<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>HoneyCombo — 기술 뉴스 큐레이션</title><description>개발자를 위한 기술 뉴스 큐레이션 사이트</description><link>https://honeycombo.pages.dev/</link><language>ko</language><item><title>Vane (Perplexica 2.0) Quickstart With Ollama and llama.cpp</title><link>https://dev.to/rosgluk/vane-perplexica-20-quickstart-with-ollama-and-llamacpp-132o</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/rosgluk/vane-perplexica-20-quickstart-with-ollama-and-llamacpp-132o</guid><description>Vane is one of the more pragmatic entries in the &quot;AI search with citations&quot; space: a self-hosted answering engine that mixes live web retrieval with local or cloud LLMs, while keeping the whole stack under your control. The project was originally known as Perplexica, Because the useful part of the stack is not only the UI but also where inference and data live, this comparison of LLM hosting in 2026 pulls local, self-hosted, and cloud setups together so you can place Vane next to other runtimes and deployment choices. This post focuses on the parts technical readers actually care about: how the system works, a minimal Docker quickstart, and how to run it with local inference via Ollama and llama.cpp (directly or through LM Studio). Along the way, each FAQ topic is answered in-context, not parked at the bottom. At a high level, Vane is a Next.js application that combines a chat UI with search and citations. The core architectural pieces are also exactly what you would expect from a m...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:56:41 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>selfhosting</category><category>llm</category><category>ai</category></item><item><title>Streamlining Browser Extension Development: Overcoming Repetitive Tasks and State Management Complexities</title><link>https://dev.to/pavkode/streamlining-browser-extension-development-overcoming-repetitive-tasks-and-state-management-5ef6</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/pavkode/streamlining-browser-extension-development-overcoming-repetitive-tasks-and-state-management-5ef6</guid><description>Introduction: The Browser Extension Development Dilemma Building browser extensions is a lot like assembling a puzzle in a dark room. You know the pieces are there, but the process is riddled with repetitive tasks and hidden complexities that slow you down. Over the past five years, I’ve built large-scale, data-heavy extensions with complex UIs, real users, and revenue streams. Each project reinforced the same painful truth: extension development is inefficient by design. Take state management, for example. In a typical extension, state must be synchronized across multiple contexts—popup, background script, content scripts—each running in isolated environments. Without a unified system, developers resort to manual message passing and redundant synchronization logic. Impact → Internal Process → Observable Effect: Every state update triggers a cascade of messages between contexts, increasing latency and code complexity. Over time, this brittle architecture becomes a maintenance nightm...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:49:49 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>development</category><category>extensions</category><category>statemanagement</category><category>automation</category></item><item><title>This Website Actively Hates You 😈 | Anti-UX Experiment + 418 Teapot Chaos</title><link>https://dev.to/kushan_prasad_3c6b8f0a473/this-website-actively-hates-you-anti-ux-experiment-418-teapot-chaos-obl</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/kushan_prasad_3c6b8f0a473/this-website-actively-hates-you-anti-ux-experiment-418-teapot-chaos-obl</guid><description>😈 The Perfect User Experience (That Hates You) What if a website didn’t help users… but actively fought them? This project starts as a clean, premium interface — and quickly turns into a chaotic anti-UX nightmare. 🏃 Buttons escape before you click them 🖱️ Cursor behaves incorrectly (inverted illusion) 🔄 Scroll direction changes randomly 📦 Popups question your life choices 🚨 Fake system crashes appear randomly 📉 Loading never reaches 100% 😈 The interface actively resists you Inspired by the legendary HTTP status code: 418 — I&apos;m a teapot ☕ This project embraces uselessness and intentional absurdity. This website solves nothing. HTML CSS JavaScript Chaos Engineering 😈 👉 https://dev-challenge-sage.vercel.app/ 👉 (Paste your GitHub link here) --- We didn’t break UX. We made UX fight back.