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C++ Development Team & C++

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C++: The Documentary

C++: The Documentary premiered today on YouTube, and it was great to be on the live chat with Bjarne and many other key folks who participated in C++’s history. I’m honored to have been one of hundreds of people who have played a part in advancing Bjarne’s wonderful project over the years. If you haven’t watched this yet, make it a weekend goal.

Hacker News 5d ago

Agentic AI arrives for Delphi and C++ Builder

Embarcadero has released Kai, an agentic AI assistant for RAD Studio, an IDE (integrated development environment) for Delphi and C++ Builder. Kai is offered as an extension, which means that by default RAD Studio lacks AI capabilities. The extension provides chat, code completion, and an MCP (model context protocol) server to enable other AI agents to communicate with the IDE.

The Register 8d ago

(T)oo (M)uch (C)haos? Mamata's party faces its biggest crisis — Latest developments

Trinamool means "grassroots" — a name chosen by Mamata Banerjee when she founded the party in 1998 to project it as a movement powered from the ground up. But on Wednesday, the castle that Mamata built for over two decades seemed vulnearable and perhaps facing its greatest crisis. In an unprecedented revolt, that has drawn parallels from when Shiv Sena broke in 2022, 58 rebel TMC MLAs led by expelled leader Ritabrata Banerjee claimed control of the Trinamool Congress legislature party and...

Times of India 6d ago

DNA design unlocks nanometer-scale catalyst control for cleaner hydrogen production

The fixed idea that DNA is only a molecule that stores genetic information is being challenged. KAIST researchers have developed a technology that controls the chemical environment around catalysts at the nanometer scale by designing DNA sequences—the arrangement of A, T, G and C that make up genetic information. The team has presented a new catalyst platform that can improve hydrogen production efficiency and increase the yield of desired chemical products by designing DNA much like writing...

Phys.org 1d ago

First nonrepeating biological clock discovered in C. elegans guides growth

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Phys.org 3d ago

Scientists discover the master clock that controls biological growth and development

Scientists discover the master clock that controls biological growth and development - Date: - June 4, 2026 - Source: - Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory - Summary: - A newly discovered genetic clock acts as the master timekeeper for development, orchestrating crucial bursts of gene activity throughout a worm’s growth. When the clock is disrupted, development stops, offering fresh clues about how growth-related disorders may arise. - Share: Imagine a train sitting at a station.

Science Daily 6d ago

History of CentOS: How a biochemist's Linux hobby project became the enterprise world's default operating system

INTERVIEW Gregory Kurtzer, CentOS's founder, tells the story of how the Red Hat Enterprise Linux clone was born of a small group of rebuild hackers and Linux fans who were angry that Red Hat Enterprise Linux had replaced Red Hat Linux and convinced they could do better. Back in 2003, Linux fans were ticked off at Red Hat because they were replacing the end-user-friendly Red Hat Linux with the business-oriented Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL). It was a smart move for Red Hat, but users were...

The Register 2d ago

How do you study an invisible exoplanet? Astronomers discover planetary 'fingerprints' in the rings around stars

How do you study an invisible exoplanet? Astronomers discover planetary 'fingerprints' in the rings around stars You just have to read between the rings. How do you weigh a planet you can't see from many light-years away?

Space.com 8d ago

Synthesized peptides can slip into cells to block hard-to-target protein interactions

Synthesized peptides can slip into cells to block hard-to-target protein interactions Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor Many diseases are driven by proteins interacting with each other inside cells. But blocking these interactions with drugs is difficult because typical "small-molecule" drugs often prove to be too small to grip the broad, flat surfaces involved in protein-protein interactions. On the other hand, peptides—short chains of amino acids—can cover larger...

Phys.org 8d ago