Sr. Content Developer at Microsoft, working remotely in PA, TechBash conference organizer, former Microsoft MVP, Husband, Dad and Geek.
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QR Codes Are Treated Like Images. That’s the Real Problem.

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QR Code Infra | QR Code generator Online | Best QR Monkey Alternative

Most QR code tools think their job ends once an image is generated.
Generate. Download. Done.
That works fine — until QR codes become part of a real system.

The moment a QR code needs to live longer than a marketing campaign, things quietly start breaking. And that’s the part almost no QR tools talk about.

This is the story of why I stopped treating QR codes like images — and started treating them like infrastructure.

The lie we all accepted about QR codes

We’ve collectively agreed on a bad assumption:

“A QR code is just a static image that points somewhere.”

That assumption holds only if:

  • The destination never changes
  • You don’t care who scans it
  • You don’t need analytics
  • You don’t need reliability
  • You don’t need long-term ownership

The second any of those constraints change, most QR generators fall apart.

And not loudly.
They fail silently.

Where existing QR tools break (especially for developers)

Most QR tools are built for:

  • Marketing pages
  • Posters
  • Flyers
  • One-off campaigns

They’re not built for:

  • Internal tools
  • Dashboards
  • Invoices
  • Operational workflows
  • Long-lived systems

Here’s what usually goes wrong:

  • Static destinations

    • Once printed, the URL is locked forever.
  • No redirect layer

    • You can’t rotate, migrate, or reroute without reprinting everything.
  • Zero audit trail

    • No way to know when, where, or how something was scanned.
  • No API-first thinking

    • Everything assumes a human clicking buttons in a UI.
  • Ownership problems

    • If the service disappears, your QR codes die with it.

Most tools optimize for how the QR looks.
Very few care about what happens after it’s scanned.

The problem that forced me to rethink everything

I ran into this while working on a side project where QR codes weren’t marketing assets — they were part of the workflow.

They had to:

  • Be reliable over time
  • Survive URL changes
  • Support tracking
  • Integrate into internal systems

And suddenly I realized something uncomfortable:

The QR code itself is the least important part.

The redirect layer, control, and ownership matter far more than the pixels.

That’s when I stopped thinking in terms of “QR generator” and started thinking in terms of QR infrastructure.

What I built differently (and why)

Instead of focusing on templates and colors, I focused on:

  • A stable redirect layer

    • QR codes point to something you control.
  • Infrastructure mindset

    • Designed for long-lived systems, not campaigns.
  • API-first approach

    • QR codes should be creatable and manageable programmatically.
  • Separation of concerns

    • Image generation ≠ tracking ≠ destination logic.

This eventually became QRCodeInfra — not as a “better QR generator,” but as an experiment in treating QR codes like part of a system instead of assets you forget about.

You can see what I mean here:
👉 QR Code Infra

(No signup required — this is still very much evolving.)

Why I’m writing this (and not “launching”)

I didn’t write this to promote a product.

I wrote this because I keep seeing the same pattern:

  • Teams hacking QR logic internally
  • Developers bending marketing tools to fit systems
  • QR codes treated as an afterthought until they break something important

I’m curious:

  • How are you handling QR codes in real systems?
  • Do you build in-house?
  • Do you accept the limitations?
  • Have you hit the same problems?

If you’ve run into these issues — or solved them differently — I’d genuinely love to hear how you approached it.

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alvinashcraft
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Commodore 64 Ultimate Review: An Astonishing Remake

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The reborn Commodore 64 is an astonishing remake—but daunting if you weren’t there the first time around.
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How AI is helping us build better communities

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MIT and Stanford professor Alex “Sandy” Pentland joins the show to explore the power of communities for shared knowledge and how AI could hurt or help the growth of these communities.
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Exclusive: Lenovo has Snapdragon X2 Elite (X2-E88-100) and X2 Plus PCs up its sleeve for CES 2026

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Windows Latest is back with yet another Lenovo leak, and this time it’s all about the company’s Windows on ARM laptops for CES 2026. We obtained the full specifications of Lenovo laptops running Qualcomm’s newly announced Snapdragon X2 series SoCs.

The company has four new Copilot+ PCs with ARM, including the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x, IdeaPad 5x 2-in-1, IdeaPad Slim 5x 13”, and 15”. All fit the thin and light moniker that ARM laptops are known for, and support touch screens as well.

