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№ 23

Monday, May 25, 2026

AI/Tech Brief — 2026-05-25

AI/Tech Brief — 2026-05-25

1. TL;DR

  • DeepSeek continues to push open-source capabilities with Reasonix, a low-cost native coding agent.
  • Widespread CPU instability on Intel Raptor Lake chips forces software-level workarounds from Mozilla and others.
  • A slow news day across major AI labs, leaving the spotlight to open-source tools and deep technical engineering discussions.

2. Key stories

  • DeepSeek Reasonix Debuts: A new DeepSeek native coding agent called Reasonix has launched, claiming high caching efficiency and low cost. Why it matters: DeepSeek continues to apply aggressive pricing and performance pressure on incumbent model providers. Source
  • Software Workarounds for Intel CPUs: Mozilla’s bug tracker reveals software-level mitigations (Bug 1950764) to work around crashes specific to Intel Raptor Lake CPUs. Why it matters: Hardware instability on widespread processors is forcing software vendors to build their own defensive patches. Source
  • Aeronautical Engineering Re-evaluated: A fundamental principle of aeronautics has reportedly been overturned, reshaping how aerodynamic lift is understood. Why it matters: Core physics assumptions rarely shift; doing so could impact future simulation software and drone designs. Source
  • Migrating from Go to Rust: A comprehensive new migration guide is making the rounds, detailing the friction and payoffs of moving a backend from Go to Rust. Why it matters: Highlights the ongoing shift towards memory-safe systems languages for performance-critical infrastructure. Source
  • Sub-Nanosecond Synchronization: The White Rabbit project provides sub-nanosecond time synchronization for large distributed computing systems. Why it matters: Critical infrastructure, from particle accelerators to financial markets, increasingly relies on ultra-precise deterministic timing. Source
  • Jira Is Turing-Complete: A developer proved that Atlassian’s Jira automation engine is Turing-complete, capable of arbitrary computation. Why it matters: A humorous but cautionary tale about the accidental complexity and hidden computational weight of modern SaaS workflow tools. Source

3. Quiet but interesting

  • Audiomass Multitrack Editor: A free, open-source multitrack audio editor running entirely in the web browser gained traction. Why it matters: Demonstrates the continued maturation of WebAssembly and browser APIs for complex media creation tools. Source
  • C Constructs Failing in C++: A technical deep dive into valid C code that fails to compile or behaves unexpectedly in C++. Why it matters: A reminder of the subtle ABI and specification divergences that plague cross-language toolchains. Source

4. Skip

  • Major AI Labs Go Quiet: A noticeably quiet 24 hours for product releases and changelogs. OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind, and Gemini CLI all had zero significant updates today, following last week’s heavy release cycle.
  • Superhuman AI Newsletter: Covered a $250M startup and SpaceX’s recent rocket launch. While interesting, these are business and space updates rather than core AI/tech infrastructure.