2026-03-08 15:11:19
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## SERP Benchmarks: Success Rates and Latency at Scale
By @brightdata [ 8 Min read ]
We benchmark SERP APIs for success rate,
speed, and stability under load. Learn which setup delivers consistent results for AI agents and deep research. Read More.
By @mexcmedia [ 2 Min read ] MEXC reports 2.35M users across its AI trading suite, with 10.8M interactions and record activity during October’s flash crash. Read More.
By @stevebeyatte [ 5 Min read ] An in-depth guide to th 7 leading requirements management software solutions in 2026. Compare Jama Connect, DOORS, Polarion, and more to find the right fit. Read More.
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By @thomascherickal [ 22 Min read ] OpenClaw has exposed the biggest issues in the hyperscaler companies, and it is the leader in AI agents. However, it is a security risk. Use local LLMs instead! Read More.
By @thomascherickal [ 14 Min read ] OpenClaw lets you run frontier AI models like Minimax M2.5 and GLM-5 100% locally on Mac M3 or DGX Spark — zero API costs, total privacy. Here's how. Read More.
By @pr-securitymetrics [ 2 Min read ] SecurityMetrics announces new CMMC tool for compliance and validation, helping primes and subcontracts streamline the CMMC process. Read More.
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By @davidiyanu [ 8 Min read ] Production is the unmarked minefield that begins the moment you accept arbitrary user input and promise reliability. Read More.
By @davidiyanu [ 10 Min read ] GitHub's agent fixed my flaky test in 11 minutes. No human wrote code. But when it fails, instead of a stack trace, you get an outcome. Read More.
By @dataops [ 3 Min read ] Technical debt isn’t refactoring—it’s hidden risk. A powerful racecar analogy to help engineers explain why cutting corners can end in disaster. Read More.
By @boostlegends1 [ 9 Min read ] Build full-stack web apps without coding. Fabricate uses AI to generate frontend, backend, databases, and payments from simple prompts in minutes. Read More.
By @MichaelJerlis [ 2 Min read ] Explore crypto staking options in 2026, compare ETH and SOL yields, and see how platforms like EMCD simplify earning passive income. Read More.
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By @alexcloudstar [ 11 Min read ]
Cloudflare rebuilt Next.js on Vite in one week using AI. Faster builds, smaller bundles, one-command deploy to Workers. Meet vinext.. Read More.
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2026-03-08 10:46:11
There are a lot of translation tools available today, and most of them are free. Open your phone, launch Google Translate, and you already have a perfectly functional solution in your pocket. That’s why devices like the iFlytek AI translation earbuds fall into a category I’m very familiar with reviewing: luxury tech.
Luxury tech is not about necessity. It’s about experience.
Nobody needs a VR headset, an AR headset, or premium peripherals for niche use cases. But for enthusiasts and frequent travelers, the right device can dramatically improve the experience. At roughly $150 USD and up, these translation earbuds clearly aren’t trying to compete with free apps. Instead, they’re trying to make translation feel seamless.
So I approached this review the same way I would approach something like a VR peripheral: judging it not against free tools, but against the experience it promises to deliver.
:::info Disclaimer: I have not been paid or compensated to do this review. These opinions reflect my true experience iwth the product. I have, however, received the product for free to test in this review.
:::
Language Covered: For the purpose of this review I tested the tech’s capabilities translating Japanese to English and vice versa since I live in Japan and speak both languages.
The first thing that stood out to me was the packaging. I know that sounds nitpicky, but when it comes to luxury tech it matters.

I still remember when I first bought the original Oculus Quest, the world’s first standalone VR headset. Before I even opened it, just holding the box felt different. The packaging had this combination of matte and glossy textures that almost felt like holding the case of a luxury watch. There was no cheap cardboard or blurry printed packaging — it immediately signaled that this was a premium product.
iFlytek clearly put effort into their packaging as well.
When you pick up the box, you can immediately feel that iFlytek put real effort into the presentation. The packaging has a noticeable weight to it and uses higher-grade materials than the typical cheap cardboard you often see from mass-produced tech products. It gives off that subtle signal that this is supposed to be a premium device, not just another gadget thrown into a thin box.