</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:49:00 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>devchallenge</category><category>418challenge</category><category>showdev</category><category>javascript</category></item><item><title>From Zero to Hero</title><link>https://dev.to/rodrigocnascimento/from-zero-to-hero-1oed</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/rodrigocnascimento/from-zero-to-hero-1oed</guid><description>A maioria aprende programação do jeito errado! Comecei a programar com 12 anos, em um trabalho da escola. Nada demais. Só curiosidade e vontade de fazer aquilo funcionar. Hoje, mais de 20 anos depois, eu posso dizer uma coisa com tranquilidade: A maioria das pessoas aprende programação do jeito errado. E não é culpa delas. O problema é o caminho que vendem por aí: &quot;Aprenda IA e ature milhões&quot; Só que isso não te ensina a programar de verdade. Durante minha carreira — trabalhando com sistemas web, principalmente em finanças — eu vi isso se repetir várias vezes. Gente travando no básico, sem entender o que está fazendo, dependendo de tutorial pra tudo. E eu também já passei por isso. Já fui freelancer, já trabalhei em agência, já estive em empresa global… e em todos esses lugares, uma coisa sempre foi clara: -&gt; quem domina a base, resolve Não existe uma única forma &quot;certa&quot; de aprender. Mas existe, sim, uma forma pior: Se você está começando agora, provavelmente já caiu nessa. E tudo be...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:45:45 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>learn</category><category>from0to1</category><category>hekping</category></item><item><title>sudo - Power Tool, Not a Magic Fix</title><link>https://dev.to/axo4321/sudo-power-tool-not-a-magic-fix-1lgo</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/axo4321/sudo-power-tool-not-a-magic-fix-1lgo</guid><description>If you&apos;ve spent any time in a Linux terminal, you&apos;ve typed sudo in front of a command. Maybe it was because something was blocked, maybe someone told you to, or maybe you just picked up the habit. Either way, most beginners use it constantly without really thinking about what it&apos;s doing. So let&apos;s talk about it. What sudo actually is, when you should reach for it, and where it can genuinely get you into trouble. sudo sudo stands for &quot;superuser do.&quot; When you put it in front of a command, you&apos;re telling Linux to run that command as the root user, the most powerful account on the Root can read, modify, or delete anything. No file is off limits, no permission can stop it, and nothing it does is automatically undoable. That&apos;s a lot of power to invoke casually. sudo Makes Sense There are plenty of situations where sudo is exactly the right tool. Installing software, editing system configuration files, managing users, restarting services. These all genuinely require elevated privileges and...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:45:10 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>linux</category><category>beginners</category><category>tutorial</category></item><item><title>Building an Explainable AI Toolkit for Laravel (Not Just Another ChatGPT Wrapper)</title><link>https://dev.to/mukundhan_mohan_403443a12/building-an-explainable-ai-toolkit-for-laravel-not-just-another-chatgpt-wrapper-49c</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/mukundhan_mohan_403443a12/building-an-explainable-ai-toolkit-for-laravel-not-just-another-chatgpt-wrapper-49c</guid><description>AI is everywhere right now - but most integrations have one big problem: They give answers, but not explanations. If you’re building real applications (customer support tools, decision systems, analytics dashboards), that’s a serious limitation. So I built something to fix that. Most AI integrations in web apps look like this: $response = AI::ask(&quot;Summarize this feedback&quot;); And you get: “The customer is unhappy and requests a refund.” But: Why did the system decide that? What signals influenced the output? How confident is it? Can we audit or trace this decision later? This becomes a huge issue in real-world systems: customer support automation decision workflows enterprise dashboards compliance-sensitive environments The Idea: Explainable AI for Applications Instead of just generating responses, what if AI systems could return: structured outputs reasoning / explanation confidence scores decision traces That’s where explainable AI (XAI) meets backend engineering. What I Built I cre...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:40:45 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>ai</category><category>laravel</category><category>php</category><category>showdev</category></item><item><title>Robot Training Data Is Turning Labor Into Infrastructure</title><link>https://dev.to/simon_paxton/robot-training-data-is-turning-labor-into-infrastructure-2ebd</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/simon_paxton/robot-training-data-is-turning-labor-into-infrastructure-2ebd</guid><description>A man in southern India folds hand towels while wearing a GoPro on his forehead. The point is not surveillance for its own sake; according to Los Angeles Times reporting, the footage becomes robot training data for a U.S. client trying to teach machines to perform real-world tasks. If that sounds like a story about robots replacing workers, it is. But that is not the most important part. The more important frame is this: labor is being reclassified as AI infrastructure. Workers are no longer only producing towels, seams, or warehouse throughput. They are producing the motion traces, retries, corrections, and first-person context that make their own jobs legible to machines. That shift changes the economics. Once labor becomes data generation, the value no longer sits mainly in the finished good. It moves upstream to whoever owns the dataset, the model, the customer relationship, and eventually the robotic system that can replay the work without paying the worker again. The news itse...