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How Digger by Windmill Software Sparked My Early Computing Passion

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Before I knew what a CPU was, I could type GPEGA with my eyes closed,and in that moment, the screen would bloom with the opening music of Grand Prix Circuit. It wasn’t magic, not really, but it felt like it. That keystroke wasn’t just a command; it was a ritual. A promise. And it stuck with me longer than most of what I learned in school that year. I didn’t think of it as computing back then. I just knew that if I wanted to hear those synthy trumpets and feel the rumble of pixelated engines, I had to hit those keys in that order. My buddy had shown me Digger first,Windmill Software’s little gem about digging for gold while avoiding monsters,but it was Grand Prix Circuit that got under my skin. The way the tires squealed when you took a corner too fast. The way the crowd noise swelled as you crossed the finish line. It was the first time I realized a machine could respond to me,not just obey, but react ,and that it did so because of something I’d typed. Then came the computer l...

Memory Costs Now Exceed Logic in AI Chips: A First

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I used to think the brain of an AI chip was the expensive part — the logic, the transistors doing the math. Turns out, it’s the memory. For the first time, the silicon that stores data in these chips costs more than the silicon that processes it. That’s not a footnote. It’s a shift in how these things are built. We looked at the chips from Nvidia, AMD, Google, and Amazon — broke down what each piece costs: the high-bandwidth memory stacks, the logic dies, the fancy packaging like CoWoS, and the rest. Then we scaled it by how many they’re actually making. The memory isn’t just a big slice anymore. It’s the biggest slice. And that changes everything — from how engineers trade off performance and cost, to why we’re seeing weird new designs pop up in roadmaps that don’t make sense if you’re still thinking in old terms. If you’ve been assuming the compute die drives the bill of materials, you’re missing the real story. What happens when the thing holding the data starts dictating t...

The Real Price of Freedom: Hidden Costs in Free Software

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Hey there! So, imagine this — you're using a piece of software that seems absolutely fantastic, right? It’s free, it does everything you need, and everyone raves about how great it is. But have you ever stopped to think about what those "free" labels really mean? I mean, let's face it — there's no such thing as a completely free lunch (or software). While the initial installation might be gratis, the real cost can sneak up on you in ways that are pretty sneaky. Think of it like this: when you use open-source software, you're not just buying simplicity and low upfront costs; you're also potentially paying with data collection, potential legal issues, and other hidden burdens that aren’t immediately obvious. Now, here’s the thing — these hidden costs can really stack up. They might not be as headline-grabbing as some shiny new feature, but they sure are something to keep an eye on if you're running a business or relying heavily on software for y...

Why Japanese Companies Lead in Innovation and Diversification

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In today's tech landscape, where major corporations often dominate markets with their sheer size and resources, it's refreshing to see smaller players challenging conventional wisdom and carving out unique niches. One such example is Japanese companies, known not only for their meticulous craftsmanship but also for their innovative spirit. What's intriguing isn't just that these firms are thriving in unexpected areas—from technology to food processing—but how they do so by redefining what it means to be a market leader. This approach challenges the widely held belief that larger is always better. By exploring industries where size might seem like an obstacle, Japanese companies demonstrate that innovation and adaptability can transcend traditional business models. It's as if they are saying: "Size doesn't define success; creativity does." This defiance of expectations not only highlights Japan's economic prowess but also offers valuable les...

Flipper One: A Terminal-First Linux GUI for CLI Users

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What if your Linux desktop didn’t hide the terminal — but made it the star of the interface? We’ve spent years rebuilding Flipper One from scratch, not because we wanted another desktop environment, but because we kept hitting the same wall: powerful CLI tools buried under layers of GUI abstraction that pretend they’re making things easier. So we flipped it. Instead of wrapping the terminal in a desktop, we built a desktop around the terminal — using thin, smart wrappers around existing CLI utilities to give them a graphical face without losing their soul. It’s been brutally hard. Financially, we’ve bootstrapped every step. Technically, we’re fighting to maintain full mainline Linux kernel support on ARM while building a GUI framework that doesn’t just sit on top of the system but feels like a natural extension of it. This isn’t another theme or launcher — it’s a rethink of what a Linux desktop could be when you stop hiding the power and start putting it front and center. If ...

OpenAI Language Model Disproves Long-Standing Discrete Geome

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When an OpenAI language model quietly disproved a long-standing conjecture in discrete geometry, it didn’t just win a math puzzle — it revealed a new kind of reasoning that doesn’t look like human intuition at all. The conjecture, which had resisted proof for over a decade, wasn’t about neural nets or transformers — it was about packing shapes in high-dimensional space, a problem so abstract even specialists struggle to visualize it. Yet the model didn’t simulate human-like spatial reasoning. It didn’t draw diagrams or rely on geometric intuition. Instead, it explored a vast, alien space of symbolic manipulations — patterns that made no immediate sense to us but consistently led to contradictions in the conjecture’s assumptions. When it finally found a counterexample, the proof wasn’t elegant in the way mathematicians admire. It was cluttered, indirect, and built on layers of abstraction that felt more like machine logic than insight. I’ve spent years watching AI tackle proble...

Building LangChain Agents That Handle Errors and Failures

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Most LangChain demos feel like toy examples — a prompt here, a tool call there, and suddenly you’ve got a chatbot that can tell you the weather. It’s clean, it’s tidy, and it barely scratches the surface of what real-world AI applications actually need to do. The truth is, building agents that work outside of a controlled notebook is messy. Tools fail. Models hallucinate. Ambiguity creeps in at every turn — whether it’s a vague user request, an incomplete API response, or a file system that doesn’t behave like you expect. LangChain gives you the primitives to handle that, but most tutorials skip straight to the happy path. Deep Agents changes that. It’s not another abstraction layer for the sake of it — it’s a opinionated set of patterns baked into LangChain for the stuff you actually wrestle with: planning when the goal isn’t clear, delegating to subagents when one model can’t do it all, and safely poking around in a file system without bringing down your whole app. If you’ve...