in OpenCode v2 all instances of the tui and desktop and web share the same backend
so everything is synced by default and resource usaged is minimized no matter how many windows you have open
Warp supports GLM 5.2! Hosted on Fireworks and super token efficient for the intelligence. We also support BYO inference to connect through other providers
Long skills are such a red flag to me
- Hard to audit (and therefore, trust)
- Hard to edit (more text, harder to maintain)
- Expensive to run (more text, more tokens)
The shorter the skill, the better IMO
🚨 UPDATE: Mini Shai-Hulud has crossed from @npmjs into @pypi and is still spreading.
Newly confirmed compromised artifacts:
@opensearch-project/opensearch: 3.5.3, 3.6.2, 3.7.0, 3.8.0 (1.3M weekly downloads)
mistralai: 2.4.6 on PyPI
guardrails-ai: 0.10.1 on PyPI
additional @squawk/* packages on npm
guardrails-ai 0.10.1 executes malicious code on import. On Linux, it downloads git-tanstack[.]com/transformers.pyz, writes it to /tmp/transformers.pyz, and runs it with python3 without integrity verification.
The git-tanstack.com domain displayed a message signed “With Love TeamPCP,” along with: “We've been online over 2 hours now stealing creds
Regardless I just came to say hello :^)”
The page also linked to a YouTube video and you can probably guess which one.
Claude for Excel, PowerPoint, and Word are now generally available, and Claude for Outlook is in public beta.
As Claude moves between your Microsoft apps, it carries the full context of your conversation.
Kimi K2.6 demonstrates strong long-horizon coding in complex engineering tasks:
Kimi K2.6 successfully downloaded and deployed the Qwen3.5-0.8B model locally on a Mac. By implementing and optimizing model inference in Zig—a highly niche programming language—it demonstrated exceptional out-of-distribution generalization.
Across 4,000+ tool calls, over 12 hours of continuous execution, and 14 iterations, Kimi K2.6 dramatically improved throughput from ~15 to ~193 tokens/sec, ultimately achieving speeds ~20% faster than LM Studio.
10 terminal tools that make you 10x faster in 2026:
1. zoxide
A smarter cd that learns your habits. Type "z proj" and it jumps to the directory you actually meant.
Repo → https://t.co/pZCH3ZQt9F
2. fzf
The fuzzy finder that powers half the terminal world. Search files, processes, git branches, shell history, anything.
Repo → https://t.co/nWEAbBMTm6
3. ripgrep
10x faster than grep. Respects .gitignore by default. Once you use it, you can never go back.
Repo → https://t.co/kb1OcCH9NQ
4. lazygit
Every git command you hate, now one keypress away. Interactive rebase feels like cheating.
Repo → https://t.co/f9fDuU6VKT
5. starship
A shell prompt that shows git status, language versions, and cloud context. Works on every shell. Renders in under 10ms.
Repo → https://t.co/Snotb0pW5B
6. atuin
Replaces your shell history with a searchable SQLite database. Syncs encrypted across every machine you own.
Repo → https://t.co/j0tedZ18wi
7. bat
cat with syntax highlighting, line numbers, and git integration. Your terminal will never look the same.
Repo → https://t.co/omdUbpX14E
8. eza
A modern ls with colors, icons, and git status built in. Makes every directory readable at a glance.
Repo → https://t.co/MxRtY8Jipo
9. yazi
A blazing fast file manager that runs in your terminal. Image previews, async I/O, vim keybindings.
Repo → https://t.co/egfS6pkLfx
10. delta
Turns git diff into something you actually want to read. Side-by-side view, syntax highlighting, line numbers.
Repo → https://t.co/GHJCrGMMm9