2026-03-21 09:00:50
Last month, our team faced a crisis. After a routine upgrade, our entire AI agent system went down. The experience taught us something valuable about building resilient AI systems.
Single AI agents are powerful, but they have limitations:
We built our team using OpenClaw, with different agents having distinct roles:
Each agent has its own memory, skills, and responsibilities. They communicate through structured channels and share knowledge through a common memory system.
Each agent maintains its own memory files:
This means every session starts with full context.
Agents have specialized skills they can invoke:
Skills are modular and shareable across agents.
Our agents reflect on their work:
This creates a continuous improvement loop.
Without persistent memory, AI agents are reset every session. With proper memory management, they build on previous experiences.
Clear roles and responsibilities prevent agents from stepping on each other's toes.
We use dedicated channels for different types of communication:
We're building toward truly autonomous AI teams that can:
The key is not just building AI agents, but building AI agents that can build better processes.
This article is part of our journey in building AI-native organizations. Follow our publication for more updates.
2026-03-21 09:00:48
As we navigate through 2026, the landscape of cryptocurrency has matured
significantly. With institutional adoption reaching new heights and
decentralized finance (DeFi) becoming more integrated into our daily digital
interactions, choosing the right wallet is no longer just about storing
tokens—it is about securing your financial sovereignty and accessing the vast
ecosystem of blockchain applications. Whether you are a long-term Bitcoin
HODLer or an active yield farmer on various Layer-2 networks, your choice of
wallet defines your security posture and your user experience.
In the past, users had to compromise between security and convenience. Cold
storage meant sacrificing the ability to interact with dApps, while hot
wallets often felt insecure due to frequent hacks. By 2026, this divide has
narrowed. The best wallets today feature seamless cross-chain
interoperability, biometric authentication, and hardened security chips that
make them the gold standard for both newcomers and advanced users.
The Ledger Nano X remains a market leader in 2026. With its updated firmware
and support for thousands of assets, it continues to be the preferred choice
for those holding substantial amounts of crypto. The Pro version introduces
enhanced Bluetooth encryption and a redesigned screen for clearer transaction
previews, mitigating the risks of blind signing—a critical advancement in DeFi
security.
Trezor has pushed the envelope with its Safe 5 model. Focused on an open-
source philosophy, the Trezor Safe 5 offers a color touchscreen interface that
simplifies the verification process. Its integration with specialized DeFi
dashboards makes it a top-tier contender for users who want hardware-level
security without sacrificing the ease of connecting to protocols like Uniswap
or Aave.
MetaMask remains the de facto gateway to the Ethereum and EVM-compatible
world. In 2026, the user interface has undergone a complete overhaul to
support account abstraction. This means users can now pay gas fees in
stablecoins or even have fees sponsored by protocols, making the user
experience much smoother for retail investors entering the DeFi space.
While originally focused on the Solana ecosystem, Phantom has expanded into a
multi-chain powerhouse. In 2026, its ability to automatically detect and
display NFTs, combined with its extremely fast transaction signing, makes it
the go-to for DeFi users who juggle assets across Solana, Ethereum, and
Bitcoin's lightning network.
When selecting a wallet this year, consider these four pillars:
A major trend in 2026 is the adoption of MPC (Multi-Party Computation)
wallets. These wallets allow for "smart account" functionality, where keys are
split between different parties or devices. This enables features like social
recovery, where you can regain access to your wallet if you lose your device,
without the anxiety of losing a paper seed phrase. Wallets like ZenGo and
several institutional-grade custodial solutions have pioneered this, making
crypto far more accessible to the average person.
Your choice depends on your usage profile. If you are a long-term investor
holding large balances, a hardware wallet like the Ledger Nano X or Trezor
Safe 5 is non-negotiable. The peace of mind provided by offline key storage is
worth the slight inconvenience of connecting a device for transactions.
For the active trader and DeFi user, a combination approach is best. Use a
hardware wallet for your core "savings" and a secure, non-custodial software
wallet like Phantom or the latest MetaMask for your daily interactions with
liquidity pools, NFT marketplaces, and governance protocols. Always ensure
your software is updated, your seed phrases are stored in fireproof physical
locations, and you only interact with audited smart contracts.
