Start Up No.2643: how Steve Jobs learnt to nurture quality, petrol price teachings, RAM forces Raspberry Pi price hikes, and more


A remarkable investigation by Nepal police suggests some climbers were made ill for an insurance scam. CC-licensed photo by Mark Horrell on Flickr.

You can sign up to receive each day’s Start Up post by email. You’ll need to click a confirmation link, so no spam.


A selection of 9 links for you. Elevated. I’m @charlesarthur on Twitter. On Threads: charles_arthur. On Mastodon: https://newsie.social/@charlesarthur. On Bluesky: @charlesarthur.bsky.social. Observations and links welcome.


Apple at 50: the roots of a tech revolution • Financial Times

Patrick McGee:

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Vicki Amon-Higa, whom [Steve] Jobs hired in early 1990 from the power utility Florida Power & Light, characterises his approach at the time as “brute force and great people”.

The idea was that you hire geniuses, lock them in a room and apply pressure until brilliant products emerge. Process, by contrast, sounded bureaucratic and stultifying. Process was not just absent from Jobs’ thinking; it was antithetical to it. Amon-Higa says Jobs understood “small q quality” (a narrow focus on product) but did not grasp “big Q quality” (how to enforce standards across the entire organisation).

…She invited her mentor, Noriaki Kano, a quality expert who emphasised customer satisfaction, and Juran — the so-called “architect of quality” whose writings had been promoted by Sarasohn — to speak with NeXT. The impact was profound.

Jobs tended to think that talent was innate, but Kano taught him that people needed to be coached and developed, to bring out their best. Juran, then in his eighties, convinced Jobs to empower the individuals actually doing the work to make improvements and taught him the value, Jobs later said, of “seeing everything as a repetitive process, and to instrument that process, and find out how it’s running”.

He particularly liked that for Juran, quality was just one aspect of a broader system that did not sound stifling. “Dr Juran was one of the few people that I met that had a real down-to-earth approach to it, that didn’t think that quality was the second coming,” Jobs said for a Juran documentary, in late 1991. “He approached it much more scientifically.”

Jobs called Juran’s philosophy “a radically different approach to business processes than the traditional one” — but it was too late for NeXT. Their pipeline of products had no market fit and, by 1993, Jobs was forced to abandon manufacturing.

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McGee is the author of “Apple in China”, which has been highly praised for its research and writing. This piece traces the origins of Apple’s success in manufacturing back to Japan’s rebirth after World War 2 as a manufacturing giant.
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Everest guides “secretly poisoned” climbers to trigger costly helicopter rescues’ as part of £15m scam • Daily Mail Online

Perkin Amalaraj:

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Guides taking tourists up and down Mount Everest have allegedly been secretly lacing climbers’ food to trigger costly helicopter rescues as part of a £15million insurance scam, according to a new investigation.

Poor weather and patchy communications at the world’s tallest mountain have allegedly led to a cottage industry that sees shifty pilots, guides and doctors charging insurance companies for services not rendered.

According to the Kathmandu Post, the fake rescue racket works by getting a climber to stage a medical emergency. A helicopter is then called and taken to a nearby hospital. An insurance claim is then filed that bears little resemblance to what actually happened.

Nepal Police’s Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) identified two ways this scam is manufactured. The first involved tourists who don’t want to walk all the way back down. Treks can take up to two weeks on foot, so guides tell climbers to fake a medical emergency so that a helicopter comes.

But the second method is far more troubling, and involves tricking climbers into thinking they’re having a medical emergency. Above 3,000m, altitude sickness is common. Symptoms include headaches, tingling in the body’s extremities, and a drop in blood oxygen saturation. In most cases, this can be resolved with rest, hydration or a gradual descent.

But Nepal’s CIB says that some guides and hotel staff are told to terrify tourists into thinking an evacuation to a hospital is the only thing that will save them. If this doesn’t work, investigators found that in some instances, guides tried to induce symptoms by giving tourists suffering mild altitude sickness tablets and excessive water.

In at least one case, baking powder was mixed into tourists’ food to make them physically unwell.

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An amazing storry, apparently all done by the Nepal Police investigating.
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Lessons from your petrol pump • Financial Times

Tim Harford:

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In 2002, the economist David Popp published a study of “induced innovation”, tracking the response by inventors to the oil shocks of the 1970s.

