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Multi-source AI news clustered, deduplicated, and scored 0–100 across authority, cluster strength, headline signal, and time decay.

  1. luckrig: a concept for tasting LLM rigs, not just models

    Prospector Labs has introduced "luckrig," a concept for evaluating the specific hardware configurations, or "rigs," used to run large language models, rather than just the models themselves. This system aims to fill a gap by allowing users to test models with exact GPU specifications, quantization, and context lengths, inspired by the early P2P tool Hotline Connect. Users can earn access to other people's rigs by contributing their own tuning notes and timing measurements, with a focus on hardware diversity over speed or leaderboards. AI

    IMPACT Introduces a novel approach to evaluating LLM hardware setups, potentially influencing how users benchmark and select inference environments.

  2. Cyberpunk 2077 cosplay jacket features a $1,200 flexible OLED collar that you can game on with a Steam Controller — dual Raspberry Pi 4s power the wearable tech

    A cosplay enthusiast has created a real-life version of the NUSA Infiltrator jacket from Cyberpunk 2077, featuring a unique collar. This collar integrates four flexible OLED displays, costing approximately $1,200, which are powered by two Raspberry Pi 4 single-board computers. The jacket's collar can display animations or even be used to play games via a Steam Controller, offering about three hours of power from hidden batteries. AI

    Cyberpunk 2077 cosplay jacket features a $1,200 flexible OLED collar that you can game on with a Steam Controller — dual Raspberry Pi 4s power the wearable tech

    IMPACT This wearable tech project showcases creative integration of consumer electronics for cosplay, with no direct impact on AI operations.

  3. New Flipper One computing multitool bristles with network, GPIO, and M.2 connectivity — new keychain device is also a fully open Arm Linux computer

    Flipper Devices has announced the Flipper One, a new open-source Arm Linux computer designed as a portable multitool. This device significantly expands on the Flipper Zero's capabilities by integrating a Linux-capable processor comparable to a Raspberry Pi 5 and M.2 expansion slots. The Flipper One is still in early development, with the company actively seeking community contributions to refine its features and prepare it for market. AI

    New Flipper One computing multitool bristles with network, GPIO, and M.2 connectivity — new keychain device is also a fully open Arm Linux computer

    IMPACT Niche tooling improvement; minimal industry-wide impact.