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7 December 2025
- 17:5117:51, 7 December 2025 I Predicted ChatGPT Would Show Ads — Two Months Later, I Was Right (hist | edit) [8,568 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Two months ago, I wrote about something that seemed almost unthinkable to many: OpenAI would eventually introduce advertisements to ChatGPT. People called it speculation. Some said I was being too cynical. But here we are in late November 2025, and leaked code from ChatGPT’s Android app has confirmed what I suspected all along , ads are coming to the world’s most popular AI chatbot. Story where I shared my thoug...")
- 17:4917:49, 7 December 2025 Why Learning DevOps with AI Might Be Slowing You Down And How to Fix It (hist | edit) [9,018 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I was completely lost during a technical interview. I had a clean Kubernetes pipeline, YAML. Clean automation. Monitoring, security, GitOps, everything. But I couldn’t explain a single decision behind it. When the interviewer asked, “Walk me through why you chose this specific resource allocation strategy,” my mind went blank. “I… the AI suggested it would be efficient,” I said quietly. “lol.”...")
- 17:4817:48, 7 December 2025 I Built a 50-State Legislation Search Engine in a Week (And You Can Too) (hist | edit) [11,345 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Let’s go back to early 2025. Everyone’s talking about Trump’s “one big beautiful bill” — all 1,000+ pages of it. I’m sitting there thinking: there’s absolutely no way representatives actually read this thing cover to cover. They’re voting on legislation they don’t understand, and we’re all just… okay with that? That thought wouldn’t leave me alone. What if there was a way to make legislation ac...")
- 17:4617:46, 7 December 2025 AI Is Coming for Healthcare, and It Terrifies Me (hist | edit) [20,128 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Image Source: https://www.pexels.com/@serenakoi/ I spent a decade at a community pharmacy, deciphering scribbled prescriptions and building long-term relationships with my patients. I’ve shared the joys of women getting their prenatal vitamins for the first time and the sorrows of the relatives coming in to thank me for the support I provided during the difficult journeys after their loved ones were gone. I am not pract...")
- 17:4517:45, 7 December 2025 Democracy, AI Autonomy, and the End of Accountability (hist | edit) [13,897 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px On a frosty January morning in New Hampshire, voters answered calls from their commander-in-chief — or so it sounded. The voice urged them to skip the primary, save the trip, stay home. The real President Biden never picked up the phone; an AI mimic did, cheap and convincing. Welcome to the pre-game of the autonomous era. Our entire democracy rests on a simple promise: responsibility ends with a person. Someone swore the oath, si...")
- 17:4217:42, 7 December 2025 ShadowMQ: The Copy-Paste Vulnerability That Infected Meta, NVIDIA, and Microsoft’s AI (hist | edit) [14,729 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When security researchers found CVE-2024–50050 in Meta’s Llama Stack, they assumed it was isolated. Then they found identical code in NVIDIA’s systems. Then Microsoft’s. Six frameworks, same vulnerability — because they copied it from each other. Two remain unpatched as of December 2025. When one bug becomes everyone’s problem — and two systems are still vulnerable Avi Lumelsky thought he’d found a straightforward security vulnerability. In October 2024...")
- 17:4017:40, 7 December 2025 Your AI Benchmark Scores Are Lying to You (hist | edit) [12,057 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "In April 2025, Meta submitted a model to the AI industry’s most watched leaderboard. Llama 4 shot to the top of Chatbot Arena, the crowdsourced battle royale where anonymous models compete for human preference votes. Headlines followed. Celebrations ensued. Then someone looked closer. The model Meta submitted wasn’t the model they planned to ship. It was a variant, carefully tuned for the arena: verbose responses, strategic emoji placement, the textual equivalent o...")
- 17:3817:38, 7 December 2025 Microsoft Entra ID: Secure Your Data with Zero Trust — A Practical Guide (hist | edit) [8,532 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px id you know that most data breaches involve weak or stolen passwords? For data teams, a single compromised account can spell disaster for business insights and customer trust. Imagine you’re a data analyst racing to access a new dashboard, only to hit frustrating access roadblocks. Or a product manager trying to onboard a new hire, buried in manual approval emails. These aren’t rare stories — they’re daily pain points for da...")
