• Artificial Intelligence (LLMs, AI agents, and the future of human expertise)
  • Blockchain (Decentralized infrastructure, networks, and ecosystem evolution)
  • Data Engineering (Building data infrastructure that actually scales)
  • DevOps (Infrastructure, automation, and operational philosophy)
  • General (Culture, science, and the miscellaneous)
  • Retro Computing (The machines and culture that shaped computing)
  • Music Production (Gear, sound design, and creative workflow)
  • Personal Development (Expertise, craft, and the engineering mindset)
  • Space (Infrastructure and vision for human expansion beyond Earth)
GPT-5.5 release illustration

GPT-5.5 Is Here: Real Step Forward or Quiet Iteration?

OpenAI released GPT-5.5 on April 23, 2026, weeks after GPT-5.4 and only months after GPT-5. The cadence is starting to feel relentless. Codenamed “Spud” internally, GPT-5.5 is the first fully retrained base model since GPT-4.5 - architecture, pretraining corpus, and agent-oriented objectives all reworked from scratch. The question worth asking is whether any of this is actually significant, or if we’ve reached the part of the curve where every new release looks like a small step. ...

April 24, 2026 · 5 min · James M
Agent-First Architecture Banner

Agent-First Architecture: The Engineer as System Curator

This is a “thinking out loud” post, not a report from the front lines. I have no evidence any of this is happening at scale, and it is not how my current day job looks. These are just ideas I keep turning over, and I wanted to write them down to see if they hold together. The question I keep coming back to is simple. If AI agents continue to improve at the rate they seem to be, what does engineering work look like five or ten years from now? Not tomorrow. Not next quarter. Further out, where the shape of the job might actually be different. ...

April 23, 2026 · 12 min · James M
AI subscription pricing illustration

Is the $20 AI Subscription Era Over?

For the last three years, $20 a month has been the magic number. Claude Pro, ChatGPT Plus, Gemini Advanced, Copilot Pro, Cursor Pro - all twenty dollars, all clearly priced to anchor against Netflix rather than against enterprise software. That anchor is cracking. The labs are burning cash on inference for power users, the frontier models cost more per token than they did a year ago, and agent tools like Claude Code and Codex are consuming ten to a hundred times the compute a chat session does. Something has to give. ...

April 23, 2026 · 9 min · James M
Meta employee tracking banner

Meta Is Tracking Its Own Employees to Train AI Agents

Meta has started installing tracking software on the work laptops of its US-based employees. It captures keystrokes, mouse movements, clicks, and occasional screenshots. The captured activity is fed back into training data for AI agents. There is no opt-out. The program was disclosed to staff in an internal memo in April 2026, and the response from inside the company has been about what you would expect. The program is called the Model Capability Initiative, and it sits under a broader effort branded as the Agent Transformation Accelerator within Meta’s Superintelligence Labs, the AI group now led by former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang. ...

April 23, 2026 · 7 min · James M
AI generated image

ChatGPT Images 2.0: Why Everyone Is Impressed

A year ago, OpenAI’s image generation went viral for Studio Ghibli portraits. That was GPT Image 1 - impressive, playful, and fundamentally still a party trick. ChatGPT Images 2.0, released on April 22nd 2026, is a different thing entirely. It’s the version that starts to look genuinely useful. It Thinks Before It Draws The headline feature is reasoning. Images 2.0 doesn’t just accept a prompt and immediately generate - it can “think” first, working through the requirements before producing anything. For paid subscribers on Plus, Pro, Business, or Enterprise, this thinking mode is fully unlocked. For everyone else, the baseline quality improvements are still there. ...

