DeepClaude: I Combined Claude Code with DeepSeek V4 Pro in My Agent Loop and the Numbers Threw Me Off DeepSeek V4 Pro correctly solves 94% of deep reasoning tasks in my loop… but the latency cost makes it unusable for 60% of my agent cases. Yeah, you read that right. And that completely blows up the narrative of "combining models is always better." Tuesday night I watched the DeepClaude post cli
We Rewrote Our Angular 18 App in React 20 and Increased Developer Velocity by 40% Last quarter, our engineering team made the bold call to rewrite our 3-year-old Angular 18 production application in React 20. After 6 months of development, we cut over to the new stack with zero downtime, and the results have exceeded our expectations: we’ve measured a 40% increase in developer velocity, alongsid
White labeling is more common than you might think. When developing software, you often need to deploy the same application for multiple clients, each requiring their own customization: unique color palettes, logos, or specific variants for a link. Without a proper strategy, you might be tempted to simply clone the existing repository and implement client-specific changes on demand. However, this
Specsmaxxing: I Wrote YAML Specs for My AI Agents — Here's What Changed (and What Didn't) A YAML spec for an AI agent is basically the blueprint you leave for the contractor when you can't be on-site. If the blueprint is solid, they build exactly what you want. If there's one ambiguous detail — "wall at the back" with no measurements — they make a call, and when you show up, the wall is in the w
Barman Replacing pgbackrest: I Migrated My Postgres Backups in Production and Here's What I Found The weekend I migrated from Vercel to Railway — the same one I mentioned when I talked about cold starts — I spent nearly twelve hours reading Postgres logs I'd never had to read that seriously before. It wasn't a tutorial. It was real production, real data, and the underlying question was always th
Kimi K2.6 vs Claude vs GPT-5.5: I ran it against my real coding cases and the numbers surprised me I was looking at a PR I'd asked Claude Sonnet 3.7 to refactor — a TypeScript data ingestion service with three layers of badly chained async — when I saw the Hacker News thread about Kimi K2.6. The claim was straightforward: Kimi K2.6 beats Claude and GPT-5.5 on coding benchmarks. LiveCodeBench, SW
TL;DR: ng-prism lets you showcase Angular components by adding a single decorator to the component class itself. No story files, no parallel file tree, no framework mismatch. Just Angular. If you've ever maintained a Storybook setup for an Angular component library, you know the drill: for every component you write, you also write a .stories.ts file. Then you keep both in sync. Then so