IWenAI

Space Debris Isn’t Just Orbiting Earthโ€”It’s Washing Up on Your Beach, and It’s Toxic

Mysterious ‘space balls’ washing up on Australian beaches may contain toxic rocket fuel, forcing a radical rethink. Space debris isn’t just an orbital problemโ€”it’s a terrestrial toxic hazard. The thrill of finding something from space clashes with the very real danger of chemical exposure. This article explores why your next beach vacation could come with an invisible cost.

The Simple Math That Makes Solar+Storage Unbeatable (And Why Europe Is Betting on It)

Co-locating solar and battery storage isn’t just an upgrade โ€” it’s a new power plant species. By stacking revenue from energy, capacity, and ancillary markets, the combined system beats standalone solar or battery on resilience and returns. Europe’s early movers are already betting on it. The question isn’t if, but how fast.

Stop Trusting AI Tools That Do Everything for You. Codex Threads Is the Fix You Didn’t Know You Needed

Most AI coding tools obscure how they work, leaving developers as passengers in their own projects. Codex Threads flips that: it gives you granular, thread-by-thread control over AI-generated code. No magic, no black boxesโ€”just transparent, auditable generation that puts you back in the driverโ€™s seat. A tiny GitHub project with a huge message.

Your Codebase Docs Are Lying to You. Here’s the AI That Keeps Them Honest.

WakaWiki is an agent-driven CLI that keeps your codebase documentation perpetually fresh. But the real breakthrough isn’t automation โ€” it’s using AI-written docs as a bridge for human-AI collaboration, making your codebase a more teachable environment for future tools. The catch? Trust. Can you rely on an AI that might hallucinate?

Dark Mode Is Broken. Hereโ€™s Why Your Toggle Is Failing.

Dark mode isn’t a color swap โ€” it’s a system-level integration that must respect OS settings, user intent, and accessibility. Most developers fail by adding manual toggles without honoring prefers-color-scheme. This article shows how to fix it with a state machine approach, and why the best dark mode is the one users never notice.

3 Years, 14 Attempts, and a Blender: Is the C-Substrate Bridge Resurrecting Dead Tech?

After 3 years and 14 grueling attempts, a developer successfully translated the entire Rust compiler into C, creating what we call the C-Substrate Bridge. This radical project doesn’t just resurrect forgotten hardware like Plan 9; it provides a critical tool for detecting compiler backdoors and challenges the centralized dominance of modern compiling ecosystems.