April 23, 2026 · 6 min · James M
AI Music Tools Comparison 2026

AI Music Tools Shootout 2026: Suno vs Udio vs AIVA vs Riffusion

AI music generation has gone from novelty to legitimate production tool in eighteen months. In 2024 the conversation was “is this cheating?” In 2026 the conversation is “which one do I subscribe to?” Four tools dominate the space right now, and they are not interchangeable. Here is how they actually compare when you sit down and try to make music with them. The Contenders Suno - text-to-song with the best vocal synthesis, now with a full DAW (Suno Studio). Udio - the main challenger to Suno, popular for instrumental and genre-accurate output. AIVA - symbolic composition (MIDI-first), aimed at composers and scoring. Riffusion - spectrogram-based generation, strong for loops and experimental textures. Round 1: Vocal Quality Suno - still the leader. The v5 model handles vowel shapes, breath noise, and consonant articulation with a realism that was science fiction two years ago. Mikey Shulman has talked about this at length and the voice personas feature makes it easy to nail a specific tone. Udio - close, sometimes better on stylised delivery (rap cadence, country twang), but less consistent. AIVA - does not generate audio vocals at all. MIDI only. Riffusion - can produce vocal-like textures but not coherent lyrics. Not a vocal tool. Winner: Suno, with Udio a strong second for specific genres. ...

April 22, 2026 · 4 min · James M
Platform Engineering in 2026 Banner

Platform Engineering in 2026: What It Is and Why DevOps Teams Are Adopting It

Platform engineering used to be the title on a few job adverts at Spotify and Netflix. In 2026 it is the default shape of any infrastructure team larger than a dozen people. The shift is worth understanding, because it is not just a rebrand of DevOps - it is a different operating model, with different tools, different incentives, and a different relationship to the developers it serves. This post is a plain-language walk through what platform engineering actually is, why the industry has converged on it, and how the arrival of AI agents is reshaping the discipline mid-flight. ...

April 22, 2026 · 8 min · James M
Music Production Software 2026

The Best Music Production Software in 2026

The DAW landscape in 2026 looks different to the one I wrote about last year. AI-assisted stem separation is now table stakes, generative co-writers are embedded everywhere, and the “cloud DAW” idea has finally stopped being a novelty. Whether you are sketching your first loop or mixing a full band, here is where I would start in 2026. Ableton Live 12 - Still the Creative Sandbox Live 12 is still the current major version in April 2026, now at 12.3 with 12.4 landing as a free update for Live 12 users. The recent releases have brought Stem Separation in Suite, Splice integration, Bounce Groups, and the new Auto Pan-Tremolo. The Session View remains unbeaten for rapid sketching and live performance, and Max for Live continues to be the quiet superpower that keeps Live feeling fresh a decade on. ...

April 22, 2026 · 5 min · James M
AI Law and Regulation

AI Law Is No Longer Theoretical: What's Here, What's Coming, and What It Means

For the past few years, AI law has been one of those topics that felt perpetually five minutes away. Governments would announce frameworks. Committees would publish white papers. Experts would debate what the rules should eventually look like. That phase is over. In 2026, the legal infrastructure around AI is arriving, piece by piece, and not always in a coherent sequence. The EU has its Act. The US has fifty state governments moving in slightly different directions while Washington stalls on federal legislation. Courts in multiple jurisdictions are working through copyright cases with implications that will reshape the entire industry. And businesses deploying AI tools are discovering, sometimes the hard way, that “the AI did it” is not a defence that holds up in court. ...

April 22, 2026 · 8 min · James M
Math Academy - The Fastest Way to Actually Learn Maths

Math Academy: The Fastest Way to Actually Learn Maths

The Gap Between Knowing Maths and Being Good at It Most adults who went through mainstream education have a complicated relationship with maths. They were taught it, they passed it (or did not), and then they mostly stopped doing it. Somewhere between primary school and the end of formal education, the subject either clicked or it did not - and for a significant majority, it did not. The consequences of that tend to surface slowly. You take a data science course and realise you cannot follow the linear algebra. You try to understand how a model is actually working under the hood and the notation stops you cold. You sit in a finance meeting and the numbers float past you. You always meant to go back and fill the gaps. You never quite did. ...

April 22, 2026 · 7 min · James M