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The Tech‑Reader AI Digest for Thu May 28 2026

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  The Tech‑Reader AI Digest Thursday, May 28, 2026 #AI #TechNews #Digest Story 1: KPMG Puts Claude in Front of 276,000 Employees What happened: Anthropic and KPMG have formalized a global strategic alliance that embeds Claude directly into KPMG's core client delivery infrastructure. The rollout covers every one of KPMG's 276,000 employees across 138 countries. The technical centerpiece is the KPMG Digital Gateway Powered by Claude. Digital Gateway is the firm's primary client platform, built on Microsoft Azure, where KPMG's proprietary tax data, internal tools, and client work all converge. Claude Cowork and Anthropic's Managed Agents API are now integrated inside it. KPMG is also launching a product called KPMG Blaze, which embeds Claude Code to help enterprises modernize legacy IT systems. The initial deployment targets tax, legal, and private equity workflows. KPMG cited a concrete benchmark: building a regulatory compliance agent that previously took weeks no...

Web Workers

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  Web Workers How to run heavy code in parallel without freezing the UI #JavaScript #WebWorkers #WebPerformance #WebAPIs The Frozen UI Imagine this scenario: Your dashboard loads a CSV. The user clicks "Analyze." You run a complex aggregation across 2 million rows. The browser stops. The cursor spins. The user taps their fingers. Then they close the tab. The calculation finished in 400ms. But the UI was frozen for those entire 400ms. That's the problem Web Workers solve — not slowness, but blocking . Every dashboard eventually hits the same wall: you run a heavy calculation — parsing, sorting, aggregating, compressing, encoding — and the browser stutters. The UI lags. Buttons stop responding. The tab feels "heavy." This isn't because JavaScript is slow. It's because the main thread is busy . Web Workers and Background Threads Web Workers solve this problem by giving your application background threads — real parallel execution — so heavy work happens...

The Secret Life of JavaScript: Page Lifecycle Management

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  The Secret Life of JavaScript: Page Lifecycle Management Optimizing background tab performance and resource management with the Page Visibility API #JavaScript #PageVisibility #WebPerformance #WebAPIs Margaret is a senior software engineer. Timothy is her junior colleague. They work in a grand Victorian library in London — the kind of place where code quality is the unspoken objective, and craftsmanship is the only thing that matters. Episode 39 The Redundant Requests Timothy checked his server logs and sighed. The cloud metrics showed a continuous, heavy stream of background API traffic hitting his database endpoints, even though it was lunchtime and half the engineering team was away from their desks. He walked away from his terminal and stepped into the library, where Margaret was reviewing a technical manuscript. "The application is wasting massive client and server resources," Timothy explained. "When a user leaves our dashboard open in a background tab for hou...

Amazon S3 Error: “The specified key does not exist”

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  Amazon S3 Error: “The specified key does not exist” A concise troubleshooting guide for missing Amazon S3 objects, incorrect object paths, and failed retrieval requests #aws   #S3   #CloudComputing   #DevOps Problem You attempt to retrieve or access an object in Amazon S3 and receive this error: The specified key does not exist This corresponds to an underlying  HTTP 404 Not Found  response from S3. It commonly appears during application downloads, static website hosting, SDK retrieval operations, AWS CLI commands, Lambda workflows, and signed URL access. A minimal reproduction looks like: aws s3 cp s3: //your-bucket-name/path/to/file.txt . Clarifying the Issue In Amazon S3, the “key” is the full object path and filename — the internal identifier S3 uses to locate the object. This error means the object cannot be found at the exact key you requested, or the request is pointing to the wrong key entirely. S3 does not use folders internally; everything is ...

Streams API: How the Browser Handles Massive Data Without Freezing the UI

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  Streams API: How the Browser Handles Massive Data Without Freezing the UI How the browser processes massive data incrementally without blocking the UI — and writes it back to disk, with no backend required #JavaScript   #HTML   #WebAPIs   #StreamsAPI The Streams API Gives You Throughput Imagine you're a developer, building a local dashboard. It reads a 500MB CSV from the user's hard drive. You write  const text = await file.text() . The browser freezes. The tab hangs. The user closes it and never comes back. That's the problem the Streams API solves. Most developers never touch the Streams API directly, but it's one of the most important pieces of the modern web platform. If File System Access gives your dashboard real files, and IndexedDB gives it real state, the Streams API gives it  real throughput  — the ability to process large data incrementally, without locking up the main thread, and without crashing on large inputs. What the Streams API Actu...