The oil price leapt in 1973 and surged further in 1979, before sliding lower throughout the early 1980s. Popp found that patent activity tracked the oil price — for example, there were 10 successful patent applications in the field of solar energy in 1972, but more than 100 in 1974 and about 300 a year in the late 1970s. As the oil price fell back, so did patent activity, with fewer than 50 successful solar patents a year from the mid-1980s onward.

Popp found that a similar story could be told for batteries (a natural complement to solar energy), and patent applications for deriving liquid and gaseous fuels from coal. In each case, the few years of high oil prices led to a few years in which oil-saving patent activity was also high.

Today’s high oil price sends more signals: to find oilfields outside the Gulf region; to build new pipelines and tanker ports that are further from harm; to find ways to defend vulnerable shipping. In fact, there are far too many to list, and that is the point: a price signal — which, of course, is also a monetary incentive — is an invitation to everyone, everywhere, to do things a little differently.

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There’s plenty more (Harford is always thorough) but the key question seems to be: how long does the price signal have to last before it permeates through all that’s affected?
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Anthropic is having a month • TechCrunch

Connie Loizos:

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Here’s what happened on Tuesday: When Anthropic pushed out version 2.1.88 of its Claude Code software package, it accidentally included a file that exposed nearly 2,000 source code files and more than 512,000 lines of code — essentially the full architectural blueprint for one of its most important products. A security researcher named Chaofan Shou noticed almost immediately and posted about it on X. Anthropic’s statement to multiple outlets was nonchalant as these things go: “This was a release packaging issue caused by human error, not a security breach.” (Internally, we’d guess things were less measured.)

Claude Code isn’t a minor product. It’s a command-line tool that lets developers use Anthropic’s AI to write and edit code and has become formidable enough to unsettle rivals. According to the WSJ, OpenAI pulled the plug on its video generation product Sora just six months after launching it to the public to refocus its efforts on developers and enterprises — partly in response to Claude Code’s growing momentum.

What leaked was not the AI model itself but the software scaffolding around it — the instructions that tell the model how to behave, what tools to use, and where its limits are. Developers began publishing detailed analyses almost immediately, with one describing the product as “a production-grade developer experience, not just a wrapper around an API.”

Whether this turns out to matter in any lasting way is a question best left to developers. Competitors may find the architecture instructive; at the same time, the field moves fast.

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These Raspberry Pi price hikes are no joke • The Verge

Stevie Bonifield:

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As of today, the price of the 16GB version of the Raspberry Pi 5 is going up by $100, a price bump that’s almost as much as the original $120 price tag. Driven by the ongoing RAM shortage, Raspberry Pi is raising prices on over a dozen of its bare-bones computers, after previous increases in December and February. The increases range from $11.25 to $150.

In a blog post announcing the price increases, Raspberry Pi CEO Eben Upton reiterated that they won’t be permanent, stating, “The circumstances in which we find ourselves are challenging, but in the future they will abate. When they do, we will reverse our price increases, and until they do, we will continue to work hard to limit their impact in every way we can.”

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And, Upton was obliged to point out, this was not an April Fools joke.
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Hackers slipped a trojan into the code library behind most of the internet. Your team is probably affected • VentureBeat

Louis Columbus:

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Attackers stole a long-lived npm access token belonging to the lead maintainer of axios, the most popular HTTP client library in JavaScript, and used it to publish two poisoned versions that install a cross-platform remote access trojan (RAT). The malicious releases target macOS, Windows, and Linux. They were live on the npm registry for roughly three hours before removal.

Axios gets more than 100 million downloads per week. Wiz reports it sits in approximately 80% of cloud and code environments, touching everything from React front-ends to CI/CD pipelines to serverless functions. Huntress detected the first infections 89 seconds after the malicious package went live and confirmed at least 135 compromised systems among its customers during the exposure window.

…The attacker took over the npm account of @jasonsaayman, a lead axios maintainer, changed the account email to an anonymous ProtonMail address, and published the poisoned packages through npm's command-line interface. That bypassed the project’s GitHub Actions CI/CD pipeline entirely.