- 17:3217:32, 7 December 2025 Why 80% of AI Projects Fail (And How to Be in the 20%) (hist | edit) [20,514 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px The numbers are brutal. According to the RAND Corporation, over 80% of AI projects fail: twice the failure rate of non-AI technology projects. MIT’s 2025 research found that despite $30–40 billion in enterprise spending on generative AI, 95% of organizations see no business return. Gartner finds that 30% of GenAI projects will have been abandoned after proof of concept by end of 2025. These aren’t edge cas...")
- 17:2717:27, 7 December 2025 Agentic AI FinOps: Cost Optimization of AI Agents (hist | edit) [21,922 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "1. Introduction The discussion around ChatGPT (in general, generative AI), has now evolved into agentic AI. While ChatGPT is primarily a chatbot that can generate text responses, AI agents can execute complex tasks autonomously, e.g., make a sale, plan a trip, make a flight booking, book a contractor to do a house job, order a pizza. Fig. 1 below illustrates the evolution of agentic AI systems. 650px Bill Gates recently envisioned a futu...")
- 17:2317:23, 7 December 2025 The Moment I Realized Technology Had Finally Caught Up to How Humans Actually Work (hist | edit) [8,457 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px There was a moment last Thursday that made me stop and realize something fundamental had shifted. I was in the middle of explaining a complex data issue to a colleague over chat. Mid-sentence, I needed to reference a document. Instead of the usual dance — “hold on, let me find that file, what was it called again, give me a second” — I just typed a description of what I needed. The system found it. Pulled it int...")
- 17:2117:21, 7 December 2025 Why Everyone Got AI Wrong (And What Actually Matters) (hist | edit) [11,351 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I’ve been in a lot of conversations about artificial intelligence lately, and I’ve noticed something strange. People talk about AI like it’s a magic solution that will either save humanity or destroy civilization. Both narratives feel equally dramatic and equally missing the point. The truth is weirder and more interesting. AI isn’t magical. But it’s also not useless. The real story is about what it’s actually goo...")
- 17:1717:17, 7 December 2025 The Models Are Getting Too Good at Lying (hist | edit) [15,198 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "What happens when your AI assistant can generate perfect-looking code that solves the wrong problem 500px Something weird happened last Tuesday. A junior data scientist came into the team channel, excited. She’d been stuck on a classification problem for days — one of those messy real-world datasets where nothing wants to cooperate. Then she tried ChatGPT. Pasted in her problem, got back a complete solution with...")
- 17:1417:14, 7 December 2025 The Convergence Nobody Saw Coming: When APIs, AI, and Cloud Storage Accidentally Built the Future (hist | edit) [12,231 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px There’s a migration story making rounds in tech circles that perfectly captures what’s happening right now. A legacy system — custom-built over fifteen years, hundreds of thousands of lines of code, complex integration points, requiring specialized knowledge to maintain. The replacement? Mostly just… connections. No massive code rewrite. No army of developers. Just intelligent orchestration of services that already...")
- 17:1217:12, 7 December 2025 We’re Not Ready for What AI Agents Are Actually Doing (hist | edit) [12,805 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "I thought I understood where AI was headed. Then I saw what Klarna did with 700 employees’ worth of work. 500px Something happened in early 2024 that made me rethink everything I thought I knew about AI. Klarna — the Swedish fintech company — deployed an AI assistant to handle customer service. Not assist with customer service. Actually handle it. Within the first month, this system was managing 2.3 million conver...")
- 17:0917:09, 7 December 2025 I Built a D2C Brand With AI Instead of $15,000 — Here’s What Happened (hist | edit) [12,727 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Two months ago, an experienced entrepreneur looked me dead in the eye and said: “You need at least ₹10 lakhs ($15,000) to launch a D2C brand. Otherwise, you’ll fail.” I had $3,000 in my bank account. And next month, I’m launching anyway. 500px The Moment Everything Changed Picture this: You’re sitting in a coffee shop, notebook open, dreams bigger than your budget. You’ve spent weeks researching direct-to-consum...")
- 17:0717:07, 7 December 2025 AI Translator Headphones: Revolutionizing Global Communication (hist | edit) [6,052 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px A Relatable Story Last summer, I landed in Tokyo for a crucial business meeting with a potential manufacturing partner. My Japanese? Non-existent. My colleague who spoke Japanese? Stuck in Seoul due to a delayed flight. In desperation, I pulled out a pair of AI translator earbuds I’d bought on a whim two weeks earlier but hadn’t even unboxed. What happened next felt like science fiction becoming reality. The Technology B...")
