Have you ever opened a large codebase and wondered why changing one color broke styles in five unrelated places? Or why two buttons that look identical are defined in completely different ways across the project? These are symptoms of the same root problem: no clear separation between layers of concern in the CSS. CSS Architecture exists precisely to solve this. Have you noticed that popular libra
You count the weeks between today and your on site. Twelve. You pull up a 90 day FAANG prep plan and the structure looks reasonable: easy problems for two weeks, mediums for six, hards for the rest. Six weeks in, you hit binary trees and realise your recursion is shaky. Two weeks later you try a DP problem and can't formulate the recurrence. Suddenly the 12 week plan is a 6 week plan with 6 weeks
Quick Answer: To connect AI agents across different cloud environments, developers must replace synchronous HTTP with asynchronous brokers like Celery and Redis, externalize state memory, secure tool execution using the Model Context Protocol (MCP), bypass strict NAT firewalls via Pilot Protocol transport, and trace distributed workflows with OpenTelemetry. Deploying a Multi-Agent System (MAS) acr
Hi everyone! 👋 I'm Lilian, a frontend developer transitioning from Agricultural Science. This week, I launched my first professional portfolio hub, and I want to share a specific lesson I learned about CSS spacing that changed how I approach layouts. The Problem: Forcing Things to Fit When I was styling my portfolio, I noticed some elements felt too far apart. My quick fix? Negative margins. I wr
Building an AI-Powered Dog Breed Recommender with Flask, Nyckel, and Google Gemini Overview This application takes a photo or image URL of a dog and passes it to an external API to determine the breed. Once the breed is identified, a custom prompt is sent to Google Gemini and the results are returned to the user as a tailored list of care recommendations for that specific breed. Tech
Stripe is opinionated: a Price object has one currency. If your product is priced at $79 USD, that's what Stripe charges. But for conversion optimization, you want to display the price in the visitor's local currency — Argentinians see ARS, Brazilians see BRL, Germans see EUR — converted at the live FX rate. The math is simple. The trick is doing it without a 200ms client-side flash. Stripe holds
Showing prices in a user's local currency increases trust, reduces bounce rates, and improves conversions — especially for international audiences. Here's how to do it automatically in React. Detect the user's currency from their IP address (no user input needed) Fetch the live exchange rate for that currency Format the price according to their locale // hooks/useCurrency.ts import { useEffect, us