According to our sources, these upcoming Lenovo devices will run on Snapdragon X2 Elite and Snapdragon X2 Plus processors. Interestingly, we didn’t see the flagship X2 Elite Xtreme chip in the mix, and it’s the yet-to-be announced X2 Plus that’s getting all the love from Lenovo, with three models from the popular IdeaPad series.

Note that Lenovo’s ThinkPad series for 2026, leaked by Windows Latest, shows no sign of Snapdragon chipsets, and as expected, the Legion gaming series for 2026 also doesn’t have any variants powered by the ARM chipset.

Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x with Snapdragon X2 Elite

Based on the information shared with Windows Latest, the Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x (14”, 11) is positioned as the most premium Snapdragon-powered laptop in Lenovo’s CES 2026 Windows on ARM lineup.

It runs on up to the Snapdragon X2 Elite series processor, specifically the 18-core X2E88100 variant, and is clearly aimed at users who want maximum performance without sacrificing portability.

Our sources describe the Yoga Slim 7x as a true thin-and-light machine, weighing just 1.17kg and measuring 13.9mm thick. Despite the slim profile, it’s said to handle demanding workloads like multitasking, AI modeling, and sustained productivity both on battery and while plugged in, which is a highlight of Windows on ARM laptops.

In fact, battery life is one of the headline claims here, with up to 29 hours on a single charge listed in the specifications we received.

Display and camera hardware also stand out in this model. The Yoga Slim 7x features up to a 2.8K PureSight Pro OLED panel with HDR peak brightness reaching 1100 nits, which, although not as impressive as the Yoga Pro 9i Aura Edition, is still suitable for both indoor work and outdoor visibility.

There’s a 9MP MIPI IR webcam, which is unusually high-resolution for a thin laptop, especially since the top-of-the-line Yoga series for CES 2026 comes with a 5MP web camera. However, it’s still lower resolution than the ThinkPad series for 2026, which will rock 10MP cameras on most models, as we leaked earlier.

Pricing for the Yoga Slim 7x for 2026 is estimated to start at $949.99 USD, with availability expected from Q2 2026.

Note: The specifications mentioned here are just one of the configurations we obtained, likely to be the top spec variant, and there might be other configurations that we are unaware of.

Full specifications of Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x (14″, 11)

Dimensions & Weight 12.28″ x 8.70″ x 0.55″
312 x 221 x as thin as 13.9mm
Starting at 2.58 lbs.
Display Up to 14″ 2.8K (2880 x 1800) 120Hz VRR, 16:10, PureSight Pro OLED
1100 nits peak brightness
100% sRGB, 100% P3, 99% Adobe RGB
Delta E < 1, Dolby Vision®, VESA DisplayHDR True Black 1000
TÜV Low Blue Light, Eyesafe®, TÜV Flicker-free
Touch optional
Processor Snapdragon® X2 Elite X2E88100 Processor 18C
Graphics UMA
AI Definition Copilot+ PC
Memory Up to 32GB LPDDR5X Dual Channel, 9600MT/s
Storage Up to 2TB PCIe Gen 4 M.2 SSD
Operating System Windows 11
Battery 70WHr
Rapid Charge Boost: 15 minutes = 2 hours
LVP ~30 hours (target)
Power Adapter 65W Type-C
Keyboard & Touchpad 1.5mm key travel + 0.3mm dish
Backlit keyboard
135 x 80mm glass touchpad
Camera 9MP MIPI webcam
IR camera, E-camera shutter
4 Voice ID microphones
Ports Left: 2 x USB4
Right: 1 x USB4
Audio 4 stereo speakers (2x2W woofers + 2x2W tweeters)
Dolby Atmos®, Smart AMP
Connectivity Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
Colors Cosmic Blue

 

Lenovo IdeaPad 5x 2-in-1 (14”, 11) with Snapdragon X2

From what our sources say, the Lenovo IdeaPad 5x 2-in-1 (14”, 11) Snapdragon-powered Copilot+ PC for CES 2026 also has an AMD-powered sibling (up to the Ryzen AI 7 445 processor), as we leaked earlier.

However, the ARM device, although being a convertible, is positioned as a more mainstream and flexible device, especially since the device has dual-slot RAM and an upgradable SSD, which is interesting for a Snapdragon laptop.

Our sources say the IdeaPad 5x 2-in-1 will run on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Plus platform rather than the Elite tier, which explains its placement in Lenovo’s IdeaPad lineup instead of Yoga or ThinkPad.

