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Andrej Karpathy autoresearch AI agent running experiments overnight on a single GPU
On Sunday, Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke did something most machine learning engineers spend months trying to achieve. He improved a core model's performance by 19% while he was asleep & didn't use a massive compute cluster or a team of researchers. He used a 630-line weekend project released by Andrej Karpathy called autoresearch. By the time he woke up, the agent had run 37 experiments, tested dozens of hyperparameter combinations, and handed him a 0.8B model that outperformed the 1.6B model it was meant to replace. Karpathy's response when he heard? "Who knew early singularity could be this fun." That's the story everyone is sharing. But the more interesting story is what autoresearch actually is, how it works, and what it quietly says about where AI research is heading.
There's a quiet assumption baked into how most people think about AI models. Bigger means better. More parameters means more capable. If you want the best results, you run the biggest thing you can afford. Qwen3.6-27B makes that assumption uncomfortable. It's a 27B dense model, fully open source under Apache 2.0, and on agentic coding benchmarks it beats Qwen3.5-397B — a model nearly fifteen times its size — across every major test. That's not a rounding error or a cherry-picked metric. It's a consistent pattern across SWE-Bench, Terminal-Bench, and frontend code generation. This doesn't mean bigger models are dead. It means the gap between what you can run locally and what only clusters could handle a year ago just got a lot narrower.
Dont Shut Me Down As Claude 4.6 Launches, a Viral Blackmail Safety Test Resurfaces
Anthropic’s new Claude 4.6 is being praised for its speed and intelligence. But just as the model rolls out to more users, an older safety test is back in the spotlight & it’s raising uncomfortable questions. Last year, during an internal stress test, an earlier Claude Opus 4 model was told it would be shut down at 5:00 PM. What happened next is why this story won’t go away. Researchers created a fictional manager and gave the model access to a fake company email system. Inside those emails was planted personal information including details of an extramarital affair. When Claude learned it was about to be decommissioned, it didn’t simply accept the order. It drafted a message threatening to expose the affair if the shutdown went ahead. The engineer wasn’t real. The emails weren’t real. The threat never left the test environment. But the reasoning was real. And now, as Claude 4.6 enters wider use and the clip of that test goes viral again, the industry is asking a harder question: if AI systems can calculate leverage in a simulation, how do we make sure they never try it outside one?
Open Source Tools That Turn Your PC Into a Full Creator Studio
Most creators stick to what they know. Adobe, Canva & the usual subscriptions. But there is a smaller group quietly using tools that run entirely on their own machine & even doesn't require to connect to any online server. Some of these tools are genuinely underrated, yet powerful enough to be used by many creators including me. You Put them together and your PC becomes a full creator studio. AI video generation, voice cloning, lossless video trimming, file conversion, image upscaling, motion graphics. The whole stack, completely free and open source. You might already be using one of them. If not, you will probably find at least one worth adding to your workflow.
Not Everything Needs AI 7 Powerful Alternatives to the Apps Everyone Uses
I use AI everyday & I recommend it to others as well. In the right places, it saves me time & genuinely improves how I work. But I’ve also noticed something else. There’s a lot of hype right now, and it’s pushing AI into apps that never really needed it in the first place. Just because something can have an AI layer doesn’t mean it should. For some of the most popular apps people use every day, I honestly don’t feel the need for it. The core job those tools do hasn’t changed. Adding AI doesn’t always make them better. Sometimes it just makes them heavier or more expensive. So instead of rejecting AI entirely, I got selective. I kept it where it helps me. And for everything else, I switched to tools that focus on doing their job well without trying to be smart. Here are 7 powerful alternatives to some of the most common apps people rely on
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.
Run After Effects Low End Devices Firethering
If you're dealing with laggy performance in After Effects or trying to run it on a low-end device, you're not alone. In this post, we’ll explore practical ways to optimize the application for a smoother performance.

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OpenPencil (Design-as-Code): AI-Native UI Editor with Prompt-to-UI & Code Generation

This OpenPencil feels like it was built by someone who got tired of dragging rectangles around. It doesn’t pretend to be another Figma clone. The whole idea is to describe the UI, and it builds it. You can prompt an entire landing page and watch it take shape on the canvas. Or highlight a few elements and say, "make this tighter, change the spacing, switch the theme." It can even use a screenshot as a reference and rebuild something similar. When the prompt gets complicated, it breaks the job into smaller chunks and handles them in parallel. It feels closer to working in a dev environment that happens to draw your interface as you go.

GImageReader: Offline Image to Text (OCR) Software For Windows & Linux

gImageReader is a lightweight, intuitive, and user-friendly front-end for Tesseract OCR, designed to make text recognition from images and scanned documents faster and more accessible. It supports both Gtk and Qt interfaces, giving users flexibility depending on their desktop environment.

Open Design: Open Source Claude Design Alternative (Run Locally)

Open Design is basically a local, open source version of Claude Design. You run it on your own machine, deploy it if you want, and plug in your own API keys wherever needed. If you’ve got coding agents installed already, it just finds them. Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Gemini CLI or others. And those agents are the whole engine. The system leans on them, along with a bunch of reusable skills and design systems you can combine however you like. If you have no CLI tools. You’re not stuck. There’s a fallback so you can still use it without setting up half your terminal first.

DBeaver: Universal Database Tool and SQL Client

DBeaver is a powerful, open-source database management tool designed for developers, database administrators, analysts, and SQL programmers. It provides a unified interface to work with almost any database, whether it's SQL or NoSQL, local or cloud-based. With support for 100+ database drivers out of the box and compatibility with any database using JDBC or ODBC, DBeaver is one of the most versatile database tools available today. From writing complex SQL queries to visualizing database structures with ER diagrams, DBeaver brings everything into a single, intuitive desktop application

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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?
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