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We Built a Chrome Extension With Clean Architecture. Here's Why It Was Worth the Extra Effort.
Most Chrome extension tutorials show you a popup with a counter. Click a button, increment a number, done. That's fine for learning the API.But what if your extension needs OAuth with PKCE, multi-tenant team switching, content script injection into arbitrary web pages, offline detection, session refresh via background alarms, and role-based access control?We built a Chrome extension for PaperLink - a document sharing and analytics platform. The extension lets you create secure share links for yo
Building Reusable UI Components in React (Clean & Scalable Approach)
“Programs must be written for people to read, and only incidentally for machines to execute.” - Harold AbelsonModern frontend applications grow fast-and without a solid component strategy, they become hard to maintain, inconsistent, and fragile. Reusable UI components solve this by promoting consistency, reducing duplication, and enabling scalable architecture.But simply “reusing components” isn’t enough. Poorly designed components can create more problems than they solve.In this article, we’ll
I rebuilt auth, payments, and CI from scratch three times. Then I stopped.
The moment that broke my patience was a Stripe webhook I'd already implemented correctly once before.I knew I'd gotten the signature verification right on my last project. The exact stripe.webhooks.constructEvent() call with the raw body buffer, not the parsed body — the mistake that burns everyone the first time. I'd already made that mistake and fixed it. But I couldn't find where the working version lived. Different repo? A local file I'd moved? Some half-archived Notion doc?An hour later I'd
Three Ways to Fly: Building Route Options Ranked by Time, CO2 , and Reliability
Three Ways to Fly: Building Route Options Ranked by Time, CO₂, and ReliabilityTags: aviation, webdev, javascript, nodeWe just shipped the Routes tab on MyAirports. You pick an origin and a destination, and you get up to three connecting itineraries — one optimised for total travel time, one for CO₂, one for reliability. Each card shows the hub sequence, layover breakdown, ticket type, and the per-leg airline strip.Building it meant solving a set of problems that are more interesting than t
SEO Analysis for Developers: Why Your JavaScript App Is Invisible to Google
My React app had a 94 Lighthouse score, a sub-2s load time, and zero organic traffic after three months.Not "low traffic." Zero. Not a single impression for any keyword I had written content for.I'd completely skipped SEO analysis. Not because I didn't care, because I assumed a good Lighthouse score meant I was fine. It doesn't.This is a practical guide to SEO analysis for developers, the part that actually matters, the part nobody teaches in your frontend course, and the part that will determin
It's OK to abandon your side-project
<a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47918961">Comments</a>
"I Wired DeepSeek V4 Into Claude Code and Codex CLI Without Touching the Tools"
DeepSeek V4 dropped, the benchmarks looked aggressive, and the price-per-million-tokens looked even more aggressive. The first thing I wanted to know wasn't "is it as good as Claude Opus 4.6 or GPT-5.4?" — it was "can my actual coding agents use it without me rewriting half my workflow?"Because that's the part nobody benchmarks. A model can be the cheapest reasoner on the leaderboard and still be useless to me if Claude Code, Codex CLI, and Gemini CLI can't talk to it the way they expect to.Here
3 Things I Learned Auditing My LLM App's Token Spend (And Why Your Benchmarks Are Lying)
You know that feeling when you ship an AI feature and realize your token bill is 3x what you estimated? Yeah, that was me last week.I have this thing called Agent-Max — it's a multi-platform growth agent that runs autonomous workflows: generating content, publishing to Bluesky, Medium, Twitter, Reddit. Sounds heavy, right? Every Monday it synthesizes a week of reading, scrapes engagement metrics, decides what to post and where. Seven platforms. Infinite LLM calls if you're not paying attention.L
Top 10 Wagtail to WordPress Migration Companies in 2026
Your Django CMS Is a Single-Developer Bus Factor Away From Being a ProblemNobody writes the post-mortem on this one. It usually starts quietly. Your lead Django developer takes another role. The marketing team raises a ticket about updating a hero image. It gets assigned to a junior dev who has never seen a Wagtail StreamField in production. Three hours later the staging environment is broken and the ticket is still open.This is not a hypothetical. It is the exact sequence of events that p
Part Time Diploma in Civil Engineering for Working Professionals
Build Your Career with GITS (Global Institute of Technology & Science)In today’s fast-evolving infrastructure and construction industry, having practical experience alone is no longer enough. Employers now look for professionals who not only have hands-on skills but also hold recognized technical qualifications. If you are already working in the civil engineering or construction field and want to upgrade your career without leaving your job, then the Part Time Diploma in Civil Engineering fo
GitHub Copilot Did Not Ship That Bug. Your React Project Had No Rules to Prevent It.
