The Laptop Return That Exposed RAG's Dirty Secret
What if your AI customer support bot confidently ships back a laptop under an expired policy? One real bug report reveals why vector search falls short in production RAG.
What if your AI customer support bot confidently ships back a laptop under an expired policy? One real bug report reveals why vector search falls short in production RAG.
What if your open source project had its own personal radar, pinging every new star and fork like sonar in the deep? OpenTrend.dev delivers that thrill, turning obsession into insight.
Database admins, rejoice—or at least pause your coffee break. Greyforge Labs' OpenForge Collection promises tools that fix real pains in scanning, deployments, and DB ops without the GitHub bloat.
Developers chasing microsecond precision in Linux have long battled scheduling chaos. One Software PLC builder's stress test flips the script: PREEMPT_RT delivers 10x better jitter control.
Imagine uploading your Rust crate, only to find its docs built for Linux servers alone. docs.rs just pulled the rug out from under multi-target defaults—effective 2026.
You hit enter on a binary, and poof—it's running. But Linux's execve syscall hides a symphony of ELF parsing, memory mappings, and lazy dynamic linking. Here's the unvarnished how and why.
Imagine firing up Steam games or pro music software on Linux without Proton's crutches. Wine Staging 11.6's massive DirectComposition patch dump makes that a notch closer to reality.
Fedora's no longer playing it safe with graphics drivers. They've locked in permanent Mesa updates for stable users, mirroring the kernel policy that keeps things fresh.
Invited to speak purely for her gender. Turned guilt into code commits. But is this open source's future?
Your next Linux server won't bluescreen on a whim. Greg KH's new fuzzing arsenal — dubbed 'Clanker T1000' — is already squashing kernel bugs at warp speed.
Dozens of security updates hit AlmaLinux, Debian, and Fedora this Monday, zeroing in on GStreamer stacks, kernels, and privacy tools like Tor. Skip them at your peril—here's the data-driven breakdown.
Imagine your AI coding buddy second-guessing itself with a rival model's sharp eye. GitHub Copilot CLI's Rubber Duck does just that, slashing errors on brutal, multi-file bugs.
Sliders for RAM. Synthwave themes. Opera GX hits Linux, chasing sticker-laptop warriors. But does it game-change, or just gimmick?
GitHub reviewed just 4,101 open source advisories in 2025—the fewest since 2021. But don't pop the champagne; new vulnerabilities jumped 19%, signaling no safety net yet.
Mark Russinovich feeds vintage Apple II binary to an AI. It labels the code, explains the logic, spots a sneaky bug. Open source suddenly looks like the only sane bet.
You're knee-deep in a repo, commit a stray API key, and bam—GitHub's secret scanning lights up like a Christmas tree. But is this savior suite really as straightforward as it seems?
Ever wondered why your containers guzzle gigabytes while others fly lean? These five lightweight Linux distros are rewriting the rules of efficient, secure containerization.
Amazon's new X DM integration for Connect sounds smart in theory: bring Twitter conversations into your contact center. But is this really about customer experience, or just another way to lock companies deeper into the AWS ecosystem?
The MIT report is damning: 95% of generative AI projects flop. But here's what nobody tells you—we're not failing because we lack talent or compute power. We're failing because we're using a 30-year-old playbook designed for certainty to build systems built on probability.
Martin Wimpress built Ubuntu MATE from a GNOME fork into an official Ubuntu staple. Now, after 12 years, he's out—citing lost passion and time—and calling for new blood.