Kdenlive hits the perfect sweet spot for me. It's much more capable than basic editors like iMovie, but doesn't have the overwhelming learning curve (or steep hardware requirements) of DaVinci Resolve.
Like others have mentioned, pairing it with OBS for screen recording and Audacity for audio makes for an incredibly powerful, 100% FOSS media creation stack. It's amazing to see how far open-source video editing has come.
The meta is definitely shifting. Since AI can now instantly output a flawless solution to almost any medium/hard LeetCode problem, asking someone to write it from memory on a whiteboard feels entirely disconnected from 2026 reality. What I'm seeing more of now is a heavy shift towards System Design, architecture, and "Code Review" interviews where you are given AI-generated code and asked to find the hidden bugs or security flaws.
The core reason most orgs are "flying blind" is that we still don't have a reliable metric for technical debt. Management only tracks shipped features and velocity because they are easy to measure. They completely ignore the hidden liability of a rushed, messy codebase until productivity eventually grinds to a halt. You can't measure the economics of a team if you ignore the balance sheet.
The ironic thing about the "best" national parks these days is that they are so overcrowded the experience can be genuinely miserable. I would gladly take a "sub-par" or boring park where I can actually be alone with nature over sitting in a two-hour traffic jam in Yosemite or Yellowstone just to see a tree.
The idea is simple: hints first, answers later. It has daily updates, archive pages, Sports Edition support, and a lightweight analyzer for reviewing misses.