When something breaks in production, the first reaction is almost always the same.The AI generated bad code. The AI missed something. The AI was not good enough.It is a reasonable reaction. The AI wrote the code. The code has a bug. The connection feels obvious.But the connection is wrong. And as long as developers keep making it, the actual problem stays unsolved. What actually happens when AI generates a bugGitHub Copilot does not generate bugs on purpose. It does not have bad days. It do
Your AI agent isn't losing its mind. It's losing its place.
Claude Code sessions accumulate noise. Not errors, not bugs — noise. Old tool results. Retracted approaches. Plans that were superseded three decisions ago but never explicitly closed. A file path that was correct at step 4 but was refactored at step 11.The model doesn't forget any of it. It just weights everything more or less equally, which means when you're at step 20, the agent is still reasoning from the full history of steps 1 through 19 — including the dead ends.This is cascading context
I built an app the hiring panel will never open
The hiring panel will never see the appThat was the constraint I kept forgetting. I built a whole interview tool with wizards, timers, auto-save, keyboard shortcuts, colour-coded scores. The hiring panel gets none of that. They get a 7-page PDF attached to an email.The app exists for one person: the interviewer, during the call. The PDF is what actually matters. It carries the scores, the notes, the strengths and growth areas, the hire/reject decision, and four appendices of detailed evide
The #2 cause of runaway Claude API costs (it's not infinite loops)
When developers worry about runaway AI API costs, they think about infinite loops. An agent that retries indefinitely. A bug that sends the same request ten thousand times. Something obviously broken.That's the #1 cause. It's dramatic, it's usually caught quickly, and it's fixable with a simple retry limit.The #2 cause is quieter and more expensive over time: verbose prompting.Here's the math. An orchestrator writes a prompt to dispatch a subagent. It explains the objective, provides context, re
Build a HackMD-Style Collaborative Markdown Editor with React, Antigravity IDE & Velt
TL;DRBuilding real-time collaboration from scratch takes significant effort. You need sync logic, presence, comments, and infrastructure before you even ship the feature.In this guide, we generate a pixel perfect HackMD style editor UI using Antigravity, connect live markdown preview in React, and then use Velt to add presence, live sync, and comments in just a few steps. What We’re BuildingWe are building a HackMD style markdown editor with a clean two pane layout. On the left, users
I built shadcn/ui for the terminal — meet InkUI
The problemEvery CLI I build with Ink ends up copy-pasting the same spinner from my last project. Same progress bar. Same select menu. It's boilerplate that shouldn't exist. What I builtInkUI works exactly like shadcn/ui — run one command:npx inkui add tableYou get the TypeScript source file dropped into ./components/ui/table/ in your own project. No black-box npm dependency. You own the code. Modify anything. What's included32 components across 4 categories:Core UI: Spinner, Bad
Introducing CarverJS
Here is a complete 2D game written in React. Move with WASD. Renders in a browser. The whole thing is around 40 lines.import { useRef, useEffect } from "react";import { Game, World, Actor } from "@carverjs/core/components";import { useGameLoop, useInput } from "@carverjs/core/hooks";import { useGameStore } from "@carverjs/core/store";import type { Group } from "@carverjs/core/types";function Player() { const ref = useRef<Group>(null); const setPhase = useGameStore((s) => s.setPhase);
React State Management: Context vs Zustand vs Redux (2026)
The State Management Landscape Has SimplifiedThe React state management ecosystem has consolidated significantly in 2026. Redux, once the default choice for any non-trivial React application, is now used primarily for applications that specifically need its middleware ecosystem, DevTools, or time-travel debugging. Zustand has emerged as the practical default for most new applications — it provides global state without boilerplate, excellent TypeScript support, and a simple mental model. Co
React useEffect Hook: Complete Guide + Common Mistakes (2026)
useEffect in React 19: What's ChangeduseEffect remains one of the most misunderstood React APIs in 2026, but the mental model has become clearer with React's official guidance and the patterns established by the ecosystem. React 19's compiler (React Forget, now stable) automatically manages many cases where developers previously needed to manually write useEffect with careful dependency arrays. Understanding when useEffect is still needed — and when it's an anti-pattern — is the key to wri
Tailwind CSS vs CSS Modules: Which to Choose in 2026
The CSS Architecture Decision That Shapes Your Entire ProjectThe choice between Tailwind CSS and CSS Modules is one of the most debated technical decisions in React development in 2026. Both are production-proven, both have large ecosystems, and both produce well-performing applications. The choice is fundamentally about development workflow, team conventions, and how you prefer to think about styling. Understanding the real tradeoffs — not the marketing of either approach — enables an inf