Lightweight Full-Text Search: A Guide to Modern, High-Performance Engines

When building applications that require searching through hundreds of thousands of short strings—such as tags, usernames, or SKU codes—traditional heavyweights like Elasticsearch are often overkill. For a dataset of 200k tags (averaging 10 characters each), the priority shifts toward low latency, small memory footprint, and ease of deployment.

This guide categorizes the best modern tools into standalone servers and library-level implementations, helping you choose the right fit for your next project.

Solving Slow WiFi on Linux: Moving Beyond the 2.4GHz Bottleneck

It’s a common frustration: you have a high-end Linux laptop with a cutting-edge WiFi card, yet your actual internet speeds are stuck in the single digits. Even on a 100 Mbps or faster fiber connection, the experience can feel sluggish, with web pages hanging and file transfers taking ages. When this happens, many users immediately blame the drivers, but the culprit is often much more fundamental: the physical radio band you are connected to.

Evaluating AGENTS.md: Are Repository Context Files Actually Helpful?

Software development practices are rapidly evolving with the adoption of AI coding agents. A popular trend has been adding repository-level context files—often named AGENTS.md or CLAUDE.md—to guide these agents. The assumption is simple: giving an AI a “map” of the codebase and specific instructions should help it navigate complex projects and solve tasks more effectively.

But does it actually work? A new paper, “Evaluating AGENTS.md: Are Repository-Level Context Files Helpful for Coding Agents?”, challenges this assumption with surprising results that might change how we document code for AI.

How to Set Up FLUX 2 Max Locally in 2026

Setting up FLUX 2 Max locally in 2026 is significantly more streamlined than previous years, but because the “Max” variant is a massive 32B+ parameter model, your hardware remains the biggest hurdle.

Here is the step-by-step guide to getting it running.

Hardware Check (The “Max” Requirements)

FLUX 2 Max is designed for high-fidelity output. To run it at a reasonable speed, you need:

GPU: NVIDIA RTX 3090, 4090, or 50-series (minimum 24GB VRAM).

Small HD Camera (1080p/720p) Light Indicators

This guide covers common light patterns and operations for generic Chinese mini cameras (like SQ11, SQ8, SQ12) that use a single LED with multiple colors.

Mode Indicators

The solid light indicates the current resolution in Standby Mode:

  • Green Light: 1080p Full HD Standby.
  • Blue Light: 720p HD Standby.

What Three Red Flashes Mean

A single red diode flashing 3 times usually indicates one of the following:

  1. Recording Started (Normal):
    • From standby (solid Green or Blue), press the Power/Rec button once.
    • The red light will flash 3 times and then turn off.
    • Meaning: The camera is actively recording video.
  2. SD Card Error:
    • If the red light flashes 3 times and the camera does not start recording or shuts down.
    • Meaning: No SD card detected, card is full, or card is not formatted to FAT32.
  3. Low Battery:
    • The light flashes red 3 times and the device powers off completely.
  4. Night Vision Toggle:
    • On some models, holding the power button for 2 seconds while in standby/recording causes 3 red flashes to signal that Infrared (Night Vision) has been turned on or off.

Basic Operation

  • Power On: Hold Power button for 2–3 seconds (defaults to Blue/720p).
  • Switch Mode: Press the Mode button once to cycle between Blue (720p) and Green (1080p).
  • Start Recording: Press Power once (3 red flashes, light goes out).
  • Stop Recording: Press Power once (solid light returns).
  • Reset: Use a pin in the “Reset” hole if the camera becomes unresponsive.

Target the Triggering Entity in Home Assistant

When you have one automation watching multiple switches, you don’t need to hardcode which one to turn off. You can use the trigger object to dynamically target whichever device started the automation.

The YAML Configuration

Copy and paste this into your automations.yaml or the YAML editor in the UI. Replace the entity IDs with your own.

alias: "Turn off the switch that triggered this"
description: "Automatically turns off the specific switch that was just turned on"
trigger:
  - platform: state
    entity_id:
      - switch.kitchen_light
      - switch.living_room_light
      - switch.garage_fan
    from: "off"
    to: "on"
condition: []
action:
  - service: switch.turn_off
    target:
      entity_id: "{{ trigger.entity_id }}"

How it works

  • The Trigger: We list all the switches we want to monitor. By specifying from: "off" and to: "on", we ensure the automation only runs when someone turns a switch on.
  • The Template: Instead of typing a specific entity name in the action, we use {{ trigger.entity_id }}.
  • Dynamic Response: Home Assistant automatically fills that template with the ID of the switch that actually changed state.

Quick Tips for Success

  1. Don’t click “Run” in the UI: If you test this by clicking the “Run” button in the Home Assistant interface, it will fail. This is because there is no actual “trigger” event to provide an ID. You must flip the physical switch to test it.
  2. Use homeassistant.turn_off: If your list includes a mix of lights and switches, change the service from switch.turn_off to homeassistant.turn_off to ensure it works for both types of devices.
  3. Avoid Loops: Always define the to: state. If you leave it blank, the automation might fire when the switch turns off, try to turn it off again, and create an error loop.