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The Best Holiday Party Hack? A Good-Smelling House

WIRED

Make sure your party is a hit from the moment your guests walk through the door with this expert-led holiday home scenting advice. All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. You've got the snacks and drinks, the music and the mood lighting, but how do you create a truly festive atmosphere? When a guest walks in the front door, they assess the general vibe with multiple senses simultaneously.


Critics at Large Live: Padma Lakshmi's Expansive Taste

The New Yorker

The host of "Top Chef" and "Taste the Nation" has sampled--and judged--dishes from around the country and the world. How did she develop her discerning palate? Padma Lakshmi is unquestionably a woman of taste. As a host of the beloved food-competition series "Top Chef" and the star of the culinary docuseries "Taste the Nation," she's spent nearly two decades artfully conveying--and critiquing--flavors and aromas for an audience. Before that, she was a fashion writer and model, cultivating her own sense of what's worth wearing and seeing. And she isn't done evolving: she's recently begun performing standup comedy, an art form with a notoriously steep learning curve.


Best Adaptogen Drinks and Functional Drinks of 2025: Get Clear

WIRED

We drank adaptogen drinks for weeks, and taste-tested with a trained sommelier. All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. The best adaptogen drinks promise not just to wake you up in the morning, but offer focus and clarity and maybe even a warm wash of well-being. A different drink might tuck you gently in at night, or sub in for alcohol as a mindful party drink. I've spent months trying some of the most popular functional drinks on the market, bedding down with kava or tryptophan-laced xicha morada, and waking up with caffeine and L-theanine. Many of the new school of nootropic and functional drinks are like kissing cousins of mushroom coffee, except in refreshing soda form. Functional sodas might be chockablock with mushroom adaptogens such as reishi and cordyceps, alongside traditional home anxiety remedies such as ashwagandha or L-theanine. I both logged the effects of each soda, and held a large taste test with Portland, Oregon, sommelier Sami Gaston, owner of an excellent wine bar and shop called Bar Diane and Negociant, respectively--to determine how happy you'd be to drink them even if they didn't help you focus better on endless spreadsheets or the hunt for a job. Also check out WIRED's guide to mushroom gummies, or take your wellness in powdered form with the best greens powders and the best protein powders .


Mark Zuckerberg Opened an Illegal School at His Palo Alto Compound. His Neighbors Revolted

WIRED

Neighbors complained about noise, security guards, and hordes of traffic. An unlicensed school named after the Zuckerbergs' pet chicken tipped them over the edge. The Crescent Park neighborhood of Palo Alto, California, has some of the best real estate in the country, with a charming hodgepodge of homes ranging in style from Tudor revival to modern farmhouse and contemporary Mediterranean. It also has a gigantic compound that is home to Mark Zuckerberg, his wife Priscilla Chan, and their daughters Maxima, August, and Aurelia. Their land has expanded to include 11 previously separate properties, five of which are connected by at least one property line. The Zuckerberg compound's expansion first became a concern for Crescent Park neighbours as early as 2016, due to fears that his purchases were driving up the market. Then, about five years later, neighbors noticed that a school appeared to be operating out of the Zuckerberg compound. This would be illegal under the area's residential zoning code without a permit.


Russia infiltrates Pokrovsk with new tactics that test Ukraine's drones

Al Jazeera

Is Trump losing patience with Putin? Will sanctions against Russian oil giants hurt Putin? Russian forces have spread rapidly through Pokrovsk, the city in Ukraine's east where the warring sides have concentrated their manpower and tactical ingenuity during the past week, in what may be a final culmination of a 21-month battle. Geolocated footage placed Russian troops in central, northern and northeastern Pokrovsk, said the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a Washington-based think tank. It set its sights on the city almost two years ago, after capturing Avdiivka, 39km (24 miles) to the east.


'Vibe coding' beats 'clanker' to be Collins dictionary's word of the year

The Guardian

Collins dictionary lexicographers chose'vibe coding' after spotting a sharp rise in its usage. Collins dictionary lexicographers chose'vibe coding' after spotting a sharp rise in its usage. 'Vibe coding' beats'clanker' to be Collins dictionary's word of the year AI-inspired word joins'biohacking', 'Henry' and'broligarchy' on tech-heavy 2025 list "Vibe coding", an emerging software development that turns natural language into computer code using artificial intelligence, has been named Collins dictionary's word of the year for 2025. Lexicographers at Collins monitor the 24bn-word Collins Corpus, which draws from a range of media sources, including social media, to create the annual list of new and notable words that reflect our ever-evolving language . They chose vibe coding as word of the year after observing a huge increase in usage since its first appearance in February.


'Vibe coding' named word of the year by Collins Dictionary

BBC News

'Vibe coding' named word of the year by Collins Dictionary If you've ever wanted to create your own computer program but never learnt how to code, you might try vibe coding. Collins Dictionary's word of the year - which is confusingly made up of two words - is the art of making an app or website by describing it to artificial intelligence (AI) rather than by writing programming code manually. The term was coined in February by OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy, who came up with the name to represent how AI can let some programmers forget that the code even exists and give in to the vibes while making a computer program. It was one of 10 words on a shortlist to reflect the mood, language and preoccupations of 2025. By giving an AI tool a simple description such as make me a program that schedules my weekly meals, people can use vibe coding to make basic apps without any previous programming knowledge.


From gas to groceries, has Trump kept his promise to tackle rising prices?

BBC News

From gas to groceries, has Trump kept his promise to tackle rising prices? President Donald Trump was swept to power for a second time on the back of a central campaign promise to tackle inflation. The steep rise in the cost of living was top of voters' minds and Trump blamed President Joe Biden. He also made sweeping promises to bring down prices for Americans starting on day one. One year on from his victory, BBC Verify revisits some of the president's claims.


Will quantum be bigger than AI?

BBC News

Will quantum be bigger than AI? There's an old adage among tech journalists like me - you can either explain quantum accurately, or in a way that people understand, but you can't do both. That's because quantum mechanics - a strange and partly theoretical branch of physics - is a fiendishly difficult concept to get your head around. It involves tiny particles behaving in weird ways. And this odd activity has opened up the potential of a whole new world of scientific super power. Its mind-boggling complexity is probably a factor in why quantum has ended up with a lower profile than tech's current rockstar - artificial intelligence (AI).


Precise asymptotic analysis of Sobolev training for random feature models

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Gradient information is widely useful and available in applications, and is therefore natural to include in the training of neural networks. Yet little is known theoretically about the impact of Sobolev training -- regression with both function and gradient data -- on the generalization error of highly overparameterized predictive models in high dimensions. In this paper, we obtain a precise characterization of this training modality for random feature (RF) models in the limit where the number of trainable parameters, input dimensions, and training data tend proportionally to infinity. Our model for Sobolev training reflects practical implementations by sketching gradient data onto finite dimensional subspaces. By combining the replica method from statistical physics with linearizations in operator-valued free probability theory, we derive a closed-form description for the generalization errors of the trained RF models. For target functions described by single-index models, we demonstrate that supplementing function data with additional gradient data does not universally improve predictive performance. Rather, the degree of overparameterization should inform the choice of training method. More broadly, our results identify settings where models perform optimally by interpolating noisy function and gradient data.