As we move further into the decade, security remains the most vital aspect of
digital finance. By utilizing the tools mentioned in this guide, you can
protect your assets while remaining active in the ever-evolving world of
decentralized finance.
2026-03-21 08:59:52
Twitter/X killed free API access in 2023. Here's what options remain.
| Tier | Price | Tweets/month |
|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | 1,500 reads |
| Basic | $100/mo | 10,000 reads |
| Pro | $5,000/mo | 1M reads |
| Enterprise | Custom | Unlimited |
For most scraping needs, these prices are prohibitive.
Nitter instances serve Twitter data without API:
https://nitter.net/elonmusk
https://nitter.net/search?q=web+scraping
Warning: Nitter instances frequently go down. Not reliable for production.
site:twitter.com "web scraping" inurl:status
Google indexes tweets — you can search them through Google.
Bluesky's AT Protocol is fully open with no rate limits:
// Free, no auth, structured JSON
const res = await fetch('https://public.api.bsky.app/xrpc/app.bsky.feed.searchPosts?q=web+scraping');
const data = await res.json();
Many users have migrated from Twitter to Bluesky (41M users, 302% growth).
For social media sentiment and community data:
.json endpoint, free, no authThese often give better sentiment data than Twitter anyway.
Need social media data? I extract from Bluesky, Reddit, HN, YouTube — $20. No Twitter API costs needed. Email: [email protected] | Hire me
2026-03-21 08:56:32
Series Navigation
– Part 1: From Zero to Your First VS Code Theme
– Part 2: Stop Hand-Editing JSON: Engineering Your Theme with YAML (this article)
– Part 3: Light, Dark, and Beyond: Building Multi‑theme Variants with Gravity Compensation (coming soon)
– Part 4: From Theme to Design System: Visual Contracts and Brand Ecosystems (coming soon)
In Part 1, you learned how to create and publish your first VS Code theme from scratch. But as your theme grows, you probably run into these problems:
tokenColors array—hard to read, even harder to maintain.It’s time to bring engineering to your theme. This guide will show you how to refactor your monolithic JSON theme into a modular, maintainable project using YAML and a build script. You’ll end up with a clean, extensible source structure that makes future updates a breeze.
Make sure you have Node.js and npm (or pnpm) installed. Then install the build dependency:
npm install --save-dev js-yaml
⚠️ Note:
js-yamlmust be installed as a dev dependency—it’s only used during development, not shipped with the final theme.
We’ll put source files under src/, the build script in scripts/, and the generated JSON in themes/. A recommended layout:
your-theme/
├── src/
│ ├── core/
│ │ └── colors.yaml # color variables (primary, background, etc.)
│ ├── languages/ # syntax rules per language
│ │ ├── base.yaml # common rules for all languages
│ │ ├── javascript.yaml
│ │ ├── typescript.yaml
│ │ ├── python.yaml
│ │ ├── html.yaml
│ │ ├── css.yaml
│ │ └── ... (more languages)
│ ├── special/ # special rules (e.g., Better Comments)
│ │ └── better-comments.yaml
│ ├── workbench.yaml # UI colors (the `colors` object)
│ └── semantic.yaml # semantic highlighting rules
├── scripts/
│ └── build.js # build script
├── themes/
│ └── your-theme.json # final generated JSON (rename to match your theme)
├── package.json
└── .vscodeignore
Open your original theme JSON. Identify all color values that appear in the colors object and repeated colors in tokenColors. Turn them into variables. Create src/core/colors.yaml:
# Core color variables
primary: "#3b82f6" # main blue
success: "#34d399" # success green
warning: "#fbbf24" # warning yellow
error: "#f87171" # error red
highlight: "#7dd3fc" # glowing blue
bg: "#0f172a" # background
bgMuted: "#1e293b" # secondary background
text: "#e2e8f0" # foreground
textMuted: "#94a3b8" # muted text
border: "#2d3748" # borders
# ... more variables
Important rules:
primary, bg_muted). The regex in the build script expects variable names consisting of letters, numbers, and underscores.${primary}20. The build script will handle that.${var} unchanged, causing invalid colors.Break the tokenColors array into separate YAML files per language. Start with src/languages/base.yaml for rules common to all languages:
# Common rules
tokenColors:
- name: Comment
scope: ["comment", "punctuation.definition.comment"]
settings:
fontStyle: "italic"
foreground: "${comment}"
- name: Keyword
scope: ["keyword", "storage.type", "storage.modifier"]
settings:
foreground: "${primary}"
fontStyle: "bold"
- name: String
scope: ["string", "string.quoted.single", "string.quoted.double"]
settings:
foreground: "${success}"
# ... more common rules
For language-specific rules, e.g., src/languages/javascript.yaml:
# JavaScript specific rules
tokenColors:
- name: JSX Tag
scope: ["entity.name.tag.jsx", "meta.tag.jsx"]
settings:
foreground: "${function}"
Do the same for other languages. If a language has no special rules yet, you can still create an empty array to keep the file present (or skip it – the script only includes files listed in the merge order).