The attacker never touched the axios source code. Instead, both release branches received a single new dependency: plain-crypto-js@4.2.1. No part of the codebase imports it. The package exists solely to run a postinstall script that drops a cross-platform RAT onto the developer’s machine.

The staging was precise. Eighteen hours before the axios releases, the attacker published a clean version of plain-crypto-js under a separate npm's account to build publishing history and dodge new-package scanner alerts. Then came the weaponized 4.2.1. Both release branches hit within 39 minutes. Three platform-specific payloads were pre-built. The malware erases itself after execution and swaps in a clean package.json to frustrate forensic inspection.

StepSecurity, which identified the compromise alongside Socket, called it among the most operationally sophisticated supply chain attacks ever documented against a top-10 npm's package.

…Three npm's supply chain compromises in seven months. Every one started with a stolen maintainer credential.

The Shai-Hulud worm hit in September 2025. A single phished maintainer account gave attackers a foothold that self-replicated across more than 500 packages, harvesting npm tokens, cloud credentials, and GitHub secrets as it spread. CISA issued an advisory. GitHub overhauled npm’s entire authentication model in response.

Then in January 2026, Koi Security’s PackageGate research dropped six zero-day vulnerabilities across npm, pnpm, vlt, and Bun that punched through the very defenses the ecosystem adopted after Shai-Hulud. Lockfile integrity and script-blocking both failed under specific conditions. Three of the four package managers patched within weeks. npm closed the report.

Now axios. A stolen long-lived token published a RAT through both release branches despite OIDC, SLSA, and every post-Shai-Hulud hardening measure in place.

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This would have been very, very serious if it had laasted any longer. It was bad even for the minute it lasted.
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Renewables hit 49.4% of global electricity capacity in 2025 • The Register

Brandon Vigliarolo:

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It was a strong year for renewable power expansion in 2025, with solar installations helping push renewables to nearly half of global electricity capacity, but that does not mean the world is yet on pace to meet its renewable energy commitments.

The International Renewable Energy Agency’s (IRENA) 2026 Renewable Capacity Statistics report, published on Wednesday, found that renewables dominated new power additions last year, accounting for 85.6% of global capacity expansion. Solar, in turn, was the dominant renewable technology, accounting for nearly three-quarters of last year’s renewable capacity additions.

Those additions totalled 692 GW in 2025, lifting installed renewable capacity by a record 15.5% year over year, IRENA noted. By the end of last year, renewables accounted for 49.4% of global installed electricity capacity, while variable renewable sources such as solar and wind represented roughly 35% of total capacity. 

For reference, it was only in 2023 that renewable energy sources crossed the threshold of generating 30% of the world’s electricity.

As IRENA notes in a press release, renewable energy is back in the spotlight amid the US conflict in Iran causing a spike in fuel prices and energy (i.e., oil) instability. According to IRENA Director General Francesco La Camera, conflicts like the Iranian mess are a perfect reason to push for more renewable adoption. 

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35,000 pints of stolen Guinness, 950 wheels of pilfered cheese: can the UK’s cargo theft crisis be stopped? • The Guardian

Stuart McGurk:

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Cargo theft operates according to the law of supply and demand. When a truck carrying 400 50-litre kegs of Guinness – the equivalent of 35,000 pints – was stolen from a logistics hub in Northamptonshire in December 2024, it was widely seen as the cause of a nationwide shortage. This wasn’t quite true – the truck was targeted because there was a shortage in the first place – but it only made the scarcity worse, which in turn only made the stolen Guinness more valuable.

The cost of living crisis has made food and beverages an increasingly attractive target, with thefts rising as much as 79% in 2024 according to one report. In October of that year, 950 wheels of premium cheddar were stolen in London, an incident soon dubbed “the grate cheese heist”. (Jamie Oliver asked the public to keep an eye out for “lorryloads of posh cheese”.) Last week, a truck carrying KitKats went missing after setting off from Italy. A spokesperson for Nestlé said criminals had “made a break” with more than 400,000 bars. In some ways, it’s the perfect crime. If stolen cargo isn’t found within the first few hours, it’s as good as gone. It re-enters the supply chain, and, soon after, the evidence will get eaten. At present, Dawber says, olive oil is a popular target. With the value of Italian extra virgin hovering around £10 a litre, the average truckload is worth about £250,000, making it more valuable than most wine.

