Welcome to Tech Beat, your daily read on the technology stories that matter.
A fascinating tension is emerging in software development. As AI accelerates how fast code gets written, it's also quietly eroding the human intuition that engineers once built through hands-on experience. Honeycomb's Christine Yen and Resolve AI's Spiros Xanthos both argue that more code volume means observability — knowing what your systems are actually doing — becomes more critical, not less.
Turning to the Musk versus Altman trial, the jury is now deliberating after weeks of testimony that pulled back the curtain on Silicon Valley's inner workings. The case has surfaced claim and counter-claim about the founding of OpenAI, the nature of its nonprofit mission, and what exactly was promised to whom. Whatever the verdict, the public record is already uncomfortable reading for both men.
And in the crypto markets, rising Treasury yields are creating real headwinds. Two-year and ten-year yields have hit a twelve-month high, and Bitcoin remains pinned below its two-hundred-day moving average. The one corner of crypto that may actually benefit is tokenized Treasury products, which become more attractive precisely as traditional yields climb.
Keep surfing. Tech Beat out.
