The SEC closed its investigation into Fisker

The SEC closed its investigation into Fisker The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has concluded its investigation into electric vehicle manufacturer Fisker, which began in 2024. The closure of the probe was confirmed by the SEC’s response to a request for records made by TechCrunch in February 2026. This news signifies that Fisker has managed … Read more

Airbnb plans to bake in AI features for search, discovery and support

Airbnb plans to bake in AI features for search, discovery and support Summary Tech giant Airbnb has announced plans to integrate AI technology into its platform, with the goal of improving search, discovery, and support services for customers. The move aims to streamline the booking process and enhance overall user experience. My Analysis Airbnb’s decision … Read more

TrueNAS vs OpenMediaVault vs QNAP

TrueNAS vs OpenMediaVault vs QNAP comparison showing a DIY OpenMediaVault server, TrueNAS interface, and a QNAP prebuilt NAS on a desk

Introduction

If you’re building a NAS at home, you’ll eventually hit the same fork in the road I did: TrueNAS, OpenMediaVault, or just buy a QNAP (or even a DAS). On paper they all solve the same problem. In reality, they’re very different tools with very different tradeoffs.

I’ve used or seriously evaluated all of them while building my Plex, torrent, and media automation setup. This post breaks down the real pros and cons, then explains exactly why I landed on OpenMediaVault.

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Seamless Network Migration

How I Replaced Google WiFi Without Reconfiguring Devices

When people talk about upgrading their home network, they usually assume downtime is unavoidable. Devices disconnect, credentials change, and someone in the house inevitably gets frustrated. My goal was different: I wanted a seamless network migration where I could replace Google WiFi with ASUS hardware without touching a single device.

This article documents what I actually did not what a textbook migration looks like.

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DDR5 Price Increase Explained

DDR5 price increase showing rising memory costs driven by AI demand and reduced consumer supply

DDR5 Price Increase: Why Memory Costs Have Skyrocketed

The DDR5 price increase has caught many PC builders off guard. If you’ve tried to price out a DDR5 upgrade recently, the jump is impossible to miss. DDR5 pricing didn’t rise gradually it spiked. This wasn’t driven by hype or a single supply disruption, but by deliberate manufacturing decisions, explosive AI demand, and a shrinking pool of consumer-focused memory production.

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Why I Created an IoT Only Wi-Fi Network

IoT only Wi-Fi network diagram illustrating separation between main home network and isolated smart home devices

And Why You Probably Should Too

I didn’t create an IoT only Wi-Fi network because it was trendy. I did it because it’s best practice for a reason and my home network was proving that the hard way. Random disconnects, smart devices refusing to reconnect, and small configuration changes turning into full outages made it obvious that everything sharing one network was a bad idea.

This post explains why separating smart devices onto an IoT only Wi-Fi network is one of the most practical and stability-focused decisions I’ve made, and why I won’t be merging them back.

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Why I’m Replacing Google WiFi with ASUS Routers

Replacing Google WiFi with ASUS routers after weekly dropouts, slow Wi-Fi 5 speeds, and cloud-dependent reliability issues

I’ve been running Google WiFi pods since 2019, but replacing Google WiFi recently became unavoidable after years of reliability started to slip. For a long time, the system was exactly what I wanted: simple, stable, and invisible. I set it up once and didn’t think about it again.

That changed over the past few months.

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Nvidia Acquiring Groq Through HALO?

Nvidia acquiring Groq illustrated by a dimly lit Groq office building beside a brightly lit Nvidia office building at night

A Hire and License Strategy Explained The idea of Nvidia acquiring Groq has gained traction not because of a traditional acquisition announcement, but because of how the deal has been described publicly. Recent reporting suggests Nvidia is not buying Groq outright, but instead absorbing critical assets in a way that achieves the same competitive outcome. … Read more

Why Nvidia Wants Out of the GPU Game

Why Nvidia wants out of the GPU game shown by a comparison between Nvidia gaming GPUs and AI data center accelerators

I have been thinking about this a lot lately, especially while watching GPU prices, availability, and where NVIDIA seems to be spending its energy. Why Nvidia wants out of the GPU game becomes obvious once you look at margins, fabrication limits, and where real growth exists. The short version is simple: if I were NVIDIA, I would rather sell one AI accelerator than thirty gaming GPUs. The longer version is what this post is about.

This is not about hating gamers or abandoning PC gaming entirely. It is about incentives, margins, and which market actually makes sense to prioritize.

This article explains why Nvidia wants out of the GPU game and why prioritizing AI accelerators makes more sense than focusing on the gaming market.

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