When accounting for lost revenues, VAT and insurance costs, cargo crime is estimated to cost the UK economy about £700m a year. For freight companies, often operating on minuscule profit margins, the impact can be crippling. Insurance premiums rise with every claim. Excesses are regularly in the thousands. Many haulage companies have to absorb the costs and pay the customer for the goods lost.

For years, the industry has attempted to sound the alarm. One partial remedy, it argues, is maddeningly simple: make freight theft its own crime. (At present, it is categorised as “theft from motor vehicle”, the same offence as nicking a pair of sunglasses from a glovebox.) In parliament last year, Rachel Taylor MP introduced a bill that would do just this, meaning that sentences for criminals could be longer and accurate statistics on the scale of the crime could be collected. A second reading is due to take place next month.

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Great, and timely, article. There’s a more formal one for the US; less entertaining.
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Half of social-science studies fail replication test in years-long project • Nature

Nicola Jones:

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A massive seven-year project exploring 3,900 social-science papers has ended with a disturbing finding: researchers could replicate the results of only half of the studies that they tested1.

The conclusions of the initiative, called the Systematizing Confidence in Open Research and Evidence (SCORE) project, have been “eagerly awaited by many”, says John Ioannidis, a metascientist at Stanford University in California who was not involved with the programme. The scale and breadth of the project is impressive, he says, but the results are “not surprising”, because they are in line with those from smaller, earlier studies.

Researchers have been investigating a ‘crisis’ in the reliability of scientific results for more than a decade. They’ve found that many scientific experiments can’t be repeated — not just in the social sciences, but also in the biomedical field.

The SCORE findings — derived from the work of 865 researchers poring over papers published in 62 journals and spanning fields including economics, education, psychology and sociology — don’t necessarily mean that science is being done poorly, says Tim Errington, head of research at the Center for Open Science, an institute that co-ordinated part of the project. Of course, some results are not replicable because of either honest mistakes or the rare case of misconduct, he says, but SCORE found that, in many cases, papers simply did not provide enough data or details for experiments to be repeated accurately. Fresh methods or analyses can legitimately lead to distinct results. This means that, rather than take papers at face value, researchers should treat any single study as “a piece of the puzzle”, Errington says.

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The suspicion is that the problem comes straight from the “publish or perish” imperative imposed on so many researchers.
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• Why do social networks drive us a little mad?
• Why does angry content seem to dominate what we see?
• How much of a role do algorithms play in affecting what we see and do online?
• What can we do about it?
• Did Facebook have any inkling of what was coming in Myanmar in 2016?

Read Social Warming, my latest book, and find answers – and more.


Errata, corrigenda and ai no corrida: none notified

Start Up No.2642: Artemis aims to recap Apollo 8’s journey, how Craigslist did kill US papers, Epic Games lays off 1,000 staff, and more


Airlines may have to cut flights inside Europe within a month if jet fuel supplies don’t resume at volume, experts say. CC-licensed photo by Aldas Kirvaitis on Flickr.

You can sign up to receive each day’s Start Up post by email. You’ll need to click a confirmation link, so no spam.


A selection of 9 links for you. Unplaned. I’m @charlesarthur on Twitter. On Threads: charles_arthur. On Mastodon: https://newsie.social/@charlesarthur. On Bluesky: @charlesarthur.bsky.social. Observations and links welcome.


After more than 53 years, humans may finally return to the Moon this week • Ars Technica

Stephen Clark:

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The two-day countdown for the launch of NASA’s Artemis II mission began Monday evening, with clocks timed for the first of six opportunities in early April to send a crew of four astronauts around the far side of the Moon.

Liftoff from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Florida is scheduled for a two-hour launch window opening at 6:24 pm EDT (22:24 UTC) on Wednesday. NASA has backup launch opportunities each day through Monday, April 6, or else the mission will have to wait until the end of the month.

Mission managers said Monday that all systems were looking good for launch this week. The weather forecast is favourable, with an 80% chance of acceptable conditions for liftoff Wednesday. The only weather concern at the launch site in Florida is a low chance of rain showers and cloud cover that could present a risk of lightning. But with a two-hour launch window, there should be plenty of time to wait out any scattered storms.

