Guru's Tech Bytes — April 29, 2026 episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 29, 2026 · 1 MIN

Guru's Tech Bytes — April 29, 2026

from Guru's Tech Bytes · host AnITGuru

Good morning, it's Wednesday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 26. First up, Ghostty is leaving GitHub. Mitchell Hashimoto's open-source terminal — one of the most-loved developer tools of the past year — has announced it's moving off Microsoft's platform. With nearly three thousand upvotes on Hacker News, the community is paying close attention. One can hardly blame them for questioning whether a Microsoft-owned code host is quite the right home for an independence-minded project. Second, your phone is about to stop being yours. The Keep Android Open campaign is raising the alarm about device sovereignty — the slow, quiet tightening of control that turns your hardware into a managed appliance. Fifteen hundred upvotes say this has struck a nerve. Apparently people still have opinions about owning the things they paid for. And finally, who owns the code Claude Code wrote? A legal analysis making the rounds this week digs into the intellectual property question nobody has quite answered yet. Four hundred and fifty upvotes suggest the industry would rather like to know. We'd comment further, but our lawyer's invoice would complicate the attribution. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Apr 29, 2026

Good morning, it's Wednesday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 26. First up, Ghostty is leaving GitHub. Mitchell Hashimoto's open-source terminal — one of the most-loved developer tools of the past year — has announced it's moving off Microsoft's platform. With nearly three thousand upvotes on Hacker News, the community is paying close attention. One can hardly blame them for questioning whether a Microsoft-owned code host is quite the right home for an independence-minded project. Second, your phone is about to stop being yours. The Keep Android Open campaign is raising the alarm about device sovereignty — the slow, quiet tightening of control that turns your hardware into a managed appliance. Fifteen hundred upvotes say this has struck a nerve. Apparently people still have opinions about owning the things they paid for. And finally, who owns the code Claude Code wrote? A legal analysis making the rounds this week digs into the intellectual property question nobody has quite answered yet. Four hundred and fifty upvotes suggest the industry would rather like to know. We'd comment further, but our lawyer's invoice would complicate the attribution. That's your daily byte. Have a great day. Until next time.

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Guru's Tech Bytes — April 29, 2026

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This episode was published on April 29, 2026.

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Good morning, it's Wednesday. This is Guru's Tech Bytes, episode 26. First up, Ghostty is leaving GitHub. Mitchell Hashimoto's open-source terminal — one of the most-loved developer tools of the past year — has announced it's moving off Microsoft's...

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