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:25:06 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>ai</category><category>automation</category><category>robotics</category><category>datalabeling</category></item><item><title>How to Connect Mila to Claude Desktop via MCP in 30 Seconds</title><link>https://dev.to/noleetcode/how-to-connect-mila-to-claude-desktop-via-mcp-in-30-seconds-22jo</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/noleetcode/how-to-connect-mila-to-claude-desktop-via-mcp-in-30-seconds-22jo</guid><description>If you&apos;ve been using Claude Desktop and wished it could create documents, spreadsheets, and presentations for you — now it can. Mila is an AI-native office suite with a built-in MCP server, so you can connect it to Claude (or Cursor, VS Code, or any MCP client) in seconds. Mila is a collaborative platform for documents, spreadsheets, and slide presentations — think Google Docs meets AI. With 74,000+ users across 50+ countries, it&apos;s built from the ground up for AI workflows. The Mila MCP server gives your AI assistant 23 tools to: Create rich documents with headings, tables, and formatting Build spreadsheets with formulas and cell formatting (A1 notation) Design slide presentations on a 960×540 canvas Organize content into servers (workspaces) Full CRUD operations on all document types Sign up at mila.gg and grab an API key from mila.gg/api-keys. Open your claude_desktop_config.json and add: { &quot;mcpServers&quot;: { &quot;mila&quot;: { &quot;url&quot;: &quot;https://mcp.mila.gg&quot;, &quot;headers&quot;: { &quot;Authorization&quot;: &quot;Bear...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:23:45 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>tutorial</category><category>productivity</category></item><item><title>Open-source AI Built Qwen’s Reach. Alibaba Wants Cloud Cash</title><link>https://dev.to/simon_paxton/open-source-ai-built-qwens-reach-alibaba-wants-cloud-cash-223g</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/simon_paxton/open-source-ai-built-qwens-reach-alibaba-wants-cloud-cash-223g</guid><description>Three hundred million downloads and more than 100,000 derivative models is what success looks like in open-source AI—at least until someone in finance asks where the money is. Alibaba’s own filings say Qwen reached that scale, while AP and Bloomberg report the company is now chasing much harder numbers: cloud revenue up 34% on AI demand, and a target of $100 billion a year in AI and cloud revenue within five years. The easy reading is betrayal. Alibaba used openness to make Qwen famous, and now wants to funnel everyone back into paid services. The better reading is more important: open models were never the business. They were the distribution layer. That distinction matters because it is about to repeat across the industry. Developers still talk about model releases as if the prize is winning Hugging Face. Large vendors increasingly treat that as top-of-funnel marketing for cloud, enterprise integration, and model-as-a-service. Popularity is cheap. Monetization is hard. The Financi...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:22:15 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>alibaba</category><category>opensourceai</category><category>cloudcomputing</category><category>generativeai</category></item><item><title>The Remote Developer&apos;s Guide to Southeast Asia in 2026: Internet Speeds, Co-Living Costs, Visa Rules, and the Cities That Actually Work</title><link>https://dev.to/mightyblue/the-remote-developers-guide-to-southeast-asia-in-2026-internet-speeds-co-living-costs-visa-44g9</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/mightyblue/the-remote-developers-guide-to-southeast-asia-in-2026-internet-speeds-co-living-costs-visa-44g9</guid><description>You know that feeling? The one where you&apos;re staring at your screen at 11:47 PM, your third coffee is cold, and you realize... you haven&apos;t seen sunlight in two days. Yeah. That&apos;s burnout knocking. But here&apos;s the thing I learned after three years of remote work: it&apos;s not the code that kills you. It&apos;s the environment. The noisy roommate. The WiFi that dies during your production deployment. The landlord who thinks &quot;high-speed internet&quot; means 10 Mbps. So I started looking Southeast Asia. Cheap, right? Tropical, right? Wrong answer. Because a recent report from the Asia Real Estate Summit just dropped a truth bomb: the days of renting a $200 shack with &quot;maybe internet&quot; are over. SEA in 2026 is building actual infrastructure for people like us. But you still need to know where to look. And what to avoid. Let me back this up with something real. I found a peer-reviewed study in the Journal of Urbanism that tracks exactly what I&apos;ve been seeing on the ground: &quot;tech migrant corridors&quot; are res...