There’s a particular kind of tech announcement that arrives dressed as a feature and leaves you feeling vaguely mugged. OpenAI’s push to connect ChatGPT to your bank account is one of those. The pitch, as these things usually go, is reasonable on the surface. Let the AI see your transactions and it can help you budget, spot patterns, nudge you toward better financial habits. Useful, maybe, for some …
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There’s a particular kind of corporate misery that gets described in threads like the one circulating this week about Meta’s upcoming round of layoffs. Eight thousand jobs. And the detail that apparently, the people who still have their jobs aren’t exactly celebrating. One former employee described coming back from an ayahuasca trip and simply being unable to resume the work. Another described …
Keep readingThere’s a particular kind of dread that comes from watching a tool you actually trust start to show cracks. Not a dramatic collapse, just a quiet shifting of furniture. A page quietly updated. A couple of long-serving executives out the door. A new CEO whose LinkedIn profile prominently features “mergers and acquisitions” and experience with private equity firms. That’s where Bitwarden is …
Keep readingThere’s a thread doing the rounds about NVIDIA potentially hiking the price of the RTX 5090 again, citing rising GDDR7 costs. The comments are exactly what you’d expect: one part genuine frustration, one part people flexing their hardware like medieval lords comparing landholdings, and one part the usual “prices will come down eventually” versus “lol no they won’t” argument …
Keep readingSomeone posted recently about chucking a sickie because they were mentally ground down. Not sick in the way that puts you in bed with a bucket, just that particular exhaustion where your brain has quietly decided it’s done for the day and nothing you do will convince it otherwise. They still felt guilty about it. That guilt is doing a lot of unpaid work, and I recognise it immediately. There’s a specific …
Keep readingThere’s a story doing the rounds online that I keep thinking about. A single parent, working full time, goes to auction fifteen years ago. She’s the only person there who actually wants to live in the house. Everyone else is an investor. She wins, barely, but pays more than she should have because a cluster of people with existing wealth decided that her future home was a line item on their tax return.
Keep readingThere’s a post doing the rounds this week about GPT-5.5 cracking something called ProgramBench for the first time. It’s a software engineering benchmark that’s been resistant to frontier models until now, and the result is genuinely interesting. But the discussion underneath it is, predictably, a mess. Some of it is the usual stuff: people declaring their preferred model the winner, others pointing …
Keep readingThere’s a particular kind of story that lands differently when you work in tech. Not the breathless “AI is coming for your job” stuff, or the utopian “AI will cure cancer” counter-spin. The stories that actually stick with me are the mundane ones. The ones where something fails in a way that’s almost boring in its familiarity, except the consequences are genuinely unsettling. This …
Keep readingThere was a discussion online recently about burnout and who should foot the bill for it. The comments were, as you’d expect, a mix of exhausted workers comparing war stories and the occasional person who still genuinely believes that “reasonable overtime” is a reasonable concept. One comment stuck with me. Someone pointed out that if you strip the word “burnout” away and describe it …
Keep readingSomeone posted in a forum recently about trying to feed three kids, soon to be four, on a single parent pension. No car. Burnt out. A high-income household one day, then not. Trying to hold the line at $100 to $150 a week for groceries while pregnant and relying on delivery because she can’t drive. The responses were mostly generous and practical. Bulk cooking, freezer meals, slow cookers, food banks, jacket …
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