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Tech Stories

The Smartest AI I Use Doesn’t Need WiFi
When I started looking for alternatives, I wasn’t searching for a better chatbot. I was searching for one that can simply work on my machine while being useful for me. Most AI apps on Android are just front-ends. You type something. It leaves your phone. A server processes it. A reply comes back. That's not what I call Private AI. MNN Chat does something different. It is an Open Source Android App that runs LLMs directly on your device. You download a model inside the app, and your phone handles the rest. The prompts don’t leave or gets processed by any server. It’s just your device doing the work. Under the hood it uses an engine optimized for CPU inference, which matters more than people think. Phones don’t have desktop GPUs sitting around waiting for 70B models. Efficiency is the difference between “interesting demo” and “actually usable.”
MOSS-TTS-Nano Real-Time Voice AI on CPU
Most text-to-speech tools fall into two camps. The ones that sound good need serious hardware. The ones that run on anything sound robotic. MOSS-TTS-Nano is trying to be neither. It's a 100 million parameter model that runs on a regular CPU and it actually sounds good. Good enough that the team behind it built an entire family of speech models around the same core technology, one of which has gone head to head with Gemini 2.5 Pro and ElevenLabs and come out ahead on speaker similarity. It just dropped on April 10th and it's the newest addition to the MOSS-TTS family, a collection of five open source speech models from MOSI.AI and the OpenMOSS team. The family doesn't just cover lightweight local deployment. One of its models MOSS-TTSD outperforms Gemini 2.5 Pro and ElevenLabs on speaker similarity in benchmarks. Another generates voices purely from text descriptions with no reference audio needed. And one is built specifically for real-time voice agents with a 180ms first-byte latency. Nano is the entry point. The family is the story.
Open Source AI Video Models for Editing and Generation
If you have been looking for open source tools to work with video using AI you have probably noticed something. Most of what gets covered is generation like creating new videos from scratch. The editing side, actually modifying existing footage with AI, has been much quieter. That is starting to change. There are now open source models that can swap outfits, replace backgrounds, remove objects, change characters and apply styles to existing video using plain text instructions. Some are built specifically for editing. Others are generation models that fit naturally into a creative video workflow. This list covers both honestly. Three models built specifically for video editing and two generation models worth knowing about if you are working with video content. All open source, all available today.
EmDash is what Cloudflare rebuilt WordPress for the agent-first web
WordPress has a problem it cannot fix from the inside. Not a performance problem. Not a features problem. A structural one. 96% of its security vulnerabilities come from plugins, and the reason is simple. Every plugin gets access to everything. The database, the filesystem, the entire execution context. That is how it was built in 2003 and that is how it still works today. Cloudflare looked at that and decided patching was the wrong answer. EmDash is their attempt to start over. Built in TypeScript, Its serverless & powered by Astro & MIT licensed. No PHP, legacy architecture or plugins that can silently access your entire database. I want to be straight about what this is right now. It is a v0.1.0 developer preview. You are not migrating your production site today. But the architecture decisions behind it are serious enough that if you build on WordPress, run a plugin business, or host WordPress sites for clients, you should understand what Cloudflare just shipped.
Getting an AI agent to start a task is easy. Getting it to finish one properly is a different story. Most agents fall apart somewhere in the middle. A tool returns unexpected output, the model misreads it, and everything that follows builds on that mistake. By step thirty you are looking at something that has completely lost track of what it was supposed to do. The five AI models here were built with that specific problem in mind. They handle complex multi-step tasks, real browser control, deep research and coding workflows. All open source & self hostable.
Gemma 4 Makes Local AI Agents Actually Practical
Gemma 4 is a family of four models. Two dense models built for phones and laptops, E2B and E4B. One MoE model at 26B A4B for consumer GPUs. One dense 31B for workstations and servers. All four are multimodal. Text and image input across the entire family. The two smaller models, E2B and E4B, also handle audio natively which is unusual at that size. Context window sits at 128K tokens for the small models and 256K for the larger two. Every model in the family supports function calling out of the box, which matters if you are building agents. Every model also has a thinking mode you can toggle, so you get chain of thought reasoning without a separate model.
10 Pro-Level Offline AI Tools to Reclaim Your Privacy and Productivity
If you’ve ever felt uneasy about your data floating somewhere in the cloud, or wished your AI tools could just run on your own machine, you’re not alone. Lately, I’ve been testing a bunch of offline AI apps, some for editing, some for voice generation, for organizing notes & it’s surprising how much control and speed you get when everything happens locally. Many of these AI tools are with open-source roots, and they let you reclaim your workflow without handing your data over to some distant server. Some I’ve been using for a few weeks; others I just stumbled across. All of them have one thing in common: they work entirely on your PC, with no cloud required.

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Goose: Open Source Local AI Coding Agent for Developers

Goose is basically an AI agent that runs on your own machine. Instead of giving you snippets and waiting for the next prompt, it can create files, edit code, run commands, refactor modules, and handle multi-step tasks in one flow. You describe what you want, and it starts working through it step by step. You can use Goose in two ways. There’s a desktop app if you like a visual interface, and there’s a CLI version if you prefer staying in the terminal. Both work similarly — it just depends on how you like to work. What makes it flexible is model support. You’re not locked into a single provider. Goose can connect to OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, Groq, or even local models using Ollama. If you already have subscriptions to certain AI tools, you can route through their CLI instead of paying per API call. It also supports extensions, which means it can do more than just edit code. It can interact with the filesystem, open a browser, cache data, and connect to external services depending on your setup.

Handy: Offline Open-Source Speech-to-Text AI App For Windows, macOS & Linux

Handy is a powerful, privacy-focused, offline speech-to-text AI application designed for speed, simplicity, and complete local processing. Built with Tauri (Rust + React + TypeScript), Handy brings frictionless transcription to Windows, macOS, and Linux—completely free and open source.

Maestro: Run Multiple AI Coding Agents in Parallel (Cross-Platform)

Maestro solves a problem most developers accept: AI coding assistants only work one task at a time. You ask Claude to build Feature A. You wait. Then you ask it to fix a bug. You wait again. Context switching piles up, and progress stays stubbornly serial. Maestro takes a different approach. It lets you run 1 to 6 AI coding sessions in parallel, each inside its own isolated git worktree, with its own terminal, branch, and shell environment. No stepping on each other’s changes. No guessing which agent touched what.

Another – Open Source Android Screen Mirror & Controller for Desktop

Another puts your Android screen directly on your desktop and lets you control it entirely from your keyboard and mouse. It mirrors in real-time over USB or WiFi, forwards audio, lets you type directly into the device, and records your screen as a .webm file. There's also a macro system — record a sequence of interactions once, replay it whenever you need it. Useful for testing, demos, or anything repetitive.

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10 Faceless YouTube Channel Ideas

10 Faceless YouTube Channel Ideas In 2026

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Finding the perfect niche can feel challenging if you don't want to show your face in YouTube videos
Five proven ways to boost instgram reels reach

5 Proven Ways to Boost Your Instagram Reels Reach in 2025

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Instagram is continuously evolving and so do we, when I created my first page, during the initial stages my reels were barely getting views,...
Find Content Creation Niche with 3 easy steps

3 Simple Steps to Find Your Niche as a Content Creator

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If you're thinking to start your content creation journey, the first question that comes in your mind could be "What to Create?" and when you scroll through Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, and see creators with clear focus on their niche like fitness, finance, coding, fashion, motivation. Most of the new creators probably wonder at this point that if everything is already being created then what should we create?