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
Why Figma MCP Isn’t Enough Why Figma MCP Alone Can’t Guarantee Production-Ready UI — and What Product Teams Must Do Instead Extraordinary results require an extraordinary team. I’m surrounded by people who treat design and development like a mission. They are warriors in the tech trenches, and this win belongs to them. No fluff. No filler. Just the facts on how we shattered our veloci
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
Contè UI - A Dynamic CSS System for Advanced Styling. When CSS Frameworks Become Limiting — Meet Conté UI Traditional frameworks often lock you into predefined scales. Conté UI breaks these limits with a breakthrough approach to building modern UIs with fully dynamic values and intuitive class conventions. Faster, lighter, and more flexible than traditional frameworks. Released: May 1, 2026 https
If you spent any time on React Twitter or LinkedIn lately, you saw three names everywhere: shadcn/ui, Radix, and Base UI. People talk about them like they compete with each other, but they don't really. Let me explain what each one actually is, and when you should reach for which. Before we compare anything, you need this idea. A normal UI library like Bootstrap or Material UI gives you components
Strong image models can already produce polished game UI screenshots. The harder question is whether those screenshots are useful as production evidence. I tested six common game-screen cases two ways: a direct prompt baseline a controlled workflow using a screen brief, layout contract, style contract, IP/lookalike gate, locked prompt, review score, revision prompt, and implementation notes The si
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