This week’s reading list spans from the outer reaches of the night sky to the inner mechanics of our development environments. I found myself thinking a lot about physical and digital boundaries, whether stargazing through light pollution, sandboxing database state, or trying to understand where the corporate hype around AI token burns and layoffs actually leaves the rest of us.
[article] Our Galaxy Looks Absolutely Stunning in These Award-Winning Dark Sky Photos. Gizmodo’s gallery of award-winning dark sky photography is a breathtaking reminder of what lies beyond our light-polluted horizons. As someone with a casual interest in astronomy, these images make me want to pack up my gear and head out to the desert immediately.
[article] With the Vespera III and Vespera Pro 2, telescope-maker Vaonis unveils its sharpest optics yet. I have been keeping a close eye on Vaonis’s smart telescopes for a while now. Living in an urban area with heavy light pollution, I am highly skeptical of how much actual stargazing I would get done, but that does not stop me from desperately wanting one of these. The optics on the new Vespera III and Vespera Pro 2 look incredibly sharp.
[release] Launch HN: Ardent (YC P26) – Postgres sandboxes in seconds with zero migration. This is a compelling approach to a massive pain point. Live database testing is currently one of the highest hurdles for agentic software and autonomous coding. In my recent work building a scoreboard for Gemini Scribe, I spent a lot of time writing state-based assertions to confirm the agent didn’t nuke sibling files. Doing that for database mutations is infinitely harder without a lightweight sandbox. Ardent’s promise of instant Postgres replicas with zero migration is something I will be testing immediately.
[release] Flipper unveils a Linux-powered networking gadget built for hackers and tinkerers. This sounds like a delightful piece of hardware. I have a Flipper Zero and have thoroughly enjoyed experimenting with it, but this Linux-powered networking gadget looks like it has significantly more practical utility. It is a neat little box built for hackers and tinkerers that actually fits into a standard sysadmin toolkit.
[article] Ubers COO says its getting harder to justify the money spent on AI tokenmaxxing. Uber’s COO is pointing to a growing frustration in enterprise AI. The industry has fallen into a pattern of tokenmaxxing, where companies compete on how many millions of tokens they can burn through. As I discussed when designing the tool budgets for my Gemini Scribe scoreboard, efficiency should be a primary metric. Leaderboards that celebrate massive token usage incentivize sloppy engineering. We should be optimizing for the middle of the distribution, not cheering on the most wasteful implementations.
[article] Samsung’s OLED tech gives the Ferrari Luce a dashboard unlike anything in a car before. The custom displays in the Ferrari Luce are a stunning application of Samsung’s OLED technology. While the vehicle itself is a concept, the underlying display engineering feels like a preview of how we will interact with glass surfaces in the near future. It is a highly impressive piece of design.
[article] Jensen Huang Just Told Every CEO Hiding Behind AI Layoffs to Shut Up. A sharp analysis of the narrative around AI-driven layoffs. Jensen Huang’s blunt perspective cuts through the corporate excuse-making. This digs into the same questions about who benefits from AI disruption in the workforce that I have been wrestling with lately. It is a must-read for anyone trying to understand the macroeconomic reality behind the hype cycle.