\

That said, it doesn’t quite reach the level of the best packaging I’ve seen in the tech world.
Companies like Angry Miao have set an almost ridiculous standard when it comes to packaging design. Their products feel like you’re unboxing a collector’s item. Even Oculus, back in the early days of the Quest, delivered that same premium feel where the packaging itself felt like part of the experience.
If I had to score it, Angry Miao is a 10 out of 10 when it comes to packaging and presentation.
iFlytek lands somewhere around a very respectable 7.5.
It’s clearly premium, clearly intentional, but it doesn’t quite deliver that “wow” moment when you first open it.
Once you actually start setting the device up though, things get much more impressive.

For these to work, you must have a modern smartphone (iOS or Android) and download the Bavvo app by iFlytek. This is the app the powers the translation. The earbuds are essentially a speaker and microphone to take in the input language with special features and design to aid translation.
Once the app is setup and the earbuds connected there are 3 main modes:
\
\
The concept is simple but incredibly clever. Each person wears one earbud, and during setup you assign the input language for each earbud. One earbud listens for one language, and the other listens for the other language. From there, the system translates the conversation in real time.
And surprisingly… it just works.
You can tell a lot of thought went into the UX design of these earbuds.
Once both people are wearing an earbud and the languages are assigned, the system essentially handles the rest. Each earbud listens for its assigned language and outputs the translated result directly into the other person’s ear. There’s no passing a phone back and forth, no awkward tapping through menus, and no interruption to the flow of conversation.
In terms of concept and design, this is exactly what I imagined AI translation would look like one day. And that day is finally here!
The problem isn’t the design.
The problem is speed.
In a one-on-one conversation setting, the translation lag is usually around two to three seconds. Technically speaking that’s incredibly impressive. As someone who is developing LLM-powered tech, this feat is outstanding. But in practice to the everyday person, this lag will feel surprisingly awkward.
If you’re sitting across from someone having a conversation, three seconds of silence feels much longer than it actually is. You say something, and then both of you are just sitting there staring at each other while the translation processes.
If a human interpreter isn’t available, this is absolutely the next best thing. In fact, it’s still faster and smoother than using a phone translation app where you constantly pass the device back and forth.
But that moment of silence — even if it’s only a few seconds — makes the interaction feel slightly unnatural.
And that’s where AI translation still has a hurdle to overcome.
To really understand how impressive this device is, you have to look at where translation technology was just a few years ago.
Around three years ago I reviewed the Pocketalk translator, which at the time felt incredible. But the experience was still very much device-based translation. You spoke into the device, waited for it to process, then handed it over so the other person could respond. It worked, but it never felt like a natural conversation.
Fast forward to today and the iFlytek earbuds are doing something much more ambitious: two languages being input and output simultaneously between two people. From a technical standpoint, it’s exactly what we always hoped would be possible, like the Tower of Babel in real life.
The fact that the system can listen, process the speech, translate it, and deliver the result in about three seconds is genuinely impressive.
But here’s the strange reality that AI-tech companies need to face: they’re not competing against where technology used to be.
They’re competing against human experience.
In a normal conversation, people respond instantly with head nods, sounds of acknowledgement, etc.. Even a small pause feels noticeable. So when a device introduces a two to three second delay, it creates a rhythm that feels very unnatural, not slightly, VERY.
Because of that, I don’t think devices like this will become household everyday tech just yet.
This is because human conversation is incredibly fast, and AI translation still has a little catching up to do.
While the delay prevents this from feeling perfectly natural in a face-to-face conversation, there are still plenty of situations where these earbuds make a lot of sense.
In fact, if you’re someone who travels abroad regularly, this might actually be one of the best use cases for the device, because you have no better option other than to learn the language.
Normally when you’re traveling in another country and don’t speak the language, you end up relying on Google Translate. That usually means pulling out your phone, typing or speaking into it, showing the screen to the other person, and then waiting for them to respond so you can repeat the process again.
