Edge computing is what happens when reality collides with your architecture diagram. In the cloud, your nodes are pampered: stable power, stable networking, stable kernels, and a team that panics when latency goes above “annoying.” At the edge—factories, retail stores, vehicles, ships, wind farms, and other places where Ethernet is more rumor than resource—your nodes…
Intel’s All‑In Bet on Advanced Chip Packaging: Why EMIB, Foveros, and “Systems Foundry” Could Decide the Next AI Hardware Era
Intel is making a very public—and very expensive—point lately: the future of chips is not just about smaller transistors. It’s about how you stitch multiple pieces of silicon together so they behave like one monster processor without turning your data center into a space heater with networking cables. That’s the core theme behind the original…
The One Missing Data Point in the AI Jobs Panic: Price Elasticity (and Why O*NET Isn’t Enough)
On April 6, 2026, MIT Technology Review ran a deceptively simple headline: “The one piece of data that could actually shed light on your job and AI.” The piece (by James O’Donnell) argues that we’re obsessing over the wrong numbers when we ask whether AI will “take jobs.” The data we don’t have—systematically, across the…
Defending Your Software Supply Chain in 2026: Docker’s CISO on Why “Implicit Trust” Is the New Zero-Day
Engineering teams have always shipped software on a schedule best described as “optimistic.” But in 2026, there’s a new constraint that refuses to be sprint-planned away: your software supply chain is now a primary attack surface, and it’s getting hammered with the enthusiasm of a botnet that just discovered caffeine. That’s the core thesis of…
AI Is Rewriting the Product Playbook for Small Online Sellers (and Accio Is Just the Beginning)
Small online sellers have always lived in a strange ecosystem: half spreadsheet, half instinct, and fully caffeinated. For years, “deciding what to make next” looked like a messy blend of Amazon reviews, competitor stalking, late-night supplier emails, and the kind of gut feeling that is technically not an analytics KPI (but still pays the bills).…
Extract Text from Images with Python OCR (Without the OCR Pain): A Deep Dive into OVHcloud AI Endpoints
OCR is one of those problems that sounds solved until you actually try to solve it. You grab a “classic” OCR engine, point it at a photo of a receipt, a screenshot of a dashboard, or a scanned PDF with a weird table layout… and suddenly you’re in a world of skew correction, DPI arguments,…
Space Data Centers: The Four Things We’d Need Before We Start Renting GPU Time in Orbit
For a concept that sounds like it escaped from a late-night brainstorming session (“What if we just… yeeted the data center into orbit?”), space-based data centers are suddenly being discussed with a straight face by startups, chipmakers, and even the occasional billionaire with a rocket company. The spark for this latest round of attention is…
Kubernetes v1.36 Sneak Peek: Security Hardening, Smarter Device Scheduling, and Faster SELinux Volume Mounts
Kubernetes releases have a particular rhythm: half engineering marathon, half group therapy session, and one small part “wait, we were using that feature?” Kubernetes v1.36 looks like it will continue that proud tradition—except this time the big story is not flashy new abstractions, but the kind of platform plumbing that quietly saves your weekend. This…
Amazon Bedrock Guardrails Goes Cross-Account: Centralized Safety Controls for Multi-Account AWS Organizations
Amazon has quietly done something very unquietly useful for anyone running generative AI at enterprise scale: Amazon Bedrock Guardrails now supports cross-account safeguards with centralized control and management. In plain English, you can finally stop playing “whack-a-guardrail” across dozens (or hundreds) of AWS accounts and instead enforce consistent safety controls from a single place—your AWS…
Sony’s PS5 Price Hikes Are a Weirdly Encouraging Sign: This Console Generation Isn’t Done Yet
Sony just made a move that feels illegal in the court of gamer vibes: it raised PlayStation 5 prices again—more than five years after the console launched. If you were waiting for the traditional mid-generation “finally, a discount” moment, please accept this tiny, imaginary coupon for emotional damages. But here’s the twist: these price hikes…
