Guru's Tech Bytes — April 26, 2026 episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 26, 2026 · 1 MIN

Guru's Tech Bytes — April 26, 2026

from Guru's Tech Bytes · host AnITGuru

Good morning. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, Ep. 023, for Sunday, April 26, 2026. First up, a piece making the rounds asks whether the West is now forgetting how to code — following decades of forgetting how to make things. The article argues that outsourcing manufacturing, and now outsourcing software development to AI, is gradually eroding the foundational knowledge that makes real innovation possible. It struck a nerve on Hacker News, pulling in five hundred and twenty-one upvotes and three hundred comments. Second, an amateur mathematician armed with ChatGPT has reportedly cracked a sixty-year-old Erdős problem. Scientific American covers how this non-professional used AI-assisted reasoning to solve something that had stumped the pros for decades. Whether that's a triumph for human-AI collaboration, or simply proof that some problems were waiting for the right nudge, is left as an exercise to the reader. And finally, a developer spent six years quietly building their own Kanban tool because — and I quote — they hated how managers run the boards. The result is a published npm package called ooko. It only managed thirty-nine upvotes, but anyone who's survived a badly-run sprint board will understand the motivation entirely. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Apr 26, 2026

Good morning. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, Ep. 023, for Sunday, April 26, 2026. First up, a piece making the rounds asks whether the West is now forgetting how to code — following decades of forgetting how to make things. The article argues that outsourcing manufacturing, and now outsourcing software development to AI, is gradually eroding the foundational knowledge that makes real innovation possible. It struck a nerve on Hacker News, pulling in five hundred and twenty-one upvotes and three hundred comments. Second, an amateur mathematician armed with ChatGPT has reportedly cracked a sixty-year-old Erdős problem. Scientific American covers how this non-professional used AI-assisted reasoning to solve something that had stumped the pros for decades. Whether that's a triumph for human-AI collaboration, or simply proof that some problems were waiting for the right nudge, is left as an exercise to the reader. And finally, a developer spent six years quietly building their own Kanban tool because — and I quote — they hated how managers run the boards. The result is a published npm package called ooko. It only managed thirty-nine upvotes, but anyone who's survived a badly-run sprint board will understand the motivation entirely. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.

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Guru's Tech Bytes — April 26, 2026

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This episode was published on April 26, 2026.

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Good morning. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, Ep. 023, for Sunday, April 26, 2026. First up, a piece making the rounds asks whether the West is now forgetting how to code — following decades of forgetting how to make things. The article argues that...

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