When you build a PowerShell project from multiple files, the natural structure is clear: enums first, then classes, then functions. Each group has its own place, and as long as dependencies only flow in one direction, that structure works perfectly. But sometimes a function depends on a class, and that class calls the function. There is no longer a clean boundary between the two groups — they need
If your team works with geospatial data, sooner or later you need a place where maps, layers, users, and edits live together. There are many capable SaaS platforms and proprietary solutions you can deploy on your own infrastructure, but there is another path: self-hosting an open-source Web GIS server. In this tutorial, we will deploy NextGIS Web on a low-cost VPS using Docker, and then configure
The "Ghost" in the Codebase We’ve all been there. You’re running a security audit on an old repository, and your scanner flags 45 "Potential Secrets." You spend the next two hours manually checking them, only to realize 44 are revoked, test strings, or old keys from a defunct project. In the industry, we call these Zombie Keys—credentials that look like a threat but are actually dead. The proble
I have a confession: I'm a productivity app addict. Notion, Todoist, Things, TickTick, Bear, Obsidian — I've tried them all. And every single one failed me in the same way. Not because they were bad apps. But because they let me add unlimited tasks. So I'd wake up Monday morning, open my to-do app, and see 47 items staring back at me. By 9am I was already paralyzed. Decision fatigue is real. When
If you work in IoT, environmental sensing, or data systems, forest soil monitoring is one of the most technically interesting problems you'll encounter. The system you're trying to measure is extraordinarily complex, the variables are deeply interdependent, and the consequences of getting it wrong — or not monitoring at all — are significant. The Problem Space: What You're Actually Measuring Soil
Kubernetes Multi-Tenancy: Namespace Isolation, RBAC, and Network Policies Explained Most teams running shared Kubernetes clusters believe they have isolation. They have namespaces. They have different teams deploying to different namespaces. It feels like separation. It is not. Kubernetes was designed as a single-tenant system. Multi-tenancy is not a built-in feature. It is a property you constr
ZopNight v2.0: The Control Layer Your Cloud Bill Has Been Missing We've been watching cloud bills grow for years. Dashboards got prettier. Alerts got louder. The bills kept climbing. ZopNight v2.0 is our answer to why: the problem was never visibility. It was control. This release ships the full four-layer stack we believe every multi-cloud team needs: discovery with 14-day metrics, policy that
Most dividend tools give you a table. Numbers in columns. Yield percentages. Payout ratios. A filter you drag left or right. What they don't give you is judgment. They can't tell you why a 7% yield might be a trap. They can't flag that a company's payout ratio has been climbing for six consecutive quarters. They won't notice that a dividend that looks rock-solid today is sitting on a balance sheet