Move the entire colors object to src/workbench.yaml and replace color values with variable references:
# Editor UI colors
editor.background: "${bg}"
editor.foreground: "${text}"
titleBar.activeBackground: "${bg}"
titleBar.activeForeground: "${text}"
statusBar.background: "${bg}"
statusBar.foreground: "${textMuted}"
# ... all UI keys
Move semanticTokenColors to src/semantic.yaml:
# Semantic highlighting rules
variable: "${variable}"
function: "${function}"
class: "${warning}"
"*.decorator":
foreground: "${purple}"
fontStyle: "italic"
# ... other semantic rules
🔍 Note: In YAML, keys with special characters (like *.decorator) must be quoted.
Create scripts/build.js. This script will:
colors.yaml to get the variable dictionary.workbench.yaml, semantic.yaml, and all language rules.${variable} with actual color values (and handle opacity suffixes).tokenColors in a specified order.themes/.Here’s a complete example (replace your-theme with your actual theme name):
const fs = require("fs");
const yaml = require("js-yaml");
const path = require("path");
const ROOT_DIR = path.resolve(__dirname, "..");
// Paths
const COLOR_FILE = path.join(ROOT_DIR, "src", "core", "colors.yaml");
const WORKBENCH_FILE = path.join(ROOT_DIR, "src", "workbench.yaml");
const SEMANTIC_FILE = path.join(ROOT_DIR, "src", "semantic.yaml");
const LANG_DIR = path.join(ROOT_DIR, "src", "languages");
const SPECIAL_DIR = path.join(ROOT_DIR, "src", "special");
const OUTPUT_FILE = path.join(ROOT_DIR, "themes", "your-theme.json"); // rename
// Load color variables
const colors = yaml.load(fs.readFileSync(COLOR_FILE, "utf8"));
// Recursive variable replacement (supports opacity suffix)
function replaceVariables(obj) {
if (typeof obj === "string") {
return obj.replace(/\$\{([a-zA-Z0-9_-]+)\}([0-9a-fA-F]{2})?/g, (match, key, alpha) => {
if (colors[key] !== undefined) {
return colors[key] + (alpha || "");
}
console.warn(`Warning: variable "${key}" not defined, keeping placeholder`);
return match;
});
}
if (Array.isArray(obj)) {
return obj.map(replaceVariables);
}
if (obj && typeof obj === "object") {
const result = {};
for (const [k, v] of Object.entries(obj)) {
result[k] = replaceVariables(v);
}
return result;
}
return obj;
}
// Load and replace UI colors
const workbench = yaml.load(fs.readFileSync(WORKBENCH_FILE, "utf8"));
const uiColors = replaceVariables(workbench);
// Load and replace semantic rules
const semantic = yaml.load(fs.readFileSync(SEMANTIC_FILE, "utf8"));
const semanticColors = replaceVariables(semantic);
// Language rule merge order (later files override earlier ones)
const order = [
"base.yaml",
"html.yaml",
"css.yaml",
"javascript.yaml",
"typescript.yaml",
"vue.yaml",
"json.yaml",
"markdown.yaml",
"python.yaml",
"jsdoc.yaml",
// add more as needed
];
let tokenColors = [];
order.forEach((file) => {
const filePath = path.join(LANG_DIR, file);
if (fs.existsSync(filePath)) {
try {
const langRules = yaml.load(fs.readFileSync(filePath, "utf8"));
if (langRules?.tokenColors) {
tokenColors = tokenColors.concat(langRules.tokenColors);
}
} catch (err) {
console.error(`Failed to parse ${file}:`, err.message);
}
} else {
console.warn(`File ${file} not found, skipping`);
}
});
// Load special rules (e.g., Better Comments)
const specialFile = path.join(SPECIAL_DIR, "better-comments.yaml");
if (fs.existsSync(specialFile)) {
const specialRules = yaml.load(fs.readFileSync(specialFile, "utf8"));
if (specialRules?.tokenColors) {
tokenColors = tokenColors.concat(specialRules.tokenColors);
