I build mdedit.io — a no-account Markdown editor with live preview, collaboration and AI assistance I’m looking for feedback on the public beta of mdedit.io: https://mdedit.io Repository: https://github.com/MatthiasHertel21/mdedit mdedit.io is a browser-based Markdown editor focused on writing, structuring, previewing, sharing and exporting longer Markdown documents. It does not require an accou
I shipped gni-compression to npm two days ago. One of the first questions I got (from myself, running benchmarks at midnight): does it work on anything other than chat data? Short answer: not yet. Long answer: I found out exactly why, and it led me somewhere more interesting than I expected. After the npm launch I ran GN against Silesia — the standard general text compression benchmark suite. Dick
The drift problem Every project that ships a translated README has the same lifecycle: Someone writes README.md in English. A contributor opens a PR with README.zh.md. Great. Three months later, English has six new sections. Chinese has the original. A second translator opens README.es.md. Spanish gets translated from… which version? The current README.md? Or README.zh.md, by accident, because t
Introduction Picture two doctors updating the same patient record at the same time - one in São Paulo, the other in London. Both are offline. When connectivity returns, whose changes prevail? This is not a hypothetical. It is the everyday reality of distributed systems: multiple nodes, no shared clock, no guaranteed network. The conventional answer has long been locking - one node waits while an
I keep seeing the same argument about AI making us dumber. It's the same argument people had about search engines, and before that books. The usual response is to point at history and say "every generation panics, every generation was wrong, relax." I think that response is half right, and the wrong half is what bothers me. Tools change what we bother to remember. The people who'd trained their wh
§0 — Hook The work-pool schema that runs the paragraf project names three work types: spec, package, and issue-bucket. Only two of the three have a defined The first article introduced a methodology that produced a working library — Two parallel improvements happened in the one week that followed. The first was The second improvement was a sprint. Two new color-related packages shipped under The
A few years ago I solved 200 LeetCode problems and still froze on Mediums I hadn't seen. The breakthrough wasn't another hundred problems. It was a different loop. A problem asks for the longest substring with at most K distinct characters. You've solved sliding window before. Maximum sum subarray of size K, done. Longest substring without repeating characters, done. This third one stalls you. Twe
The previous three posts covered how events flow from the SDK to the UI, how the timeline renders, and how tool cards visualize. This final post looks at SwiftWork's infrastructure — how data is stored, how state is restored, how Markdown is rendered, how code is highlighted, and how API keys are managed. These components are independent, but all essential to making the app usable. SwiftWork uses