John Honeycutt, chair of NASA’s mission management team, told reporters Monday that there were “no showstoppers” for launch on Wednesday. Ground teams powered up the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft for final checkouts early Tuesday, setting the stage for loading super-cold liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen into the rocket Wednesday morning.

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So let’s be clear. It’s not a “return to the Moon”. It’s a return near the Moon, doing the same dance that Apollo 8 managed back in December 1968. That’s nearly 60 years of no progress.

Worse: there are good reasons to think the heat shield of this mission is less than perfect. We can hope that’s wrong. But nobody has explained what we’re really doing with this. It’s not new science, it’s not new technology.
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Gmail adds ability to change usernames after 22 years • The Register

Brandon Vigliarolo:

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If you’re embarrassed by your Gmail address but haven’t wanted to start a new account for fear of losing messages, we have good news. Ahead of Gmail’s 22nd anniversary on Wednesday, Google says it is now letting US users change their account username.

That’s right: You can now swap out that less-than-professional address you registered years ago but still use because it became the de facto hub of your online life back when that joke username still seemed like a good idea.

Google announced the change in a rather brief note on its Keyword blog on Tuesday, only mentioning that it was now available for all Google Account users in the US. This vulture can personally attest to not having the ability available in his account, suggesting that like most other features Google rolls out for its products, this is probably being released gradually. 

If you do have the option to change your Gmail username, you can follow the steps on this linked page to do so.

…Per the help page linked above, your previous Gmail address stays on as an alternate address, and emails will still be received by both, effectively making it an alias for the new account. You can still sign in to Google services using either the old or new address in case you forget what you renamed that 20-year-old account at some point.

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OK, but they do check that the desired account name isn’t already in use, right? Right? Because there are ever so many ways for this to go wrong. Of course it’s a stupid question, but Google sometimes misses the obvious.
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European jet fuel supplies under threat as Iran war halts flows • Financial Times

Ryohtaroh Satoh and Sylvia Pfeifer:

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A drop in shipments of jet fuel from the Middle East is prompting warnings of a looming supply crunch for Europe’s aviation industry as the Iran war chokes off cargoes.

European imports of jet fuel are expected to fall to about 420,000 barrels a day this week, down roughly 40% from last week and the lowest level for March since 2022, according to energy data provider Vortexa.

The decline follows the near shutdown of flows through the Strait of Hormuz, a key artery for global fuel shipments that accounted for roughly 40% of Europe’s jet fuel supply before the war.

“Fuel supplies are a major concern,” said one airline industry insider, adding that while supplies had remained “relatively stable over the past ten days”, carriers were in “daily monitoring mode”.

A senior jet fuel manager said European markets could begin to face physical shortages within weeks.

While airlines had until recently been supported by cargoes already en route from the Gulf, which typically take several weeks to arrive, flows from the Middle East have now largely ceased.

Volumes have fallen about 90%, with just over 1mn barrels still in transit at the start of the week, according to Mick Strautmann, an analyst at Vortexa.

Insights Global, which tracks storage levels at key hubs in north-west Europe, said jet fuel inventories had been declining but that levels were still in line with those of February 2024. However, it added that the pace of drawdowns from storage could accelerate as Middle East shipments fall.

…Mylène Scholnick, an adviser to UK aircraft leasing company World Star Aviation, said airlines may cut flights towards the end of April if the fuel shortage persists, with the impact expected to be most acute on short and medium-haul routes in Europe and Asia, where demand is more price-sensitive.

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Impact of online competition on local newspapers: evidence from the introduction of Craigslist • The Review of Economic Studies

Milena Djourelova, Ruben Durante and Gregory Martin:

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How does competition from online platforms affect the organization, performance, and editorial choices of newspapers? What are the implications of these changes for the information voters are exposed to and for their political choices?

We study these questions using the staggered introduction of Craigslist—the world’s largest online platform for classified advertising—across US counties between 1995 and 2009. This setting allows us to separate the effect of competition for classified advertising from other changes brought about by the Internet, and to compare newspapers that relied more or less heavily on classified ads ex ante.

We find that, following the entry of Craigslist, local newspapers reliant on classified ads experienced a significant decline in the number of management and newsroom staff, including in the number of editors covering politics. These organizational changes led to a reduction in news coverage of politics and resulted in a decline in newspaper readership, particularly among readers with high political interest.

