Vast Luck
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Defunct Hong Kong bakery chain fined HK$251,800 over unpaid wages
A Hong Kong court has fined a now-defunct bakery chain a total of HK$251,800 (US$32,127) over unpaid wages and other entitlements exceeding HK$1.3 million. A liquidator for Taipan Bread & Cakes, Taipan Restaurant and their parent company, Vast Luck, pleaded guilty at Kowloon City Court on Monday to 96 charges under the Employment Ordinance, after the group failed to pay 47 employees following the closure of all outlets on June 24 last year. Asked when the parent company could settle the...
Sixty thousand love letters and counting: volunteers help sift through vast German trove of devotion
Team is working to digitise archive of correspondence donated by public, charting relationships, social history and evolution of languageAfter four decades together, Tatiana and Steffen Missbach still write each other love letters. “A good love letter is specific – not only declaring your feelings but also, you know, ‘good luck at music practice, I’ll be thinking of you’,” said Tatiana, 66, a retired personnel manager. “If he’s leaving early on a work trip, I like waking up and finding one...
AI Is Slowing Down
If you liked this piece, you should subscribe to my premium newsletter. It’s $70 a year, or $7 a month, and in return you get a weekly newsletter that’s usually anywhere from 5,000 to 18,000 words, including vast, detailed analyses of NVIDIA, Anthropic and OpenAI’s finances, and the AI bubble writ large (updated to version 3.0 last week). My Hater's Guides To the SaaSpocalypse, Private Credit and Private Equity are essential to understanding our current financial system, and my guide to how...
If cores are what agents crave, Intel's new Clearwater Xeon 6+ might just quench their thirst
Intel’s Clearwater Forest Xeons were originally designed to power telco networks, SaaS apps, and other high-volume web-scale workloads. But by a stroke of luck, the x86 giant may have also built an agentic AI beast. AI model training, inference, and the GPUs that power them have dominated the discourse for the past few years, but with the rise of agentic harnesses like OpenClaw, CPUs are back in the limelight.
22 World Cup items, 22 stories
FIFA won't reveal how, but after every game at the 2026 World Cup this summer, it will be collecting items that will one day document the tournament. It already has the net from the 2018 World Cup final, for example, as well as the tracksuit that Pelé wore at his first World Cup in 1958. The items live in FIFA's various museums, ranging from Vancouver and Miami to Zurich and Hong Kong.
Did Claude increase bugs in rsync?
A simple distributional analysis of every rsync release with bug data. Nothing complicated, answers only one question: are the Claude-assisted releases unusually buggy? In order to avoid accuastions of this "just being Claude defending Claude," "AI slop," "probably all hallucinations," etc., I've decided it's probably worth explaining a few key points about how this report was created: In late May 2026, rsync blew up.
How Britain Became as Poor as Mississippi
Illustrations by Joan WongWho broke Britain? Someone—or something—must have. The past 18 years, enough time for a whole lost generation to be born and brought up, have yielded nothing but stagnation and mass disillusionment.
Data vs. dahi-chini: Why AI can code your life, but only your mom can decode your face
We live in an era where artificial intelligence can diagnose our lifestyle errors, draft our corporate emails, and map out a step-by-step strategy to text our crush. It processes billions of data points and language patterns in milliseconds to simulate human reasoning. Today, millions of people treat apps like ChatGPT and Google Gemini as digital confidantes, feeding them their deepest anxieties, career dilemmas, and late-night identity crises.
The Ordinary Miracle of Existing
On the northwestern shore of Africa, some 150 miles south of the Canary Islands, the coastline slightly bulges in a pimple known as Cape Bojador. For Europeans in the early 15th century, Cape Bojador marked the boundary between the known and the unknown. North of the cape was civilization and the cities of light.
Commentary: SpaceX’s capital needs are out of this world
Commentary: SpaceX’s capital needs are out of this world SpaceX's rising capital needs might be a tough sell ahead of its blockbuster initial public offering, says Chris Bryant for Bloomberg Opinion. Elon Musk’s SpaceX needed comparatively little money to build a world-beating space launch and satellite-broadband firm. But as it reframes itself partly as an artificial-intelligence (AI) infrastructure company - offering both terrestrial and potentially space-based computing capacity - its...