Everything You Know About Latency Is Wrong

Okay, maybe not everything you know about latency is wrong. But now that I have your attention, we can talk about why the tools and methodologies you use to measure and reason about latency are likely horribly flawed. In fact, they’re not just flawed, they’re probably lying to your face. When I went to Strange […]
Why top firms fire good workers

Elite firms’ notorious ‘revolving door’ culture isn’t arbitrary but a rational way to signal talent and boost profits, a new study finds. Why do the world’s most prestigious firms—such as McKinsey, Goldman Sachs and other elite consulting giants, investment banks, and law practices—hire the brightest talents, train them intensively, and then, after a few years, […]
Over-Regulation Is Doubling the Cost by Peter Reinhardt

After building a software company to a multi-billion dollar exit, I made the jump to hardware. Now I’m working on carbon removal + steel at Charm Industrial, and electric long-haul trucking with Revoy. It’s epically fun to be building in the real world, but little did I expect that more than half the cost of […]
GitHut – Programming Languages and GitHub

GitHut GitHut is an attempt to visualize and explore the complexity of the universe of programming languages used across the repositories hosted on GitHub. Programming languages are not simply the tool developers use to create programs or express algorithms but also instruments to code and decode creativity. By observing the history of languages we can […]
Run Docker containers natively in Proxmox 9.1 (OCI images)
Proxmox VE is a virtualization platform, like VMWare, but open source, based on Debian. It can run KVM virtual machines and Linux Containers (LXC). I’ve been using it for over 10 years, the first article I wrote mentioning it was in 2012. At home I have a 2 node Proxmox VE cluster consisting of 2 […]
Introducing Kagi Assistants

TL;DR Today we’re releasing two research assistants: Quick Assistant and Research Assistant (previously named Ki during beta). Kagi’s Research Assistant happened to top a popular benchmark (SimpleQA) when we ran it in August 2025. This was a happy accident. We’re building our research assistants to be useful products, not maximize benchmark scores. Kagi Quick Assistant […]
New OS aims to provide (some) compatibility with macOS

ravynOS is a new open source OS project that aims to provide a similar experience and some compatibility with macOS on x86-64 (and eventually ARM) systems. It builds on the solid foundations of FreeBSD, existing open source packages in the same space, and new code to fill the gaps. The main design goals are: Source […]
CBP is monitoring US drivers and detaining those with suspicious travel patterns

The U.S. Border Patrol is monitoring millions of American drivers nationwide in a secretive program to identify and detain people whose travel patterns it deems suspicious, The Associated Press has found. The predictive intelligence program has resulted in people being stopped, searched and in some cases arrested. A network of cameras scans and records vehicle […]
Data-at-Rest Encryption in DuckDB

Lotte Felius, Hannes Mühleisen 2025-11-19 · 22 min TL;DR: DuckDB v1.4 ships database encryption capabilities. In this blog post, we dive into the implementation details of the encryption, show how to use it and demonstrate its performance implications. If you would like to use encryption in DuckDB, we recommend using the latest stable version, v1.4.2. […]
Mozilla Says It’s Finally Done with Two-Faced Onerep

In March 2024, Mozilla said it was winding down its collaboration with Onerep — an identity protection service offered with the Firefox web browser that promises to remove users from hundreds of people-search sites — after KrebsOnSecurity revealed Onerep’s founder had created dozens of people-search services and was continuing to operate at least one of […]