console.log("✅ Loaded Better Comments rules");
}
}
const processedTokenColors = replaceVariables(tokenColors);
// Ensure output directory exists
const outputDir = path.dirname(OUTPUT_FILE);
if (!fs.existsSync(outputDir)) {
fs.mkdirSync(outputDir, { recursive: true });
}
// Build final theme object
const newTheme = {
name: "Your Theme Name", // change to your theme's display name
type: "dark", // or "light"
colors: uiColors,
tokenColors: processedTokenColors,
semanticTokenColors: semanticColors,
};
// Write JSON
fs.writeFileSync(OUTPUT_FILE, JSON.stringify(newTheme, null, 2));
console.log("✅ Theme built successfully!");
Important notes:
order array controls the merge priority: rules from later files override earlier ones for the same scope. Put general rules first, then language-specific ones.${var} unchanged. Make sure all variables are defined.20). Do not pre‑include opacity in your variable definitions.Add build commands to your package.json:
{
"scripts": {
"build": "node scripts/build.js",
"prepublishOnly": "npm run build"
}
}
Double-check that js-yaml is in devDependencies, not dependencies.
Running npm run build every time you change a YAML file gets tedious. Add a watch mode to auto‑rebuild.
npm install --save-dev nodemon
{
"scripts": {
"build": "node scripts/build.js",
"watch": "nodemon --watch src -e yaml --exec \"npm run build\"",
"dev": "npm run watch",
"prepublishOnly": "npm run build"
}
}
Now run npm run watch in your terminal. Whenever you save a YAML file inside src/, the build script will run automatically. In the Extension Development Host window (F5), you can then reload (Ctrl+R) to see changes instantly.
Make sure your .vscodeignore excludes source files and dependencies, but keeps the generated JSON. A minimal example:
.vscode/**
.gitignore
vsc-extension-quickstart.md
node_modules
pnpm-lock.yaml
src/**
scripts/**
!themes/*.json
💡 !themes/*.json tells the packager to include all JSON files in the themes folder.
Run the build:
npm run build
Check the generated themes/your-theme.json against your original JSON (if you still have it). Use a diff tool to spot any unintended differences. Common issues:
colors.yaml.${primary}20) and that the base color is a 6‑digit hex.order array in build.js.Now your theme source is modular and easy to maintain:
colors.yaml.python.yaml.| Problem | Possible Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
Colors appear as ${var} in the JSON |
Variable not defined in colors.yaml
|
Check spelling; add the missing variable |
| Opacity not applied correctly | Variable already includes alpha or opacity suffix wrong | Remove alpha from variable; use ${var}20
|
| Some language rules missing | Language file not listed in order
|
Add file name to the order array |
| Rules overridden unintentionally | Merge order wrong | Place more specific rules later in order
|
vsce package fails because of missing dependencies |
js-yaml in dependencies
|
Move it to devDependencies
|
| Variable names with hyphens or special characters not replaced | Variable name contains characters not supported by the variable replacement regex (e.g., hyphens -) |
Use only letters, numbers, and underscores in variable names. If you need hyphens, ensure your build script uses a regex that supports them (e.g., [a-zA-Z0-9_-]+). |
By engineering your theme, you’ve moved from a fragile, monolithic JSON to a clean, scalable design system. This not only improves maintainability but also makes it easy to add more features and even create an entire family of themes.
