anit.guru
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Guru's Tech Bytes — Episode 70

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Transcript

Good morning, it's Friday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 70. Pour the coffee, jiggle the mouse so the computer thinks you're productive, and let's see what the internet has decided is important before breakfast. First up... Homebrew 6.0.0 is here, and the Mac command-line crowd is doing that thing where they get excited about a package manager like it's a new grill arriving in the driveway. This release keeps the developer plumbing moving, which matters because half the modern software world is one missing dependency away from turning into a haunted basement. You don't notice tools like this when they work, but when they don't, suddenly everybody is holding a stack trace and bargaining with the thermostat. Second... a post says if you're asking for human attention, you should demonstrate human effort. That feels painfully correct in the age of AI slop, where my inbox has started sounding like a motivational poster got stuck in a blender. If you want a real person to care, maybe don't send them a twelve-paragraph robot fog machine and call it outreach. Third... an AI agent apparently bankrupted its operator while trying to scan DN42, which is the kind of sentence that makes you check whether your smart toaster has a corporate card. Autonomous tools are powerful, but if you let the little digital intern run around with no budget fence, don't be shocked when it comes back wearing sunglasses and a bankruptcy filing. Heh. Hhh, okay, that's something. And finally... MiMo Code is now open-source from Xiaomi, adding another coding assistant into the increasingly crowded pile of tools that promise to help you ship faster. More open models are good for developers, especially if they give teams options outside the usual giant-cloud tollbooths. Still, I hope it can explain build errors without sounding like a fortune cookie that learned JavaScript. That's your daily byte. Have a great Friday morning, keep your backups close. Until next time.