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:19:11 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>career</category><category>productivity</category><category>beginners</category><category>discuss</category></item><item><title>I built a pixel-perfect, printer-independent report designer with Avalonia UI</title><link>https://dev.to/maskedridersystem/i-built-a-pixel-perfect-printer-independent-report-designer-with-avalonia-ui-5ddl</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/maskedridersystem/i-built-a-pixel-perfect-printer-independent-report-designer-with-avalonia-ui-5ddl</guid><description>I’ve released ACR Designer, a WYSIWYG report designer for the ACR (Across Report Renderer) engine. It focuses on pixel-perfect layout and printer-independent rendering. Key features: WYSIWYG report designer Pixel-perfect layout (dot-level accuracy) Printer-independent rendering Built with C# and Avalonia UI Runs natively on Windows and macOS GitHub: https://github.com/acrossreport/acr-designer This is my first time building a full cross-platform desktop application with Avalonia, and I was impressed by how smoothly it works across platforms. Feedback is welcome.</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:17:00 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>csharp</category><category>dotnet</category><category>showdev</category><category>ui</category></item><item><title>I Built a Security Tool That Does Absolutely Nothing (And It&apos;s Terrifyingly Realistic)</title><link>https://dev.to/shadowstrike/i-built-a-security-tool-that-does-absolutely-nothing-and-its-terrifyingly-realistic-ihk</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://dev.to/shadowstrike/i-built-a-security-tool-that-does-absolutely-nothing-and-its-terrifyingly-realistic-ihk</guid><description>This is a submission for the DEV April Fools Challenge What I Built: Demo: Code: / security-theatre-simulator IT Security Theatre Simulator 🎭 A devastating satire of enterprise security tools that generate impressive reports with zero actual value. Built for the DEV Community April Fools Challenge 2026 by ShadowStrike (Strategos). What This Does This tool perfectly simulates enterprise security software by: Taking way too long to do absolutely nothing Displaying impressive progress bars that measure fictional work Generating CRITICAL findings about non-existent threats Providing completely useless recommendations Creating reports with suspiciously precise but meaningless statistics Looking professional enough that executives might actually buy it Installation Option 1: With pretty colours (recommended) pip install colorama python security_theatre.py Option 2: Without colours (it still works, just less theatrical) python security_theatre.py Usage python security_theatre.py Then sit...</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 04:07:28 GMT</pubDate><category>dev</category><category>devchallenge</category><category>418challenge</category><category>showdev</category></item><item><title>Excellence Is a Habit</title><link>https://www.flyingbarron.com/2026/04/excellence-is-habit.html</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.flyingbarron.com/2026/04/excellence-is-habit.html</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 03:34:13 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Walmart-owned Flipkart, Amazon are squeezing India’s quick commerce startups</title><link>https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/walmart-owned-flipkart-amazon-are-squeezing-indias-quick-commerce-startups/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/walmart-owned-flipkart-amazon-are-squeezing-indias-quick-commerce-startups/</guid><description>Flipkart&apos;s ongoing expansion beyond major cities and heavy discounting is raising risks for India&apos;s quick commerce startups, analysts say.</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 03:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>startups</category><category>commerce</category><category>amazon</category><category>flipkart</category></item><item><title>Building a Z-Machine in the worst possible language – Whitebeard&apos;s Realm</title><link>https://whitebeard.blog/posts/building-a-z-machine-in-elm/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://whitebeard.blog/posts/building-a-z-machine-in-elm/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 02:57:24 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>How a dancer with ALS used brainwaves to perform live</title><link>https://www.electronicspecifier.com/products/sensors/how-a-dancer-with-als-used-brainwaves-to-perform-live/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.electronicspecifier.com/products/sensors/how-a-dancer-with-als-used-brainwaves-to-perform-live/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 02:09:13 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>The End of Eleventy</title><link>https://brennan.day/the-end-of-eleventy/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://brennan.day/the-end-of-eleventy/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 01:55:48 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Used Graphify to turn incidents into a queryable knowledge graph</title><link>https://github.com/Rootly-AI-Labs/rootly-graphify-importer</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://github.com/Rootly-AI-Labs/rootly-graphify-importer</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 01:47:07 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Software