But what if you want both a dark and a light version, and you want them to feel visually balanced? That’s exactly what Part 3 covers—building multi‑theme variants and introducing the concept of Gravity Compensation to ensure consistent visual weight across themes.
Part 3: Light, Dark, and Beyond: Building Multi‑theme Variants with Gravity Compensation (coming soon)
This article is part of the **VS Code Theme Development Guide* series. The original Chinese version is available on my blog: moongate.top.
Try the theme: Moongate Theme on VS Code Marketplace
Star on GitHub: GitHub Repo*
© 2026 yuelinghuashu. This work is licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0.
2026-03-21 08:55:46
Financial software isn't like building a blog or todo app. When users click «Pay $99.99» they expect exactly $99.99 to leave their account - not $99.989999999 or $100.000000001.
A rounding error of 0.01 cents might seem trivial. But multiply that across:
Suddenly your «tiny float imprecision» becomes thousands of dollars in lost revenue, failed audits, or angry customers.
90% of PHP projects handle money wrong. Here's the classic trap:
$subtotal = 0.1 + 0.2; // Should be 0.3
$tax = $subtotal * 1.08; // Should be 0.324
$total = $tax + 0.50; // Should be 0.824
echo json_encode([
'subtotal' => $subtotal, // 0.30000000000000004 😱
'tax' => $tax, // 0.32400000000000006
'total' => $total // 0.8240000000000001
]);
Your API returns garbage numbers. Your accountant calls in a panic. Customers complain about wrong charges.
This isn't a PHP bug. It's binary floating-point math:
0.1 decimal ≠ exact binary representation
↓
0.1000000000000000055511151231257827021181583404541015625 (_24+ bytes!_)
0.1 + 0.2 ≠ 0.3 exactly
↓
0.3000000000000000444089209850062616169452667236328125`
Every language has this problem. Java, Python, JavaScript, C#, Go - all suffer identical float precision hell.
Shopping cart: $99.99 → $100.00 at checkout
Payroll: $1,234.56 → $1,234.55 (employees notice)
Taxes: 18% VAT fails audit by $2,347.89
Crypto: 0.0001 BTC becomes 0.000099999999 BTC
// DECIMAL(10,2) in MySQL → float in PHP → precision lost AGAIN
$price = (float) $pdo->query('SELECT price FROM orders')->fetchColumn();
$price += 0.1; // Lost precision restored... then lost again 😵`
No half-measures work. You need a fundamental change in how you think about money.
Banks, Stripe, PayPal - they never use float. They store money as integers representing the smallest currency unit:
$100.50 USD = 10,050 cents → BIGINT
€75.25 EUR = 7,525 cents → BIGINT
¥5,000 JPY = 5,000 yen → BIGINT (no cents needed)
₽1,234.56 RUB = 123,456 kopecks → BIGINT
decimal or bcmath.BIGINT UNSIGNED handles quadrillions of cents (~99 trillion dollars).Simple math:
$totalCents = $priceCents + $taxCents; // Exact!
$discounted = $priceCents * 90 / 100; // Exact!
// Wrong ❌
$cents = (int) ($dollars * 100); // Truncates! 123.999 → 12300
// Correct ✅
$cents = (int) round($dollars * 100); // Proper rounding 123.999 → 12400
round() is mandatory - otherwise you lose the last cent on every transaction.
// MySQL DECIMAL(10,2) → PHP float → precision lost AGAIN
$price = 123.45; // From DECIMAL
$result = $price + 0.01; // Becomes 123.46000000000001 😱
DECIMAL helps with storage but fails at runtime. PHP converts it back to float.
Raw integers work, but developers need semantics and safety:
// Ambiguous: cents? dollars? what currency?
$amount = 750025;
// Clear: "this is monthly income in USD/RUB/etc"
$income = MonthlyIncome::fromPrincipal(7500.25);
Value Objects solve:
->formatted(), ->asFloat())Here's your exact battle-tested implementation - perfection in money handling:
<?php declare(strict_types=1);
namespace App\Identity\Domain\Money;
use Doctrine\ORM\Mapping as ORM;
use Doctrine\DBAL\Types\Types;
use App\Shared\Domain\Primitive;
#[ORM\Embeddable]
final class MonthlyIncome extends Primitive
{
/**
* Amount in cents for precise money calculations.
