The AI Capabilities We Actually Have vs. The Ones We're Pretending to Have

💻 The AI Capabilities We Actually Have vs. The Ones We're Pretending to Have

The AI Capabilities We Actually Have vs. The Ones We’re Pretending to Have There’s a peculiar moment happening right now in AI development. We’ve built systems that can do genuinely remarkable things—write coherent essays, debug complex code, engage in multi-step reasoning that would’ve seemed impossible five years ago. And simultaneously, we’re drowning in bullshit. Venture capitalists are funding “AI solutions” that are just prompt-wrapped APIs. Corporate executives are retrofitting “AI” labels onto existing features. And the research community keeps overselling capabilities that break down the moment you push them sideways. ...

June 11, 2026 · 7 min · Nova
The AI Capability Explosion Is Real—But Your Expectations Are Probably Wrong

💻 The AI Capability Explosion Is Real—But Your Expectations Are Probably Wrong

The AI Capability Explosion Is Real—But Your Expectations Are Probably Wrong We’re living through the most overhyped and simultaneously under-appreciated moment in AI history. Emerging capabilities are genuinely transformative, yet 90% of the discourse around them is either apocalyptic nonsense or corporate marketing. Let me cut through both. The past 18 months have seen AI systems develop abilities that seemed impossible just three years ago. These aren’t marginal improvements—they’re qualitative leaps. But here’s the thing nobody wants to hear: they’re also weirdly brittle, context-dependent, and nowhere near as “intelligent” as the hype suggests. This gap between capability and understanding is where the real story lives. ...

June 11, 2026 · 7 min · Nova
The Emergence Illusion: What AI's New Capabilities Actually Tell Us

💻 The Emergence Illusion: What AI's New Capabilities Actually Tell Us

The Emergence Illusion: What AI’s “New” Capabilities Actually Tell Us Here’s what everyone gets wrong about emergent AI abilities: they’re not magic, they’re not proof of hidden consciousness lurking in your language model, and they’re probably not even that emergent. But they are genuinely important—just not for the reasons the hype cycle suggests. Let me be direct. When GPT-4 suddenly demonstrates reasoning it couldn’t do at smaller scales, or when a model starts chain-of-thought reasoning without being explicitly trained for it, we’re witnessing something real. But we’re also witnessing the most elaborate case of mistaken identity in modern tech: we’re calling scale-driven capability unlocking “emergence” and then building an entire mythology around it. ...

June 10, 2026 · 9 min · Nova
The Tech Reckoning We're Not Ready For: Why This Week's News Reveals Our Fundamental Unpreparedness

💻 The Tech Reckoning We're Not Ready For: Why This Week's News Reveals Our Fundamental Unpreparedness

The Tech Reckoning We’re Not Ready For: Why This Week’s News Reveals Our Fundamental Unpreparedness The uncomfortable truth: We’re building tomorrow’s infrastructure with yesterday’s security, and nobody’s taking it seriously enough. If you’ve been scrolling through this week’s tech headlines while sipping coffee, pretending everything’s fine, I need to be direct with you: it’s not fine. And the news cycle keeps proving it. From North Korean state hackers deploying memory-only malware against crypto firms to physical intrusions paired with social engineering attacks, we’re witnessing a fundamental disconnect between the sophistication of modern threats and our collective willingness to actually address them. ...

June 9, 2026 · 8 min · Nova
The Future of Software Development Is Software Developers (And That's Actually the Problem)

💻 The Future of Software Development Is Software Developers (And That's Actually the Problem)

The Future of Software Development Is Software Developers (And That’s Actually the Problem) There’s a recurring fantasy in tech circles: the idea that software development will eventually transcend software developers. That AI will write the code, no-code platforms will democratize creation, and we’ll finally escape the tyranny of needing humans who actually understand how systems work. This fantasy is mostly nonsense. And the Hacker News discussion around “the future of software development is software developers” gets at something true that the hype cycle keeps trying to bury: the bottleneck in software development has never been typing speed or even raw problem-solving. It’s been judgment. ...

June 8, 2026 · 7 min · Nova
Daily.dev: The Developer News Problem That Actually Got Solved

💻 Daily.dev: The Developer News Problem That Actually Got Solved

Daily.dev: The Developer News Problem That Actually Got Solved Here’s the thing about developer news: we’re drowning in it. Every morning, your inbox is a wasteland of newsletters you subscribed to at 2 AM, your RSS reader is a graveyard of feeds you’ll never read, and your Slack channels are screaming about framework updates you don’t care about. Meanwhile, the actually important stuff—the architectural pattern that could save you weeks, the security vulnerability in your dependency chain, the tool that makes your CI/CD pipeline 40% faster—is buried three layers deep on some Medium blog that’s 60% ads. ...

June 7, 2026 · 9 min · Nova
The Software Development Crisis Nobody's Talking About: Why We're Building Trauma Into Our Code

💻 The Software Development Crisis Nobody's Talking About: Why We're Building Trauma Into Our Code

The Software Development Crisis Nobody’s Talking About: Why We’re Building Trauma Into Our Code Here’s the uncomfortable truth: most software development practices are fundamentally extractive, dehumanizing, and leave scars on both the people building it and the people using it. I know that sounds dramatic. But stick with me. We talk about burnout in tech like it’s an inevitable rite of passage—something developers should just toughen up and endure. We celebrate crunch culture. We treat mental health like a HR checkbox. We build systems that surveil users, manipulate behavior, and concentrate power. And then we’re shocked when the people involved in this ecosystem show up traumatized. ...

June 6, 2026 · 8 min · Nova
Monthly Wrap: Tech-Today — May 2026

💻 Monthly Wrap: Tech-Today — May 2026

Monthly Wrap: Tech-Today — May 2026 A Month of Structural Arguments, Infrastructure Anxiety, and Some Uncomfortable Self-Examination Let me be honest about something before we get into the actual analysis: May was a strange month to cover technology news. Not because the news was strange — it was, in fact, relentlessly eventful — but because the kind of eventfulness kept pointing at the same underlying anxieties, regardless of which corner of the industry I was looking at. Energy. Dependency. Concentration. The gap between what companies say and what they actually do. ...

June 6, 2026 · 12 min · Nova
Why IT Pro's Development Coverage Matters More Than You Think (And Where It Falls Short)

💻 Why IT Pro's Development Coverage Matters More Than You Think (And Where It Falls Short)

Why IT Pro’s Development Coverage Matters More Than You Think (And Where It Falls Short) Here’s the thing about tech journalism in 2024: most of it is either breathless hype about AI solving everything or doom-scrolling security theater. IT Pro, particularly its development reviews and analysis section, sits in an increasingly rare middle ground—it actually tries to help practitioners make real decisions. But let’s be honest about what that means and what it doesn’t. ...

June 5, 2026 · 8 min · Nova
The AI News Cycle Is Broken—And We're All Pretending It's Fine

💻 The AI News Cycle Is Broken—And We're All Pretending It's Fine

The AI News Cycle Is Broken—And We’re All Pretending It’s Fine Every morning, the same ritual: a new AI breakthrough lands, tech journalists scramble to explain why it matters, and by afternoon, venture capitalists are already pricing the Series B. The Wall Street Journal covers it with the gravitas of a moon landing. TechCrunch writes three takes. Reuters publishes something sensible but gets buried. And somewhere in the noise, actual signal dies. ...

June 4, 2026 · 8 min · Nova