The 360-degree hinge allows it to switch between laptop and tablet modes, for typing, productivity, watching content, drawing, or writing notes, using the included Lenovo Linear Pen 2 (AES 3.0), which has both tilt and pressure sensitivity.

From the specifications we obtained, the 14-inch touchscreen display sits in the everyday premium category with up to WUXGA (1920 x 1200) OLED, 400 nits, and VESA Certified HDR. Camera hardware is the basic FHD unit with an IR setup for Windows Hello.

Interestingly, the next-gen Ryzen-powered IdeaPad 5a 2-in-1 with a battery capacity of up to 84Wh, unlike the 60Wh of the X2 Plus-powered IdeaPad 5X 2-in-1.

We do not have information about the pricing of the IdeaPad 5x 2-in-1, but it will likely undercut the Yoga Slim 7x, as we already know that the AMD version will start at $799 USD. However, we are not sure when this convertible ARM laptop will be available for sale.

Note: The specifications mentioned here are just one of the configurations we obtained, likely to be the top spec variant, and there might be other configurations that we are unaware of.

Full specifications of Lenovo IdeaPad 5x 2-in-1 (14″, 11)

Dimensions & Weight 12.27″ x 8.86″ x as thin as 0.69″
311.6 x 224.9 x as thin as 17.4mm
Starting at 3.13 lbs. (1.42kg)
Display Up to 14″ WUXGA (1920 x 1200) OLED
16:10, 400 nits, 60Hz
100% DCI-P3
VESA DisplayHDR TrueBlack 500
TÜV low blue light
10-finger touch
Processor Snapdragon X2 Plus Series Platform
Graphics UMA
AI Definition Copilot+ PC
Memory Up to 32GB LPDDR5X 9523MT/s (Dual Channel)
Storage Up to 1TB PCIe Gen 4 M.2
Expandable second slot (2242/2280)
Operating System Windows 11 Pro / Home
Battery 60Whr
Power Adapter 65W Type-C
Keyboard & Touchpad 1.3mm key travel
White backlight (2-level)
120 x 75mm Mylar touchpad
Lenovo Pen Gen 2 (AES 3.0)
Camera FHD IR camera with privacy shutter
Ports Right: Power button, 2x USB-A 5Gb/s, Micro SD Card reader
Left: 2x USB-C Gen 2 (DP1.4 + PD3.0 + USB) 10Gb/s, 1x HDMI 2.1 TMDS, 1x Audio combo jack
Audio 2 x 2W SLS speakers, Dolby Audio™
Connectivity Up to Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
Colors Luna Grey

Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 5x (13”, 11) and IdeaPad Slim 5x (15”, 11) with Snapdragon X2 Plus

It seems like the Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 5x lineup is the company’s most straightforward path to make Snapdragon-powered Windows laptops feel normal and accessible in 2026.

Our sources revealed that both the 13-inch and 15-inch models run on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Plus platform, and as expected, the focus is on thin-and-light portability, all-day battery life, and an all-metal design.

Battery life is one of the main talking points here, with up to 21 hours listed for the Slim 5x models. Rapid Charge Boost is also supported, allowing up to two hours of usage from just 15 minutes of charging, which is a practical touch for people constantly on the move.

The IdeaPad Slim 5x (13”, 11) is the more travel-friendly option, starting at around 1.2kg and measuring just 14mm thick, making it one of the lightest Snapdragon X2 laptops Lenovo plans to ship for CES 2026. However, our sources say this model will only be available in select markets, and pricing details are unclear for now.

The larger IdeaPad Slim 5x (15”, 11) trades some portability for a bigger screen and richer visuals. It can be configured with up to a 2.5K OLED display, which is notable for a non-Yoga, non-ThinkPad ARM laptop. That alone makes it stand out as a more media-friendly Snapdragon option. Pricing for the 15-inch model is estimated to start at $899 USD, with availability expected from Q2 2026.

Note: The specifications mentioned here are just one of the configurations we obtained, likely to be the top spec variant, and there might be other configurations that we are unaware of.

