When you build a PowerShell project from multiple files, the natural structure is clear: enums first, then classes, then functions. Each group has its own place, and as long as dependencies only flow in one direction, that structure works perfectly. But sometimes a function depends on a class, and that class calls the function. There is no longer a clean boundary between the two groups — they need
Kubernetes and AI have become unlikely bedfellows—and the numbers prove it. New data from CNCF and SlashData reveals that two-thirds of organizations running generative AI models have standardized on Kubernetes for orchestration. But here's the thing: it's not because Kubernetes magically solves AI problems. It's because the engineering fundamentals that make Kubernetes valuable—standardization, r
How Cloudflare Built Resilience: Lessons from Their Infrastructure Overhaul When a single misconfiguration can cascade across a global CDN and take down customer traffic, every deployment becomes a high-stakes decision. Cloudflare recently completed a massive push to make their infrastructure fundamentally more resilient—and their approach offers critical lessons for anyone operating at scale. M