Decoupling Workloads: Strategies for Non-Blocking API Responses in Python Modern web applications demand instant feedback. Users expect immediate responses, and frustrating delays can quickly lead to abandonment. When an API endpoint performs computationally intensive or time-consuming operations directly within the request-response cycle, it creates a bottleneck that can cripple your backend sy
No build today. Just fundamentals. And honestly? It humbled me in the best way. Every automation I've built so far has relied on no-code/low-code tools like n8n to handle the logic. But I kept hitting moments where I thought , if I knew Python, I could do this faster, cleaner, and with more control. So I decided to fix that. And then I hit Exception Handling and File Handling and that's where thi
How I automated value discovery in binary oil markets using Python, Yahoo Finance, and the Polymarket API Polymarket lets you trade on the probability of real‑world events. There are often inefficiencies—especially when fear or greed distorts prices. But manually checking dozens of contracts and calculating fair probabilities is tedious. Yesterday, I noticed a juicy set of markets: What price will
Hi everyone! I've been working on a personal project to create a desktop virtual assistant that doesn't rely on the cloud. I wanted something that felt like JARVIS but kept my data 100% private. Brain: It uses Ollama as the backend, so you can run models like Llama 3, Mistral, or Phi-3 locally. Interface: Built with PyQt6 featuring a "holographic" glassmorphism effect (transparent and sleek).
While learning python today, I spent some time understanding how the Python shell works and how modules behave inside it. The Python shell (or REPL) is basically an interactive environment where you can run code line-by-line. It's super useful when you just want to test something quickly instead of running a full script every time. While experimenting, I tried something interesting. I created a Py
Greetings, Dev Community! 👋 We’ve officially crossed into mid-2026, and if you look at your IDE today compared to two years ago, the change is staggering. We aren't just "writing" code anymore; we are orchestrating logic. The era of manual syntax grinding is fading, making way for a much more powerful identity for developers: the Software Architect. Here is a deep dive into how AI has fundamental
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A defaced website is a curious problem. It's loud — anyone visiting the page can see something is wrong. But it's also quiet from a server's perspective: HTTP returns 200, your uptime monitor is happy, your TLS cert hasn't moved, and the CMS logs show a "successful" content update from a legitimate-looking session. The signal is on the rendered page, not in the metrics. I run a site at hi3ris.blue