BMW changes lanes
I think this is the first time I’ve ever seen a BMW cross that many lanes and actually use their turn signal.
I think this is the first time I’ve ever seen a BMW cross that many lanes and actually use their turn signal.
In other announcements, Microsoft has quietly extended Windows 10 support for another year to 2027. You can enroll in Extended Security Updates (ESU) program any time until the program ends on October 12, 2027.
This is totally not an admission that Windows 10 is still over 25% of the install base even 5 years after Windows 11 released.
To enroll, make sure your device meets the following requirements – most notably they want you to use your Microsoft account and not any local accounts:
In a report published in February that brings us one step closer to the Terminator and War Games movies, when presented scenarios, the leading open AI models used nuclear weapons in 95% of war-game scenarios. None chose full surrender, even when losing.
Researchers warn AI use may escalate conflicts under pressure.
Edwin “James” Nagle decided to see who actually owned the COMPUTE! magazine trademark. It turns out, nobody did. The name and assets of COMPUTE! were traded and sold and eventually put up as collateral which when the loan failed, reverted to a company that no longer existed.
He stepped in and got the rights from the US patent and trademark office and now officially has revived the Compute! Gazette magazine – complete with type-in programs!
Here’s his excellent talk on the subject.
Oh – and he considered the old print versions of the magazine he now owns the copyrights for as ‘free and open source’.
Claude Design has hit the scene – and Figma stock dropped 7.7% the same day.
A small team with access to a frontier model can reach “good enough” on a design tool in a matter of weeks. The question being priced in isn’t “will Figma die?” It’s “what is Figma’s moat, actually?”
Learn more about Claude Design here or read a step-by-step walkthrough in this Medium article.
While this was a parody/joke – it’s actually pointing in the direction software is likely headed. You can tell some of the folks in the video are seeing it. What if you just type in the application you want and it’s generated for you? Sure this is flaky now, but given the advancements as well as putting guard rails on things to guide it – this is all very much a possible future. You don’t buy software anymore and SaaS companies don’t exist either – you make the software you want by asking for it and the system generates exactly the app you need.
Download it here: https://vibeos.sh
In order to get Kokoro text-to-speech to work with my 5090 GPU inside a Docker container on Windows, I had to get the CUDA setup inside WSL2 using Docker images on Windows. Here were the helpful links:
Setup the WSL image with CUDA and Docker support.
Now run the Kokoro docker command inside your WSL2 image:
Connect with the default web link:
You can’t follow this 100% directly. Note you have to stop and restart/reboot WSL and desktop as you do the other steps above.
# NVidia CUDA setup inside WSL2 Ubuntu 24.04 image
wget https://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/repos/wsl-ubuntu/x86_64/cuda-wsl-ubuntu.pin
sudo mv cuda-wsl-ubuntu.pin /etc/apt/preferences.d/cuda-repository-pin-600
wget https://developer.download.nvidia.com/compute/cuda/13.3.0/local_installers/cuda-repo-wsl-ubuntu-13-3-local_13.3.0-1_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i cuda-repo-wsl-ubuntu-13-3-local_13.3.0-1_amd64.deb
sudo cp /var/cuda-repo-wsl-ubuntu-13-3-local/cuda-*-keyring.gpg /usr/share/keyrings/
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get -y install cuda-toolkit-13-3
exit
sudo apt install nvidia-cuda-toolkit
nvcc --version
exit
sudo usermod -a -G docker matt
exit
docker run --gpus all -p 8880:8880 ghcr.io/remsky/kokoro-fastapi-gpu:latest-cu128
“How could we tell we were losing the war? Oh, it was because the victories kept coming closer and closer to us every week.”

This is a really interesting set of DEV articles written by a software engineer. Initially a set of 8 articles, it’s expanded to 21 and counting. It does an excellent job of describing and analyzing exactly the conditions engineers are going through – from watching an AI agent do a week’s worth of work in 1 hour while they were in a meeting to seeing 27.5% of programmer jobs disappear in 2 years.
Definitely a good read.