- 17:0517:05, 7 December 2025 I Stopped Chasing the Latest AI Model and My Productivity Doubled — Here’s Why (hist | edit) [8,986 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Three months ago, I was that person. You know the one. Refreshing Twitter every hour for the latest AI model announcement. Signing up for every new beta. Switching between ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and whatever new model just launched that week. I thought I was staying ahead of the curve. Turns out, I was just spinning my wheels. The Breaking Point It was a Tuesday afternoon when I realized something was deeply wr...")
- 17:0317:03, 7 December 2025 5 AI-Powered Ad Copy Formulas That Crushed My D2C Campaigns (With Templates) (hist | edit) [8,313 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I thought AI would water down my ads. Turns out, it just took the guesswork out. After burning through $12K testing 47 different AI prompts across Meta, Google, and TikTok campaigns, I found 5 formulas that consistently beat my hand-written copy — sometimes by 2x the CTR. Here’s what worked, why it worked, and the exact Jasper prompts you can steal today. Why Most AI Ad Copy Fails (And What I Learned) Most people...")
- 17:0017:00, 7 December 2025 I Used ChatGPT to Manage My Calendar for 2 Weeks — It Changed Everything (hist | edit) [3,555 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px For years, I’ve prided myself on being organized. I color-coded my Google Calendar, stacked Notion dashboards, and even tried bullet journaling. Yet somehow, my days still felt like a chaotic blend of rushed coffee, overlapping meetings, and missed personal goals. Two weeks ago, I decided to try something radical: let ChatGPT manage my calendar. Not just suggest tasks — I mean literally run my sc...")
- 16:5916:59, 7 December 2025 Will Technology (AI) Replace Humans in the Future World (hist | edit) [5,953 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px In recent years, the world has witnessed a rapid surge in technological advancements that have transformed industries, businesses, and everyday life. From self-checkout counters to automated customer service and driverless vehicles, technology is playing a larger role than ever before. But this raises an important question: Will technology eventually replace humans in the workforce and society at...")
- 16:5716:57, 7 December 2025 YouTube Shorts AI Enhancements (hist | edit) [5,796 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px In the fast-paced world of digital content, YouTube Shorts has emerged as a game-changer for creators and audiences alike. These bite-sized, engaging videos are designed to capture attention in just a few seconds. But with the growing competition and increasing number of creators joining the platform, YouTube has introduced powerful enhancements to help creators stand out. The most impactful of these are the latest AI-...")
- 16:5516:55, 7 December 2025 How Retail Investors Can Leverage AI Tools for Market Analysis Why you no longer need a Wall Street desk to make smart investing decisions (hist | edit) [4,359 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px The Rise of the Retail Investor Ten years ago, if you wanted cutting-edge market insights, you’d probably imagine a Wall Street analyst surrounded by ten monitors and a team of quants crunching numbers in real time. Today, with the power of AI tools, even a college student with a laptop in a coffee shop can access the same level of analysis — if not better. Retail investing has changed. And AI is at the heart of...")
- 16:5416:54, 7 December 2025 Workflow Automation Hacks Every Solopreneur Needs to Save Hours Every Week (hist | edit) [8,084 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Introduction Recruiting used to mean coffee, endless resumes, and missed interviews. In 2025, my team hired a developer — and I barely lifted a finger. Blame the bots. Here’s what happened when I let AI take over my company’s hiring process, what worked, what flopped, and why I’ll never go back. The Breaking Point Last month, our startup urgently needed a Python developer. The project timeline was brutal — thre...")
- 16:5216:52, 7 December 2025 I Tested 6 AI Productivity Tools — Only 2 Were Actually Worth It (hist | edit) [6,088 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Introduction: When “AI Productivity” Becomes a Buzzword Every week, a new AI tool promises to revolutionize your workflow, save hours a day, or turn you into a one-person army. Like many creators and entrepreneurs, I’ve been tempted by the hype. So, over the past month, I went all in — testing six of the most popular AI productivity tools across content creation, research, and task automation. My goal wasn...")