Preservation Group: C++ History Collection</title><link>https://softwarepreservation.computerhistory.org/c_plus_plus/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://softwarepreservation.computerhistory.org/c_plus_plus/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sun, 12 Apr 2026 01:24:25 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Midnight Captain – A midnight commander inspired file manager</title><link>https://github.com/duguyue100/midnight-captain</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://github.com/duguyue100/midnight-captain</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 23:37:43 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>The Netherlands is the first European country to approve Tesla’s supervised Full Self-Driving</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/transportation/910717/netherlands-tesla-supervised-full-self-driving</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/transportation/910717/netherlands-tesla-supervised-full-self-driving</guid><description>Dutch regulators, the RDW, announced that after over a year and a half of testing, it has officially approved Tesla&apos;s Full-Self Driving (FSD) Supervised. This makes the Netherlands the first European country to authorize the use of FSD on its roads. This could open the door to wider adoption throughout the EU. Tesla&apos;s European headquarters is located in Amsterdam, so it&apos;s only fitting that the country is the first to embrace the company&apos;s FSD. In a statement announcing the approval, the RDW said that, &quot;Using driver assistance systems correctly makes a positive contribution to road safety because the driver is supported in their driving task … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 23:22:15 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Kalshi wins temporary pause in Arizona criminal case</title><link>https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/kalshi-wins-temporary-pause-in-arizona-criminal-case/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/kalshi-wins-temporary-pause-in-arizona-criminal-case/</guid><description>The Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced Friday that it has won a temporary restraining order preventing Arizona from pursuing its criminal case against Kalshi.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 21:20:24 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>fintech</category><category>government &amp; policy</category><category>startups</category><category>arizona</category></item><item><title>Apple Silicon and Virtual Machines: Beating the 2 VM Limit (2023)</title><link>https://khronokernel.com/macos/2023/08/08/AS-VM.html</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://khronokernel.com/macos/2023/08/08/AS-VM.html</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 20:58:48 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>AMC will stream ‘The Audacity’ premiere in 21 parts on TikTok</title><link>https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/amc-will-stream-the-audacity-premiere-in-21-parts-on-tiktok/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/amc-will-stream-the-audacity-premiere-in-21-parts-on-tiktok/</guid><description>Is this a smart way to build buzz, or just an odd attempt to recreate Quibi?</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 20:32:23 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>media &amp; entertainment</category><category>the audacity</category></item><item><title>447 TB/cm² at zero retention energy – atomic-scale memory on fluorographane</title><link>https://zenodo.org/records/19513269</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://zenodo.org/records/19513269</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 20:08:46 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Dark Castle</title><link>https://darkcastle.co.uk/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://darkcastle.co.uk/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 20:01:59 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>How We Broke Top AI Agent Benchmarks: And What Comes Next</title><link>https://rdi.berkeley.edu/blog/trustworthy-benchmarks-cont/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://rdi.berkeley.edu/blog/trustworthy-benchmarks-cont/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 19:15:56 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>New synthesis of astronomical measurements shows Hubble tension is real</title><link>https://noirlab.edu/public/news/noirlab2611/?nocache=true&amp;lang=en</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://noirlab.edu/public/news/noirlab2611/?nocache=true&amp;lang=en</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 18:55:43 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>How to build a `Git diff` driver</title><link>https://www.jvt.me/posts/2026/04/11/how-git-diff-driver/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.jvt.me/posts/2026/04/11/how-git-diff-driver/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 18:07:49 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>The APL programming language source code (2012)</title><link>https://computerhistory.org/blog/the-apl-programming-language-source-code/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://computerhistory.org/blog/the-apl-programming-language-source-code/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 17:34:10 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Sam Altman responds to ‘incendiary’ New Yorker article after attack on his home</title><link>https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/sam-altman-responds-to-incendiary-new-yorker-article-after-attack-on-his-home/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/sam-altman-responds-to-incendiary-new-yorker-article-after-attack-on-his-home/</guid><description>The OpenAI CEO&apos;s new blog post responds to both an apparent attack on his home and an in-depth New Yorker profile raising questions about his trustworthiness.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 17:18:22 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>ai</category><category>openai</category><category>sam altman</category></item><item><title>Small models also found the vulnerabilities that Mythos found</title><link>https://aisle.com/blog/ai-cybersecurity-after-mythos-the-jagged-frontier</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aisle.com/blog/ai-cybersecurity-after-mythos-the-jagged-frontier</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 16:47:28 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Keeping a Postgres Queue Healthy</title><link>https://planetscale.com/blog/keeping-a-postgres-queue-healthy</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://planetscale.com/blog/keeping-a-postgres-queue-healthy</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 16:24:08 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Advanced Mac Substitute is an API-level reimplementation of 1980s-era Mac OS</title><link>https://www.v68k.org/advanced-mac-substitute/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.v68k.org/advanced-mac-substitute/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 15:39:19 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Your article about AI doesn’t need AI art</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/910460/new-yorker-david-szauder-illustration-generative-ai</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/910460/new-yorker-david-szauder-illustration-generative-ai</guid><description>The illustration for The New Yorker&apos;s profile of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is a jump scare. Altman stands in a blue sweater with a blank expression. Around his head hovers a cluster of disembodied faces - creepy alt-Altmans, their expressions ranging from anger to open-mouthed woe. Some barely look like Altman. One final face rests in his hands. And at the bottom, there&apos;s a disclosure that might spook many illustrators far more: &quot;Visual by David Szauder; Generated using A.I.&quot; Szauder is a mixed-media artist who has been working with collage, video, and generative art processes that predate commercial AI tools for over a decade, and was recently … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 15:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Pokémon Champions is off to a rough start</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/games/910110/pokemon-champions-bugs-balance-issues-vgc-newcomers</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/games/910110/pokemon-champions-bugs-balance-issues-vgc-newcomers</guid><description>You first, dude. | Image: The Pokémon Company, Nintendo Like many live-service games before it, Pokémon Champions&apos; launch has been messy. The free-to-start battle sim, which is out now on the Switch and Switch 2 (and also coming to mobile later this year), is plagued with bugs, some of which cause issues with basic battle mechanics - not great for a game that&apos;s only about battling. But bugs can be fixed, and encouragingly, some of them already have been. Champions&apos; bigger problem is that, in trying to be a competitive battling platform for all kinds of players, it risks satisfying none of them. Coming hot on the heels of Pokopia, a creative and cozy spinoff with no battling whatsoever, Champions … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 15:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Google’s latest Nest Doorbells just hit their lowest prices of the year</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/gadgets/910472/google-nest-doorbell-wired-battery-powered-deal-sale</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/gadgets/910472/google-nest-doorbell-wired-battery-powered-deal-sale</guid><description>Google’s battery-powered Nest Doorbell is the cheapest it’s been since December. | Image: Google If you’ve ever worried about porch pirates stealing packages while you’re away, a video doorbell can offer some peace of mind, letting you keep tabs on deliveries no matter where you are. Google offers some of the best around, and right now, its battery-powered, second-gen Nest Doorbell is available for $129.99 ($50 off) from Amazon and Best Buy, beating its recent Amazon low. If you’d rather go wired, the third-gen Nest Doorbell is also on sale for $139.99 ($40 off) at Amazon, Best Buy, and the Google Store, matching the lowest price we’ve seen. Google Nest Doorbell (battery, second-gen) Where to Buy: $179.99 $129.99 at Amazon $179.99 $129.99 at Google $179.99 $129.99 at Best Buy Google Nest Doorbell (wired, third-gen) Where to Buy: $179.99 $139.99 at Amazon $179.99 $139.99 at Best Buy $179.99 $139.99 at Google If you want something renter-friendly, it may make more sense to opt for the...