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

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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.

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.

Claude Opus 4.7: What X and Reddit Users Are Saying

Claude Opus 4.7: What X and Reddit Users Are Saying

A 48-hour snapshot of how power users on X and Reddit reacted to Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.7 release on April 16, 2026. Covers the dominant praise for agentic coding and the new Claude Design tool, the three loudest complaints, token-burn economics, and the practical prompting habits teams are already adopting.

Qwen3.6-35B-A3B: Alibaba's Open-Weight Coding MoE

Qwen3.6-35B-A3B: Alibaba's Open-Weight Coding MoE

Alibaba's Qwen3.6-35B-A3B is a sparse Mixture-of-Experts model with 35B total and 3B active parameters, released April 2026 under Apache 2.0. It scores 73.4 on SWE-bench Verified, matches Claude Sonnet 4.5 on vision, and runs locally as a 20.9GB Q4 quantization on an M5 MacBook. A close look at the architecture, benchmarks, features, and honest trade-offs.

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.

MiniMax M2.7: Model That Almost Matches Claude Opus 4.6

MiniMax M2.7: Model That Almost Matches Claude Opus 4.6

A practical review of MiniMax M2.7: the 230B-parameter Mixture-of-Experts reasoning model that scores 50 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index, runs on a 128GB Mac Studio, and costs roughly a tenth of Claude Opus 4.6. Covers benchmarks, self-hosting hardware, the license catch, and when to pick the API over local inference.

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How to Build a Markdown Blog Engine in 100 Lines of Python

How to Build a Markdown Blog Engine in 100 Lines of Python

You can build a working static site generator in about 100 lines of Python. The result reads Markdown files from a content directory, parses their YAML front matter, converts the Markdown to HTML, wraps everything in Jinja2 templates, and writes the output to a public/ folder ready to be served by any web server. It is the same fundamental pipeline that powers tools like Hugo , Jekyll , and Eleventy - just stripped down to the essentials so you can see exactly how the pieces fit together.

 Python, Static-Sites, Blogging, Developer-Tools
How to Build Accessible Web Forms with ARIA, Validation, and Proper Error Handling

How to Build Accessible Web Forms with ARIA, Validation, and Proper Error Handling

The short answer is: start with semantic HTML, add ARIA only where native elements fall short, validate on blur with screen reader announcements via aria-live regions, and handle errors with programmatically associated messages using aria-describedby. If a native HTML element does the job, skip ARIA entirely. Following WCAG 2.2 AA guidelines means every form field has a visible label, every error is perceivable by sighted and non-sighted users alike, and the entire form can be completed with nothing but a keyboard.

 Javascript, Css, Developer-Tools
How to Evaluate LLM Outputs Systematically with Promptfoo

How to Evaluate LLM Outputs Systematically with Promptfoo

Promptfoo is an open-source CLI tool that lets you define test cases with expected outputs, run them against one or more LLM providers simultaneously, and score the results using deterministic checks, LLM-as-judge grading, or custom scoring functions. You write a YAML configuration file defining your prompts, test cases, and assertions, then run promptfoo eval to generate a detailed report showing pass/fail rates, regressions, and side-by-side comparisons. This catches prompt regressions, model upgrade breakages, and quality degradation before they reach production.

 Evals, Llm, Developer-Tools, Python
How to Track Your Car with Home Assistant Using OBD-II and Bluetooth

How to Track Your Car with Home Assistant Using OBD-II and Bluetooth

You can stream live vehicle diagnostics and GPS location to Home Assistant by pairing a Bluetooth Low Energy OBD-II adapter with an ESPHome -based BLE proxy or a dedicated Android device running Torque Pro . This setup feeds real-time fuel economy, engine codes, coolant temperature, and GPS coordinates into Home Assistant entities, enabling geo-fenced automations like opening your garage door on arrival or logging trip fuel costs - all without any cloud dependency.

 Home-Assistant, Iot, Automation, Hardware
How to Write a Custom Linter Rule with AST Parsing

How to Write a Custom Linter Rule with AST Parsing

You can catch domain-specific anti-patterns that ESLint , Ruff , or golangci-lint miss by writing custom linter rules that parse your code into an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST), walk the tree to match specific node patterns, and report violations with auto-fix suggestions. The process is the same regardless of language: parse source into a tree, define the pattern you want to catch, walk the tree to find matches, and emit diagnostics. In JavaScript/TypeScript, this means writing an ESLint plugin with a visitor-pattern rule. In Python, you write a flake8 plugin using the ast module or a Ruff plugin in Rust. In Go, you use the go/ast and go/analysis packages.

 Developer-Tools, Javascript, Python, CLI
RAG vs. Long Context: Choosing the Best Approach for Your LLM

RAG vs. Long Context: Choosing the Best Approach for Your LLM

RAG and long context windows are not competing replacements. They are different tools built for different problems. If you are trying to choose between them, the short answer is: it depends on the size and nature of your data, your latency and cost constraints, and how much infrastructure complexity you are willing to maintain. The longer answer involves understanding what each approach actually does, where each one breaks down, and what teams running production LLM systems are doing in 2026 - which is usually some combination of both.

 Llm, Rag, Embeddings, Production-Ai
Build a Self-Hosted CI/CD Pipeline with Gitea Actions and Docker

Build a Self-Hosted CI/CD Pipeline with Gitea Actions and Docker

Running CI/CD through GitHub Actions or GitLab CI is convenient until it isn’t. Free tier minute limits run out fast, private repositories cost more than you’d expect, and if your code is sensitive, you’re sending every push through someone else’s infrastructure. Self-hosting your pipeline sidesteps all of that.

Gitea is a lightweight, self-hosted Git service that has added GitHub Actions-compatible workflow support through a component called act_runner . The workflow YAML syntax is near-identical to GitHub Actions, so teams already familiar with that ecosystem can migrate with minimal friction. This guide walks through setting up a complete, production-ready CI/CD stack on Linux using Docker Compose.

 Gitea, Git, Automation, Developer-Tools, Docker
Build an AI-Powered Terminal Assistant with Ollama and Shell Scripts

Build an AI-Powered Terminal Assistant with Ollama and Shell Scripts

You can build a practical AI terminal assistant by wiring Ollama’s local API into shell functions that explain errors, suggest commands, and summarize man pages - all from your .bashrc or .zshrc. No Python dependencies, no cloud API keys, no persistent daemon consuming RAM when you’re not using it. The whole thing fits in under 120 lines of shell script and responds in under a second on modest hardware with a model already loaded.

 Ollama, Linux, Local-Ai, CLI, Developer-Tools
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