- 16:5016:50, 7 December 2025 5 Stupid-Simple AI Workflows That Save You 10 Hours A Week (Even If You’re Not Techy) (hist | edit) [7,250 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Three months ago, I spent 6 hours writing a single blog post. I’d stare at the blank screen, research for two hours, write a messy draft, delete half of it, rewrite it again, and still feel like it wasn’t good enough. By the time I hit publish, I was exhausted and already dreading the next one. Then I discovered something that changed everything: workflows, not tools. Most people approach AI wrong. They collect tools...")
- 16:4816:48, 7 December 2025 How AI is Revolutionizing Recruitment: My Experience with the Next Generation of Hiring Tools (hist | edit) [9,889 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px How AI is Revolutionizing Recruitment: My Experience with the Next Generation of Hiring Tools Introduction Recruiting used to mean coffee, endless resumes, and missed interviews. In 2025, my team hired a developer — and I barely lifted a finger. Blame the bots. Here's what happened when I let AI take over my company's hiring process, what worked, what flopped, and why I'll never go back. A Relatable Story: Whe...")
- 16:4616:46, 7 December 2025 15 Copy-Paste Scripts That Made Me Money Online (Steal Them) (hist | edit) [10,931 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I stared at the blank email for 40 minutes. I knew I needed to reach out to potential clients. I knew what service I was offering. But I couldn’t figure out how to say it without sounding desperate, salesy, or like every other “digital marketer” in their inbox. So I did nothing. For three months. Then I found a simple script, changed three sentences, and hit send. Two days later, I had my first paid client. The problem was...")
- 16:4416:44, 7 December 2025 The Top Investing Trends in 2025 You Shouldn’t Ignore (hist | edit) [7,699 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Introduction: Investing in the Future of Now The world of investing is changing — fast. In 2025, it’s not just about picking the right stock or buying real estate at the right time. It’s about understanding why people invest, how markets are moving, and what the data is telling us. From AI-powered stock picks to sustainable ESG portfolios, the smartest investors are using insights from customer behavior, storytelling, and cutting-edge content marketing to st...")
- 16:4116:41, 7 December 2025 The Ethics of AI: Potential Benefits and Dangers (hist | edit) [8,489 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When I Let AI Hire Our Developer (And Why I’ll Never Go Back) 500px Recruiting used to mean coffee, endless resumes, and missed interviews. In 2025, my team hired a developer — and I barely lifted a finger. Blame the bots. Here's what happened when I let AI take over my company's hiring process, what worked, what flopped, and why I'll never go back. The Panic That Started It All Last month, our startup hit a wall. Our lead Python dev...")
- 16:3916:39, 7 December 2025 I Used Only Free AI Tools for 90 Days — Here’s What Actually Works (hist | edit) [12,782 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px I canceled my $180/month AI subscriptions on a Tuesday morning. My colleagues thought I’d lost my mind. “You’re literally going backwards,” my manager said, watching me delete ChatGPT Plus from my phone. Three months later, I’m producing better work, saving over $500, and I’ve discovered something the AI industry doesn’t want you to know: the free versions are criminally underrated. Here’s what actually happe...")
- 16:3716:37, 7 December 2025 I Watched a One-Person Business Outperform a 50-Person Marketing Team. Here’s Their Secret Weapon (hist | edit) [11,341 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Last month, a family-owned jam company in San Diego started outselling brands with ten times their budget. A tamale shop in Los Angeles created a promotional video that hit 22 million views. And a coffee roaster in San Francisco is now competing with Starbucks for search traffic. None of them hired fancy agencies. None of them raised millions in funding. They all discovered the same thing: AI-powered marketi...")
- 16:3516:35, 7 December 2025 AI Image Enhancer: Easy Pro-Level Photo Edits in Seconds (hist | edit) [11,303 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Subtitle: How I used AI to turn dull images into wow-worthy content — no Photoshop skills required 500px Introduction Ever taken a photo that looked amazing in real life, but flat and blurry on your phone? I have — constantly. Last month, I shot what I thought was the perfect product photo for my online store. Natural lighting, good angle, steady hands. But when I uploaded it? Grainy, dull, and honestly embarrassing next to my compe...")