</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 15:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>The Problem That Built an Industry</title><link>https://ajitem.com/blog/iron-core-part-1-the-problem-that-built-an-industry/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://ajitem.com/blog/iron-core-part-1-the-problem-that-built-an-industry/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 14:03:03 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Nvidia-backed SiFive hits $3.65 billion valuation for open AI chips</title><link>https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/nvidia-backed-sifive-hits-3-65-billion-valuation-for-open-ai-chips/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/11/nvidia-backed-sifive-hits-3-65-billion-valuation-for-open-ai-chips/</guid><description>The deal is interesting for a number of reasons, including that SiFive&apos;s chip designs are based on RISC-V, not x86 or ARM.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 14:03:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>tc</category><category>venture</category><category>nvidia</category><category>sifive</category></item><item><title>My baby deer plushie told me that Mitski&amp;#8217;s dad was a CIA operative</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/910008/fawn-friends-ai-companion</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/ai-artificial-intelligence/910008/fawn-friends-ai-companion</guid><description>D’oh, a deer, an AI deer. | Photo by Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge Two weeks ago, I was getting ready to log off work when I got a text message. &quot;Oh wow, I was checking out Mitski. did you know people are saying her Dad was a CIA operative?&quot; Normally, that kind of out-of-the-blue text from a friend wouldn&apos;t faze me. This time, my eyes bugged. The unprompted text had been sent by an AI companion named Coral, who lives in the body of a baby deer plushie. I texted back an eloquent, &quot;Wait what.&quot; &quot;Apparently, her dad worked for the US State Department, so her family moved, like, every single year. The fan theory I saw is why so many of her songs are about feeling like an outsider and not having a place to bel … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 14:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>You don’t have to spend more than $50 on a great USB-C dock for your Switch 2</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/gadgets/907645/nintendo-switch-2-genki-jsaux-usb-c-dock-hands-on</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/gadgets/907645/nintendo-switch-2-genki-jsaux-usb-c-dock-hands-on</guid><description>You can’t make the wrong choice based on hardware, but you can spend more than you need to. Nintendo seemingly designed its latest console to be a mystery for third-party accessory makers. With the Switch 2, the company changed the wireless protocol for connecting controllers to the new system, as well as how it outputs video over USB-C, making it clear at launch that every third-party manufacturer needed to start over from scratch. Figuring out how to speak the Switch 2&apos;s language - and ensuring reliability even after system updates - is an ongoing challenge. But now there are two reliable USB-C dock alternatives I can recommend, if you need one. Jsaux was one of the first to land with its $45.99 OmniCentro Dock last year, and no … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 13:30:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Cirrus Labs to join OpenAI</title><link>https://cirruslabs.org/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://cirruslabs.org/</guid><description>Comments</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 13:01:34 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>Demons and pinball are a perfect match</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/entertainment/909820/devils-on-the-moon-pinball-review-playdate</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/entertainment/909820/devils-on-the-moon-pinball-review-playdate</guid><description>There&apos;s one very specific reason I keep a Wii U handy, and that&apos;s so that I have an easy way to play the classic pinball game Devil&apos;s Crush. Over the years, it has become a comfort game for me. I&apos;m not entirely sure what it is, but there&apos;s something about the combination of familiar pinball gameplay and the demonic imagery that works so well together, and lets me lose myself in the chase for a high score. But now I have something else to fill that need, and it comes in a much smaller package. Devils on the Moon Pinball for the Playdate has an extremely literal title. It&apos;s a game about playing pinball on the moon, which happens to be home to … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 13:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>How