Good morning, it's Sunday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 44. I got my coffee, I got four stories, and somehow the internet is arguing about CSS, Rust robots, hacker contests, and video models before my toaster even finished doing its little burnt-bread negotiation. First up, Julia Evans says she's moving away from Tailwind and learning to structure CSS again, which is like admitting you threw every tool in the garage into one bucket and now you gotta find the tiny screwdriver. Tailwind is handy, sure, but sometimes the class list on a button looks like somebody sneezed into a keyboard during a Microsoft Teams update. The point is, abstraction is great until you forget the thing underneath still exists. Second, Zerostack is a Unix-inspired coding agent written in pure Rust, and that checks three different internet boxes at once: agents, command-line minimalism, and Rust people saying, very calmly, that memory safety is not a lifestyle, it's a calling. I like the idea of an agent that behaves like a little pipeline tool instead of a big shiny coworker who schedules meetings. If it composes cleanly, does one job, and doesn't ask me to sign in with an enterprise account, already we're ahead. Third, frontier AI may have broken the open Capture the Flag format, because the machines are getting good enough to chew through puzzles meant for humans with hoodies and energy drinks. Heh. Hhh, okay, that's something. CTFs used to be about cleverness, persistence, and knowing which weird corner of Linux was haunted; now the contest organizers have to ask whether the smartest contestant is a person or a rented GPU with vibes. And finally, Nvidia's SANA-WM is a 2.6 billion parameter open-source world model for one-minute, 720p video, which sounds like a little dream machine for simulating motion, scenes, and cause-and-effect without needing a Hollywood render farm. World models matter because video AI is not just making pretty clips; it's learning how things move, collide, and change. That's useful for robotics, games, planning, and also making sure my virtual lawnmower doesn't decide the mailbox is optional. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.