Technical Beauty — Episode 34 Open the sudo CHANGELOG and search for the word "security". Make a cup of tea first. The list is rather long for a tool whose entire job is to ask three questions: who are you, what would you like to run, and may you. In July 2015, Ted Unangst grew tired of negotiating with the sudo configuration on OpenBSD and wrote his own. He called it doas: dedicated OpenBSD appli
So you've outgrown MySQL. Maybe you need better JSON support, real window functions, or you're moving to a managed cloud database that defaults to Postgres. Whatever the reason — MySQL to PostgreSQL migration trips up almost everyone the first time. The two dialects look similar but behave very differently under the hood. Why MySQL Dumps Don't Import Directly into PostgreSQL users ( id INT(11) NOT
Introduction Code reviews. For many developers, they are a necessary evil — a box to check in the development process. However, I have come to appreciate them as a powerful tool for elevating code quality, fostering collaboration, and improving team dynamics. Today, I want to share my journey from viewing code reviews as a mundane task to recognizing their critical role in successful projects. L
Building a Translation Pipeline for International Contract Bidding If your company bids on international contracts, you've probably dealt with the translation bottleneck. Technical proposals need precise translation, certified documents have strict formatting requirements, and procurement deadlines don't wait for anyone. After seeing how UK public procurement translation requirements can make or
Inside the five-stage pipeline from 1.1.1, there is another fork right after the parser. PostgreSQL classifies every SQL command into one of two camps. One side holds the optimizable queries, the other holds the utility commands. The classification is decided by a single field on the Query node, commandType, and from that point on the two camps travel completely different paths. One goes through t
Go is a compiled language — the code is converted into machine‑readable form before execution. From a beginner’s perspective, this means Go catches many errors during compilation, giving you cleaner, faster, and more predictable performance at runtime. Go is widely used for: API development CLI tools Microservices architecture Backend server. DEVOPS activity So it fits perfectly with the kind of
If you've tried building an AI agent in the last six months, you've hit the same wall: there are half a dozen frameworks, each with a different philosophy, a different API surface, and a different definition of what an "agent" even is. I spent a weekend writing the same simple agent — "read a GitHub issue, classify it as bug/feature/question, and post a comment" — in six different frameworks. This
Originally published on TechSaaS Cloud Originally published on TechSaaS Cloud An API gateway sits between clients and your backend services. It handles cross-cutting concerns so your services do not have to: authentication, rate limiting, request routing, load balancing, caching, and observability. WebMobileIoTGatewayRate LimitAuthLoad BalanceTransformCacheService AService BService CDB / Cache API