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Hands-on experience with AI, self-hosting, Linux, and the developer tools I actually use

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Hands-on experience with AI, self-hosting, Linux, and the developer tools I actually use

The best eGPU enclosures for Linux in 2026, from TB5 to OCuLink

The best eGPU enclosures for Linux in 2026, from TB5 to OCuLink

The best eGPU enclosures for Linux in 2026 are the Razer Core X V2 ($349, Thunderbolt 5, 80 Gbps) for maximum bandwidth and the Sonnet Breakaway Box 750 eX ($349, Thunderbolt 4) for proven Linux reliability. Thunderbolt 5 enclosures have finally closed the bandwidth gap that made external GPUs feel like a compromise, and Linux kernel 6.12+ delivers stable hot-plug support that actually works.

External GPUs spent years as a niche curiosity - the bandwidth penalty was too steep, driver support too fragile, and the cost math rarely made sense. That calculus has shifted. If you run GPU workloads on Linux - local LLM inference, Stable Diffusion, CUDA development, PyTorch training - an eGPU setup now gets you 85-95% of internal PCIe performance depending on the workload. This guide ranks the enclosures that work best on Linux, walks through the setup process, and sets realistic expectations with actual benchmark numbers.

DuckDB is absurdly good at crunching gigabytes with no database server

DuckDB is absurdly good at crunching gigabytes with no database server

DuckDB crunches gigabytes of CSV and Parquet with no database server, no import step, and no waiting around. You aim a SELECT straight at a file on disk and it answers. On 41 million rows of raw NYC taxi data, I clocked a full group-by aggregation in 20ms and a two-table join in another 20ms, read straight off Parquet with nothing loaded, copied, or indexed first. That is a multi-gigabyte analytical query returning before you lift your finger off Enter key! Every number in this post comes from a benchmark you can run yourself; the scripts and raw results live in a GitHub repo .

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Bun vs Deno vs Node.js: which JavaScript runtime actually wins in 2026?

Which JavaScript runtime wins in 2026:

  • Node.js is still the safe default for production work that needs maximum ecosystem compatibility.
  • Bun has the fastest startup, installs, and test runner, and is the best fit for new projects that prioritize developer experience.
  • Deno is the most secure by default and the best TypeScript-first experience. Since the 2.9 release, it’s also the fastest at raw HTTP throughput on my test bench.

All three are production-ready in 2026, so the decision should come down to your constraints rather than benchmark headlines.

Local AI coding costs will make you rethink your cloud subscription

Local AI coding costs will make you rethink your cloud subscription

If you spend $70 or more per month across Cursor Pro, Claude Pro, ChatGPT Plus, and GitHub Copilot, a local AI coding GPU pays for itself in a few months. But only with the right setup. The answer is not “go fully local” or “stay on cloud.” It is a hybrid split: send high-volume autocomplete and private code to a local model on Ollama , keep cloud for hard multi-file reasoning, and cut 60-80% of your cloud bill with no loss of quality where it counts.

Claude Code hooks that stop the AI from breaking your codebase

Claude Code hooks that stop the AI from breaking your codebase

Claude Code hooks are scripts that fire at lifecycle points like SessionStart, PreToolUse, PostToolUse, and Stop, giving developers firm control over AI agent behavior. The headline capability is PreToolUse with exit code 2, which hard-blocks risky commands such as rm -rf /, git push --force main, or DROP TABLE before they run. Pair that with PostToolUse auto-format, Stop quality checks, and Notification alerts. Together they give you a full CI/CD-like pipeline around your AI coding tool that runs every single time.

The shocking mini PC verdict: Ryzen AI Max 395 dethrones your homelab rack

The shocking mini PC verdict: Ryzen AI Max 395 dethrones your homelab rack

AMD’s Strix Halo - officially the Ryzen AI Max 300 series - is the first x86 APU that can genuinely replace a discrete GPU for local AI workloads. The flagship Ryzen AI Max+ 395 pairs 16 Zen 5 cores with a 40 CU Radeon 8060S iGPU, a 50 TOPS XDNA 2 NPU, and up to 128GB of LPDDR5X-8000 unified memory on a 256-bit bus. For homelabbers who want one node to run Proxmox, a Llama 3.3 70B inference endpoint, and a handful of VMs without a discrete GPU, Strix Halo delivers what no other single-socket mini PC can. The catch is price - $1,600 to $2,800 depending on configuration - and the fact that RAM is soldered at the factory.

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What X and Reddit Users Are Saying about Claude Opus 4.7

What X and Reddit Users Are Saying about Claude Opus 4.7

How power users on X and Reddit reacted to Claude Opus 4.7: praise for agentic coding, token burn concerns, and teams' practical prompting habits.

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Run FLUX 2 Locally in 2026: VRAM by GPU + ComfyUI Setup

Run FLUX 2 locally in ComfyUI. VRAM by GPU from 8GB to 24GB, GGUF builds, the variant that fits your card, cost versus cloud, and the files to grab.

Alacritty vs. Kitty: Best High-Performance Linux Terminal

Alacritty vs. Kitty: Best High-Performance Linux Terminal

Alacritty vs Kitty in 2026: emoji and Unicode rendering, real benchmarks, latency, memory, maintainer reputation, and the right terminal for your workflow.

Hyprland vs Sway vs COSMIC: Best Wayland Compositor for Developers in 2026

Hyprland vs Sway vs COSMIC: Best Wayland Compositor for Developers in 2026

Compare Sway, Hyprland, and COSMIC Wayland compositors. Covers tiling models, display handling, plugin ecosystems, and stability for your workflow.

Running Gemma 4 26B MoE on 8GB VRAM: Three Strategies That Work

Running Gemma 4 26B MoE on 8GB VRAM: Three Strategies That Work

Run Google Gemma 4 26B MoE with sparse activation on budget 8GB GPUs using aggressive quantization, GPU-CPU layer offloading, and tensor parallelism techniques.

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Local Image Models in 2026: Qwen vs FLUX vs SDXL on VRAM

Compare the best local image generation models on text-in-image accuracy, prompt adherence, VRAM, speed, and license to find your quality-per-VRAM sweet spot.

AI Coding Benchmarks in 2026: Why the Leaderboard You Pick Decides the Winner

AI Coding Benchmarks in 2026: Why the Leaderboard You Pick Decides the Winner

AI coding benchmarks produce wildly different rankings. Which models win depends on which benchmark you choose and which agent framework wraps them.

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