AppDaemon
(currently at version 4.5.14) is a Python runtime that runs alongside Home Assistant
and lets you write automations as full Python classes. You get access to state machines, scheduling, external API calls, and conditional logic that would be impossible or unmaintainable in YAML automations. Install it as a Home Assistant add-on, create a Python file in the apps directory, define a class that inherits from hass.Hass, and use callbacks like listen_state() and run_daily() to build automations that handle multi-step workflows, persistent variables, and real-time data processing.
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Gemma 4 vs Qwen 3.5 vs Llama 4: Which Open Model Should You Actually Use? (2026)
A head-to-head comparison of Gemma 4, Qwen 3.5, and Llama 4 across benchmarks, licensing, inference speed, multimodal capabilities, and hardware requirements. Covers the full model families from edge to datacenter scale.

5 Open Source Repos That Make Claude Code Unstoppable
Five GitHub repositories released in March 2026 push Claude Code into new territory. From autonomous ML experiments running overnight to multi-agent communication and full Google Workspace access, these open source tools solve real workflow gaps that Claude Code cannot handle alone.

Claude Opus 4.7: What X and Reddit Users Are Saying
A 48-hour snapshot of how power users on X and Reddit reacted to Anthropic's Claude Opus 4.7 release on April 16, 2026. Covers the dominant praise for agentic coding and the new Claude Design tool, the three loudest complaints, token-burn economics, and the practical prompting habits teams are already adopting.

Qwen3.6-35B-A3B: Alibaba's Open-Weight Coding MoE
Alibaba's Qwen3.6-35B-A3B is a sparse Mixture-of-Experts model with 35B total and 3B active parameters, released April 2026 under Apache 2.0. It scores 73.4 on SWE-bench Verified, matches Claude Sonnet 4.5 on vision, and runs locally as a 20.9GB Q4 quantization on an M5 MacBook. A close look at the architecture, benchmarks, features, and honest trade-offs.

Alacritty vs. Kitty: Best High-Performance Linux Terminal
A practical comparison of Alacritty and Kitty for high-performance Linux terminal workflows in 2026, including latency, startup time, memory use, and heavy-output responsiveness. The analysis covers design philosophy differences between minimalist and feature-rich terminal environments, plus Wayland behavior and real-world configuration trade-offs. It also situates Ghostty and WezTerm in the current landscape and explains when each terminal model fits best for daily development.

MiniMax M2.7: Model That Almost Matches Claude Opus 4.6
A practical review of MiniMax M2.7: the 230B-parameter Mixture-of-Experts reasoning model that scores 50 on the Artificial Analysis Intelligence Index, runs on a 128GB Mac Studio, and costs roughly a tenth of Claude Opus 4.6. Covers benchmarks, self-hosting hardware, the license catch, and when to pick the API over local inference.
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AppDaemon 4.5 State Machines: Beyond YAML Automations
Custom Linux ISOs with Live Build or Cubic: Scripted or GUI
You can build a personalized Linux live USB image - complete with your preferred packages, desktop environment, configuration files, and branding - using either Debian’s live-build
toolchain or Cubic
(Custom Ubuntu ISO Creator). live-build is a fully command-line-driven tool that produces reproducible ISOs from configuration files, making it a natural fit for CI/CD pipelines and version-controlled builds. Cubic takes the opposite approach: a GUI that extracts an existing Ubuntu or Debian ISO, drops you into an interactive chroot, and reassembles everything when you are done. Both produce bootable ISO images ready for USB flashing with Ventoy
, dd, or Balena Etcher
.
Monitor 3D Printer with Home Assistant Integration
Yes, you can monitor and control your 3D printer from anywhere by connecting OctoPrint or Moonraker to Home Assistant . Both print servers expose APIs that Home Assistant can poll for real-time data - print progress, temperatures, camera feeds, error states - and from there you can build dashboards, fire notifications on your phone when a print finishes, detect failures with AI-powered camera analysis, and even kill power to a runaway printer through a smart plug. The whole setup takes about an hour once you have a print server running on a Raspberry Pi, and the result is a 3D printer that behaves like any other smart device in your home.
Old Android Phones as MQTT Sensors, Cameras, and Dashboards
That old Android phone gathering dust in your drawer is a fully equipped sensor platform. It has a camera, microphone, ambient light sensor, barometer, accelerometer, proximity sensor, and a touchscreen - all connected to your WiFi network. Instead of recycling it or letting it rot, you can turn it into a motion-detecting security camera, a room environment sensor publishing data over MQTT, or a wall-mounted Home Assistant dashboard that rivals commercial smart displays costing $150 or more. The entire setup runs on free or near-free software, keeps your data local, and takes about an hour to configure.
Defensive Coding in Rust: Error Handling Patterns That Scale
Rust’s error handling ecosystem in 2026 centers on four patterns: Result<T, E> with custom enums for libraries, thiserror
for ergonomic enum derivation, anyhow
for application-level error propagation, and miette
or color-eyre
for human-friendly diagnostic reports. The right choice depends on whether you are writing a library (where callers need to match on specific error variants) or an application (where you need to propagate errors with context and print them readably). Most non-trivial Rust projects use both thiserror in their library crates and anyhow in their binary crates.
Is Systemd-Nspawn a Better Alternative to Docker for Linux Containers?
Yes - for many workloads, systemd-nspawn
is a leaner, simpler, and better-integrated alternative to Docker, especially on servers and homelabs where you want isolated environments without daemon overhead. You launch a container with a single command, manage it with machinectl, and run it as a systemd service - all using tools already present on every modern Linux system.
That said, Docker and nspawn solve slightly different problems. Understanding where each one excels makes the choice straightforward.
Firejail vs Bubblewrap: Which Linux Sandbox Should You Use?
Firejail and Bubblewrap are the two leading lightweight sandboxing tools for Linux, and they take very different approaches to the same problem. Firejail is a feature-rich, SUID-root sandbox shipping over 1,000 pre-built application profiles that work out of the box for browsers, messaging apps, media players, and more. Bubblewrap (bwrap) is a minimal, unprivileged namespace tool - the same one Flatpak uses internally - that gives you precise control over exactly what a sandboxed process can see, at the cost of requiring you to build the sandbox yourself. If you want quick desktop app isolation with sensible defaults, pick Firejail. If you need a minimal, auditable sandbox with no SUID binary and complete control over every mount point and capability, pick Bubblewrap.
Windows 11 + Linux: Shared exFAT, systemd-boot Bootloader
Install Windows first, then install Linux using systemd-boot as the bootloader on a shared EFI System Partition, with a dedicated exFAT partition for cross-OS file sharing. This avoids the notorious problem of Windows Update overwriting GRUB , since systemd-boot entries live alongside Windows Boot Manager in the ESP without conflicting. exFAT is natively supported by both operating systems with full read-write access and no filesystem corruption risks.
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