Botmonster Tech
Posts jQuery Bootpag Image2SVG Categories Tags
Botmonster Tech
PostsjQuery BootpagImage2SVGCategoriesTags
Hands-on experience with AI, self-hosting, Linux, and the developer tools I actually use

Most Popular

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.

Newest

How to Build a DIY Mailbox Notification Sensor with ESPHome and Home Assistant

How to Build a DIY Mailbox Notification Sensor with ESPHome and Home Assistant

Mount an ESP32-C3 Super Mini with a reed switch on the mailbox door (or a VL53L0X time-of-flight distance sensor inside the box), flash it with ESPHome 2026.3, and wire it into Home Assistant - you will get instant push notifications on your phone the moment mail lands. The total parts cost sits under $15, and deep sleep keeps the whole thing alive for months on a single 18650 cell.

 Iot, Home-Assistant, Esphome, Automation
How to Run SQLite on the Edge in Serverless and CDN Environments

How to Run SQLite on the Edge in Serverless and CDN Environments

SQLite can now run at the edge - inside Cloudflare Workers via D1, on Fly.io via LiteFS replicated volumes, and in any V8 isolate through embedded WASM builds. This gives you sub-millisecond read queries by placing your database physically close to your users on a global CDN. The key innovations that made this practical are LiteFS for transparent SQLite replication across distributed nodes, Cloudflare D1 as a managed edge SQLite service, Turso with its libSQL fork adding server mode and built-in replication, and Litestream for continuous WAL-based streaming to S3. Combined with SQLite’s zero-dependency, single-file architecture, you get a relational database that deploys as part of your application binary, needs no connection pooling, and handles thousands of reads per second per node with microsecond-level latency.

 Databases, Serverless, Developer-Tools
How to Set Up a Reverse Proxy with Caddy for Self-Hosted Services

How to Set Up a Reverse Proxy with Caddy for Self-Hosted Services

Caddy (currently at version 2.11) is the simplest reverse proxy for self-hosted services because it automatically provisions and renews TLS certificates from Let’s Encrypt with zero configuration. Install the single static binary, write a Caddyfile with three lines per service, and Caddy handles HTTPS, HTTP/2, OCSP stapling, and certificate renewal on its own - replacing hundreds of lines of Nginx config and separate Certbot cron jobs.

If you run even a handful of services on a home server or VPS, putting them behind a reverse proxy with proper TLS is non-negotiable. Caddy makes this painless enough that there is no excuse to skip it.

 Homelab, Networking, Docker, Security
Why AI is Killing the Internet: Model Collapse and the Knowledge Commons

Why AI is Killing the Internet: Model Collapse and the Knowledge Commons

The open web was built on a surprisingly fragile premise: that people would share what they know, for free, in public. For roughly two decades that premise held. Developers posted answers on Stack Overflow . Students debated ideas on Reddit. Journalists broke stories indexed by Google. The result was an extraordinary knowledge commons - a vast, searchable, collectively maintained record of human expertise. AI did not just consume that commons. It is in the process of destroying the conditions that made it possible.

 Ai, Llm, Hallucinations, Production-Ai
How to Build a Local Home Alarm System with Home Assistant and Z-Wave

How to Build a Local Home Alarm System with Home Assistant and Z-Wave

You can build a fully local, cloud-free home alarm system using Z-Wave door and window sensors, motion detectors, and a siren connected to Home Assistant via a Z-Wave JS controller. The built-in alarm_control_panel integration combined with automations handles arming, disarming, entry delays, and siren activation entirely on your local network. No cloud subscription, no monthly monitoring fee, and the alarm keeps working even when your internet goes down.

Professional monitored systems like SimpliSafe and Ring Alarm cost $10-25 per month and route every sensor event through a company’s cloud servers. If their servers go down or the company decides to change pricing, your security system is at their mercy. A local Z-Wave setup running on Home Assistant puts you in full control. The total hardware cost is roughly $250-350 for a three-bedroom home, with zero ongoing fees. The trade-off is that you handle configuration, testing, and monitoring yourself - but if you are already running Home Assistant, you have the skills to make this work.

 Home-Assistant, Automation, Iot, Privacy
How to Build an AI-Powered Git Commit Message Generator

How to Build an AI-Powered Git Commit Message Generator

You can wire a local LLM into your Git workflow to automatically generate conventional commit messages from staged diffs by creating a prepare-commit-msg Git hook. The hook runs git diff --cached, sends the output to Ollama running a model like Llama 4 Scout or Qwen3, and writes the generated message into the commit message file for you to review before finalizing. The whole setup is roughly 30 lines of shell or Python, costs nothing to run, keeps your code completely local, and produces commit messages that follow Conventional Commits format - consistently better than the “fix stuff” messages most of us write when we just want to move on to the next task.

 Git, Ollama, Ai-Coding, Automation
Intel Arc 140V on Linux: The Best GPU Control Panel Apps and Driver Setup

Intel Arc 140V on Linux: The Best GPU Control Panel Apps and Driver Setup

If you just got a Lunar Lake laptop and went looking for Intel’s Arc Control app on Linux, you already know: it doesn’t exist. Intel only ships Arc Control for Windows. What Linux users get instead is a community tool called LACT (Linux GPU Configuration and Monitoring Tool), which covers temperature monitoring, power limit adjustments, clock speed readouts, and voltage tracking through a proper GUI. For real-time performance data, intel_gpu_top and nvtop handle the rest from the terminal.

 Linux, Gpu, Hardware, CLI
Run DeepSeek R1 Locally: Reasoning Models on Consumer Hardware

Run DeepSeek R1 Locally: Reasoning Models on Consumer Hardware

You can run DeepSeek R1 ’s distilled reasoning models locally on an RTX 5080 with 16 GB of VRAM using Ollama or llama.cpp with 4-bit quantization. The 14B distilled variant (Q4_K_M) fits comfortably in about 10 GB of VRAM and produces visible <think> reasoning traces that rival cloud API quality on math, coding, and logic tasks. For the full 671B Mixture of Experts model, you need multi-GPU setups or aggressive quantization, but the distilled models deliver 80-90% of the reasoning quality at a fraction of the resource cost.

 Local-Ai, Ollama, Llama.cpp, Quantization
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • …
  • 25
Privacy Policy  ·  Terms of Service
2026 Botmonster