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I Thought Figma Was Untouchable — Until This Open-Source AI Tool Designed My UI
I've used Figma. I've used Adobe XD. And for most design work they do the job fine — if you're okay with paying for them and okay with your files living on someone else's server. I wasn't looking for a replacement. I just stumbled across OpenPencil while browsing GitHub one evening and the one thing that caught my attention wasn't the canvas or the components. It was the MCP server built directly into the tool. An AI agent that can read, create and modify your design files from the terminal. That's not a plugin. That's a different way of thinking about design tools entirely. I installed it, connected it to Claude Code, created a sample design and spent some time with it. Here's what I actually found.
I Use Claude Code But Not for My Personal Projects Heres What I Use Instead
Think of it as an AI agent that lives on your machine. Not a chatbot that gives you code suggestions. An actual agent that can create files, edit code, run commands, debug errors, and work through multi-step tasks on its own.
mimo v2.5 pro
Peking University gives its computer science students a compiler project every semester. Build a complete SysY compiler in Rust including lexer, parser, abstract syntax tree, IR code generation, assembly backend, performance optimization. The whole thing. Students typically need several weeks. MiMo-V2.5-Pro finished it in 4.3 hours. Perfect score. 233 out of 233 tests passed on a hidden test suite it had never seen. That's a real university project and a model that scored higher than most students who spent weeks on it. Xiaomi built this, which is still a sentence that takes a moment to process. V2.5-Pro is the next step up from MiMo-V2-Flash and its closed source for now, but Xiaomi has confirmed open source is coming for the V2.5 series. What V2.5-Pro adds over Flash is meaningful. Better long-horizon coherence, stronger agentic capabilities, and the ability to sustain complex tasks across more than a thousand tool calls without losing the thread.
Open-Source Discord Alternatives That Don’t Care Who You Are
Discord has been catching heat over its new verification rules. You’ve probably seen the threads everywhere. At some point I stopped scrolling and asked myself, Why does hanging out with friends online suddenly feel like paperwork? So I started looking for better alternatives to discord that don’t care who you are. They respect your privacy and still deliver a Discord-level experience. Some are great for gamers who want low-latency voice and familiar server layouts. Others are better for smaller communities that want tighter control or even self-hosting instead of ranking them from best to worst, I’ve grouped them by what they’re actually good at.
Open Source Tools That Do What Your OS Should Have Done Already
Your OS was built for everyone. Which means it was optimized for no one in particular. The clipboard works the same way it did decades ago. Audio is still one slider for everything. Window management is still a guessing game. And nobody is coming to fix any of it because technically it works. Just not the way you actually want it to. The open source community noticed. And they got to work. These 8 tools don't ask you to switch operating systems or learn a new workflow. They just quietly fix the things that slow you down every single day. Some of them will feel so obvious you'll wonder why your OS never shipped them in the first place.
GLM 5.1 AI
Give an AI agent a hard problem and it usually figures out the easy wins fast. After that, more time does not help. It just sits there, trying the same things. ZhipuAI ran GLM-5.1 on a vector database optimization problem and let it go for 600 iterations. It did not run out of ideas. At iteration 50 it was sitting at roughly the same performance as the best single-session result any model had achieved. By iteration 600 it had reached 21,500 queries per second. The previous best was 3,547. That gap is not incremental improvement. It is a different category of result. GLM-5.1 is open source, MIT licensed, and the weights are on HuggingFace right now. It works with Claude Code, vLLM, and SGLang. If you are building anything that runs agents over long tasks, this one is worth understanding.
7 Free After effects plugins to make edits better
I can say that the plugins I'm about to share with you guys are proven to be a game changer for me especially if you use Adobe After Effects to edit your videos.

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Onyx: Open-Source AI Platform for RAG, Agents & LLM Apps

Most LLM tools feel like demos. You ask something, get an answer, and that’s about it. Onyx feels more like something you’d actually build on. It sits between you and the model and adds the stuff you end up needing anyway. Search, agents, file output, even running code. You can plug in OpenAI, Anthropic, or run your own models with Ollama. Swap things out when you feel like it. The agents part is what makes it more powerful. You can give them instructions, let them browse the web, generate files, call external tools. It can get heavy if you run the full version. There’s indexing, workers, caching, all that. But if you’re serious about using LLMs beyond basic chat, that’s kind of the point. Lite mode exists if you just want to poke around without setting up a whole system.

Stable Diffusion WebUI: AI Image Generation Platform For Windows, macOS & Linux (Open Source)

Stable Diffusion WebUI is the most powerful and feature-rich interface for AI image generation, built using the Gradio library. It offers a customizable, and offline-ready experience to run Stable Diffusion models locally with full control.

Upscayl: Powerful AI Image Upscaler for Windows, macOS & Linux

Upscayl is a powerful open-source AI-based image upscaling tool that helps you enhance low-resolution images using state-of-the-art machine learning models. Whether you're a designer, photographer, or content creator, Upscayl offers an intuitive interface and great results. With a revamped interface, Upscayl now feels smoother, faster, and more intuitive than ever.

oMLX: Run Local AI Models on Your Mac With a Native Menu Bar App

oMLX is one of the cleanest ways to run local AI models on a Mac. You install the app, download models, and manage everything from a native macOS menu bar app and web dashboard. It can keep frequently used context in memory, move older cache data to SSD automatically, run multiple models together, and work with tools like Claude Code, OpenCode, Codex, and OpenClaw. The admin dashboard is surprisingly useful too. You can download models, benchmark them, manage memory usage, and even run vision or OCR models from the same interface. If you already own an Apple Silicon Mac, this feels much closer to a proper local AI workspace than most open source inference tools right now. oMLX keeps model context cached across RAM and SSD storage, so repeated prompts and long coding sessions feel faster over time.

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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?
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,...