The Problem If you're like me, you live in your terminal. You've got Docker containers running for databases, Redis instances for caching, microservices doing their thing — and you're constantly context-switching to check on them. # The old way: docker ps docker logs my-app -n 50 docker stats docker inspect some_container # ... back and forth, breaking your flow Now imagine you're working with
The landscape of mobile development is shifting beneath our feet. For years, "Smart Apps" were simply thin clients for powerful cloud APIs. If you wanted to understand the sentiment of a sentence or find similar documents, you packaged a JSON request, sent it to a server, and waited for a response. But the era of the "Cloud-First" mandate is being challenged by a new priority: Privacy-Centric, Low
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
If you've spent any time doing Android development from the command line, you know the rhythm: adb devices, adb logcat, adb shell, repeat. It works, but it's friction — switching between windows, retyping device serials, manually grep-ing through logcat noise. padb is a Python-based terminal UI that wraps all of that into one interactive session. No GUI required, no Android Studio open in the back
Exemplo mínimo de uso com Bun (baseado na documentação oficial) Aviso: Este exemplo é puramente acadêmico, baseado na documentação oficial do Next.js. Para um ambiente de produção real, ajustes adicionais de segurança, performance e monitoramento são necessários. 1 - Ajustar o next.config.ts para "Standalone": import type { NextConfig } from "next"; const nextConfig: NextConfig = { output: "
Yesterday, my Jenkins pipeline could install dependencies and build the frontend. But there was a missing piece: Docker. Without it, I couldn't package my applications into containers — the whole point of this challenge! Today, I fixed that. I configured Jenkins to build Docker images for both my backend and frontend, turning my CI pipeline into a complete build system. The pipeline could: Pull co
If you’ve ever tried to set up an Intel RealSense camera with ROS 2 on a fresh machine, you already know the pattern: it works on one system, then breaks on another, and you lose time chasing environment differences. That’s why I put together realsense-ros2-docker — a small, focused repository that provides a simple Dockerfile for RealSense bring-up with ROS 2. Repo: https://github.com/SAJIB3489/r