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Practical guides on Linux, AI, self-hosting, and developer tools

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Gemma 4 vs Qwen 3.5 vs Llama 4: Which Open Model Should You Actually Use? (2026)

Gemma 4 vs Qwen 3.5 vs Llama 4: Which Open Model Should You Actually Use? (2026)

A head-to-head comparison of Gemma 4, Qwen 3.5, and Llama 4 across benchmarks, licensing, inference speed, multimodal capabilities, and hardware requirements. Covers the full model families from edge to datacenter scale.

How to Serve Multiple LLMs Behind a Single OpenAI-Compatible API

How to Serve Multiple LLMs Behind a Single OpenAI-Compatible API

Unify access to Ollama, vLLM, OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google models behind one endpoint using LiteLLM Proxy. Configure model routing, load balancing, fallback chains, rate limiting, and spend tracking from a single YAML file.

How to Set Up FLUX 2 Max Locally in 2026

How to Set Up FLUX 2 Max Locally in 2026

FLUX 2 Max brings high-fidelity image generation to local hardware in 2026. Covers hardware requirements, model setup, and optimization techniques for running inference on consumer GPUs without cloud dependencies.

Restore an Old MacBook Pro with Modern Linux (2026)

Restore an Old MacBook Pro with Modern Linux (2026)

A 2012–2015 MacBook Pro with an SSD upgrade and a lightweight Linux distribution becomes a capable, fast machine in 2026 - far more useful than selling it for parts or letting it collect dust. This guide covers hardware upgrades, distribution choice, driver configuration, and performance tuning.

5 Open Source Repos That Make Claude Code Unstoppable

5 Open Source Repos That Make Claude Code Unstoppable

Five GitHub repositories released in March 2026 push Claude Code into new territory. From autonomous ML experiments running overnight to multi-agent communication and full Google Workspace access, these open source tools solve real workflow gaps that Claude Code cannot handle alone.

Alacritty vs. Kitty: Best High-Performance Linux Terminal

Alacritty vs. Kitty: Best High-Performance Linux Terminal

A practical comparison of Alacritty and Kitty for high-performance Linux terminal workflows in 2026, including latency, startup time, memory use, and heavy-output responsiveness. The analysis covers design philosophy differences between minimalist and feature-rich terminal environments, plus Wayland behavior and real-world configuration trade-offs. It also situates Ghostty and WezTerm in the current landscape and explains when each terminal model fits best for daily development.

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AI-Powered Log Analysis: Find Anomalies in Server Logs with Local LLMs

AI-Powered Log Analysis: Find Anomalies in Server Logs with Local LLMs

You can use a local LLM like Llama 3.3 70B or Qwen 2.5 32B running through Ollama to analyze structured server logs faster and more contextually than traditional grep/awk workflows. By piping parsed log data through a prompt that instructs the model to identify anomalous patterns, correlate error cascades, and generate root-cause hypotheses, you get incident summaries and actionable insights within seconds. This covers the gap between simple text search and expensive commercial observability platforms like Datadog or Splunk , all without sending sensitive log data off your network.

 Ollama, Llm, Python, Local-Ai
Automate Code Reviews with Local LLMs: A CI Pipeline Integration Guide

Automate Code Reviews with Local LLMs: A CI Pipeline Integration Guide

You can integrate a local LLM into your Gitea Actions (or any CI system) to automatically review pull requests by extracting the diff, feeding it to a model running on Ollama , and posting structured feedback as PR comments - all without sending a single line of code to an external API. The setup requires a self-hosted runner with GPU access, a review prompt template, and a short Python wrapper to connect the pieces.