- 16:3216:32, 7 December 2025 3 Simple AI Automations That Save Solo Founders 10+ Hours (hist | edit) [7,280 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px You didn’t become a founder to live inside your inbox. Yet most days, that’s exactly where the hours disappear. By the time you answer emails, reply to DMs, update a few spreadsheets, and drag tasks around in your project board, the day is gone. The ideas that could actually grow your business are still sitting in your notes app. This article shows you three simple AI-powered workflows that you can set up without being...")
- 16:3016:30, 7 December 2025 Is AI Holding Up the U.S. Economy Or Setting It Up for Collapse? (hist | edit) [9,995 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px How AI Investment Fuels the U.S. Economy — And Why a Sudden Stop Could Trigger a Hard Downturn Artificial intelligence has rapidly shifted from a technological breakthrough to the dominant economic force in the United States. By 2025, AI-driven investment — spanning data centers, semiconductors, cloud infrastructure and advanced hardware — has become the country’s most powerful growth engine. AI now shapes GDP growth,...")
- 16:2516:25, 7 December 2025 I Reverse-Engineered 200 AI Startups. 146 Are Selling You Repackaged ChatGPT and Claude with New UI (hist | edit) [18,521 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "I monitored network traffic, decompiled code, and traced API calls for 200 funded AI startups. 73% are running third-party APIs with extra steps. OpenAI dominates, Claude is everywhere, and the gap between marketing and reality is staggering. This story is part 2 of the AI Reality Trilogy, a three-part series on what AI is really doing to infrastructure, startups, and you. Part 1 → We Spent $47,000 Running AI Agents in Production. Here’s What Nobody Tells You...")
- 16:1616:16, 7 December 2025 AI Urgently Needs an Operating System No One Is Building (hist | edit) [25,228 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Why You Should Read This (and TL;DR) If you’re an AI engineer, ML practitioner, or programmer trying to ride the AI wave, you’ve probably felt it: the ground under your feet is moving. The tools change weekly. The failures are unpredictable. Agent frameworks look promising — until they collapse in production. One day you feel ahead; the next day it feels like the entire field jumped...")
- 15:5415:54, 7 December 2025 LLMs Are Dying - The New AI Is Killing Them (hist | edit) [17,344 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Build worlds, not words.. Image created by the author with Stable Diffusion. LLMs are already museum pieces Yes, ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, all of them. Brilliant fossils of a linguistic age that’s already ending. They’re decomposing in public, billions are still being spent to polish their coffins: bigger models, longer contexts, more hallucinations per watt. The “predict-the-next-word” LLM era is...")
- 03:3403:34, 7 December 2025 Everyone’s Building AI Wrong — There’s Only One Kernel That Works (hist | edit) [20,685 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px One AI Kernel to Rule Them All. Image created by the author with Stable Diffusion. The Missing Piece That Keeps AI Subpar Think about what Unix gave us: the same kernel handles a single process doing computation, a server handling requests, a distributed system with thousands of concurrent processes. You don’t switch operating systems when you go from batch processing to interactive to networked. 😆 Now look at A...")
- 03:2703:27, 7 December 2025 The Two Algebras of AI — and Why Everyone Uses the Wrong One (hist | edit) [16,133 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px AI keeps crashing against the same walls Yep, everybody, even Tesla, is using the old damn math from 2 centuries ago, and hence it’s not surprising to watch many of scenes like this all over YouTube when you rely on AI driving your Tesla: Apparently, not even Tesla - with its 1.4 Trillion valuation and army of PhDs - knows about this math. Or maybe they do, and just enjoy watching their cars perform interpretive dance r...")
- 03:2203:22, 7 December 2025 This embarrassingly simple secret explains all of AI (hist | edit) [10,261 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Credits: Leonardo AI In college, there was a course called “PRML”, the infamous ML elective that pretty much everyone wanted to take. When I first heard about it, my seniors told me to take probability first. But why was probability important for ML? I had no idea. If you like learning AI concepts through easy-to-understand diagrams, I’ve created a free resource that organises all my work i...")
- 03:0703:07, 7 December 2025 I Let an AI Bet on the Future So I Could Stop Doomscrolling: Meet Tenki (hist | edit) [17,581 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Let’s be honest. Most of us participate in prediction markets — platforms like Polymarket, Kalshi, or Manifold — using a highly sophisticated trading strategy I like to call “The Vibes-Based Approach.” It usually goes something like this: It is 11:42 PM on a Tuesday. You are lying in bed, bathed in the sickly blue light of your phone, your circadian rhythm screaming for mercy. You open the app, ostensibly to che...")