It works, but it’s clunky.
The iFlytek earbuds remove a lot of that friction. Instead of shoving a phone into someone’s face and asking them to speak into it, you can actually have a somewhat normal conversation. The other person hears the translation in their ear, you hear the translated response in yours, and even with the 2–3 second delay, it still feels much smoother than the back-and-forth of phone translation apps.
But the moment that really blew me away wasn’t during a conversation.
It was when I tried live translation while watching the news.
This is a use case where the small delay suddenly doesn’t matter at all.

This is the mode everyone is used to. You start the app and as things are being said, it is being translated instantly. This is akin to starting google translate while someone is speaking. The main difference is there’s a limit to how much google translate will take in at a time. The iFlytek earbuds can go on indefinitely until the batteries run out.
This is where the tech shined. Using it to listen to the news was a great experience. The tech was accurate and the delay between input and output was minimal enough to be great for this use case.
When I turned on the live translation feature while watching the news, that’s when the device suddenly made a lot more sense.
Unlike a one-on-one conversation, watching something like a news broadcast doesn’t require an immediate response. A couple of seconds of delay doesn’t really matter because you’re not trying to reply to the speaker — you’re just trying to understand what’s being said.
In that situation, the earbuds worked incredibly well. The translated audio came through naturally enough that I could follow along with the broadcast without constantly looking at subtitles or pausing to check my phone.
This also opens up some really interesting use cases.
For example, imagine visiting a museum or planetarium in another country where all the explanations are being given in a language you don’t understand. With something like this, you could listen to the translation directly in your ear and still experience the presentation in real time.
The same goes for things like lectures or educational talks.
Forms of entertainment where timing is critical — like stand-up comedy or movies in a theater — don’t translate nearly as well. A joke that lands three seconds late usually isn’t funny anymore, and hearing dialogue after the moment has already passed can break the immersion of a film.
So while the technology is impressive, context matters a lot.
\
When it comes to translation quality, the results were surprisingly solid most of the time.
No translation system is perfect, and that’s true here as well. There were moments where the earbuds misheard a word or repeated a phrase in a slightly awkward way. Occasionally a sentence would come through sounding a bit robotic or structured differently than how a native speaker would normally phrase it.
That said, these situations were relatively rare.
The majority of the time the system was about 90% accurate in terms of both recognizing what was said and producing a correct translation on the other side. In most casual conversations that level of accuracy is more than enough to get the point across.
\ \
This feature was interesting but I didn’t fully grasp when/how it would be useful.
This features allows you to essentially overlay the translation app over your phone screen and translate other apps in real time.
One feature I appreciated was that the app shows the recognized speech on-screen in real time. So if the system mishears something or picks up background noise incorrectly, you can quickly see the mistake before the translation causes an awkward misunderstanding.
If something looks wrong, you can simply pause the translation and start again, which acts as a nice safety net in situations where accuracy really matters.
Unfortunately, the only real technical issue I encountered came during the initial setup.
\ \ Unfortunately, I did run into a technical hiccup during the initial setup.
When pairing the earbuds with my iPhone 15 for the first time, the phone recognized each earbud as a separate device instead of a single unit. Because of that, I could only hear audio through one earbud at a time. It was a bit confusing at first and made the device feel like it wasn’t working properly.
After a few resets, disconnects, and reconnecting the Bluetooth pairing process, the iPhone eventually recognized them correctly as one device and everything worked normally after that.
Once the connection issue was resolved, the overall experience was quite smooth. The translation system works reliably, the UX is extremely well thought out, and the idea of two people each wearing one earbud for real-time conversation is honestly one of the most elegant approaches to translation I’ve seen.
The biggest limitation is still the 2–3 second delay. Technologically speaking that’s incredibly impressive, but from a human conversation standpoint it still creates a slightly awkward rhythm.
Because of that, I don’t see devices like this replacing human interpreters anytime soon.
However, for frequent travelers, tech enthusiasts, or anyone who regularly finds themselves navigating foreign languages, the iFlytek AIH 2542 earbuds offer a genuinely futuristic experience that’s far more natural than using translation apps on your phone.