 Ai-Coding, Automation, Gitea, Ollama
How to Build a Linux Router with nftables and CAKE Traffic Shaping

How to Build a Linux Router with nftables and CAKE Traffic Shaping

Yes, a standard Debian 12 or Fedora Server installation on cheap x86 hardware (or a Raspberry Pi 5) makes a better router than most consumer gear costing twice as much. You need two network interfaces, a handful of config files, and about two hours of setup time. The result is a gateway with a real stateful firewall via nftables , proper DNS with DHCP from dnsmasq , and traffic shaping that actually works through CAKE SQM - all managed through plain-text configs you can version-control with Git.

 Linux, Networking, Security, Homelab
How to Choose a Soldering Station for Electronics Projects

How to Choose a Soldering Station for Electronics Projects

For most hobbyist PCB work, the Pinecil V2 at around $26 is the best value soldering iron thanks to its USB-C PD and QC3.0 power flexibility, RISC-V open-source firmware (IronOS ), and sub-10-second heat-up time. But the Hakko FX-888D (now succeeded by the FX-888DX at around $130-150) remains the superior benchtop station for marathon soldering sessions due to its thermal recovery and ceramic heater. The Miniware TS101 at roughly $50-70 splits the difference as a portable iron with an OLED display and dual power input that handles everything from SMD rework to through-hole joints with interchangeable TS-series tips.

 Hardware, Embedded, Iot
How to Write a GitHub or Gitea Bot in Python with Webhooks

How to Write a GitHub or Gitea Bot in Python with Webhooks

You can build a bot that automatically labels issues, enforces PR naming conventions, posts review comments, and triggers custom workflows by writing a FastAPI application that receives webhook events from GitHub or Gitea , validates their signatures, and calls the respective API to take action. The same webhook handler pattern works for both platforms with minor differences in header names and payload structure, so a single codebase can serve either forge.

 Python, Gitea, Git, Automation
Run Home Assistant in a Proxmox VM for Maximum Flexibility

Run Home Assistant in a Proxmox VM for Maximum Flexibility

Running Home Assistant OS (HAOS) inside a Proxmox VE virtual machine gives you the full, officially supported installation - add-ons, Supervisor, automatic updates - while sharing hardware with other VMs and containers. On a modest Intel N305 mini PC, you can run HAOS alongside Plex, Vaultwarden, Nextcloud, and a WireGuard VPN with room to spare. The entire setup takes under 30 minutes. Download the HAOS QCOW2 image, create a VM in Proxmox, import the disk, boot, and you are up and running.

 Home-Assistant, Linux, Hardware, Automation
Rust for Python Developers: Rewrite Your Hot Paths for 10x Speed

Rust for Python Developers: Rewrite Your Hot Paths for 10x Speed

Python is excellent for most of what developers throw at it - API servers, data pipelines, automation scripts, machine learning glue code. But CPU-bound work is a different story. When you’re parsing 500MB log files, running simulation loops, or crunching millions of rows in a tight inner loop, you’re going to hit a wall. Not always, but often enough that it becomes a real problem.

The solution is not to rewrite your entire application in Rust. That’s dramatic and usually unnecessary. The better approach is to profile your code, find the 5-10% that consumes most of the CPU time, and rewrite just that part in Rust. The rest of your codebase stays Python. Your interfaces stay Python. You just swap out the slow function for a fast one.

 Rust, Python, Optimization, Developer-Tools
Claude Opus 4.7: What X and Reddit Users Are Saying

Claude Opus 4.7: What X and Reddit Users Are Saying

Claude Opus 4.7 landed on April 16, 2026, and after the first 48 hours on X and Reddit the verdict is net-positive but heavily qualified. Power users are calling it state-of-the-art for agentic coding, long refactors, and the viral new Claude Design tool. The loudest complaints cluster around runaway token burn (roughly 1.5-3x more expensive in practice than 4.6), an “ambiguity tax” where the model no longer silently rescues vague prompts, and confidently broken output on marathon runs. Users who prompt like they are writing a spec are getting enormous leverage out of it. Users who prompt the way they used to prompt 4.6 are burning through their usage caps before lunch.

 Ai, Claude, Llm, Ai-Coding
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