AI: The New Operating System
AI is more than just smarter software; it's the next big platform shift, like the internet or the smartphone. Get ready for a seismic change.
Practical guides, reviews, and updates on the latest AI products shaping coding, writing, design, and productivity workflows.
AI is more than just smarter software; it's the next big platform shift, like the internet or the smartphone. Get ready for a seismic change.
The context window wall. It's haunted AI developers for years. Now, Google's ADK is finally, *finally*, doing something about it with 'Skills'.
OpenAI is rolling out agents that embed directly into company workflows, and xAI is gobbling up code tools. Forget chatbots; AI is officially doing the actual work.
AI agents aren't magic. They're code. And code breaks. Especially when it's pretending to be intelligent.
They promised AI could understand everything. Turns out, it still needs a good old-fashioned index. Hybrid search for RAG isn't a compromise; it's survival.
The AI arms race isn't just in Silicon Valley data centers anymore. It's hitting your desk.
Imagine your AI agent furiously retrying calls to tools that don't exist—like dialing a ghost number over and over. New analysis reveals ReAct systems waste 90.8% of retries this way, draining budgets and dooming real tasks.
I've seen a thousand 'breakthrough' model tweaks in 20 years, but this finetune of Qwen's multimodal embedder actually delivers: 0.947 NDCG on VDR, smoking rivals four times its size. Still, who's cashing in?
What if your diary fought back? One writer's week with Mindsera reveals the seductive pull of AI that mirrors your soul—flaws and all.
Everyone thought AI would just spit out answers. But AI agents? They're out there running queries, calling APIs, looping until the job's done—turning data engineering into a sci-fi dream.
70% of production AI agents crash due to harness staleness. Anthropic claims Managed Agents ends that nightmare—decoupling brain from hands. Skeptical? Read on.
Picture this: refactoring code on a plane, no Wi-Fi, no rate limits — just your M1 MacBook humming with a 26-billion-parameter AI brain. I did it, and it's shockingly good.