In my latest blog post, I dive into an eclectic mix of tech and culture! I chat about Jonathan Nunn’s journey with Vittles magazine from Substack to print, reveal my adventure with crafting an MP3 player app to tackle Apple’s challenges, and share insights into Claude 4’s AI leap. Plus, explore groundbreaking algorithms, the quirky realm of decibels, and Google’s Gemini Diffusion from I/O! Exciting stuff awaits!
- ‘Print is new counter culture’ says Vittles founder as newsletter launches in print: Interview with Vittles magazine founder Jonathan Nunn who first launched the food brand on Substack in 2020 and has now gone into print.
- In 2025, Apple still makes it hard to play your own MP3s, so I wrote my own app: Technical leadership, MVP development, and scalable infrastructure consulting for startups and founders. Hands-on expertise in Go, Kubernetes, system design, and cloud architecture.
- Pocket is saying goodbye – What you need to know: More information about the end of support for Pocket.
- Introducing Claude 4: Discover Claude 4’s breakthrough AI capabilities. Experience more reliable, interpretable assistance for complex tasks across work and learning.
- Decibels are ridiculous: Celebrating a rare dumpster fire in the kingdom of science.
- For Algorithms, a Little Memory Outweighs a Lot of Time: One computer scientist’s “stunning” proof is the first progress in 50 years on one of the most famous questions in computer science.
- Gemini Diffusion: Another of the announcements from Google I/O yesterday was Gemini Diffusion, Google’s first LLM to use diffusion (similar to image models like Imagen and Stable Diffusion) in place of transformers. …