Finally, we document that reduced exposure to local political news was associated with an increase in partisan voting and increased entry and success of ideologically extreme candidates in congressional elections. Taken together, our findings shed light on the determinants of the decline of print media and on its broader implications for democratic politics.

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So we could draw a straight line and say Craigslist is responsible for Trump, and the current energy crisis? That’s what it feels like. (Though the same dynamic occurred in the UK, without Craigslist.)
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Epic Games layoffs today: Fortnite losses force 20% job cuts • Fast Company

Jennifer Mattson:

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Video game maker Epic Games, the creator of Fortnite, announced on Tuesday that it is laying off 1,000 employees, or about 20% of its workforce. (In 2023, Epic cut 830 jobs, or 16% of its workforce at that time, per Variety.)

“I’m sorry we’re here again,” Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney said in a note to Epic employees, which the company posted on X. “The downturn in Fortnite engagement that started in 2025 means we’re spending significantly more than we’re making, and we have to make major cuts to keep the company funded.”

He continued: “This layoff, together with over $500 million of identified cost savings in contracting, marketing, and closing some open roles, puts us in a more stable place.”

Fast Company reached out to Epic, which had no further comment.

The note said some of the challenges the company is facing were industry-wide. Those challenges included lower growth, weaker spending, and tougher cost economics; current consoles selling fewer units than past generations did; and games competing for time against other entertainment. Sweeney said the layoffs are not due to AI.

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Once upon a time Fortnite was huge. Now it’s not. Times change, and with them tastes. Epic seems not to have been able to adapt.
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Hollywood work dried up. So they’re taking survival jobs • L.A. Material

Alex Zaragoza:

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Across the entertainment industry, countless creatives are in the same boat, taking jobs bartending, dog walking, or playing fake patients at hospitals, all the while confronting an existential crisis. The landscape is bleak and getting bleaker. Threads from out-of-work entertainment workers asking for advice on jobs pop up on Reddit and other message boards regularly, their tenor growing more defeated as time wears on. Studio executives — the ones who still have jobs, anyway — may be raking in multimillion dollar salaries and bonuses as many studios turn massive profits, but it can feel like everyone else is holding on for dear life.

The hope is that the job engine of Hollywood in Los Angeles is facing a slump — and not an irreversible crash.
The punches have come one after another in recent years. There was the COVID pandemic, which led to nearly a million jobs lost; the 2023 double strike of the Writers Guild of America and SAG-AFTRA; and the 2025 wildfires. Through that also came the proliferation of AI, production moving out of state to take advantage of cost-saving subsidies offered elsewhere, and major studio mergers threatening to create a monopoly that will undoubtedly make matters worse. The result has been fewer TV shows and films being made, and a stream of layoffs across the industry. It has all depressingly accounted for 41,000 industry jobs lost in just two years, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Last year, FilmLA, the film office for the City and County of Los Angeles, reported a 13.2% decline in production between July and September of 2025 from the previous year. The Writers Guild of America reported a 40% decrease in jobs in the 2023-2024 television season. International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE), the union that oversees stagehands, craftspeople, and artisans in film and television production, saw 18,000 jobs disappear from 2022 to 2024. Meanwhile, SAG-AFTRA went back into negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) last month, with a key goal of protecting members from losing work to AI. 

Add it all up and what has been a jobs drought the last couple years now stands to become a career-ending wasteland, leaving the creative workforce scrambling to figure out how the hell they’re going to get by.

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Solar panels at Lidl? Plug-in versions set to appear in shops within months • This is Money

Lucy Evans:

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Eco households who want to distance themselves from fossil fuel energy, which is susceptible to market fluctuations, can install traditional solar panels.

They use daylight to create electricity for your home, which means your family will be less reliant on expensive fossil fuel energy to power your lives.

But they are expensive to install – around £6,000 on average, with £350 a year in energy bill savings, according to Energy Saving Trust. So despite the potential savings, some families shy away from such a purchase due to the thousands of pounds needed upfront to install the panels.

These plug-in versions, however, are far cheaper and can be put on a balcony or in an outdoor space such as a garden instead of being fixed permanently on a roof.