It’s not perfect yet.
But it’s a very exciting glimpse at where real-time AI translation is heading.
\
2026-03-08 07:30:00
SkyReels-V4 generates video and audio together, fixing uncanny timing issues like lip-sync drift and mismatched impacts—without massive compute.
2026-03-08 07:00:00
HyTRec splits long histories: linear attention learns stable taste, softmax captures recent intent—fast, accurate recs even at 10k interactions.
2026-03-08 03:01:05
Like the rest of the Rust community, crates.io has been growing rapidly, with download and package counts increasing 2-3x year-on-year. This growth doesn't come without problems, and we have made some changes to download handling on crates.io to ensure we can keep providing crates for a long time to come.
This growth has brought with it some challenges. The most significant of these is that all download requests currently go through the crates.io API, occasionally causing scaling issues. If the API is down or slow, it affects all download requests too. In fact, the number one cause of waking up our crates.io on-call team is "slow downloads" due to the API having performance issues.
\ Additionally, this setup is also problematic for users outside of North America, where download requests are slow due to the distance to the crates.io API servers.
To address these issues, over the last year we have decided to make some changes:
Starting from 2024-03-12, cargo will begin to download crates directly from our static.crates.io CDN servers.
\
This change will be facilitated by modifying the config.json file on the package index. In other words: no changes to cargo or your own system are needed for the changes to take effect. The config.json file is used by cargo to determine the download URLs for crates, and we will update it to point directly to the CDN servers, instead of the crates.io API.
\ Over the past few months, we have made several changes to the crates.io backend to enable this:
We announced the deprecation of "non-canonical" downloads, which would be harder to support when downloading directly from the CDN.
We changed how downloads are counted. Previously, downloads were counted directly on the crates.io API servers. Now, we analyze the log files from the CDN servers to count the download requests.
The latter change has caused the download numbers of most crates to increase, as some download requests were not counted before. Specifically, crates.io mirrors were often downloading directly from the CDN servers already, and those downloads had previously not been counted. For crates with a lot of downloads these changes will be barely noticeable, but for smaller crates, the download numbers have increased quite a bit over the past few weeks since we enabled this change.
We expect these changes to significantly improve the reliability and speed of downloads, as the performance of the crates.io API servers will no longer affect the download requests. Over the next few weeks, we will monitor the performance of the system to ensure that the changes have the expected effects.
\
We have noticed that some non-cargo build systems are not using the config.json file of the index to build the download URLs. We will reach out to the maintainers of those build systems to ensure that they are aware of the change and to help them update their systems to use the new download URLs. The old download URLs will continue to work, but these systems will be missing out on the potential performance improvement.
\ We are excited about these changes and believe they will greatly improve the reliability of crates.io. We look forward to hearing your feedback!
Tobias Bieniek on behalf of the crates.io team
\ Also published here
\ Photo by Ruben Mavarez on Unsplash
\
2026-03-08 03:00:44
\ \ There’s a question you’ve asked yourself a thousand times.
Why is it that you know exactly what you should be doing… and you still don’t do it?
You think it’s procrastination. \n Or discipline. \n Or laziness.
The classic explanations we reach for when nothing else makes sense.
Here’s the deal, my friend. You don’t have a thinking problem. You have a nervous system problem.
Your mind decides what it wants. \n Your body decides what you’re allowed to become.
And your body? \n It is loyal to one thing only:
The old you. The familiar you. \n The predictable you.
Because predictable means safe. \n And safe means survival.
Everything else (the future you, the ambitious you, the version of you who actually does the thing you promised yourself) that part is unfamiliar. Which means your nervous system rejects it before you even get one step in the door.
I call this identity dissonance. This is when your mind is negotiating with a past you that refuses to move out.
Your brain is not sitting there trying to sabotage you. It’s trying to keep you alive.
Even when “alive” means stuck. \n Even when “alive” means miserable. \n Even when “alive” means repeating the same patterns every year, in every relationship, in every attempt to reinvent yourself.
