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How intentional loading decisions keep your app fast at scale. Frontend performance is not a late-stage cleanup task. It’s not tech debt. It’s a set of decisions we make every day while we code — what we load, when we load it, and how we render it. The answer depends on the importance of the code, its size, and when the user actually needs it. Get that wrong, and the browser pays for everything
How we moved from a fragile loop-based payout system to a reliable, idempotent, and traceable architecture. On paper, payouts sound simple: Customer places an order Platform collects payment Platform pays the seller That's it. Until you try to do it at scale. In any marketplace or fintech system, money flows across multiple parties: Sellers / vendors Delivery partners Platform fees Discounts, vouc
I’m going on a short vacation this week, so this post is coming out a bit earlier than usual. I actually had a different, more “useful” topic in mind — something educational, something responsible. But then I came across this fascinating article: I don’t like Tailwind. Sorry not sorry written by @freshcaffeine , and I couldn’t get it out of my head. So I decided to write a response instead. I actu
What Is an Atomic Transaction? Before we begin, let’s define atomic transaction clearly: “It is a protective wrapper around multiple state updates that guarantees the whole operation either succeeds completely or has no effect at all.” Inside an atomic transaction, you can perform multiple set() calls, and even cross multiple await boundaries. Only when the entire operation succeeds do we commit
The "Unsharable" Dashboard Problem Imagine this common B2B SaaS scenario: An executive opens your analytics dashboard. They spend three minutes configuring the data—they filter the status to "Active," set the date range to "Last 30 Days," sort the table by "Highest Revenue," and navigate to Page 4. They copy the URL and Slack it to their team lead. The team lead clicks the link, but instead of see
Most React performance problems are not architectural. They are not about picking the wrong state manager or choosing the wrong rendering strategy. They are small habit things that look perfectly fine in isolation but compound quietly across a codebase until your app feels sluggish and you are not sure why. This article covers five of the most common ones, with code examples so you can see exactly
I still remember where i was when the email came in. December 25th. Christmas morning. Phone in hand while having breakfast, and there is an email from our client's CTO. No greetings, Just "We're terminating the contract. Our legal team will be in touch" We lost a 120K a year contract. On a Christmas morning because of a date calculation bug that none of us, not a person on a team of 5 experienced