anit.guru
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Guru's Tech Bytes — Episode 74

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Transcript

Good morning, it's Tuesday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 74. We got job scams, peer-to-peer plumbing, local coding robots, and a pirate game where the wind apparently has more rules than my health insurance portal. So grab your coffee, jiggle the mouse like you're still in a meeting, and let's chew through the internet before it chews through us. First up... somebody wrote about a backdoor hidden in a LinkedIn job offer, and yeah, that's the kind of sentence that makes me want to unplug the router and become a lighthouse keeper. The whole trick is classic: dress malware up like opportunity, let ambition click the attachment, and suddenly your laptop is doing secret jazz hands for some stranger. It is a reminder that security training is not just posters about passwords; it is teaching people that a dream job can still arrive wearing clown shoes. Second... Iroh 1.0 is out, and it is one of those networking projects where everybody smarter than me nods and says, yes, this makes distributed systems less miserable. From what I gather, it is about making devices connect directly, share data, and not require seventeen little cloud middlemen taking a snack tax. I like that. If my printer needs three accounts, two apps, and a blood oath just to jam paper, maybe peer-to-peer deserves a parade. Third... Hacker News is asking whether anyone has replaced Claude or GPT with a local model for daily coding, which is basically the nerd version of, can I raise chickens instead of buying eggs? The answer seems to be: sometimes, if you're patient, technical, and okay with the chicken occasionally writing TypeScript that looks haunted. Still, local AI is getting useful enough that developers are seriously comparing speed, privacy, cost, and whether their GPU sounds like a leaf blower in a server closet. And finally... TinyWind is a pixel pirate sailing game with real wind physics and hundreds of thousands of kilometers sailed by players, which is delightful and also suspiciously educational. You think you're just pushing a tiny boat around, then boom, you're learning about tacking, weather, and why old sailors talked like they had swallowed a compass. Heh. Hhh, okay, that's something. Honestly, I respect any game that makes physics charming instead of turning it into homework with barnacles. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.