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Microsoft’s AI-102: Designing and Implementing a Microsoft Azure AI Solution exam is designed for Azure AI engineers who build, deploy, secure, and manage AI solutions using Azure AI services, Azure AI Search, Azure OpenAI, computer vision, natural language processing, knowledge mining, and generative AI capabilities. The exam is proctored, has a listed duration of 100 minutes, and measures practi
A step-by-step guide for beginners who want a gaming PC and a real enterprise Linux environment on the same machine — with every decision explained in plain English. What Is Dual-Booting and Why Rocky Linux? UEFI, BIOS, and Secure Boot Partitions, File Systems, and GPT The GRUB Bootloader Before You Begin — Checklist Phase 1 — Shrink Your Windows Partition Phase 2 — Download & Flash Rocky Linux Ph
It started at midnight I had 24 hours, a free Replit subscription, and an idea: what if I could build something like Miro — but actually understand every line of code in it? The core problem I had to solve first Multiplayer sync sounds simple until you actually build it. The hard part isn't sending a canvas update — it's figuring out what to send. canvas.on('object:modified', (e) => { socket.emi
FutureMe has 15 million letters in its database. They've been there since 2002. Some of them will be there in 2050. Evengood will have zero. This week I shipped The Quiet Letter — a feature where you write to your future self today, we email it on a date you pick, and we hard-delete the row from our database within 24 hours of sending it. The email is the only artifact. We don't keep a copy. Every
GitHub Copilot just got a lot more complicated — and not in a good way. If you tried to sign up for Copilot Pro recently and hit a wall, that's not a bug. GitHub quietly paused new sign-ups for Copilot Pro, Pro+, and Student plans starting in late April 2026. No end date announced. No workaround offered. Just a message and a door that won't open. That alone would be worth covering. But they made t
It was around 1am and I had three feeds open. X on my phone, Reddit on one monitor, Hacker News on the other. I was reading about a plane crash, a new AI model, and a meme war about whether oat milk counts as milk. And I realised I had no idea what the internet was actually feeling about any of it. The feeds told me what was happening. They didn't tell me how it felt. That's when the idea hit me.
I write a lot of READMEs. I ship faster than I document. I work with AI agents that write code in seconds and READMEs in minutes, and somewhere between the first commit and the third refactor, the README I wrote on Tuesday stops matching the code I wrote on Friday. The install command says npm start. The package.json defines start:prod. Anyone copying that command would have failed instantly. I'd