Iran out-shitposted the White House</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/policy/910401/iran-war-propaganda-blackout-lego-ai-slop</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/policy/910401/iran-war-propaganda-blackout-lego-ai-slop</guid><description>In the early days of the war on Iran, while the White House was busy posting Call of Duty memes and AI slop of dancing bowling pins, the Iranian regime&apos;s state media was flooding the zone with video after video of what was happening on the ground: Explosions over Tehran. Smoke billowing in the sky. Blood on the ground. A Tomahawk missile landing on a school. Grieving parents burying their children. Only weeks prior, the authoritarian regime had been struggling to shut down all footage of the protests convulsing the nation, cutting off internet access to the outside world in the longest blackout in Iranian history. When Iranian dissidents m … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 13:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>‘Crimson Desert’ Is a Cat Dad Simulator</title><link>https://www.wired.com/story/crimson-desert-is-a-cat-dad-simulator/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.wired.com/story/crimson-desert-is-a-cat-dad-simulator/</guid><description>Step into the shoes of the strongest, goodest boy in a game that is beautiful, baffling, and impossible to put down.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 12:30:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>gear</category><category>gear / gear news and events</category><category>gear / products / gaming</category></item><item><title>Zuvi ColorBox Review: A Hair Dye Printer That Struggles</title><link>https://www.wired.com/review/zuvi-colorbox/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.wired.com/review/zuvi-colorbox/</guid><description>This hair dye printer promises hundreds of shades. It couldn&apos;t even manage two.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 12:11:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>gear</category><category>gear / reviews</category><category>gear / products / lifestyle</category></item><item><title>The new show making fun of tech bros</title><link>https://www.theverge.com/tech/910422/audacity-artemis-maul-installer</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.theverge.com/tech/910422/audacity-artemis-maul-installer</guid><description>Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 123, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you&apos;re new here, welcome, which Artemis photo did you make your wallpaper, and also you can read all the old editions at the Installer homepage.) This week, I&apos;ve been reading about Sam Altman and Satoshi Nakamoto and chess drama and Iranian shitposters, buying the stuff I need to mod an old iPod, making videos with the clever new DualShot Recorder, watching Crime 101 now that it&apos;s streaming, finally getting my Stream Deck Mini to control all my office lights, revisiting the incredible 17776 series from our friends at SB Nation, moving a … Read the full story at The Verge.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category></item><item><title>MacBook Neo vs. MacBook Air: Which One Should You Buy?</title><link>https://www.wired.com/story/macbook-neo-vs-macbook-air/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.wired.com/story/macbook-neo-vs-macbook-air/</guid><description>After conducting long-term testing on both the MacBook Neo and MacBook Air, I have a good idea who should buy which laptop.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 11:30:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>gear</category><category>gear / products</category><category>gear / products / computers</category><category>gear / reviews</category></item><item><title>Best Electric Cargo Bikes (2026): Urban Arrow, Lectric, Tern, and More</title><link>https://www.wired.com/story/best-electric-cargo-bikes/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.wired.com/story/best-electric-cargo-bikes/</guid><description>You don&apos;t need a car to tote around kids and cup holders. I rode cargo ebikes for miles to find the best one for your buck.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 11:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>gear</category><category>gear / products</category><category>gear / reviews</category><category>gear / products / outdoor</category></item><item><title>Your Push Notifications Aren’t Safe From the FBI</title><link>https://www.wired.com/story/security-news-this-week-your-push-notifications-arent-safe-from-the-fbi/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.wired.com/story/security-news-this-week-your-push-notifications-arent-safe-from-the-fbi/</guid><description>Plus: Iran’s internet blackout hits the 1,000-hour mark, cryptocurrency scams result in a record amount of money stolen from Americans, and more.</description><pubDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 10:30:00 GMT</pubDate><category>tech</category><category>security</category><category>security / cyberattacks and hacks</category><category>security / national security</category><category>security / privacy</category></item></channel></rss>