HELLO EVERYONE!!! It’s February 20th, 2026, and you are reading the 99th edition of Codeminer42’s tech news report. Let’s check out what the tech world showed us this week!
Gemini 3.1 Pro: A smarter model for your most complex tasks
This article announces the release of Gemini 3.1 Pro, Google’s newest advanced AI model designed to handle complex reasoning and deep analytical tasks beyond simple responses. This release brings significant improvements in reasoning performance on complex problem-solving benchmarks, expanded multimodal capabilities, and creative coding outputs.
From Claude Code to Figma: Turning production code into editable Figma designs – by Gui Seiz & Alex Kern
This interesting article showcases how Claude Code can transform real production code into fully editable Figma designs. It highlights the bridge between engineering and design, reducing friction in product iteration. A fascinating look at AI-assisted workflows. Click to see how code becomes design.
Most Developers Don’t Build New Things – by Robby Russell
This article challenges the common narrative that great developers are constantly building brand-new products. Instead, it argues that most impactful work happens through iteration, maintenance, and improvement of existing systems. It’s a refreshing take on craftsmanship and long-term value in software. If you’ve ever felt pressure to always “ship something new,” this one will resonate. Click to read the full perspective.
npm bulk trusted publishing config and script security now generally available
This post announces the general availability of npm’s bulk trusted publishing configuration and enhanced script security. It explains how these features improve supply chain security and streamline package publishing workflows. Essential reading for maintainers and DevOps teams. Click to understand what’s changed.
RubyLLM 1.12: Agents Are Just LLMs with Tools – by Carmine Paolino
This article introduces RubyLLM 1.12 and reframes “agents” as LLMs empowered with structured tools. It breaks down practical patterns for building tool-augmented AI systems in Ruby. If you’re experimenting with AI integrations in Rails or backend services, this is a compelling read. Check it out.
Introducing the WordPress AI Assistant — Now Built Into WordPress.com
This post unveils the new built-in AI Assistant inside WordPress.com, designed to help users draft, edit, and enhance content directly within the platform. It demonstrates how AI is becoming native to content workflows. Curious about the future of blogging with AI? Read the full announcement.
TanStack Hotkeys (ALPHA)
This interesting post introduces TanStack Hotkeys, a new alpha library focused on powerful and flexible keyboard shortcut management. It aims to bring the same developer experience philosophy of TanStack Query and Router to hotkeys. Frontend engineers should definitely explore this early preview. Click to learn more.
Yes, Learning to Code Is Still Valuable – by Matteo Collina
This article argues that despite rapid AI advancements, learning to code remains deeply valuable. It explores how programming builds mental models, problem-solving skills, and technical intuition that AI cannot replace. A thoughtful reflection for anyone questioning their path, give it a read.
Languages, Tools & Framework releases
RSpec 4.0 is now in beta
This post announces that RSpec 4.0 has entered beta, outlining key changes and improvements to the Ruby testing ecosystem. It highlights updates that may impact test suites and gems. Ruby developers should review what’s coming next. Read the changelog to prepare!
Go 1.26 Release Notes
This article presents the official release notes for Go 1.26, covering language updates, performance improvements, and tooling enhancements. It gives a comprehensive overview of what developers can expect from the new version. Go engineers should explore the details, click to see what’s new.
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And that’s all for this week! Wish you all a great weekend and happy coding!
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