If you spend eight-plus hours a day in a terminal and an editor, the right pointing device counts as much as the right keyboard. The Logitech MX Vertical remains the default vertical pick. It has a 57-degree handshake angle, a 4000 DPI sensor, and solid Linux support via Solaar and logiops . For a thumb trackball, the Logitech MX Ergo S wins on tilt and 120-day battery life. The Kensington SlimBlade Pro leads the finger and palm trackball field with its 55mm billiard-grade ball and Bluetooth LE. For open-source fans, the Ploopy Classic 2 with QMK firmware ships as a fully user-fixable device. Linux sees it as a standard HID mouse with zero closed drivers.
Custom Mechanical Keyboards: Layout, Switches, Stabilizers, Build
Building a custom mechanical keyboard means assembling five core components: a PCB, a case, a plate, switches, and keycaps. The result is a board that types, sounds, and feels exactly the way you want. Budget $100 to $400 depending on materials, set aside three to six hours for a first build, and you’ll end up with a board no mass-produced model can match. This guide walks every decision from PCB choice to firmware flashing and final assembly.
OpenClaw Texted My Ex and Why iMessage Access Is a Trap
The viral r/ChatGPT “my OpenClaw texted my ex” post reads like a joke, but the comments treat it as a warning sign. Keep OpenClaw’s iMessage, SMS, and contacts skills off your personal Mac. Wait until LTS ships and the founder’s “rough week” supply-chain fixes land. Scope write-access skills to a disposable VPS instead.
Key Takeaways
- The viral “texted my ex” post is a leading indicator, not just a meme.
- iMessage, SMS, and contacts are write-heavy skills that touch your real social graph.
- Forgetful agents plus unsupervised cron jobs turn wrong-recipient sends into expected behavior.
- Run write-heavy OpenClaw skills on a disposable VPS, not your personal Mac.
- Wait for the LTS release before treating OpenClaw as personal-machine infrastructure.
The viral OpenClaw meme is not just a meme
A screenshot of OpenClaw happily reporting that it had texted the OP’s ex hit 4.8K upvotes and 176 comments on r/ChatGPT in about three weeks. The top replies are jokes (“Of all the things that didn’t happen, this happened the didn’test”). The serious comments point at a real safety category that is forming in real time.
Wayland Screen Sharing: XDG Portal, PipeWire Fix
Screen sharing on Wayland fails because Wayland’s security model blocks apps from grabbing other windows or the full desktop. The fix has three layers. First, install the right XDG Desktop Portal backend for your compositor. Second, check that PipeWire is running as your media daemon. Third, set your browser or app to use the portal capture path, not the old X11 one. Once these align, screen sharing works in Zoom, Teams, Discord, and Google Meet on any major Wayland compositor .
AI Code Review in 2026: Why Human Review Skills Matter More Than Ever
AI writes about 41% of all committed code in 2026, and some teams report well above 50%. AI review tools have cut PR cycle times by as much as 59%. Yet when Sonar asked 1,149 developers for their 2026 State of Code report , 47% ranked “reviewing and validating AI-generated code for quality and security” the top skill in the AI era, above prompting at 42%. The paradox: the more code AI writes, the more vital human review becomes.
Ditching Claude Opus for GLM 5.1 in OpenClaw at $18/Mo
Anthropic’s third-party tool rules priced agent users off Claude Opus 4.6. The cheapest working OpenClaw stack now is Z.ai’s $18/mo GLM 5 Turbo plan. Next rungs: Ollama-cloud’s $20/mo GLM 5.1, then MiniMax’s $40/mo highspeed tier. Kimi 2.6 stays API-only since local setup needs about 750 GB of RAM.
Key Takeaways
- Z.ai’s $18/mo plan running GLM 5 Turbo is the cheapest OpenClaw backend that actually works.
- MiniMax highspeed at $40/mo handles heavier workloads without the four-figure surprise bills.
- Kimi 2.6 needs around 750 GB of RAM to self-host, so almost everyone runs it through the API.
- Keep Claude on the planner role; route scheduled jobs to the cheap backends.
- China-hosted models trade dollars for privacy on iMessage, contacts, and email skills.
Why $1,500/mo Opus Bills Pushed Users to GLM
The pressure here is simple. Once Anthropic’s third-party tool rules kicked in, OpenClaw users on the Claude Pro CLI got nudged onto pay-per-token API access. At Opus 4.6 list pricing of $15 per million input tokens and $75 per million output tokens, agent loops add up fast. The OP of the r/openclaw PSA thread tracked his own bill at about $1,500/mo before he switched. That figure is the anchor most cost threads on the sub now cite.
Botmonster Tech