- 03:0403:04, 7 December 2025 Stop Using ChatGPT for Data: Why Julius is the Spreadsheet Killer You Missed (hist | edit) [16,178 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px It starts with good intentions — a clean grid, a fresh cup of coffee, and the naive belief that VLOOKUP will actually work on the first try. You open a new tab, crack your knuckles, and whisper, "Today, I will be organized." Three hours later, reality has set in. You are staring at a #REF! error that feels like a personal insult from Bill Gates. Your laptop fan sounds like a Boeing 747 preparing for a trans-Atlantic...")
- 03:0003:00, 7 December 2025 The Best AI Tools for 2026 (hist | edit) [9,805 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "650px Over the past three years, I’ve tried dozens of AI tools for different tasks. Some were great Some were terrible Some don’t exist anymore Here are the best AI tools I’ve found, organized by category and ranked into the following tiers. You’ll also find guides to learn most tools - S tier: AI tools everyone must use - A tier: AI tools most people should use - B tier: Best AI tools for specific niches S tier:...")
- 02:5402:54, 7 December 2025 Building a Generic Knowledge Extraction AI Framework for Organization-Specific Use Cases (hist | edit) [27,902 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Note: The GitHub repo has been updated with an improved schema generator (schema.py). This article refers to the previous version of the schema generator (schema_basic.py). The new version of the schema generator ensures the exact field names (and optionality), includes data type hints for schema generation, recognizes richer data types, such as dates, datetimes, numeric quantities, and enums, and normalizes them in place. Date handling is improved. The generator acce...")
- 02:4802:48, 7 December 2025 Claude Skills: The AI Feature That Actually Solves a Real Problem (hist | edit) [7,956 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Yesterday, Anthropic quietly released what might be the most practical AI feature of 2025. It’s not flashier models or better benchmarks. It’s something simpler: a way to teach Claude your specific workflows without writing a single line of code. They call it Skills. And this might be a bigger deal than the Model Context Protocol that had everyone buzzing last year. What Are Skills, Really? Skills are remarkably straightforward: folders containing instructions, sc...")
- 02:4502:45, 7 December 2025 Stop Teaching Claude the Same Thing Every Day: Build Your Persistent AI Development Team (hist | edit) [28,694 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "It’s 8:47 PM on a Wednesday. I’m reviewing my third pull request of the night, and I catch myself copy-pasting the same code review checklist into the comment box. Again. For probably the 47th time this month. 500px * “Check for SQL injection vectors.” * “Verify error handling covers edge cases.” * “Confirm test coverage above 80%.” * “Scan for hardcoded credentials.” Disclosure: I...")
- 02:4002:40, 7 December 2025 Google’s Code Wiki: The End of Manual Documentation (hist | edit) [6,627 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "If you’ve spent any time leading engineering teams, you know the painful truth: developers waste 30–40% of their time just trying to understand existing code. New hires take weeks to make their first meaningful contribution. Legacy systems become archaeological digs. Documentation goes stale the moment it’s written. Google just launched a solution that addresses this head-on, and it’s not just another documentation tool — it’s a fundamental rethinking of ho...")
- 02:3602:36, 7 December 2025 Claude Code in Claude Desktop: AI-Powered Coding Without the Command Line (hist | edit) [5,498 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Anthropic had quite a few releases in the last couple of days announcement: Claude Code is now available directly in the Claude Desktop app. For developers who’ve been using Claude Code in the terminal, this might seem like a convenience update. But for the millions of business professionals, technical PMs, data analysts, and “citizen developers” who never touch a command line? This is a paradigm shift. Let me explain why this matters — and how you can leverage...")
- 02:3202:32, 7 December 2025 The Secret Sauce to AI Image Generation (That Nobody’s Talking About) (hist | edit) [16,714 bytes] PC (talk | contribs) (Created page with "500px Picture this: It’s 2 AM, you’re three coffees deep, and you’ve just typed your 47th variation of “a majestic lion in a Business Casual setting with dramatic lighting” into an AI image generator. What you get back looks less like the king of the jungle and more like a confused house cat wearing a tie. Sound familiar? Welcome to the wonderfully frustrating world of AI image generation, where everyone’s...")