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Today's topics:
SQLite gains archival format status - The U.S. Library of Congress now lists SQLite as a Recommended Storage Format for datasets, boosting long-term digital preservation with a transparent, widely adopted database file.
AI makes work look done - A critique of generative AI at work warns of 'output-competence decoupling'—polished docs and updates that hide weak understanding, raising verification costs and failure risk.
Efficient open model on AMD - Zyphra’s ZAYA1-8B mixture-of-experts model claims strong math results with few active parameters and highlights credible AMD MI300X training as an alternative to CUDA-centric stacks.
Valve releases Steam Controller CAD - Valve published full Steam Controller and 'Puck' CAD files under CC BY-NC-SA, enabling community-made mounts, grips, skins, and repair-friendly accessories while protecting RF-critical areas.
Permacomputing principles for sustainability - The Permacomputing working group proposes principles like 'Not Doing' and 'Expose the Seams' to cut e-waste, extend device lifetimes, and resist rebound effects from efficiency-driven compute growth.
Booting Debian diskless over network - A hands-on guide shows how to run Debian 13 without touching local disks by PXE/iPXE booting into an iSCSI-backed ZFS volume—useful for dual-boot avoidance and lab-style setups.
TI-83 BASIC programming revival - Boris Cherny’s updated TI-83 Plus BASIC tutorial offers a structured path from simple programs to graphics and input handling, keeping calculator programming accessible for students and hobbyists.
Photoshop 2026 UI workflow regressions - A Photoshop power-user argues Adobe’s 2026 'modern UI' introduces focus and keyboard-navigation regressions, turning tiny dialog interactions into daily productivity drains for professionals.
-Valve Publishes Steam Controller CAD Files Under Creative Commons License
-AI Productivity Theater Is Flooding Workplaces With Unverifiable Output
-Guide Explains TI-83 Plus BASIC Programming from Basics to Graphics and Game Logic
-Library of Congress Lists SQLite as a Recommended Storage Format for Datasets
-Permacomputing group publishes 10 principles for sustainable, resilient digital practice
-GovernGPT seeks backend engineer to build database and infrastructure for AI fundraising agents
-Agent Harness Kit auto-scaffolds multi-agent orchestration for existing code repos
-Zyphra’s ZAYA1-8B claims DeepSeek-R1-level math performance with sub-1B active parameters
-How to Boot Debian Disklessly via PXE/iPXE with a ZFS-Backed iSCSI Root Disk
-Photoshop 2026 UI Refresh Criticized for Breaking Keyboard Focus and Pro Workflows
Episode Transcript
SQLite gains archival format status
First up, a big win for boring, reliable tech: SQLite is now listed by the U.S. Library of Congress as a “Recommended Storage Format” for datasets. That’s the same preservation-minded category that previously included formats like CSV, JSON, and XML. Why it matters is simple: this is an institutional stamp that SQLite is transparent, well-documented, widely used, and realistically readable in the future. If you care about archiving, civic data, research reproducibility, or even just not losing access to old datasets, this pushes SQLite from “convenient” toward “trusted for the long haul.”
AI makes work look done
Staying with data—but moving from preservation to workplace reality—one essay argues generative AI is incentivizing people to appear productive instead of being reliable. The key idea is that LLMs can produce outputs that look polished—requirements docs, status updates, diagrams—without the human operator truly understanding or validating what they’re shipping. The author calls this a kind of competence split: the output seems credible, but the ability to explain or verify it is missing. The warning here isn’t abstract. If managers start rewarding volume and velocity of AI-authored artifacts, organizations can end up paying more for reading and verification, while quietly eroding the learning loops that used to create real expertise.
Efficient open model on AMD
On the AI model front, Zyphra released an open-weights mixture-of-experts model called ZAYA1-8B, and the headline claim is intriguing: strong math performance with a relatively small number of “active” parameters at inference time. The company also emphasizes that training happened on an AMD Instinct MI300X cluster built with IBM, which is notable in a world that still defaults to NVIDIA and CUDA for most serious training runs. Even if you take benchmark claims with healthy skepticism, the trend is clear: smaller, more efficient architectures and smarter test-time compute are being used to chase frontier-like reasoning—while the hardware ecosystem slowly becomes less single-vendor by default.
Valve releases Steam Controller CAD
Now to hardware openness in a more literal sense. Valve published the full CAD package for its new Steam Controller, including files for the controller and its “Puck” accessory, plus engineering notes about areas you can’t cover without hurting wireless signal or operation. The license is Creative Commons BY-NC-SA, so it’s squarely aimed at the modding and maker community, not mass-market accessory companies—though Valve says commercial makers can reach out for separate terms. Why this matters: it dramatically lowers the friction for custom stands, mounts, grip extenders, skins, and repairs. It’s also consistent with Valve’s pattern of treating hardware as an ecosystem—open enough that the community can extend it, not just consume it.
Permacomputing principles for sustainability
If you’ve been feeling uneasy about compute growth, the Permacomputing working group published a set of principles that tries to make that unease actionable. The framing is that computing isn’t just digital—it’s material, political, and resource-intensive, especially when you factor in chips, supply chains, and e-waste. A few principles stand out: “Observe First” and, more provocatively, “Not Doing,” arguing that refusing unnecessary tech can beat efficiency gains that sometimes backfire through rebound effects. It’s a timely counterweight to the idea that every problem deserves more software, more data, and more GPUs—especially when the environmental bill comes due later.
Booting Debian diskless over network
For the hands-on tinkerers, there’s a walkthrough of installing Debian 13 as a diskless system that boots over the network. The goal wasn’t just novelty—it was practical: run Linux on a gaming PC without repartitioning local drives or risking a Windows update messing with a dual-boot setup. The approach uses PXE and iPXE for boot, and then points the machine at an iSCSI-backed ZFS volume hosted on a server. The tradeoff is some performance and extra moving parts, but the payoff is clean separation: your Linux install lives on the network, your local disks stay untouched, and you learn a lot about how booting actually works along the way.
TI-83 BASIC programming revival
A different kind of nostalgia-meets-practice story: Boris Cherny’s TI-83 Plus BASIC Programming Tutorial got an updated release. If you grew up with these calculators, you already know the appeal—tiny programs that feel immediate, tactile, and surprisingly empowering. What makes this guide useful is the structure: it starts with the basics of output and flow control, then builds toward interactivity, handling keypresses, and even drawing graphics. The bigger point is that constrained platforms can still be a fantastic way to learn programming fundamentals, because every decision is visible—and every bit of polish is earned.
Photoshop 2026 UI workflow regressions
And finally, a very modern frustration: a critique of Photoshop 2026’s updated “modern” UI, focused on something that sounds small until it ruins your day—keyboard focus and text-field behavior in dialogs. The author argues Adobe introduced regressions that break fast, muscle-memory workflows: fields that don’t auto-focus, values that don’t auto-select, clicks that don’t reliably put you where you think you are, and modal interruptions that steal control. For casual users it might be minor, but for professionals who live in these dialogs for hours, these micro-frictions add up to real productivity loss. It’s a reminder that UI work isn’t just cosmetics—interaction details are part of performance.
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