70% Unit Tests or Bust: The 2026 Automation Testing Wake-Up Call
Picture this: Your CI pipeline crumbles because E2E tests flake out again. 70% of tests should be lightning-fast units. Here's why most teams screw it up—and how to fix it in 2026.
Your AI morning briefing for May 07, 2026 — the top stories you need to know.
Picture this: Your CI pipeline crumbles because E2E tests flake out again. 70% of tests should be lightning-fast units. Here's why most teams screw it up—and how to fix it in 2026.
Ever botched a deploy because your laptop's Arch Linux clashed with Ubuntu? One dev's GitHub Actions fix turns Phoenix Mix releases into smoothly Hetzner pushes.
Ever zoned out in a standup dreaming of dragons? AI Meeting Translator pastes your drudgery into Gemini and spits out lore-worthy legends. But does the magic last?
AI agents flop on 40% of coding tasks right now. HyperFlow claims to fix that by letting one AI debug another—autonomously. But after 20 years in this game, I've seen this movie before.
None
Website owners chasing Google rankings just got a rude wake-up. AI Overviews cite top-10 pages only 38% of the time now—down from 76%—meaning your SEO sweat might not pay off where traffic's heading next.
Manual KYC reviews are choking fintech growth—19.2% of onboardings stuck in queues. Device intelligence fixed that for Webull Brazil, dropping it to 2.5% while nailing remote hackers.
Five members. All with law degrees, zero blockchain builders. The CFTC's new Innovation Task Force promises crypto clarity — but smells like Washington window dressing.
Every site looks the same: centered blobs screaming for attention. Uncenter Everything flips the script, unleashing CSS mayhem on web symmetry — and it's brilliant.
Picture this: your Python CLI starts as a neat script, ends up a bloated monster. Enter Klix — the framework that glues it all smoothly.
Devs dreamed of easy data riches — locked behind paywalls and APIs. This Python scraper cracks it wide open, turning free web gold into sellable treasure.
Sunlight hits a windowsill panel, a tiny Pi Zero hums to life, serving HTTP to strangers worldwide. But does this ultra-lean setup survive the real world?