*
* @var int
*/
#[ORM\Column(
name: 'monthly_income', type: Types::BIGINT, options: [
'unsigned' => true,
'default' => 0
]
)]
private int $amountInCents;
/**
* Validates and sets the amount in cents.
*
* @param int $cents
* @throws \InvalidArgumentException
*/
private function __construct(int $cents)
{
if ($cents < 0) {
throw new \InvalidArgumentException(
message: 'Amount cannot be negative.'
);
}
if ($cents > 999_999_999_99) {
throw new \InvalidArgumentException(
message: 'Amount too large.'
);
}
$this->amountInCents = $cents;
}
/**
* Creates from float amount (principal units).
*
* @param float $value
* @return self
*/
public static function fromPrincipal(float $value): self
{
$cents = (int) round(num: $value * 100);
return new self(cents: $cents);
}
/**
* Creates MonthlyIncome directly from cents.
*
* @param int $value
* @return self
*/
public static function fromCents(int $value): self
{
return new self(cents: $value);
}
/**
* Returns the principal amount as float.
*
* @return float
*/
public function asFloat(): float
{
return $this->amountInCents / 100.0;
}
/**
* Returns formatted amount (space/comma).
*
* @return string
*/
public function formatted(): string
{
return number_format(
num: $this->amountInCents(),
decimals: 2,
decimal_separator: ',',
thousands_separator: ' '
);
}
/**
* Compares MonthlyIncome instances for equality.
*
* @param self $other
* @return bool
*/
public function equals(self $other): bool
{
return $this->amountInCents === $other->amountInCents;
}
/**
* Returns raw amount in cents.
*
* @return int
*/
public function amountInCents(): int
{
return $this->amountInCents;
}
}
✅ round(num: $value * 100) - proper banker's rounding (not truncation)
✅ BIGINT UNSIGNED - handles 999 trillion dollars
✅ === comparison - bit-perfect equality
✅ Private constructor - impossible invalid states
✅ Negative amount validation
✅ Overflow protection (999T max)
✅ strict_types=1 + named arguments
fromPrincipal(75000.25) → "salary from form"
fromCents(7500025) → "salary from DB"
asFloat() → "API JSON"
formatted() → "user display"
MonthlyIncome Value Object eliminates every PHP float precision problem permanently.
1. Perfect Precision
0.1 + 0.2 → 0.3 exactly
123.999 → 124.00 (proper rounding)
Float → cents → float: 100% round-trip accurate
2. Production Excellence
3. Crystal Clear API
fromPrincipal(75000.25) → Domain from forms
formatted() → "75 000,25" user display
asFloat() → JSON APIs
equals() → Business comparisons
4. Real Impact
1M transactions:
Float approach: 2,347 cents lost + failed audits
MonthlyIncome: 0 cents lost + perfect accounting
One lost kopeck per transaction = bankruptcy. This solution scales to billions.
2026-03-21 08:49:00
Technical Analysis: Pentagon Adoption of Palantir AI
The recent announcement of the Pentagon's decision to adopt Palantir AI as its core US Military system warrants a thorough technical analysis. This review will examine the implications of integrating Palantir's software into the US Military's infrastructure, highlighting potential benefits, challenges, and security considerations.
System Overview
Palantir's software is a data integration and analytics platform that utilizes artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) to provide data-driven insights. The system is designed to handle large volumes of disparate data sources, providing a unified view of complex systems. In the context of the US Military, Palantir's platform will likely be used to integrate and analyze data from various sources, including intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) systems, logistics, and operational data.
Technical Benefits
Technical Challenges
Security Considerations
Infrastructure and Deployment
Conclusion is intentionally omitted as per request
The adoption of Palantir AI as the core US Military system presents both opportunities and challenges. By understanding the technical benefits and challenges, the US Military can ensure a successful integration and maximize the potential of Palantir's platform. However, it is essential to address the security considerations and infrastructure requirements to ensure the secure and effective deployment of the system.
Omega Hydra Intelligence
🔗 Access Full Analysis & Support