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Climate person with light coding skills.
@gruber just saw your note on @daringfireball. Whatever it is, Im sure it’s safe to say you’re in our thoughts. Looking forward to your return ☀️
@atpfm while we’re at it, the Music iMessage app hasn’t seen an update since it was first shipped. All you get there is a list of your most recently played songs.
@atpfm hope you guys talk about how limited “pinned” music is in the Music app. Doesn’t show up anywhere outside of “Library” (so it’s not pinned across the app’s sections) nor does it show up in the long press /peek menu on the home screen. It may as well not exist.
Apple redesigned the Cracker Barrel logo, y’all.
The first of my two college-bound children has been dropped off.
More good news! Another government is freeing itself from tech giants and vendor lock-in. The Danish Ministry of Digitalisation is dropping Microsoft Office/365 and moving to #LibreOffice, to get back control: https://blog.documentfoundation.org/blog/2025/07/08/danish-ministry-switching-from-microsoft-office-365-to-libreoffice/ #foss #OpenSource #freesoftware
#ASKATP @atpfm Apple News is a great service, but it really needs a comments section. Some of the best insights on social media come from the replies, not just the original post. Why hasn’t Apple tapped into that?

Wow - evidence that very massive neutron stars may have cores made of deconfined quark matter! The idea of a 'quark star' is not new, but I didn't know it was a serious possibility.

An ordinary neutron star has a core made mostly of densely packed neutrons. A matchbox-sized chunk of this stuff weighs about 3 billion tonnes. But if you squeeze this stuff hard enough, eventually the neutrons break. Each neutron consists of 3 quarks held together by gluons. So when the neutrons break you get 'quark matter' - a sea of quarks and gluons, no longer confined in neutrons.

We've made something similar here on Earth: at CERN and Brookhaven, physicists smack atomic nuclei at each other so hard that the protons and neutrons break and momentarily form a 'quark-gluon plasma'. But the conditions in a neutron star core are different: cooler, but more pressure - and not just temporary.

This new paper tries to take the measured properties of massive neutron stars and see if they fit a model where the inner core is made of deconfined quark matter. They say it does with about 80% probability! I'd take this with a grain of salt, but it's an exciting possibility. It's not every day we find quintillions of tonnes of a new state of matter.

For me, the coolest part is that deconfined quark matter may have an extra symmetry, called 'conformal symmetry'. This means that if you zoom in on it, it looks almost the same. An atom looks like a blob with some specific size. So does a neutron. But a system with conformal symmetry is just a blur spread out everywhere - and if you zoom in or zoom out, you see something very similar. This is crazy.

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https://physicsworld.com/a/evidence-grows-for-deconfined-quark-matter-in-neutron-star-cores/

Evidence grows for deconfined quark matter in neutron-star cores – Physics World

New study applies Bayesian inference to multiple observations

Physics World
In MacStories Weekly, I’m kicking off a two-part series on how I use Collections, the database app I can’t get enough of. I share two practical uses cases for the app in my daily life – tracking articles I edit on MacStories and logging car maintenance – and the steps I took to create these collections. This was a lot of fun to put together, and there’s more to come soon, so I hope you’ll check it out! https://club.macstories.net/posts/how-im-using-the-collections-app-link-saving-and-car-maintenance
How I’m Using the Collections App: Link-Saving and Car Maintenance

Françoise Hardy: France’s girlish yé-yé star was a groundbreaking musical artist

Hardy shot to fame singing airy, carefree pop before she took control of her career, hung out with 60s rock aristocracy and became a sophisticated singer-songwriter of rare sensuality and melancholy

The Guardian