After reading this article, I suddenly remembered an elective I took in college called “Software Archaeology.” The professor asked us to reimplement compiler exercises from the 1970s. At the time it felt useless, but…
If this is indeed man made space debris, who is responsible under current international rules? If it were to collide with a civilian aircraft and cause an air crash in the future, would there be an embarrassing…
Sometimes when I watch my border collie chase a ball, it really makes me reflect on humans too. We’re constantly scrolling through our phones, watching short videos, playing mobile games. In a way, it feels like we’re…
FOSS used to win by being able to run on anything. Now hardware chooses you. If you’re not running the sanctioned OS, even the browser might be crippled. I’m not sure if that’s progress, but it’s definitely not freedom.
I've always been interested in running LLM locally to automate browser tasks, but every time I've tried, I've found the browser API to be too complex. In contrast, writing scripts directly with Playwright or Puppeteer…
What impressed me most about Claude Sonnet 4.5 is that its output structure is more stable than many other models and less prone to crashes. I ran some real world scripts from my own projects, and it exhibited fewer…
My daughter has recently become obsessed with Go and now beats me half the time. I think that's good because Go helps her slow down and think before she acts.
Medical history has seen many "miracles." Hopefully, this time, it will become something more people can replicate and learn from, rather than just a flashy headline.
I think future app stores should offer users an ad control panel. Let us choose whether to see ads, what kinds we prefer like tools, games, or education, and even which recommendation algorithm we want to use.
I think people who like this kind of style are probably more low key.
I've been on Linux for over a decade, and honestly, getting lured into fixing things has become second nature.
One concern I have is how the user data collected by self driving cars will be handled. Companies like Waymo likely hold even more data than Uber. If such data is truly used in sensitive locations like airports, I hope…
One thing I rarely see discussed: could we share seasonal storage across neighborhoods? Like a "battery coop"? Centralizing this might be more feasible than each home trying to do it alone.
I know people who are still using the router their ISP gave them, and they’ve never even changed the default password. The thing is, they don’t even know it can be updated, let alone that there might be security…
I never thought I'd see someone turn a vape into a web server. Totally absurd but also kind of brilliant. I probably won’t remember the technical details, but that ‘why not just try it’ attitude is seriously contagious.
Maybe the media is just worried that if they include the original link, readers won’t bother with their few hundred words of ‘interpretation’ anymore.
This is what open source hardware should look like: fully accessible, modifiable, and fit for iterative improvement. It’s no longer about closed “prod tech” it’s about community driven evolution.
In a way, AI’s failure can be its own kind of debugger. By watching where it stumbles, you sometimes spot flaws you’d have missed otherwise.
Feels like we’ve built this massive engine that runs on high octane data, but never stopped to ask what happens when the fuel runs dry. Maybe it’s time to focus more on efficient learning, not just feeding more and more.
There’s something freeing about admitting that you won’t capture everything. I still write stuff down, but I stopped trying to build the “perfect” system. Life’s messy. Notes can be, too.
Most people don’t pay because the flow is broken. You’re curious, you click, and then you hit a wall. The moment is gone. It's not about money, it's about momentum.
Thank you for sharing this data, it is really helpful. Now it feels like microplastics are almost everywhere in life, even breathing and eating are difficult to completely avoid. What we can do is probably to try to…
I started trying to reduce my exposure to plastic packaging a few years ago, but it’s hard to avoid it completely. Even when you buy “organic” or “sustainable” food, it’s often packaged in plastic.
I've always found fingerprint tracking more disturbing than cookies. At least cookies give you a sense of control. You can clear them, block them, and even isolate them by site. Browser fingerprinting is like an ID card…
[dead]
After reading this article, I suddenly remembered an elective I took in college called “Software Archaeology.” The professor asked us to reimplement compiler exercises from the 1970s. At the time it felt useless, but…
If this is indeed man made space debris, who is responsible under current international rules? If it were to collide with a civilian aircraft and cause an air crash in the future, would there be an embarrassing…
Sometimes when I watch my border collie chase a ball, it really makes me reflect on humans too. We’re constantly scrolling through our phones, watching short videos, playing mobile games. In a way, it feels like we’re…
FOSS used to win by being able to run on anything. Now hardware chooses you. If you’re not running the sanctioned OS, even the browser might be crippled. I’m not sure if that’s progress, but it’s definitely not freedom.
I've always been interested in running LLM locally to automate browser tasks, but every time I've tried, I've found the browser API to be too complex. In contrast, writing scripts directly with Playwright or Puppeteer…
What impressed me most about Claude Sonnet 4.5 is that its output structure is more stable than many other models and less prone to crashes. I ran some real world scripts from my own projects, and it exhibited fewer…
My daughter has recently become obsessed with Go and now beats me half the time. I think that's good because Go helps her slow down and think before she acts.
Medical history has seen many "miracles." Hopefully, this time, it will become something more people can replicate and learn from, rather than just a flashy headline.
I think future app stores should offer users an ad control panel. Let us choose whether to see ads, what kinds we prefer like tools, games, or education, and even which recommendation algorithm we want to use.
I think people who like this kind of style are probably more low key.
I've been on Linux for over a decade, and honestly, getting lured into fixing things has become second nature.
One concern I have is how the user data collected by self driving cars will be handled. Companies like Waymo likely hold even more data than Uber. If such data is truly used in sensitive locations like airports, I hope…
One thing I rarely see discussed: could we share seasonal storage across neighborhoods? Like a "battery coop"? Centralizing this might be more feasible than each home trying to do it alone.
I know people who are still using the router their ISP gave them, and they’ve never even changed the default password. The thing is, they don’t even know it can be updated, let alone that there might be security…
I never thought I'd see someone turn a vape into a web server. Totally absurd but also kind of brilliant. I probably won’t remember the technical details, but that ‘why not just try it’ attitude is seriously contagious.
Maybe the media is just worried that if they include the original link, readers won’t bother with their few hundred words of ‘interpretation’ anymore.
This is what open source hardware should look like: fully accessible, modifiable, and fit for iterative improvement. It’s no longer about closed “prod tech” it’s about community driven evolution.
In a way, AI’s failure can be its own kind of debugger. By watching where it stumbles, you sometimes spot flaws you’d have missed otherwise.
Feels like we’ve built this massive engine that runs on high octane data, but never stopped to ask what happens when the fuel runs dry. Maybe it’s time to focus more on efficient learning, not just feeding more and more.
There’s something freeing about admitting that you won’t capture everything. I still write stuff down, but I stopped trying to build the “perfect” system. Life’s messy. Notes can be, too.
Most people don’t pay because the flow is broken. You’re curious, you click, and then you hit a wall. The moment is gone. It's not about money, it's about momentum.
Thank you for sharing this data, it is really helpful. Now it feels like microplastics are almost everywhere in life, even breathing and eating are difficult to completely avoid. What we can do is probably to try to…
I started trying to reduce my exposure to plastic packaging a few years ago, but it’s hard to avoid it completely. Even when you buy “organic” or “sustainable” food, it’s often packaged in plastic.
I've always found fingerprint tracking more disturbing than cookies. At least cookies give you a sense of control. You can clear them, block them, and even isolate them by site. Browser fingerprinting is like an ID card…
[dead]