In Q3 2024, our 12-person platform team slashed log ingestion spend by 35% in 90 days, moving from a brittle Elasticsearch-based pipeline to a tuned Vector 0.30 and Loki 3.0 stack—without losing a single log or breaking our 99.95% SLA. GameStop makes $55.5B takeover offer for eBay (279 points) Talking to 35 Strangers at the Gym (144 points) Newton's law of gravity passes its biggest test (15
The Idea After deciding to build an iOS app using AI, the first thing I set out to create was a metronome app designed for dark stage environments. Back in college, I played drums — and while that was a while ago, there weren’t many metronome apps that felt both clean and professional. (Turns out, that’s still true today.) That’s what led me to the idea: a simple, black-and-white metronome where
We Cut Compliance Costs by 40% Using Pulumi 3.140 and Chef 18 for Multi-Cloud AWS and GCP Modern multi-cloud environments offer unmatched flexibility, but they also introduce complex compliance challenges. For our team managing hybrid infrastructure across AWS and GCP, manual policy enforcement and fragmented tooling were driving up compliance costs by 22% year-over-year. By integrating Pulumi 3
I have a confession: I'm a productivity app addict. Notion, Todoist, Things, TickTick, Bear, Obsidian — I've tried them all. And every single one failed me in the same way. Not because they were bad apps. But because they let me add unlimited tasks. So I'd wake up Monday morning, open my to-do app, and see 47 items staring back at me. By 9am I was already paralyzed. Decision fatigue is real. When
I'm going to give you the comparison I couldn't find when I was choosing. Most "Claude Code vs Cursor" articles are either vibe-based or benchmarks that don't match solo indie dev workflows. I wanted something grounded in an actual multi-product project: 4 iOS apps, 5 distribution surfaces, 11 public repos, CI/CD across all of them. So I spent 14 days building exactly that — exclusively with Claud
It's a one-line item on the roadmap. "Send a push notification when X happens." Estimate is two days, three if the backend doesn't have FCM credentials yet. There's a library for it. The library is the visible part. The other 90% is platform lifecycle, registration state machines, race conditions with navigation, payload archaeology, and a half-dozen iOS and Android quirks. Nobody writes them down
In Q3 2024, our 12-person platform engineering team reduced confirmed security incidents by 41.7% (from 72 to 42 per quarter) after rolling out Trivy 0.50 for pre-deployment scanning and Falco 0.40 for runtime detection across 142 production microservices. We didn’t rewrite our CI/CD pipeline, we didn’t hire a dedicated security team, and we didn’t spend a dime on enterprise security tools. Here’s
Mobile tests are where the bugs actually live. A signup flow that works on an iPhone 15 falls apart on a lower-end Android because the keyboard pushes a button off-screen. A push notification mid-flow leaves the app in a state nothing else reproduces. Memory pressure on a four-year-old Android does things you can't make a simulator do. I wrote simulator-only tests anyway, for years. Real-device ru