mere months of funding.”

Rec Room is not the only social gaming service to face difficulties recently. Beginning in June, Meta’s Horizon Worlds will not receive new VR experiences as the company pivots the platform’s focus towards mobile. Last week, Epic Games laid off over 1,000 employees due to a “decline in Fortnite engagement” which meant the company was “incurring significantly more expenses than we are earning,” as stated by CEO Tim Sweeney.

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Water utility announces it will stop adding fluoride — then reveals it had stopped doing so years earlier
Tech/AI

Water utility announces it will stop adding fluoride — then reveals it had stopped doing so years earlier

by admin March 30, 2026
written by admin

“This is the identical board that vowed transparency. The very leadership that said they would operate this utility the right way. And now they can’t even comply with a basic notification statute before removing a public health measure from the drinking water of hundreds of thousands of people,” Woodfin wrote.

Late last week, the City of Birmingham filed a lawsuit against CAW, alleging that CAW failed to provide notice of the change and seeking an emergency court order to restore fluoridation, according to local WVTM13. The city argued in its filing that removing fluoride from the water endangered residents’ dental health, particularly low-income residents and children who lack access to dental care.

When contacted by Ars Technica, the City of Birmingham declined to comment on the suit. CAW told reporters that it does not comment on pending litigation.

Fluoride recommendations

The American Dental Association (ADA) and the American Academy of Pediatrics endorse fluoridating community water to prevent tooth decay, especially in children. In areas without fluoridated water, medical experts recommend prescribing fluoride supplements for children.

Water fluoridation is considered one of the top 10 public health achievements. Still, since its introduction in the US in 1945, baseless fears and conspiracy theories have swirled around the practice. Those concerns have been stoked recently by anti-vaccine Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Although he has no background in medicine, public health, or science, Kennedy has rejected scientific evidence on fluoridation and made forceful, unsubstantiated claims that fluoridated water is unsafe. As health secretary, he has pledged to remove it from US water. A modeling study by Harvard University researchers last year estimated that if Kennedy follows through on that pledge, it would lead to 25 million more decayed teeth among children and teens in the first five years.

Health experts have also pushed back against the idea that fluoridation is unnecessary now that fluoride-containing toothpaste and mouthwash are available. In comments to NBC News, Scott Tomar, head of the department of population oral health at the University of Illinois Chicago, said: “It certainly is true that fluoride-containing toothpaste is effective at preventing decay, but it’s not true that that alone justifies removing fluoride from our drinking water.” Tomar warned that CAW’s decision to remove fluoride will increase residents’ risk of cavities. “It has probably put youngest children at the greatest risk, because that’s usually where we see it show up first when fluoridation stops,” he said.

March 30, 2026 0 comments
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Jim Cramer states that this downturn is generating chances to buy
Economy

Jim Cramer states that this downturn is generating chances to buy

by admin March 30, 2026
written by admin

On Monday, CNBC’s Jim Cramer warned investors to be cautious about selling high-quality stocks in a market that he believes is influenced more by fear than by fundamental conditions.

“Stocks decline for various reasons, some valid, some not. Recently, we’ve seen a fair amount of negative news, and tonight I want to clarify a few points,” Cramer stated on “Mad Money.” “A negative market can lead people to sell valuable stocks, particularly when they should be increasing their investments.”

The stock market closed predominantly lower on Monday, reversing earlier gains and finishing slightly above session lows. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq dropped by 0.39% and 0.73%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average managed a small gain of 0.11%.

Despite higher oil prices, the broader market lost its early momentum. Cramer highlighted the significant gap between stock market movements and the actual business landscape, especially within the technology sector.

Cramer cited cybersecurity as a prime example. Fears that the artificial intelligence developed by private firm Anthropic could supplant conventional cybersecurity companies have pressured the shares of Palo Alto Networks and CrowdStrike.

“That’s completely wrong,” Cramer remarked. “In fact, the growth of AI should actually benefit Palo Alto and CrowdStrike, since these AI systems can be exploited by hackers to easily infiltrate your network. They pose the real risk. Without traditional cybersecurity support, you’re in greater danger than ever,” he continued.

He underscored that insider confidence supports this perspective, highlighting that Palo Alto CEO Nikesh Arora recently acquired $10 million in stock. “I doubt a CEO would invest 10 million dollars in stock if he believed AI posed a true existential threat to the business,” Cramer asserted.

Cramer also discussed the significant decline in shares of social media behemoth Meta Platforms following recent judicial decisions, suggesting that investors are overreacting.

“I found the sell-off triggered by these lawsuits odd,” he pointed out, noting that such legal matters are frequently overturned during appeals.

His main takeaway: “At times, stocks decline for poor or entirely unfounded reasons, and in those situations, I’d prefer to be buying rather than selling shares of CrowdStrike or Meta.”

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March 30, 2026 0 comments
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Judge blocks Nexstar/Tegna merger after FCC allowed the companies to exceed the TV ownership limit
Tech/AI

Judge blocks Nexstar/Tegna merger after FCC allowed the companies to exceed the TV ownership limit

by admin March 30, 2026
written by admin

“Nunley wrote that the defendants likewise do not dispute the plaintiff’s claim that in the 16 [market areas] where Nexstar or Tegna holds a Big Four duopoly or triopoly, they appoint a single news director to run one newsroom and employ the same on-air talent across all Big Four channels they own in the [market area],” Nunley wrote.

Before the merger, Nexstar controlled 201 full-power TV stations and Tegna controlled 64, for a combined total of 265. They agreed to divest six stations, which would bring the total down to 259.

DirecTV argues that “without a hold-separate order, Nexstar will fully absorb Tegna and eliminate the firms’ head-to-head competition in the 31 overlapping markets,” Nunley wrote. “Plaintiff asserts it will suffer irreparable harm from a substantially reduced bargaining position vis-à-vis Nexstar in retransmission consent talks. Plaintiff maintains it will soon be negotiating access to highly sought-after content, including Big Four sports and local news, with a merged company that plans to threaten blackouts at rates that could double or even triple the current risk.”

Judge: Nexstar can’t absorb Tegna yet

Nunley concluded that DirecTV’s Clayton Act claim is likely to succeed on the merits and that “the public interest favors a hold-separate order.” The hold-separate directive contains multiple elements intended to stop Nexstar and Tegna from integrating assets or coordinating decisions.

“Nexstar must allow Tegna to continue operating as a separate and distinct, independently managed business unit from Nexstar, and Nexstar must implement measures to preserve Tegna as an ongoing, economically viable, and active competitor,” Nunley wrote. “Tegna shall have separate management that conducts Tegna’s affairs in the ordinary course consistent with pre-closing practices.”

One clause in the order requires Tegna’s leadership to retain control over decision-making “with respect to retransmission consent agreements and negotiations, newsroom personnel, operations and programming, product and service offerings, product development, advertisement sales, and personnel.”

Another provision states that all local TV stations owned by Tegna “will be maintained and operated as independent, ongoing, economically viable, and active competitors in the business of licensing retransmission consent” to TV providers. A clause aimed at preventing layoffs requires the companies “shall use all reasonable efforts to maintain” Tegna stations’ pre-merger staffing levels.

Nexstar has until April 1 to file arguments explaining why a preliminary injunction should not be entered, and a hearing is scheduled for April 7 to consider the potential injunction. The judge also ordered Nexstar to file a report by April 6 detailing the steps it has taken to comply with the temporary restraining order.

March 30, 2026 0 comments
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Sexual violence is a component of ‘daily life’ in certain regions of Sudan, according to a charity.
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