Your nervous system is obsessed with one thing: predictive safety.
If it can predict how your day goes, it feels secure. \n If it can predict what version of you wakes up in the morning, it relaxes. \n If it can predict your bad habits, your avoidance patterns, your self-sabotage routines…
…it actually feels safer than when you try to change.
Read that again.
The part of you that wants to grow is competing with the part of you that wants to stay alive. And your biology always chooses survival over evolution.
Your Reticular Activating System (RAS) decides what enters your awareness.
It filters the world for one purpose: confirm the identity it already believes you are.
If you believe you’re someone who hesitates? \n Your RAS spotlights hesitation.
If you believe you’re someone who can’t follow through? \n Your RAS highlights every example that reinforces that story.
Identity isn’t just who you think you are. \n It’s what your biology is trained tonotice.
Changing your life requires you to change what your brain pays attention to.
And that doesn’t happen with motivation. \n Or productivity hacks. \n Or waiting for the “right time.”
It happens when you stop negotiating with the old identity… \n and start rewiring the new one.
The biggest lie in self-growth is that you need motivation to change.
Wrong.
You need internal permission.
Permission to become someone your past self doesn’t recognize. \n Permission to break the habits that kept you safe but stuck. \n Permission to outgrow the identity your nervous system has memorized.
This is where the real work begins. \n Not with action. \n Not with discipline. \n But with identity alignment.
Your biology wants to know: \n Who am I now? \n Who am I becoming? \n And is it safe to let go of who I used to be?
When you answer those questions, everything else (habits, discipline, consistency) stops feeling like a fight. Because now your body and your mind want the same thing.
This is why you can know things intellectually, and still not be able to change. This is why I was still struggling with perfectionism even after have written The Manuscript.
This is why the smartest people can get stuck for years, having read all the books, watched the podcasts, bought the courses.
Identity isn’t a “decision.” \n It’s not a mindset. \n It’s not even a conscious belief.
Identity is a prediction system.
Your brain constantly asks one question: “Who do I need to be to stay safe?”
And it answers that question using three systems working together:
Your brain isn’t reacting to the world. it’s predicting it. It uses your past behaviors, your old fears, your familiar patterns, and says: “Okay, this is who we’ve been. This version survived. Stick to that.”
That becomes your baseline identity, because it’s predictable.
Predictability = survival.
This is why change feels threatening even when it’s good for you.
When your mind wanders, when you self-reflect, when you imagine the future, \n your DMN lights up. This network builds the story of “you.” It stitches your past, your fears, your expectations, your self-image… and turns it into a narrative your brain trusts.
If that story says:
“I’m someone who hesitates.” \n or \n “I’m someone who starts strong and falls off.” \n or \n “I’m someone who overthinks everything…”
Then your brain defends that story as if it were a survival strategy.
And in a way, it is.
Because the DMN is not optimized for growth. It’s optimized for coherence, \n even if the coherent story is keeping you small. (I know, this probably hurts reading).
Put all three together, and here’s the real truth:
Your identity is not chosen.\It’s reinforced.\Predicted.\Repeated.\Protected.
And your brain is protecting the only “you” it currently understands.
Being smart… and still stuck.
Knowing exactly what’s wrong with you and still waking up as the same person every day. That’s the real hell.
You think you’re growing because you understand more. But you’re not changing. You’re just becoming an expert in why you’re the same.
And if that hurts, good. \n It should.
Because 2024 didn’t change you. \n 2025 didn’t change you.
And nothing about you right now suggests 2026 will be any different.
Not unless something breaks. \n Not unless something snaps inside you. \n Not unless you reach that moment where you finally admit:
“I can’t think my way out of who I am.”
Because you can’t. \n If you could, you would have done it already.
And deep down, you know why.
You’re still negotiating with the identity that’s been running your life for years. And that version of you? It has no intention of dying quietly.
If you don’t interrupt it, it will repeat itself in 2026. \n And 2027. \n And every year after that until you finally break.
That’s the cost of staying the same.
\