UV: The Python Package Manager That Actually Gets It
The Python packaging ecosystem is famously broken. Between pip, pipenv, poetry, pyenv, and virtualenv, you need five different tools to do what npm does in one. Enter UV — a single
The Python packaging ecosystem is famously broken. Between pip, pipenv, poetry, pyenv, and virtualenv, you need five different tools to do what npm does in one. Enter UV — a single
# Daily Tech Digest: April 14th, 2026 Linux 7.0 Arrives With Self-Healing Filesystems (And It's About Time) Twenty years ago, you lost data because drives failed. Today you
The intersection of AI governance, Linux kernel evolution, and supply chain security dominated this week's tech landscape. Here's what matters. AI: The Infrastructure Wars Heat Up
Python's package management has been a pain point for years. You've lived through pip's dependency hell, waited for Poetry's lock files, and
Daily Tech Digest: The AI Wars Heat Up The tech industry made one thing clear this week: the AI gold rush is separating the serious players from the wannabes. OpenAI
Claude Code: AI That Actually Codes in Your Terminal A coding assistant that runs commands, edits files, and handles git workflows without leaving your shell. That's the promise.
Daily Tech Digest — April 8, 2026 Security patches aren't usually page-one news. But when both XDG-Desktop-Portal and Flatpak ship critical fixes on the same day to prevent apps
BentoPDF: The PDF Toolkit That Actually Gets Privacy Right I've watched the PDF toolkit space for years. Most tools either send your documents to mysterious servers or consume
Daily Tech Digest — April 7, 2026 Linux 7.0 is a week away and security teams are scrambling. Good morning. The Kernel March Continues Linux 7.0-rc7 dropped over the
Linux 7.0 Approaches Release With AI Integration Linux 7.0-rc7 dropped yesterday, bringing the kernel tantalizingly close to its anticipated mid-April release. What makes this release candidate particularly interesting
OpenScreen: Screen Studio Without the Subscription Screen recording tools charge like luxury software but deliver basic functionality. Screen Studio wants $29/month for what amounts to recording your screen with
Daily Tech Digest: AI Security Reality Check, Linux Gaming Surge, and Hardware Catch-Up April 4th, 2026 The tech world doesn't sleep, and neither do its vulnerabilities. This week
Daily Tech Digest — April 3, 2026 The stuff that matters from the last 24 hours. AI Gets Real About Governance (Finally) Google's Gemma 4 is here with Apache
Claude Code: Terminal-Native AI That Actually Gets Your Codebase Every few months someone releases another "AI coding assistant" that promises to revolutionize development. Most of them are glorified
Daily Tech Digest: Supply Chain Reality Check April 2, 2026 The industry woke up this week to a harsh reminder: your dependencies are someone else's attack vector. While
Daily Tech Digest - April 1, 2026 The industry had another chaotic 48 hours. Anthropic leaked their own source code, supply chain attacks hit mainstream packages, and the Linux kernel
Neofetch is dead. The beloved system info tool that made every Linux screenshot worth sharing got archived in April 2024. For years, it was the way to show off your
UV: The Python Package Manager That Actually Delivers Installing JupyterLab: 21 seconds with pip, 2.6 seconds with UV. Same result. Massive difference. UV is a Python package manager written
Daily Tech Digest — March 27, 2026 The Linux world keeps moving, AI tools show their rough edges, and hardware vendors push boundaries. Here's what happened while you were
Daily Tech Digest — March 27, 2026 The Linux world keeps moving, AI tools show their rough edges, and hardware vendors push boundaries. Here's what happened while you were
Project N.O.M.A.D.: Offline Knowledge That Actually Works Your internet goes down. Your cell tower fails. Your cloud services vanish. You still need answers. What It Is
Daily Tech Digest: March 26, 2026 The infrastructure wars are heating up. Today's tech news reads like a battle report from the trenches of enterprise computing — supply chain
Supply chains got messier, Linux got faster, and AI companies got greedier. Another Tuesday in tech. 🔒 Security: Trust No One, Verify Less LiteLLM got owned. The popular AI proxy that
Tell an AI agent "fill out this job application" and it figures out the form fields. Tell it "add these items to my grocery cart" and
Daily Tech Digest — March 24, 2026 Linux hits another milestone while AI companies feast on each other's data. The weekend brought stability improvements and corporate drama in equal
Daily Tech Digest — March 23, 2026 The weekend dropped some real moves. OpenAI just ate Python's most important dev tools, AMD finally made their AI chips useful on
Daily Tech Digest: March 22, 2026 The tech world moves fast. Here's what actually matters from the last 24 hours. Python's Massive Ecosystem Shake-Up OpenAI just
Atuin: Shell History That Actually Works Your shell history is broken. You know it, I know it, everyone hitting Ctrl+R and scrolling through garbage knows it. What It Actually
Daily Tech Digest: March 21, 2026 Linux 7.0 is knocking on the door, AI security gets messy, and the supply chain shows more cracks. Let's cut through
Unsloth: Local AI Training Gets a Web UI That Actually Works Most local AI tools make you choose: either get a slick interface that phones home to some API, or
Daily Tech Digest: March 19, 2026 AI Floods Open Source With Slop While Linux Marches Forward The tech world is dealing with two opposing forces today: AI-generated noise flooding critical
Chrome headless eating your server budget? There's a new option, and it's built from scratch.
Daily Tech Digest: March 17, 2026 Linux 7.0 edges toward release with fewer surprises than expected, enterprises discover that AI adoption is harder than buying AI tools, and ReSharper
Daily Tech Digest: March 16, 2026 Linux kernel 7.0 inches toward release, AI agents get uncomfortably clever, and a security vulnerability reminds us why defense in depth matters. The
Daily Tech Digest: March 15, 2026 The weekend brought a flood of important releases and troubling security discoveries. Linux 7.0 inches toward release with substantial hardware support, while the
TUI Studio: Visual Terminal UI Design Finally Gets the Figma Treatment Terminal UIs are everywhere. htop, lazygit, k9s — every tool that makes the command line bearable lives in that text-only
Daily Tech Digest: AI Agents Take the Wheel While Linux Patches Security Holes March 13, 2026 Ubuntu's AppArmor just took a security beating, Google finally commits to Chrome
You pause a video game mid-level, shut down your computer, fly to another continent, boot up a different machine, and resume exactly where you left off — same health, same position,
Daily Tech Digest: March 12, 2026 Technology moves fast. Sometimes it trips over its own feet. Today's digest covers AI growing pains that are shutting down engineering teams,
Daily Tech Digest — March 11, 2026 The industry lost a legend, RISC-V hit a reality check, and AI deployment stories got real. Here's what mattered in the last
You send a PDF to someone. They forward it to someone else. That someone else posts it online. Now your pay stub is being used to open bank accounts in
Daily Tech Digest — March 10, 2026 The acceleration of AI integration across every layer of the computing stack reached a new milestone this week. From kernel-level optimizations for AI workloads