Full specifications of Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 5x (13″, 11)

Dimensions & Weight 11.64″ x 8.15″ x as thin as 0.56″
295.58 x 206.95 x as thin as 14.3mm
Starting at 2.62 lbs. (1.19kg)
Display 13.3″ WUXGA (1920 x 1200) LCD
16:10, 400 nits, 60Hz
100% sRGB
TÜV low blue light, Eyesafe
10-finger touch
Processor Snapdragon X2 Plus Series Platform
Graphics UMA
AI Definition Copilot+ PC
Memory Up to 32GB LPDDR5X 9600MT/s Dual Channel
Storage Up to 1TB Gen 4 2242
Operating System Windows 11 Home / Pro
Battery Up to 54WHr
Power Adapter 65W Type-C
Keyboard & Touchpad 1.3mm key travel
Backlit keyboard
120 x 75mm Mylar touchpad
Camera FHD IR camera with privacy shutter
Ports Right: Power button, Micro SD, 1x USB3.2-Type A (Always on) Gen 1, 1x USB3.2-Type A Gen 1
Left: HDMI 2.1 TMDS, 2x USB-C DP1.4 + PD3.0 10GB/s, Audio jack, One Key Recovery
Audio 2 x 2W speakers, Dolby Audio™
Connectivity Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
Colors Cloud Grey

 

Full specifications of Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 5x (15″, 11)

Dimensions & Weight 13.36″ x 9.29″ x as thin as 0.61″
339.33 x 236 x as thin as 15.6mm
Starting at 3.11 lbs. (1.41kg)
Display Up to 15.3″ 2.5K (2560 x 1600) OLED
16:10, 500 nits, 165Hz
100% DCI-P3
VESA DisplayHDR TrueBlack 500
TÜV low blue light
10-finger touch
Processor Snapdragon X2 Plus Series Platform
Graphics UMA
AI Definition Copilot+ PC
Memory Up to 32GB LPDDR5X 9600MT/s Dual Channel
Storage Up to 1TB Gen 4 2242
Operating System Windows 11 Home / Pro
Battery Up to 70WHr
Power Adapter 65W Type-C
Keyboard & Touchpad 1.3mm key travel
Backlit keyboard
135 x 80mm glass touchpad
Camera FHD IR camera with privacy shutter
Ports Right: Power button, Micro SD, 2x USB-A Gen 1 (one always-on)
Left: HDMI 2.1 TMDS, 2x USB-C DP1.4 + PD3.0, Audio jack, One Key Recovery
Audio 2 x 2W speakers, Dolby Audio™
Connectivity Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.4
Colors Cloud Grey

 

With this Snapdragon X2-powered lineup, Lenovo looks to be doubling down on Windows on ARM for everyday thin-and-light notebooks, but it’s sad how the company continues to steer its more experimental and performance-oriented hardware toward Intel instead. We’re glad to see AMD Ryzen AI 400 series getting to power some Legion gaming series for 2026.

Recent leaks from Windows Latest showed that Lenovo’s Legion Pro Rollable gaming laptop, with a horizontally expanding display and an Intel Core Ultra processor, is targeting a radically different segment of the market compared to these Snapdragon models.

Likewise, the ThinkPad lineup for 2026, including devices like the ThinkBook Plus Gen 7 Auto Twist Concept and other Aura Edition flagships, all get Intel Core Ultra Series 3 chips.

In that context, it’s a bit disappointing not to see something like a Yoga Pro 9i-class transition to Snapdragon X2 Elite Xtreme, especially given how important premium performance is for Lenovo’s flagships.

That being said, Qualcomm’s X2 chips were only announced late last year, and OEM product cycles lag behind chip releases, so there’s room for announcements later in 2026.

For now, Lenovo’s Snapdragon X2 devices for CES seem focused on practical, mainstream notebooks with good battery life, rather than cutting-edge performance. We’ll continue tracking any further Snapdragon laptop leaks as they surface.

The post Exclusive: Lenovo has Snapdragon X2 Elite (X2-E88-100) and X2 Plus PCs up its sleeve for CES 2026 appeared first on Windows Latest

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Meta just bought Manus, an AI startup everyone has been talking about

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Meta says it'll keep Manus running independently while weaving its agents into Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, where Meta's own chatbot, Meta AI, is already available to users.
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Aurelia 2 Beta 27: 13 Features and a Glimpse of What's Next

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Beta 27 is a landmark release. With 13 new features, 16 bug fixes, and foundational refactoring for SSR and AOT compilation, this update touches nearly every corner of Aurelia 2. Whether you’re managing complex state, building virtualized lists, or waiting for server-side rendering support, there’s something substantial here for you.

SSR and AOT on the Horizon

Fred ( @fkleuver ) has been laying the groundwork for server-side rendering and ahead-of-time compilation. Beta 27 includes several internal refactors that pave the way for these features: AST nodes converted to interfaces for easier serialization ( #2309 ), numeric instruction discriminants for smaller payloads ( #2329 ), and a simplified template compiler ( #2310 ).

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