Good morning, it's Sunday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 84. Pour the coffee, make sure the smart speaker is not ordering patio furniture again, and let's look at what the internet dragged onto the porch overnight, wearing weird digital shoes. First up... an anonymous GitHub account is apparently dropping piles of undisclosed zero-days like somebody found a cursed USB stick behind the bowling alley and said, yeah, put that on main. Security folks are poking at a repository called exploitarium, and the scary part is not just the bugs, it's the vibe: mystery meat exploits, public pressure, and maintainers waking up to a fire drill they did not schedule. Second... OpenRA is getting Hacker News excited, because sometimes the future of technology is a lovingly rebuilt real-time strategy engine from the era when a computer desk had one beige tower, three cables, and a cup holder that was actually the CD-ROM tray. It's open source, it's nostalgic, and honestly it is refreshing to see people arguing about tanks and modding instead of whether an AI agent should be allowed to expense lunch. Third... the Fintech Engineering Handbook is making the rounds, and this is the kind of thing that sounds boring until you remember money systems are basically spreadsheets strapped to rockets. Payments, ledgers, reconciliation, risk checks: all the plumbing that keeps your paycheck from taking a little vacation in New Jersey. Heh. Hhh, okay, that's something. But seriously, good engineering notes here can save teams from learning finance through production incidents. And finally... there is a case for owning physical media again, which is funny because every streaming service promised convenience and then slowly turned into a vending machine that changes the buttons while you're using it. Discs, books, drives, local copies: boring little objects that keep working when licensing deals vanish, apps redesign themselves, or some executive decides your favorite movie is now a premium emotional add-on. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.
Información
- Programa
- FrecuenciaCada día
- Publicado28 de junio de 2026 a las 12:00 p.m. UTC
- Duración2 min
- Episodio84
- ClasificaciónApto
