Pair Restic with Rclone and you get client-side AES-256 encryption, smart deduplication, and a backend that talks to 70 plus cloud providers. A systemd timer and a short wrapper script handle the schedule. The result runs unattended, prunes old snapshots on its own, and lets you swap clouds by editing one config line. A tuned setup backs up 500 GB in under five minutes and costs as little as $3 a month on Backblaze B2.
Multi-Sensor Weather Station with ESP32 Under $100
Yes, you can build a working outdoor weather station for under $100. You need an ESP32 running ESPHome (current stable: 2026.3.x), a Davis 6410 anemometer for wind, a tipping-bucket rain gauge, and a VEML6075 UV sensor. All of it reports live data to Home Assistant over WiFi. The result is hyperlocal weather data more accurate than any commercial forecast for your yard, roof, or field.
Hardware Selection and Sensor Wiring
The backbone of this station is an ESP32-S3 DevKitC (or the older ESP32-WROOM-32). The S3 variant has better WiFi range and BLE 5.0 support if you want to expand later. Power it with a 5V USB-C supply. For longer outdoor cable runs, use a 12V barrel jack feeding an LDO voltage regulator. The same board family fits other outdoor builds too. Our guide to tracking particulates with a PMS5003 node uses a similar power and enclosure setup.
Flatpak vs Snap vs AppImage: Which Linux Package Format Should You Use?
For most Linux desktop users, Flatpak is the best universal packaging format in 2026. It offers strong sandboxing through Bubblewrap and Linux namespaces. Its curated app store, Flathub , passed 3,200 apps and 433 million downloads in 2025. Snap fits server and IoT setups where Canonical’s store and auto-updates help, but slow cold starts hurt it on the desktop. AppImage wins for portable, single-file delivery, yet ships with no sandbox, no updates, and no shared libraries.
AI Code Quality Crisis: Why Enterprise Codebases Degrade 4.94x Faster After AI Adoption
Enterprise codebases adopting AI coding tools degrade fast. Static analysis warnings rise 30%. Code complexity climbs 41%. Technical debt balloons up to 4.94x in 90 days. Developers feel faster but ship slower. Fewer than one in five companies have governance mature enough to catch the spiral.
The Adoption Numbers Behind the Problem
AI coding tools have crossed from optional to structural. GitHub and Stack Overflow surveys show 84% of developers now use or plan to use them, and 51% used them daily by mid-2025. By late 2025, 90% of engineering teams had AI in their workflows, up from 61% the year before. That’s one of the fastest adoption curves in software history.
Hono: The 14KB Web Framework That Runs Everywhere
Hono
is a ~14KB TypeScript web framework that runs on every modern JavaScript runtime with the same API. Write your routes once and ship to Bun
, Deno
, Cloudflare Workers
, Node.js
, AWS Lambda
, Vercel Edge, Fastly Compute, or Netlify. No code changes needed. Hono builds on Web Standard APIs (Request, Response, fetch), which makes it small, fast, and far lighter than Express
. It ships with middleware, validation, RPC, and streaming. The current stable release is v4.12.
Opus 4.8 First Look: How Reddit Reacts to the Car Wash Test
Claude Opus 4.8 launched on May 28, 2026, and r/ClaudeAI flipped its mood inside a day. The first verdict from people who actually ran it reversed the Opus 4.7 backlash. Most testers now call 4.8 “what 4.6 should have been.” The gripes that remain are token burn and a colder voice. The viral car wash test caught the whole story: 4.8 reasoned its way to the right answer most models miss, then spent 589,000 tokens to do it.