They can be plugged into a mains socket like any other electronic device to provide a home with free solar power.

These cheaper versions are already available in other European countries. In Germany, for example, almost half a million new devices are plugged in every year.

The Government says this technology is “easy to install” and will allow consumers to ‘significantly cut energy bills’.

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The problem with introducing these in the UK (Germany has wide deployment) is the difference in electrical wiring systems between the two countries. The UK’s ring mains system is different from the spur systems used in Germany, and that creates problems over power flow.

Amusing too that the story has a link to this guide of its own in the middle: “Step by step, what to do NOW to stop the Middle East energy crisis leaving you penniless. This is how to get the best deals on petrol, mortgages and household energy and stay afloat”. Well, at least someone’s taking it seriously.
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Railway clock glitch causes false delays and payouts • Daily News Hungary

Hetzmann Mercédesz:

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Hungary’s switch to daylight saving time on Sunday morning caused an unexpected technical issue at the state railway company, MÁV. While most digital systems automatically adjusted to the new time, MÁV’s passenger information system failed to update accordingly, leading to widespread confusion.

For several hours after the clock change, the system incorrectly registered trains as being delayed by around 60 minutes, even when services were running on time or with only minimal delays, Telex reported.

The issue became particularly visible on the Vonatinfó platform, where the map appeared flooded with delay indicators. At first glance, it suggested that nearly the entire Hungarian rail network was experiencing significant disruption:

In reality, no such nationwide breakdown had occurred. The problem was that the system “forgot” to advance the time, which resulted in incorrect delay calculations being shown to passengers.

The glitch had an unexpected upside for some travellers.

Because MÁV’s system interpreted the situation as widespread delays exceeding 20 minutes, it automatically began issuing compensation payments.

Under the railway’s policy, passengers are entitled to partial refunds if their train is significantly delayed. Due to the error, even those travelling on time or with minor delays were flagged as eligible and received compensation.

…By late Sunday morning, MÁV issued an official statement confirming that an “IT error” had caused the incorrect delay reports following the clock change. The company said the issue was resolved within a few hours, and the system has since been restored to normal operation. Importantly, the railway company clarified that passengers who received compensation due to the error will not be required to return the money.

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Still – still! – after all these years there are systems which fail to update when the clocks change. True, it’s not easy. But that’s why they get paid the medium-scale bucks.
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Top Brussels official urges Europeans to work from home and drive less • POLITICO

James Fernyhough, Elena Giordano, Ben Munster and Ben Makuch:

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The European Commission has urged people to work from home, drive and fly less, and for EU countries to urgently roll out renewables, as it warned of a prolonged energy crisis as a result of the conflict in the Gulf.

In a speech with echoes of the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, EU energy chief Dan Jørgensen said Europe was facing a “very serious situation” with no clear end in sight.

“Even if … peace is here tomorrow, still we will not go back to normal in the foreseeable future,” he said, following an extraordinary meeting of the EU’s 27 energy ministers on Tuesday to discuss the crisis.

“The more you can do to save oil, especially diesel, especially jet fuel, the better we are off,” Jørgensen said, confirming an earlier report by POLITICO that Brussels wanted Europeans to travel less.

He urged member countries to follow the advice of the International Energy Agency, which he said included “work from home where possible, reduce highway speed limits by ten kilometres [an hour, ie 6mph], encourage public transport, alternate private car access … increase car sharing and adopt efficient driving practices.”

Longer term, he urged EU countries to double down on building more renewables, saying “this must be the time we finally turn the tide and truly become energy independent.”

Tuesday’s talks between ministers ended with no concrete proposals, although Jørgensen promised the Commission would be announcing a package of EU-level measures in the near future.

His comments come as fears grow that the world faces a major energy crisis exceeding even the 1970s oil shock that could have global economic ramifications comparable to the coronavirus pandemic.

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Unlike the pandemic, though, there’s absolutely no question of this being anything to do with China.
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• Why do social networks drive us a little mad?
• Why does angry content seem to dominate what we see?
• How much of a role do algorithms play in affecting what we see and do online?
• What can we do about it?
• Did Facebook have any inkling of what was coming in Myanmar in 2016?

Read Social Warming, my latest book, and find answers – and more.


Errata, corrigenda and ai no corrida: none notified