You asked Claude to build a feature. It worked. You shipped it. Six weeks later, you're adding something related, and nothing makes sense anymore. The code is technically correct but completely opaque. You can't remember why anything was structured this way. Claude can't figure it out either — it starts guessing, and the guesses start breaking things. This is the scenario I keep seeing. And it's n
Some time ago, I was building a chat application using AWS Websocket API gateway. Things were going smoothly. I created a WebSocket API Gateway, added $connect, $disconnect, and sendMessage/addGroup routes. From the frontend (React) side, everything was fire-and-forget. You send a message, and the onMessageHandler takes care of it 💪🏼 But then a new requirement of uploading files using S3 signed
I spent the last few months building BlazOrbit, a component library for Blazor. It's not the first of its kind —MudBlazor, Radzen and Blazorise already exist— so I had to answer a hard question from the start: why does this need to exist? The answer turned out to be a set of architectural decisions I want to share, because each one taught me something about building UI frameworks that I didn't kno