anit.guru
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Guru's Tech Bytes — Episode 36

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Transcript

Good morning, it's Saturday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 36. We got privacy gates, nature-documentary royalty, little radios yelling across mountains, and a programming language doing the AI-infrastructure gym-bro thing. So grab the coffee, make sure your phone does not have to solve a puzzle to prove it is a phone, and let's get into it. First up... Google broke reCAPTCHA for de-googled Android users. The newer flow can depend on Google Play Services, which means if you're running GrapheneOS or another privacy-friendly Android setup, the website may look at you and go, nope, this human smells insufficiently Google. Heh. Hhh, okay, that's something. Bot detection turning into ecosystem control is the kind of thing that makes developers quietly reopen the Cloudflare docs and stare into the middle distance. Second... David Attenborough turned 100, and the internet basically stood up like it was the end of a nature special. The BBC has concerts, orchestras, old clips, and even a newly named wasp, because apparently if you narrate enough penguins, science eventually hands you an insect. It is not hardcore tech, but it is media history: one guy helped define how generations experience the natural world through screens. Third... Meshtastic is getting attention again, and I love this little goblin-radio stuff. It uses cheap LoRa devices to make off-grid mesh messaging, so people can text without towers, Wi-Fi, or some app asking for fourteen permissions and your cousin's dental records. Every node can rebroadcast for the others, which is basically networking if networking wore cargo shorts and brought extra batteries. And finally... Mojo 1.0 Beta is here, with Modular pitching speed, portability, and AI workloads that can jump across hardware without everybody rewriting kernels until their eyes become raisins. It is Python-adjacent, compiler-heavy, and aimed at people who want performance without sacrificing their whole weekend to GPU weirdness. If it works, great; if not, well, at least Microsoft didn't name it Copilot Kernel Deluxe. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.