Kimi K2.6 has been getting a lot of love lately, especially from devs who want a strong coding model without paying premium model prices every time they run a big prompt. So I wanted to see how good this model actually is. But this time, I wanted to compare it with something much heavier, the developers darling Claude Opus 4.7. On paper, Claude Opus 4.7 and Kimi K2.6 are very different models. On
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Denver likes a good origin story. The city still keeps a marker for Louis Ballast and the Humpty Dumpty Barrel, the local spot tied to the cheeseburger's Colorado claim. That detail felt oddly right for SnowFROC 2026. A cheeseburger is a small upgrade that changes the whole meal. This year's conference kept returning to the same ideas in AppSec, such as how meaningful security progress often comes
You write a Dockerfile, run docker build, and get an image. But what’s really happening under the hood? Docker isn’t just “building” your app — it’s assembling a stack of immutable filesystem layers. Docker doesn’t build applications — it builds filesystem snapshots layer by layer. Let’s break it down. A Docker image is not a single file. stack of read-only layers. Every instruction in your Docker
Why Most Crypto Bots Get Sandwiched (And How to Prevent It) If you’ve ever tried deploying a crypto trading bot, chances are you’ve encountered the dreaded sandwich attack. It’s one of the most frustrating experiences for traders and developers alike. I’ve lost count of how many times my bots got caught in these attacks, but over time, I’ve learned how to mitigate them effectively. In this artic
Metric Value Django Average Response Time 287ms Node.js Average Response Time 193ms Django Memory Usage (1000 users) 1.8GB We tested Django 4.2 and Node.js 18.16 under identical conditions to measure their performance for reporting dashboard workloads. The test environment consisted of AWS EC2 m5.2xlarge instances (8 vCPUs, 32GB RAM) running Ubuntu 22.04. Both frameworks connected to th
GitHub has thousands of open-source apps with binary releases — but finding and downloading the right one is painful. Release pages are buried, and you're left squinting at filenames like app-1.2.3-linux-x86_64.tar.gz guessing which one is yours. So I built GHFrog — a browser-based app store on top of the GitHub API. No install, no account needed. Live: ghfrog.pages.dev · Source: github.com/iamovi
I was out walking with my dog Dexter, daydreaming on the first properly warm day of the year. I was lost in my own mind mulling over a conversation I'd had with a fellow Game Developer about how we've adapted to the use of AI as software engineers. None of the existing labels fit. "Vibe coding", Karpathy's term, elicits a culture of care-free one-shotting with little to no regard for the code qual