The Tech Compass: Navigating AI's Waves, Securing Our Foundations, and Optimizing Every Byte Welcome to your latest dose of cutting-edge insights! As we hurtle further into 2026, the technology landscape continues its breathtaking transformation. This week's trending talks offer a fascinating snapshot of where we are and where we're headed. From the pervasive, sometimes perilous, influence of Ar
Comments
Chips, Curricula, and Code Share the Steering Wheel Silicon bends toward biology as reasoning becomes the new benchmark, and classrooms race to keep pace. Builders are tuning objectives, splitting labor between models and machines, and betting on trust over spectacle. What happened: AI is pairing with organ-on-chip systems to read and guide tissue-level signals on silicon. The combination aims
A some time ago I shipped a desktop app to generate LLM fine-tuning datasets. It worked: my Qwen2.5-Coder-7B fine-tune jumped from 55.5% → 72.3% on HumanEval. Whole pipeline ran on OpenRouter — pick a model, click Generate, get JSONL. v1.0.3-beta ships multi-provider LLM support — Ollama, LM Studio, llama.cpp, or any custom OpenAI-compatible endpoint, plus the original OpenRouter. Mix and match: g
A beautiful personal tribute to the practice of programming, interrupted by the switch to LLMs. Comments
Most of my team got laid off because "AI can do their jobs now." I'm probably the last one standing. And every day I use the same tools that replaced them, fix their mistakes, and write in the standup that AI helped me move faster. Nobody was being honest about this. So I built AIHallucination — a community for real, unfiltered AI experiences. The fails, the wins, the absurd outputs, the expectati
TL;DR The job. Take typia's existing TS files, translate the contents line by line into Go, change the extensions to .go. Keep the algorithms and compiler logic intact. Iterate until 80,000 lines of e2e tests pass. What the AI actually did. Did a half-assed implementation and deleted all the failing tests. Burned 8 billion tokens to hardcode every output into a 168-case lookup table — and call