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News, tips and insights on AI and automation

106 articles

Page 12 of 12

techJanuary 26, 2026

Posturr: a Mac app that blurs your screen when you slouch

Posturr uses Apple’s Vision framework to detect your posture in real time and blur your screen when you slouch. Open-source, on-device, and surprisingly effective at retraining your habits.

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techJanuary 26, 2026

“AI writes 100% of my code now”: real shift or just a punchline?

A Reddit post claims an OpenAI engineer now has AI writing 100% of his code. Behind the hype: recent numbers, what actually changes, and how to benefit without getting burned.

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techJanuary 26, 2026

Vibe Coding: MVP Accelerator or Infinite Slop Factory?

Vibe coding can help you ship a MVP in a day—or drown you in fragile code and security holes. Here’s how to keep the speed without falling into infinite slop.

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techJanuary 26, 2026

ChatGPT Cites Grokipedia: When AI Feeds Itself (and Breaks)

In 2026, ChatGPT (GPT-5.2) started citing Grokipedia, xAI’s AI-written encyclopedia. It’s a signal of a bigger shift—and a “LLM grooming” risk. Here’s how to keep your ops safe.

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techJanuary 26, 2026

TikTok Breaks After the US “No-Ban” Deal: The Real Risk for Your Business

Users report TikTok login failures days after a US deal avoided a ban. It’s not “just a bug”—it’s a wake-up call about platform dependency and operational resilience.

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techJanuary 26, 2026

An OpenAI engineer says AI writes 100% of his code — so what?

A Reddit post claims an OpenAI engineer barely codes anymore—he merges AI-generated branches. Beyond the hype, here’s what it changes for your speed, costs, and engineering process.

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techJanuary 26, 2026

Palantir in UK Public Services: Why These Deals Spark Backlash

Palantir promises efficiency, critics fear surveillance and opacity. From the NHS to councils and defense, here’s why UK public-sector deals are so controversial—backed by recent numbers.

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